1 research outputs found
Native Mass Spectrometry Analysis of Oligomerization States of Fluorescence Recovery Protein and Orange Carotenoid Protein: Two Proteins Involved in the Cyanobacterial Photoprotection Cycle
The
orange carotenoid protein (OCP) and fluorescence recovery protein
(FRP) are present in many cyanobacteria and regulate an essential
photoprotection cycle in an antagonistic manner as a function of light
intensity. We characterized the oligomerization states of OCP and
FRP by using native mass spectrometry, a technique that has the capability
of studying native proteins under a wide range of protein concentrations
and molecular masses. We found that dimeric FRP is the predominant
state at protein concentrations ranging from 3 to 180 μM and
that higher-order oligomers gradually form at protein concentrations
above this range. The OCP, however, demonstrates significantly different
oligomerization behavior. Monomeric OCP (mOCP) dominates at low protein
concentrations, with an observable population of dimeric OCP (dOCP).
The ratio of dOCP to mOCP, however, increases proportionally with
protein concentration. Higher-order OCP oligomers form at protein
concentrations beyond 10 μM. Additionally, native mass spectrometry
coupled with ion mobility allowed us to measure protein collisional
cross sections and interrogate the unfolding of different FRP and
OCP oligomers. We found that monomeric FRP exhibits a one-stage unfolding
process, which could be correlated with its C-terminal bent crystal
structure. The structural domain compositions of FRP and OCP are compared
and discussed