Bioscience, Biotechnology, and Biochemistry
Online ISSN : 1347-6947
Print ISSN : 0916-8451
Food & Nutrition Science Regular Papers
Thermostabilization of Ovalbumin by an Alkaline Treatment: Examination for the Possible Implications of an Altered Serpin Loop Structure
Hiroko YAMAMOTONobuyuki TAKAHASHIMasayuki YAMASAKIYasuhiro ARIIMasaaki HIROSE
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2003 Volume 67 Issue 4 Pages 830-837

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Abstract

  Ovalbumin, a member of the serpin superfamily, is transformed via an intermediate state into a non-cleaved, thermostabilized form (S-ovalbumin) during either the storage of unfertilized eggs or development of fertilized eggs; essentially the same thermostabilization also occurs upon in vitro incubation of isolated ovalbumin under alkaline conditions. To investigate the implications of a partial insertion of the α-helical serpin loop into β-sheet A that has been proposed as a conformational mechanism for S-ovalbumin production, we examined the thermostabilization process of ovalbumin with different loop structures. When the thermostabilization processes were compared for the intact, P1-P1′-cleaved and P1-P1′/P8-P7-cleaved forms of egg white ovalbumin, both the rates for the conversion from the native to intermediate and from the intermediate to S-ovalbumin were almost indistinguishable among the three protein forms. Furthermore, the fully loop-inserted form of recombinant ovalbumin mutant R339T that had been thermostabilized by P1-P1′ cleavage with Tm values from 72 to 88°C was further thermostabilized by an alkaline treatment, yielding a final product (loop inserted S-ovalbumin) with a Tm value of 93°C. No significant difference was found between native ovalbumin and S-ovalbumin in respect of the rate of proteolytic cleavage of the loop by elastase and subtilisin. These data strongly suggest that S-ovalbumin is produced by a mechanism other than that of the partial loop insertion model.

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© 2003 by Japan Society for Bioscience, Biotechnology, and Agrochemistry
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