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Enhancing the Activity of a β-Helical Antifreeze Protein by the Engineered Addition of Coils.

Authors :
Marshall, Christopher B.
Daley, Margaret E.
Sykes, Brian D.
Davies, Peter L.
Source :
Biochemistry. 9/21/2004, Vol. 43 Issue 37, p11637-11646. 10p.
Publication Year :
2004

Abstract

The effectiveness of natural antifreeze proteins in inhibiting the growth of a seed ice crystal seems to vary with protein size. Here we have made use of the extreme regularity of the β-helical antifreeze protein from the beetle Tenebrio molitor to explore systematically the relationship between antifreeze activity and the area of the ice-binding site. Each of the 12-amino acid, disulfide-bonded central coils of the β-helix contains a Thr-Xaa-Thr ice-binding motif. By adding coils to, and deleting coils from, the seven-coil parent antifreeze protein, we have made a series of constructs with 6-11 coils. Misfolded forms of these antifreezes were removed by ice affinity purification to accurately compare the specific activity of each construct. There was a 10-100-fold gain in activity upon going from six to nine coils, depending on the concentration that was compared. Activity was maximal for the nine-coil construct, which gave a freezing point depression of 6.5 C° at 0.7 mg/mL, but actually decreased for the 10- and 11-coil constructs. This small loss in activity might result from the accumulation of a slight mismatch between the spacing of the ice-binding threonine residues and the O atoms of the ice lattice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00062960
Volume :
43
Issue :
37
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Biochemistry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
14562817
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/bi0488909