M. Hahn et al., NATIVE-LIKE IN-VIVO FOLDING OF A CIRCULARLY PERMUTED JELLYROLL PROTEIN SHOWN BY CRYSTAL-STRUCTURE ANALYSIS, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United Statesof America, 91(22), 1994, pp. 10417-10421
A jellyroll beta-sandwich protein, the Bacillus beta-glucanase H(A16-M
), is used to probe the role of N-terminal peptide regions in protein
folding in vivo. A gene encoding H(A16-M) is rearranged to place resid
ues 1-58 of the protein behind a signal peptide and residues 59-214. T
he rearranged gene is expressed in Escherichia coli. The resultant cir
cularly permuted protein, cpA16M-59, is secreted into the periplasm, c
orrectly processed, and folded into a stable and active enzyme. Crysta
l structure analysis at 2.0-Angstrom resolution, R = 15.3%, shows cpA1
6M-59 to have a three-dimensional structure nearly identical with that
of the parent beta-glucanase. An analogous experiment based on the wi
ld-type Bacillus macerans beta-glucanase, giving rise to the circularl
y permuted variant cpMAC-57, yields the same results. Folding of these
proteins, therefore, is not a vectorial process depending on the conf
ormation adopted by their native N-terminal oligopeptides after riboso
mal synthesis and translocation through the cytoplasmic membrane.