首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
G D Henry  J H Weiner  B D Sykes 《Biochemistry》1987,26(12):3626-3634
Hydrogen-exchange rates have been measured for individual assigned amide protons in M13 coat protein, a 50-residue integral membrane protein, using a 13C nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) equilibrium isotope shift technique. The locations of the more rapidly exchanging amides have been determined. In D2O solutions, a peptide carbonyl resonance undergoes a small upfield isotope shift (0.08-0.09 ppm) from its position in H2O solutions; in 1:1 H2O/D2O mixtures, the carbonyl line shape is determined by the exchange rate at the adjacent nitrogen atom. M13 coat protein was labeled biosynthetically with 13C at the peptide carbonyls of alanine, glycine, phenylalanine, proline, and lysine, and the exchange rates of 12 assigned amide protons in the hydrophilic regions were measured as a function of pH by using the isotope shift method. This equilibrium technique is sensitive to the more rapidly exchanging protons which are difficult to measure by classical exchange-out experiments. In proteins, structural factors, notably H bonding, can decrease the exchange rate of an amide proton by many orders of magnitude from that observed in the freely exposed amides of model peptides such as poly(DL-alanine). With corrections for sequence-related inductive effects [Molday, R. S., Englander, S. W., & Kallen, R. G. (1972) Biochemistry 11, 150-158], the retardation of amide exchange in sodium dodecyl sulfate solubilized coat protein has been calculated with respect to poly(DL-alanine). The most rapidly exchanging protons, which are retarded very little or not at all, are shown to occur at the N- and C-termini of the molecule.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
The 1H, 13C, and 15N high field nuclear magnetic resonance spectra of the cyclic peptide viomycin have been fully assigned using homo- and heteronuclear double resonance experiments and pH effects. In addition it is shown how the two- and three-bond H-D isotope effects upon carbonyl resonances may assist in their assignment. The resistance to exchange with solvent water of the amide proton involved in the transannular hydrogen bond is observed directly in the 1H spectra, via the isotope effect on a carbonyl resonance in the 13C spectra, and via the one-bond 1H couppling in the 15N spectra.  相似文献   

3.
Two multi-dimensional heteronuclear NMR experiments are described for assigning the resonances in uniformly 15N- and 13C-labeled proteins. In one experiment (HCNH-TOCSY), the amide nitrogen and proton are correlated to the side-chain protons and carbons of the same and preceding residue. In a second triple resonance experiment (HC(CO)NH-TOCSY), the amide nitrogen and proton of one residue is correlated exclusively with the side-chain proton and carbon resonances of the preceding residue by transferring magnetization through the intervening carbonyl. The utility of these two experiments for making sequential resonance assignments in proteins is illustrated for [U-15N,13C]FKBP (107 residues) complexed to the immunosuppressant, ascomycin.  相似文献   

4.
Deuterium isotope effects on carbonyl 13C magnetic shielding were measured for the backbone carbonyl groups in BPTI (basic pancreatic trypsin inhibitor), and interpreted as a measure of hydrogen bond energies. The effects originate from peptide amide proton deuterium substitution and were observed on carbonyl carbons separated by two or three covalent bonds from the amide H/D. Two-bond isotope effects depend on the energy of the hydrogen bond donated by NH/D. Calibration of the effect with model compound data leads to hydrogen bond enthalpies less than 4.7 kcal/mol. Isotope effects over three bonds from the amide H/D to the carbonyl carbon of the same amino acid residue are observed for seven carbonyl resonances in BPTI. The three-bond isotope effects are highly related to the various backbone conformations. The largest effects are observed for residues with an approximate syn- periplanar conformation of the H-N-C alpha-C = O atoms, as realized for many residues in the BPTI antiparallel beta-sheet. The residues that show measurable three-bond effects have unusually short distances between H and O. The size of this effect decreases rapidly with increased O..H distance in the open five-membered ring. This observation suggests appreciable interactions in these rings.  相似文献   

5.
Bacteriorhodopsin (bR), the light-driven proton pump protein from Halobacterium halobium, was biosynthetically labeled with [4-13C]Asp. The incorporation yield was 48%. The magic angle sample spinning (MASS) 13C nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectrum of this sample revealed six different peaks superimposed on a broad band of naturally abundant peptide-bond 13C. Two of the six carbonyl signals can be attributed to internal-protonated Asp carboxyl groups, one of which might be Asp115. An additional resonance at 110 ppm can be associated with the C-11 carbon of Trp, indicating an unusual biosynthetic pathway of this amino acid in Halobacterium halobium. Similar measurements performed on papain-treated purple membrane which lacks the C-terminal tail display two new intense signals at 178 and 178.9 ppm. If the same spectrum is taken without cross-polarization, these signals do not decrease or disappear. On the basis of their intensities and their chemical shifts, one can assign in addition to the C-terminal Asp four Asp residues facing the cytoplasmic phase. In native bR, at least two of these form a salt-bridge-like bond which also might include the C-terminal tail. These experiments not only provide data about the chemical environment of the Asp residues within the hydrophobic core of bacteriorhodopsin but also yield information about the interactions between surface components.  相似文献   

