A study of Pb2+ induced unfolding and aggregation of arginine kinase from Euphausia superba: kinetics and computational simulation integrating study

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dc.contributor.authorS J Yin-
dc.contributor.authorJinhyuk Lee-
dc.contributor.authorGyu Tae Lim-
dc.contributor.authorZ Chen-
dc.contributor.authorG Y Qian-
dc.contributor.authorY X Si-
dc.contributor.authorY D Park-
dc.date.accessioned2022-10-20T16:32:38Z-
dc.date.available2022-10-20T16:32:38Z-
dc.date.issued2022-
dc.identifier.issn0739-1102-
dc.identifier.urihttps://oak.kribb.re.kr/handle/201005/30469-
dc.description.abstractArginine kinase is a crucial phosphagen kinase in invertebrates, which is associated to the environmental stress response, plays a key role in cellular energy metabolism. In this study, we investigated the Pb2+-induced inhibition and aggregation of Euphausia superba arginine kinase (ESAK) and found that significantly inactivated ESAK in a dose-dependent manner (IC50?=?0.058?±?0.002?mM). Spectrofluorimetry results showed that Pb2+ induced tertiary structural changes via the internal polarity increased and the non-polarity decreased in ESAK and directly induced ESAK aggregation. The ESAK aggregation process induced by Pb2+ occurred with multi-phase kinetics. The addition of osmolytes did not show protective effect on Pb2+-induced inactivation of ESAK. The computational molecular dynamics (MD) simulation showed that three Pb2+ interrupt the entrance of the active site of ESAK and it could be the reason on the loss of activity of ESAK. Several important residues of ESAK were detected that were importantly contributed the conformation and catalytic function of ESAK. Our study showed that Pb2+-induced misfolding of ESAK and the complete loss of activity irreversibly, which cannot be recovered by osmolytes.-
dc.publisherT&F (Taylor & Francis)-
dc.titleA study of Pb2+ induced unfolding and aggregation of arginine kinase from Euphausia superba: kinetics and computational simulation integrating study-
dc.title.alternativeA study of Pb2+ induced unfolding and aggregation of arginine kinase from Euphausia superba: kinetics and computational simulation integrating study-
dc.typeArticle-
dc.citation.titleJournal of Biomolecular Structure & Dynamics-
dc.citation.number18-
dc.citation.endPage8215-
dc.citation.startPage8206-
dc.citation.volume40-
dc.contributor.affiliatedAuthorJinhyuk Lee-
dc.contributor.affiliatedAuthorGyu Tae Lim-
dc.contributor.alternativeNameYin-
dc.contributor.alternativeName이진혁-
dc.contributor.alternativeName임규태-
dc.contributor.alternativeNameChen-
dc.contributor.alternativeNameQian-
dc.contributor.alternativeNameSi-
dc.contributor.alternativeName박용두-
dc.identifier.bibliographicCitationJournal of Biomolecular Structure & Dynamics, vol. 40, no. 18, pp. 8206-8215-
dc.identifier.doi10.1080/07391102.2021.1908168-
dc.subject.keywordEuphausia superba-
dc.subject.keywordArginine kinase-
dc.subject.keywordPb2þ-
dc.subject.keywordInhibition-
dc.subject.keywordMolecular dynamics simulation-
dc.subject.localEuphausia superba-
dc.subject.localArginine kinase-
dc.subject.localarginine kinase-
dc.subject.localArginine kinase (AK)-
dc.subject.localInhibition-
dc.subject.localinhibition-
dc.subject.localMolecular Dynamics (MD) simulations-
dc.subject.localMolecular dynamics (MD) simulation-
dc.subject.localMolecular dynamics simulation-
dc.subject.localMolecular dynamics simulations-
dc.description.journalClassY-
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Synthetic Biology and Bioengineering Research Institute > Genome Editing Research Center > 1. Journal Articles
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