Abstract
Circular dichroism (CD) was used to study the conformations of bovine nerve root P2 basic protein, its reduced and carboxymethylated derivative (RCM-P2), and its large cyanogen bromide fragment (CN1). Data in the far UV show that both the parent protein and RCM-P2 have conformations dominated by a large amount of .beta. structure. The CN1 peptide appears to exist in a largely unordered conformation. Since CN1 lacks short (20 residue) amino- and carboxy-terminal segments of the P2 protein, the spectral data suggest that these regions are important for determining and/or maintaining folding of the P2 protein in aqueous solutions. The P2 protein had a distinctive CD spectrum in the near UV. The characteristics of molar ellipticities indicate that the spectrum contains significant contributions from tyrosine residues, and that these contributions suggest different environments for the 2 tyrosines in P2 protein. Both environments depend on protein conformation, since CD side chain absorptions are lost when P2 protein is denatured with 5 M urea.