6.
Nakazawa Y  Asakura T 《FEBS letters》2002,529(2-3):188-192
The structure and structural transition of the glycine residue adjacent to the N-terminal alanine residue of the poly(L-alanine), (Ala)(12-13), region in Samia cynthia ricini silk fibroin was studied using (13)C nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR). Most of the glycine carbonyl peaks in the (13)C solution NMR spectrum of [1-(13)C]glycine-silk fibroin could be assigned to the primary structure from the comparison of the (13)C chemical shifts of seven glycine-containing tripeptides. The slow exchange between helix and coil forms in the NMR time scale was observed with increasing temperature exclusively for the underlined glycine residue in the Gly-Gly-(Ala)(12-13) sequence during fast helix-coil transition of the (Ala)(12-13) region.  相似文献   

7.
G D Henry  J H Weiner  B D Sykes 《Biochemistry》1987,26(12):3619-3626
The major coat protein of the filamentous bacteriophage M13 is a 50-residue amphiphilic polypeptide which is inserted, as an integral membrane-spanning protein, in the inner membrane of the Escherichia coli host during infection. 13C was incorporated biosynthetically into a total of 23 of the peptide carbonyls using labeled amino acids (alanine, glycine, lysine, phenylalanine, and proline). The structure and dynamics of carbonyl-labeled M13 coat protein were monitored by 13C nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. Assignment of many resonances was achieved by using protease digestion, pH titration, or labeling of the peptide bond with both 13C and 15N. The carbonyl region of the natural-abundance 13C NMR spectrum of M13 coat protein in sodium dodecyl sulfate solution shows approximately eight backbone carbonyl resonances with line widths much narrower than the rest. Three of these more mobile residues correspond to assigned peaks (glycine-3, lysine-48, and alanine-49) in the individual amino acid spectra, and another almost certainly arises from glutamic acid-2. A ninth residue, alanine-1, also gives rise to a very narrow carbonyl resonance if the pH is well above or below the pKa of the terminal amino group. These data suggest that only about four residues at either end of the protein experience large-amplitude spatial fluctuations; the rest of the molecule is essentially rigid on the time scale of the overall rotational tumbling of the protein-detergent complex. The relative exposure of different regions of detergent-bound protein was monitored by limited digestion with proteinase K.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
Uchida K  Markley JL  Kainosho M 《Biochemistry》2005,44(35):11811-11820
A novel method for monitoring proton-deuteron (H/D) exchange at backbone amides is based on the observation of H/D isotope effects on the (13)C NMR signals from peptide carbonyls. The line shape of the carbonyl (13)C(i) signal is influenced by differential H/D occupancy at the two adjacent amides: the H(N)(i)(+1) (beta site) and the H(N)(i) (gamma site). At a carbon frequency of 75.4 MHz, the H --> D isotope shifts on the (13)C signal are about 5-7 Hz for exchange at the beta site and 2 Hz or less for exchange at the gamma site. Because the effects at the two sites are additive, the time dependence of the line shape of a particular carbonyl resonance can report not only the exchange rates at the individual sites but also the level of dual exchange. Therefore, the data can be analyzed to determine the rate (k(c)) and degree of correlated exchange (X(betagamma)) at the two sites. We have applied this approach to the investigation of the pH dependence of hydrogen exchange at several adjacent residues in Streptomyces subtilisin inhibitor (SSI). Two selectively labeled SSI proteins were produced: one with selective (13)C' labeling at all valyl residues and one with selective (13)C' labeling at all leucyl residues. This permitted the direct observation by one-dimensional (13)C NMR of selected carbonyl signals from residues with slowly exchanging amides at the i and i + 1 positions. The residues investigated were located in an alpha helix and in a five-stranded antiparallel beta sheet. Samples of the two labeled proteins were prepared at various pH values, and (13)C NMR spectra were collected at 50 degrees C prior to and at various times after transferring the sample from H(2)O to (2)H(2)O. Most of the slowly exchanging amides studied were intramolecular hydrogen-bond donors. In agreement with prior studies, the results indicated that the exchange rates of the amide hydrogens in proteins are governed not only by hydrogen bonding but also by other factors. For example, the amide hydrogen of Thr34 exchanges rapidly even though it is an intramolecular hydrogen-bond donor. Over nearly the whole pH range studied, the apparent rates of uncorrelated exchange (k(beta) and k(gamma)) were proportional to [OH(-)] and the apparent rates of correlated exchange at two adjacent sites (k(c)) were roughly proportional to [OH(-)](2). This enabled us to extract the pH-independent exchange rates (k(beta) degrees , k(gamma) degrees , and k(c) degrees ). In all cases in which correlated exchange could be measured, the observed sigmoidal pH dependence of X(betagamma) could be replicated roughly from the derived pH-independent rates.  相似文献   

