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Thermal Cycling Aids Folding of a Recombinant Human β-Casein with Four Extra N-Terminal Amino Acid Residues

Abstract

Due to the limited secondary structure, it is believed that the caseins of milk, particularly the beta-caseins (beta-CN), may be in a mostly random-coil conformation or in various structures that result from random association of hydrophobic residues. However, the self-association of the human proteins with increasing temperature (T) and in the presence of Ca2+ is reproducible, implying that they normally fold into fixed tertiary structures. A nonphosphorylated recombinant human beta-CN with four extra amino acids at the N-terminus (GSHM-) was prepared and studied by laser light scattering, analytical ultracentrifugation, fluorescence spectroscopy, turbidity, and circular dichroism. In 3.3 M urea or at 4 degrees C, the protein was monomeric, as expected. Increasing T both without and with the addition of Ca2+ ions caused self-association as it does for the nonphosphorylated native beta-CN but with a somewhat different interaction pattern. However, returning the protein to its monomeric state by reequilibration at 4 degrees C followed again by increasing T caused a shift in the pattern. Such thermal cycling eventually caused the protein to equilibrate to a particular conformation where no more change could be observed. The resulting interaction pattern was similar to that of the native protein but differed particularly in that there was more extensive self-association for the recombinant mutant. The equilibration to a stable conformation was more rapid in the presence of Ca2+ ions. This suggests that the native protein normally folds into a particular conformation which may be aided by Ca2+ in the mammary gland. Further study of a recombinant form with the native amino acid sequence is needed.

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