NAD+ facilitates high-yield reactivation of clostridial
glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) after unfolding in urea.
The specificity of this effect has been explored by using
analogues and fragments of NAD+. The adenine
portion, unlike the nicotinamide portion, is important
for reactivation. Alteration in the nicotinamide portion,
in acetylpyridine adenine dinucleotide, has little effect,
whereas loss of the 6-NH2 substitution on the
adenine ring, in 6-deamino NAD, diminishes the effectiveness
of the nucleotide in promoting refolding. Also ADP-ribose,
lacking nicotinamide, promotes reactivation whereas NMN-phosphoribose,
lacking the adenine, does not.
Of the smaller fragments, those containing an adenosine
moiety, and especially those with one or more phosphate
groups, impede the refolding ability of NAD+,
and are able to bind to the folding intermediate though
unable to facilitate refolding.
These results are interpreted in terms of the known 3D structure
for clostridial glutamate dehydrogenase. It is assumed
that the refolding intermediate has a more or less fully
formed NAD+-binding domain but a partially disordered
substrate-binding domain and linking region. Binding of
NAD+ or ADP-ribose appears to impose new structural
constraints that result in completion of the correct folding
of the second domain, allowing association of enzyme molecules
to form the native hexamer.