C.P.M. van Mierlo
Wageningen University and Research Centre
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Featured researches published by C.P.M. van Mierlo.
FEBS Letters | 1991
Nigel J. Darby; C.P.M. van Mierlo; Thomas E. Creighton
An analogue of the BPTI folding intermediate that contains only the disulphide bond between Cys‐5 and Cys‐55 has been prepared by mutation or the other four Cys residues to Ser. On the basis of its circular dichroism and 1H‐nuclear magnetic resonance spectra and its electrophoretic mobility, this intermediate is shown to be at least partially folded at low temperatures. This probably accounts for several of the unique properties of this intermediate observed during folding.
Journal of Molecular Biology | 1992
Nigel J. Darby; C.P.M. van Mierlo; G. H. E. Scott; David Neuhaus; Thomas E. Creighton
The most productive folding pathway of reduced bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (BPTI) proceeds through the disulphide intermediates (30-51), (30-51, 5-14), and (30-51, 5-38); these are important kinetic intermediates in folding, even though the latter pair contain non-native disulphide bonds. Analogues of these intermediates have been prepared by protein engineering methods and their conformational properties examined by circular dichroism and 1H-nuclear magnetic resonance. The (30-51), (30-51, 5-14) and (30-51, 5-38) analogues exhibit comparable degrees of stable structure, which cannot include those portions of the polypeptide chain involving Cys5, Cys14 and Cys38. These properties are consistent with the roles of (30-51, 5-14) and (30-51, 5-38) in the folding pathway of BPTI, which demand that they exhibit a considerable degree of conformational flexibility in part of the molecule.
Nature Communications | 2012
Y.J.M. Bollen; Adrie H. Westphal; Simon Lindhoud; W.J.H. van Berkel; C.P.M. van Mierlo
Numerous proteins require cofactors to be active. Computer simulations suggest that cooperative interaction networks achieve optimal cofactor binding. There is a need for the experimental identification of the residues crucial for stabilizing these networks and thus for cofactor binding. Here we investigate the electron transporter flavodoxin, which contains flavin mononucleotide as non-covalently bound cofactor. We show that after binding flavin mononucleotide with nanomolar affinity, the protein relaxes extremely slowly (time constant ~5 days) to an energetically more favourable state with picomolar-binding affinity. Rare small-scale openings of this state are revealed through H/D exchange of N(3)H of flavin. We find that H/D exchange can pinpoint amino acids that cause tight cofactor binding. These hitherto unknown residues are dispersed throughout the structure, and many are located distantly from the flavin and seem irrelevant to flavodoxins function. Quantification of the thermodynamics of ligand binding is important for understanding, engineering, designing and evolving ligand-binding proteins.
Journal of Biomolecular NMR | 1996
Sybren S. Wijmenga; C.P.M. van Mierlo; E. Steensma
SummaryRecently, strategies for double sensitivity enhancement in heteronuclear three-dimensional NMR experiments were introduced (Krishnamurthy, V.V. (1995) J. Magn. Reson., B106, 170–177; Sattler et al. (1995) J. Biomol. NMR, 6, 11–22; Sattler et al. (1995) J. Magn. Reson., B108, 235–242). Since a sensitivity enhancement of a factor 21/2 can be achieved for each indirect dimension, nD spectra can theoretically be enhanced up to a factor of 2((n-1)/2). We propose and analyze a doubly enhanced three-dimensional TOCSY-HSQC sequence. The application of the doubly enhanced three-dimensional {15N, 1H} TOCSY-HSQC sequence is shown for uniformly 13C-/15N- and 15N-labeled samples of the relatively large Azotobacter vinelandii flavodoxin II (179 amino acids). The main factors that contribute to the final signal-to-noise enhancement have been systematically investigated. The sensitivity enhancement obtained for the doubly enhanced TOCSY-HSQC pulse sequence as compared to the standard (unenhanced) version is close to the theoretically expected factor of two.
FEBS Letters | 2009
Nina V. Visser; Adrie H. Westphal; S.M. Nabuurs; A. van Hoek; C.P.M. van Mierlo; Antonie J. W. G. Visser; Jaap Broos; H. van Amerongen
The apoflavodoxin protein from Azotobacter vinelandii harboring three tryptophan (Trp) residues, was biosynthetically labeled with 5‐fluorotryptophan (5‐FTrp). 5‐FTrp has the advantage that chemical differences in its microenvironment can be sensitively visualized via 19F NMR. Moreover, it shows simpler fluorescence decay kinetics. The occurrence of FRET was earlier observed via the fluorescence anisotropy decay of WT apoflavodoxin and the anisotropy decay parameters are in excellent agreement with distances between and relative orientations of all Trp residues. The anisotropy decay in 5‐FTrp apoflavodoxin demonstrates that the distances and orientations are identical for this protein. This work demonstrates the added value of replacing Trp by 5‐FTrp to study structural features of proteins via 19F NMR and fluorescence spectroscopy.
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2010
J.H. Ippel; S. Koutsopoulos; S.M. Nabuurs; W.J.H. van Berkel; J. van der Oost; C.P.M. van Mierlo
Insight into the hyperthermostable endo-beta-1,3-glucanase pfLamA from Pyrococcus furiosus is obtained by using NMR spectroscopy. pfLamA functions optimally at 104 degrees C and recently the X-ray structure of pfLamA has been obtained at 20 degrees C, a temperature at which the enzyme is inactive. In this study, near-complete (>99%) NMR assignments are presented of chemical shifts of pfLamA in presence and absence of calcium at 62 degrees C, a temperature at which the enzyme is biologically active. The protein contains calcium and the effects of calcium on the protein are assessed. Calcium binding results in relatively small chemical shift changes in a region distant from the active site of pfLamA and thus causes only minor conformational modifications. Removal of calcium does not significantly alter the denaturation temperature of pfLamA, implying that calcium does not stabilize the enzyme against global unfolding. The data obtained form the basis for elucidation of the molecular origins involved in conformational stability and biological activity of hyperthermophilic endo-beta-1,3-glucanases at extreme temperatures.
Biomacromolecules | 2003
Luben N. Arnaudov; R.J. (Renko) de Vries; J.H. Ippel; C.P.M. van Mierlo
Journal of Molecular Biology | 1998
E. Steensma; C.P.M. van Mierlo
Protein Science | 1998
C.P.M. van Mierlo; W.M.A.M. van Dongen; F. Vergeldt; W.J.H. van Berkel; E. Steensma
Biochemistry | 2004
Y.J.M. Bollen; I.E. Sanchez; C.P.M. van Mierlo