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Biophys. J. BioFAST: First Published December 1, 2006. doi:10.1529/biophysj.106.091736
© 2006 by the Biophysical Society.


A more recent version of this article appeared on February 15, 2007.
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PROTEINS

Reversible Unfolding of the Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus Main Protease in Guanidinium Chloride

Hui-Ping Chang 1*, Chi-Yuan Chou 2 and Gu-Gang Chang 3

1 Department of Life Sciences and Institute of Genome Sciences
2 National Yang-Ming University
3 National Yang Ming University

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: huiping_chp{at}hotmail.com.

Submitted on June 19, 2006
Revised on August 20, 2006
Accepted on 2 November 2006


   Abstract
Chemical denaturant sensitivity of the dimeric main protease from severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) coronavirus to guanidinium chloride was examined in terms of fluorescence spectroscopy, circular dichroism, analytical ultracentrifuge, and enzyme activity change. The dimeric enzyme dissociated at guanidinium chloride concentration of < 0.4 M, at which the enzymatic activity loss showed close correlation with the subunit dissociation. Further increase in guanidinium chloride induced a reversible biphasic unfolding of the enzyme. The unfolding of the C-terminal domain-truncated enzyme, on the other hand, followed a monophasic unfolding curve. Different mutants of the full-length protease (W31 and W207/W218), with tryptophanyl residue(s) mutated to phenylalanine at the C-terminal or N-terminal domain, respectively, were constructed. Unfolding curves of these mutants were monophasic but corresponded to the first and second phases of the protease, respectively. The unfolding intermediate of the protease thus represented a folded C-terminal domain but an unfolded N-terminal domain, which is enzymatically inactive due to loss of regulatory properties. The various enzyme forms were characterized in terms of hydrophobicity and size-and-shape distributions. We provide direct evidence for the functional role of C-terminal domain in stabilization of the catalytic N-terminal domain of SARS coronavirus main protease.

Key Words: 3CLpro, SARS-CoV, folding, protein stability, quaternary structure, size-and-shape




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J. Shi, J. Sivaraman, and J. Song
Mechanism for Controlling the Dimer-Monomer Switch and Coupling Dimerization to Catalysis of the Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 3C-Like Protease
J. Virol., May 1, 2008; 82(9): 4620 - 4629.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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Copyright © 2006 by the Biophysical Society.