REVIEW: What Ultrastable Globular Proteins Teach Us about Protein
Stabilization
R. Jaenicke
Institut für Biophysik und Physikalische Biochemie,
Universität Regensburg, Universitätsstraße 31, D-93040
Regensburg, Germany; fax: +49 (0) 941-943-2813; E-mail:
jaenicke@biologie.uni-regensburg.de
Received June 28, 1997
Proteins, due to their delicate balance of stabilizing and destabilizing
interactions, are only marginally stable if physiological conditions
are considered as the standard state. Enhanced intrinsic stability of
"ultrastable" proteins, e.g., from extremophiles, requires
only minute local structural changes. Thus, general strategies of
stabilization are not available for temperature, pH, salt, or pressure
adaptation. Mechanisms of enhanced thermal stability involve improved
packing or docking of structural elements (domains, subunits), as well
as specific local interactions, e.g., networks of ion pairs. Relating
the structure and stability of eye lens crystallins (which do not
undergo any turnover during the life time of an organism), point
mutations, nicking and swapping of domains, grafting of linker peptides
between domains, and denaturation-renaturation allowed the cumulative
nature of protein stability and its relation to the hierarchy of
protein structure and folding to be established. In this review, recent
results for crystallins and enzymes from hyperthermophiles will be
discussed as models to illustrate mechanisms of protein stabilization.
KEY WORDS: association, chaperons, crystallins, domains,
extremophiles, eye lens proteins, folding, fragments, glycolytic
enzymes, linker peptide, oligomeric proteins, self-assembly,
stabilization, thermophilia