A Point Mutation of Human Nucleoside Diphosphate Kinase A Found in Aggressive Neuroblastoma Affects Protein Folding*

I. Lascu,Sabine Schaertl,Chanquing Wang,C. Sarger,A. Giartosio,Gilberd Briand,M. Lacombe,M. Konrad

Published 1997 in Journal of Biological Chemistry

ABSTRACT

The point mutation serine 120 to glycine in the human nucleoside diphosphate kinase A has been identified in several aggressive neuroblastomas (Chang, C. L., Zhu, X. X., Thoraval, D. H., Ungar, D., Rawwas, J., Hora, N., Strahler, J. R., Hanash, S. M. & Radany, E. (1994) Nature 370, 335–336). We expressed in bacteria and purified wild-type and S120G mutant nucleoside diphosphate kinase A. The mutant enzyme had enzymatic and structural properties similar to the wild-type enzyme, whereas its stability to denaturation by heat and urea was markedly reduced. More importantly, upon renaturation of the urea-denatured mutant protein, a folding intermediate accumulated, having the characteristics of a molten globule. It had no tertiary structure, as shown by near UV circular dichroism, whereas the secondary structure was substantially recovered. The hydrophobic probe 8-anilino-1-naphthalene sulfonate bound to the intermediate species with an increase in fluorescence intensity and a blue shift. The hydrodynamic size was between that expected for a folded and an unfolded monomer. Finally, electrophoresis in a transverse urea gradient displayed no renaturation curve, and the protein showed the tendency to aggregate at the lowest urea concentrations. The existence of a molten globule folding intermediates resulting from an altered folding in the mutated protein might be related to the aggressiveness of neuroblastomas.

PUBLICATION RECORD

CITATION MAP

EXTRACTION MAP

CLAIMS

  • No claims are published for this paper.

CONCEPTS

  • No concepts are published for this paper.

REFERENCES

Showing 1-33 of 33 references · Page 1 of 1

CITED BY

Showing 1-68 of 68 citing papers · Page 1 of 1