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Published in

National Academy of Sciences, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 22(91), p. 10417-10421, 1994

DOI: 10.1073/pnas.91.22.10417

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Native-like in vivo folding of a circularly permuted jellyroll protein shown by crystal structure analysis.

Journal article published in 1994 by M. Hahn, K. Piotukh, R. Borriss ORCID, U. Heinemann
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

A jellyroll beta-sandwich protein, the Bacillus beta-glucanase H(A16-M), is used to probe the role of N-terminal peptide regions in protein folding in vivo. A gene encoding H(A16-M) is rearranged to place residues 1-58 of the protein behind a signal peptide and residues 59-214. The rearranged gene is expressed in Escherichia coli. The resultant circularly permuted protein, cpA16M-59, is secreted into the periplasm, correctly processed, and folded into a stable and active enzyme. Crystal structure analysis at 2.0-A resolution, R = 15.3%, shows cpA16M-59 to have a three-dimensional structure nearly identical with that of the parent beta-glucanase. An analogous experiment based on the wild-type Bacillus macerans beta-glucanase, giving rise to the circularly permuted variant cpMAC-57, yields the same results. Folding of these proteins, therefore, is not a vectorial process depending on the conformation adopted by their native N-terminal oligopeptides after ribosomal synthesis and translocation through the cytoplasmic membrane.