The interrelationship between ligand binding and thermal unfolding of the folate binding protein. The role of self-association and pH.

2014 
Abstract The present study utilized a combination of DLS (dynamic light scattering) and DSC (differential scanning calorimetry) to address thermostability of high-affinity folate binding protein (FBP), a transport protein and cellular receptor for the vitamin folate. At pH 7.4 (pI = 7–8) ligand binding increased concentration-dependent self-association of FBP into stable multimers of holo-FBP. DSC of 3.3 μM holo-FBP showed Tm (76 °C) and molar enthalpy (146 kcal M − 1 ) values increasing to 78 °C and 163 kcal M − 1 at 10 μM holo-FBP, while those of apo-FBP were 55 °C and 105 kcal M − 1 . Besides ligand binding, intermolecular forces involved in concentration-dependent multimerization thus contribute to the thermostability of holo-FBP. Hence, thermal unfolding and dissociation of holo-FBP multimers occur simultaneously consistent with a gradual decrease from octameric to monomeric holo-FBP (10 μM) in DLS after a step-wise rise in temperature to 78 °C ≈ Tm. Stable holo-FBP multimers may protect naturally occurring labile folates against decomposition or bacterial utilization. DSC established an interrelationship between diminished folate binding at pH 5, especially in NaCl-free buffers, and low thermostability. Positively charged apo-FBP was almost completely unfolded and aggregated at pH 5 (Tm 38 °C) and holo-FBP, albeit more thermostable, was labile with aggregation tendency. Addition of 0.15 M NaCl increased thermostability of apo-FBP drastically, and even more so that of holo-FBP. Electrostatic forces thus seem to contribute to a diminished thermostability at low pH. Fluorescence spectroscopy after irreversible thermal unfolding of FBP revealed a weak-affinity folate binding.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    32
    References
    13
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []