The oxidative refolding of ribonuclease A has been investigated
in several experimental conditions using a variety of redox
systems. All these studies agree that the formation of
disulfide bonds during the process occurs through a nonrandom
mechanism with a preferential coupling of certain cysteine
residues. We have previously demonstrated that in the presence
of glutathione the refolding process occurs through the
reiteration of two sequential reactions: a mixed disulfide
with glutathione is produced first which evolves to form
an intramolecular S-S bond. In the same experimental conditions,
protein disulfide isomerase (PDI) was shown to catalyze
formation and reduction of mixed disulfides with glutathione
as well as formation of intramolecular S-S bonds.
This paper reports the structural characterization of the
one-disulfide intermediate population during the oxidative
refolding of Ribonuclease A under the presence of PDI and
glutathione with the aim of defining the role of the enzyme
at the early stages of the reaction. The one-disulfide
intermediate population occurring at the early stages of
both the uncatalyzed and the PDI-catalyzed refolding was
purified and structurally characterized by proteolytic
digestion followed by MALDI-MS and LC/ESIMS analyses. In
the uncatalyzed refolding, a total of 12 disulfide bonds
out of the 28 theoretical possible cysteine couplings was
observed, confirming a nonrandom distribution of native
and nonnative disulfide bonds. Under the presence of PDI,
only two additional nonnative disulfides were detected.
Semiquantitative LC/ESIMS analysis of the distribution
of the S-S bridged peptides showed that the most abundant
species were equally populated in both the uncatalyzed
and the catalyzed process.
This paper shows the first structural characterization of
the one-disulfide intermediate population formed transiently
during the refolding of ribonuclease A in quasi-physiological
conditions that mimic those present in the ER lumen. At
the early stages of the process, three of the four native
disulfides are detected, whereas the Cys26–Cys84
pairing is absent. Most of the nonnative disulfide bonds
identified are formed by nearest-neighboring cysteines.
The presence of PDI does not significantly alter the distribution
of S-S bonds, suggesting that the ensemble of single-disulfide
species is formed under thermodynamic control.