3.8 Article

Isolation and spectroscopic characterization of the structural subunits of keyhole limpet hemocyanin

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/S0167-4838(01)00152-2

Keywords

circular dichroism; fluorescence spectroscopy; hemocyanin; molluscan hemocyanin; protein denaturation

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Keyhole limpet hemocyanin is a respiratory glycoprotein of high molecular weight from the gastropod mollusc Megathura crenulata. Two subunits, HLH1 and KLH2, were isolated using ion exchange chromatography and their physical properties are compared with the parent molecule. The various proteins are characterized by fluorescence spectroscopy, combined with fluorescence quenching studies, using acrylamide, cesium chloride and potassium iodide as tryptophan quenchers. The conformational stability of the native aggregate and its isolated structural subunits are also studied by circular dichroism and fluorescence spectroscopy as a function of temperature, as well, as in the presence of guanidinium hydrochloride and urea. The associated subunits in the hemocyanin aggregates increase considerably the melting temperature to 67 degreesC and the free energy of stabilization in water, DeltaG(D)(H2O), towards guanidinium hydrochloride is higher for the decamer as compared to the isolated subunits; this difference can be accounted for by the stabilizing effects of intra-subunit interactions exerted within the oligomer. The copper-dioxygen complex at the active site additionally stabilizes the molecule, and removing of the copper ions increases the tryptophan emission and the quantum yield of the fluorescence. (C) 2001 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.

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