9.
Summary Modern multidimensional double- and triple-resonance NMR methods have been applied to assign the backbone and side-chain 13C resonances for both equilibrium conformers of the paramagnetic form of rat liver microsomal cytochrome b 5. The assignment of backbone 13C resonances was used to confirm previous 1H and 15N resonance assignments [Guiles, R.D. et al. (1993) Biochemistry, 32, 8329–8340]. On the basis of short- and medium-range NOEs and backbone 13C chemical shifts, the solution secondary structure of rat cytochrome b 5 has been determined. The striking similarity of backbone 13C resonances for both equilibrium forms strongly suggests that the secondary structures of the two isomers are virtually identical. It has been found that the 13C chemical shifts of both backbone and side-chain atoms are relatively insensitive to paramagnetic effects. The reliability of such methods in anisotropic paramagnetic systems, where large pseudocontact shifts can be observed, is evaluated through calculations of the magnitude of such shifts.Abbreviations DANTE delays alternating with nutation for tailored excitation - DEAE diethylaminoethyl - DQF-COSY 2D double-quantum-filtered correlation spectroscopy - EDTA ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid - HCCH-TOCSY 3D proton-correlated carbon TOCSY experiment - HMQC 2D heteronuclear multiple-quantum correlation spectroscopy - HNCA 3D triple-resonance experiment correlating amide protons, amide nitrogens and alpha carbons - HNCO 3D triple-resonance experiment correlating amide protons, amide nitrogens and carbonyl carbons - HNCOCA 3D triple-resonance experiment correlating amide protons, amide nitrogens and alpha carbons via carbonyl carbons - HOHAHA 2D homonuclear Hartmann-Hahn spectroscopy - HOHAHA-HMQC 3D HOHAHA relayed HMQC - HSQC 2D heteronuclear single-quantum correlation spectroscopy - IPTG isopropyl thiogalactoside - NOESY 2D nuclear Overhauser enhancement spectroscopy - NOESY-HSQC 3D NOESY relayed HSQC - TOCSY 2D total correlation spectroscopy - TPPI time-proportional phase incrementation - TSP trimethyl silyl propionate  相似文献   

10.
E Tüchsen  C Woodward 《Biochemistry》1987,26(25):8073-8078
Hydrogen-deuterium exchange is measured for the buried primary amide groups of Asn-43 and Asn-44 in bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor. Amide protons trans and cis to the amide carbonyl oxygen (HE and HZ, respectively) exchange at indistinguishable rates. Uncorrelated exchange of HE and HZ is established for both residues by following the nuclear Overhauser enhancement from HE to HZ during the deuterium exchange. The exchange of Asn-43 and Asn-44 side-chain protons differs qualitatively from exchange of primary amide groups in fully solvated model compounds, for which HE generally exchanges faster than HZ. The equal rates for the buried primary amide HE and HZ in BPTI are not a consequence of coupled exchange. The data indicate rapid rotation around the CO-NH2 bond for both Asn-43 and Asn-44 and suggest considerable lability of intramolecular hydrogen bonds. The side chain of Asn-43 has all of its polar atoms integrated into the very stable hydrogen-bonded structure of the protein. Asn-44 is hydrogen-bonded to side chains and to a buried water molecule. Solvent isotope exchange is several orders of magnitude more restricted by protein secondary and tertiary structure than the CO-NH2 rotation, indicating that N delta H2 groups flip many times before hydrogen isotope exchange occurs.  相似文献   

