
Biotechnology and Applied Biochemistry (1998) 28, (717) (Printed in Great Britain)
Expression and equilibrium denaturation of cardiac troponin I: stabilization of a folding intermediate during denaturation by urea
Nihmat Morjana1 and Rony Tal2
Chemistry Research and Development, Dade Behring, P.O. Box 520672, Miami, FL 33152-0672, U.S.A.
Abbreviations used: TnI, troponin I; DTT, dithiothreitol; ANS, 1-anilino-8-naphthalenesulphonate;
IPTG, isopropyl b-D-thiogalactoside; r, recombinant;
MI, myocardial infarction.1To whom correspondence should
be addressed.
2Present address: Sunol Molecular, 2173 N.W. 99th Avenue,
Miami, FL 33172, U.S.A.
Human cardiac troponin I has been expressed at high level
in Escherichia coli as a fusion protein by using the
expression vector Ptac114. The expressed protein forms primarily intracellular
inclusion bodies that are solubilized in the presence of 8 M urea.
The purified troponin I is recognized by anti-(human cardiac troponin I)
monoclonal antibodies. Equilibrium denaturation of recombinant human troponin
I and bovine troponin I is compared by monitoring changes in the protein's
fluorescence and CD characteristics. At pH 7.5 the equilibrium denaturation
of both proteins by urea occurs in two distinct steps involving at least
three major conformational states: native, intermediate and fully denatured.
The biphasic profile in the presence of urea is observed by both fluorescence
and CD spectroscopy. In the intermediate state the native tertiary structure
is largely disrupted and 40% of the secondary structure is conserved, as
suggested by near-UV and far-UV CD respectively. Thermal denaturation of
troponin I, as followed by fluorescence, shows a loss in the signal that
is not reversible after heating to 90 °C. In the presence of
a constant amount of urea (not greater than 0.5 M) the thermal denaturation
becomes biphasic, suggesting the accumulation of an intermediate species
that is stabilized by urea. The fluorescence of 1-anilino-8-naphthalenesulphonate
produced on binding troponin I decreases in the presence of increasing
concentrations of urea up to 3 M; at higher urea concentrations no
further change in the remaining signal is observed. Kinetic studies show
at least two phases of renaturation for troponin I previously denatured
with 8 M urea, whereas only a single phase is detected for the renaturation
process in the presence of 3 M urea. The results suggest the occurrence
of a stable folding intermediate, the formation of which might be related
to the two-domain architecture of troponin I.
Received 22 October 1997/15 December 1997; accepted 22 January 1998
Portland Press Ltd © 1998
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