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. 1999 Aug;8(8):1605-13.
doi: 10.1110/ps.8.8.1605.

The disulfide-coupled folding pathway of apamin as derived from diselenide-quenched analogs and intermediates

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The disulfide-coupled folding pathway of apamin as derived from diselenide-quenched analogs and intermediates

S Pegoraro et al. Protein Sci. 1999 Aug.

Abstract

The sequence of apamin, an 18 residue bee venom toxin, encloses all the information required for the correct disulfide-coupled folding into the cystine-stabilized alpha-helical motif. Three apamin analogs, each containing a pair of selenocysteine residues replacing the related cysteines, were synthesized to mimic the three possible apamin isomers with two crossed, parallel, or consecutive disulfides, respectively. Refolding experiments clearly revealed that the redox potential of selenocysteine prevails over the sequence encoded structural information for proper folding of apamin. Thus, selenocysteine can be used as a new device to generate productive and nonproductive folding intermediates of peptides and proteins. In fact, disulfides are selectively reduced in presence of the diselenide and the conformational features derived from these intermediates as well as from the three-dimensional (3D) structures of the selenocysteine-containing analogs with their nonnatural networks of diselenide/disulfide bridges allowed to gain further insight into the subtle driving forces for the correct folding of apamin that mainly derive from local conformational preferences.

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