Folding Mechanism of the Triple Helix in Type‐III Collagen and Type‐III pN–Collagen
- 1 May 1980
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in European Journal of Biochemistry
- Vol. 106 (2) , 619-632
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1432-1033.1980.tb04610.x
Abstract
The kinetics of triple‐helix formation in type III pN‐collagen, type III collagen and a quarter fragment of type III collagen was followed by optical rotation and circular dichroism. Kinetic intermediates were detected by trypsin digestion and polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The end products of refolding at 25°C were identical to the native molecules according to their melting profiles, molecular weights and sedimentation behavior. Only at low temperatures (4–15°C) were mismatched structures of lower stability formed. At 25°C helix formation started exclusively at the set of three disulfide bridges which link the three chains at the carboxy‐terminal end. The growth of the triple helix proceeds from this single nucleus at a rather uniform rate in a zipper‐like fashion. This gives rise to zero‐order kinetics over a large fraction of the conversion. Consequently the time of half conversion is proportional to the length of the molecule. From the appearance and disappearance of intermediates the growth of the triple helix could be observed directly. The rate of helix propagation is determined by the rate of cis → trans isomerization of peptide bonds. A model mechanism was developed which quantitatively described the overall kinetics as well as the time course of the intermediates with a single set of parameters: the rate constant of cis → trans isomerization k= 0.015 s−1 and an average number of 30 tripeptide units in uninterrupted stretches of residues with all peptide bonds in trans configuartion.Keywords
This publication has 37 references indexed in Scilit:
- Three Conformationally Distinct Domains in the Amino-Terminal Segment of Type III Procollagen and Its Rapid Triple Helix Coil TransitionEuropean Journal of Biochemistry, 1978
- Physical properties of the amino-terminal precursor-specific portion of type I procollagenBiochemistry, 1977
- Molecular dynamics and structure of the random coil and helical states of the collagen peptide, α1-CB2, as determined by 13C magnetic resonanceBiochemistry, 1975
- ProcollagenPublished by Wiley ,1975
- Analysis of bacteriophage T7 early RNAs and proteins on slab gelsJournal of Molecular Biology, 1973
- Analysis of the helix–coil transition in (Pro‐Pro‐Gly)n by the All‐or‐none modelBiopolymers, 1973
- Evidence for cis peptide bonds in copolypeptides of glycine and prolineBiochemistry, 1972
- Polypeptides of the tail fibres of bacteriophage T4Journal of Molecular Biology, 1971
- Polymers of tripeptides as collagen models: IV. Structure analysis of poly(l-prolyl-glycyl-l-proline)Journal of Molecular Biology, 1969
- The Configurational Changes of Poly-L-proline in SolutionJournal of the American Chemical Society, 1960