Structural basis of urea-induced unfolding of Fasciola gigantica glutathione S-transferase.
Jupitara KalitaRohit ShuklaTimir TripathiPublished in: Journal of cellular physiology (2018)
Glutathione S-transferases (GSTs) are enzymes that are involved in the detoxification of harmful electrophilic endogenous and exogenous compounds by conjugating with glutathione (GSH). The liver fluke GSTs have multifunctional roles in the host-parasite interaction, such as general detoxification and bile acid sequestration to synthase activity. The GSTs have been highlighted as vaccine candidates towards parasitic flukes. In this study, we have thoroughly examined the urea-induced unfolding of a mu-class Fasciola gigantica GST1 (FgGST1) using spectroscopic techniques and molecular dynamic simulations. FgGST1 is a highly cooperative molecule, because during urea-induced equilibrium unfolding, a concurrent unfolding of the protein without stabilization of any folded intermediate was observed. The protein was stabilized with conformational free energy of about ~12.36 kcal/mol. The protein loses its activity with increasing urea concentration, as the GSH molecule is not able to bind to the protein. We also studied the fluorescence quenching of Trp residues and the obtained K SV data that provided additional information on the unfolding of FgGST1. Molecular dynamic trajectories simulated in different urea concentrations and temperatures indicated that urea destabilizes FgGST1 structure by weakening hydrophobic interactions and the hydrogen bond network. We observed a precise correlation between the in vitro and in silico studies.
Keyphrases
- high glucose
- diabetic rats
- molecular dynamics
- protein protein
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- structural basis
- drug induced
- molecular docking
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- toxoplasma gondii
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