학술논문

Secondary Structure of Antifreeze Proteins from Overwintering Larvae of the BeetleDendroides canadensis
Document Type
Article
Source
Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics; December 1998, Vol. 360 Issue: 1 p25-32, 8p
Subject
Language
ISSN
00039861; 10960384
Abstract
Antifreeze proteins from overwintering larvae of the beetleDendroides canadensisare among the most active antifreeze proteins known. TheDendroidesAFPs (DAFPs) consist of 6 or 7, 12- or 13-mer repeat units with a consensus sequence of -C-T-X3-S-X5-X6-C-X8-X9-A-X11-T-X13-. Nearly all of the Cys residues are in internal disulfide bridges between positions 1 and 7 within the repeats. The study presented here identified the secondary structure of the DAFPs using infrared and circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopies. The eight disulfide bridges impose significant constraints on potential secondary structural features (i.e., a number of three-residue γ-turns) which may lead to unusual infrared and CD spectra that require special interpretation. At 25°C the DAFPs contain ∼46% β-sheet, 39% turn, 2% helix, and 13% random structure. In the presence of ice there is a slight increase in helix and β-sheet structures and a decrease in both turn and especially random structures. This change in the presence of ice may reflect a certain amount of flexibility in the DAFP structure. These structural changes may permit an improved lattice match between the DAFPs and ice, a requisite for the noncolligative freezing-point-depressing activity of the DAFPs.