Pgw. Gettins et al., THIOL ESTER ROLE IN CORRECT FOLDING AND CONFORMATION OF HUMAN ALPHA(2)-MACROGLOBULIN - PROPERTIES OF RECOMBINANT C949S VARIANT, FEBS letters, 339(3), 1994, pp. 276-280
To determine the role of the thiol ester in the folding of human alpha
(2)-macroglobulin (alpha(2)M) in the active conformation, we have char
acterized a recombinant variant of alpha(2)M, C949S, expressed in baby
hamster kidney cells, that lacks the thiol ester-forming cysteine. C9
49S cr,M behaves like methylamine-treated plasma alpha(2)M, with corre
ctly formed inter-subunit disulfide bridges, non-covalent association
of covalent dimers to form tetramers, and exposure of the receptor bin
ding domain, but an inability to inhibit proteinases, and inaccessibil
ity of the bait regions to proteolysis. We concluded that correct fold
ing of monomers or their association to give tetrameric alpha(2)M does
not require a pre-formed thiol ester. Active alpha(2)M may form in vi
vo by a two-step process involving initial folding to give a structure
resembling that of C949S alpha(2)M followed by thiol ester formation
and a conformational change that gives the native active state.