Hydrophobic substitutions at solvent-exposed positions
in two α-helical regions of the bacteriophage P22 Arc
repressor were introduced by combinatorial mutagenesis.
In helix A, hydrophobic residues were tolerated individually
at each of the five positions examined, but multiple substitutions
were poorly tolerated as shown by the finding that mutants
with more than two additional hydrophobic residues were
biologically inactive. Several inactive helix A variants
were purified and found to have reduced thermal stability
relative to wild-type Arc, with a rough correlation between
the number of polar-to-hydrophobic substitutions and the
magnitude of the stability defect. Quite different results
were obtained in helix B, where variants with as many as
five polar-to-hydrophobic substitutions were found to be
biologically active and one variant with three hydrophobic
substitutions had a tm 6 °C higher
than wild-type. By contrast, a helix A mutant with three
similar polar-to-hydrophobic substitutions was 23 °C
less stable than wild-type. Also, one set of three polar-to-hydrophobic
substitutions in helix B was tolerated when introduced
into the wild-type background but not when introduced into
an equally active mutant having a nearly identical structure.
Context effects occur both when comparing different regions
of the same protein and when comparing the same region
in two different homologues.