11.
Vinarov DA  Miziorko HM 《Biochemistry》2000,39(12):3360-3368
Binding of [1,2-(13)C]acetyl-CoA to wild-type 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-coenzyme A (HMG-CoA) synthase is characterized by large upfield shifts for C1 (184 ppm, Deltadelta = 20 ppm) and C2 (26 ppm, Deltadelta = 7 ppm) resonances that are attributable to formation of the covalent [1,2 -(13)C]acetyl-S-enzyme reaction intermediate. NMR spectra of [1, 2-(13)C]acetyl-S-enzyme prepared in H(2)(16)O versus H(2)(18)O indicate a 0.055 ppm upfield shift of the C1 resonance in the presence of the heavier isotope. The magnitude of this (18)O-induced (13)C shift suggests that the 184 ppm resonance is attributable to a reaction intermediate in which C1 exhibits substantial carbonyl character. No significant shift of the C2 resonance occurs. These observations suggest that, in the absence of second substrate (acetoacetyl-CoA), enzymatic addition of H(2)(18)O to the C1 carbonyl of acetyl-S-enzyme occurs to transiently produce a tetrahedral species. This tetrahedral adduct exchanges oxygen upon backward collapse to re-form the sp(2)-hybridized thioester carbonyl. In contrast with HMG-CoA synthase, C378G Zoogloea ramigera beta-ketothiolase, which also forms a (13)C NMR-observable covalent acetyl-enzyme species, exhibits no (18)O-induced shift. Formation of the [(13)C]acetyl-S-enzyme reaction intermediate of HMG-CoA synthase in D(2)O versus H(2)O is characterized by a time-dependent isotope-induced upfield shift of the C1 resonance (maximal shift = 0. 185 ppm) in the presence of the heavier isotope. A more modest upfield shift (0.080 ppm) is observed for C378G Z. ramigera beta-ketothiolase in similar experiments. The slow kinetics for the development of the deuterium-induced (13)C shift in the HMG-CoA synthase experiments suggest a specific interaction (hydrogen bond) with a slowly exchangeable proton (deuteron) of a side chain/backbone of an amino acid residue at the active site.  相似文献   

12.
IIIGlc is an 18.1-kDa signal-transducing phosphocarrier protein of the phosphoenolpyruvate:glycose phosphotransferase system (PTS) of Escherichia coli. Virtually complete (98%) backbone 1H, 15N, and 13C nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) signal assignments were determined by using a battery of triple-resonance three-dimensional (3D) NMR pulse sequences. In addition, nearly complete (1H, 95%; 13C, 85%) side-chain 1H and 13C signal assignments were obtained from an analysis of 3D 13C HCCH-COSY and HCCH-TOCSY spectra. These experiments rely almost exclusively upon one- and two-bond J couplings to transfer magnetization and to correlate proton and heteronuclear NMR signals. Hence, essentially complete signal assignments of this 168-residue protein were made without any assumptions regarding secondary structure and without the aid of a crystal structure, which is not yet available. Moreover, only three samples, one uniformly 15N-enriched, one uniformly 15N/13C-enriched, and one containing a few types of amino acids labeled with 15N and/or 13C, were needed to make the assignments. The backbone assignments together with the 3D 15N NOESY-HMQC and 13C NOESY-HMQC data have provided extensive information about the secondary structure of this protein [Pelton, J.G., Torchia, D.A., Meadow, N.D., Wong, C.-Y., & Roseman, S (1991) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 88, 3479-3488]. The nearly complete set of backbone and side-chain atom assignments reported herein provide a basis for studies of the three-dimensional structure and dynamics of IIIGlc as well as its interactions with a variety of membrane and cytoplasmic proteins.  相似文献   

13.
The metabolism of [2-13C]-ethanol by alcohol dehydrogenase purified from Drosophila melanogaster has been observed by proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (NMR). The reverse-DEPT pulse sequence, with composite pulse 13C decoupling to simplify and increase the signal-to-noise of spectra, has been used to eliminate the strong water signal while still observing the proton signals of metabolites of interest. Using these techniques the rates of synthesis of acetaldehyde, its diol and acetate from [2-13C] ethanol by alcohol dehydrogenase were measured simultaneously.  相似文献   

14.
G D Henry  B D Sykes 《Biochemistry》1992,31(23):5284-5297
The major coat protein of the filamentous coliphage M13 is a 50-residue integral membrane protein. Detergent-solubilized M13 coat protein is a promising candidate for structure determination by nuclear magnetic resonance methods as the protein can be prepared in large quantities and the protein-containing micelle is reasonably small. Under the conditions of our experiments, SDS-bound coat protein exists as a dimer with an apparent molecular weight of 27,000. Broad lines and poor resolution in the 1H spectrum have led us to adopt an 15N-directed approach, in which the coat protein was labeled both uniformly with 15N and selectively with [alpha-15N]alanine, -glycine, -valine, -leucine, -isoleucine, phenylalanine, -lysine, -tyrosine, and -methionine. Nitrogen resonances were assigned as far as possible using carboxypeptidase digestion, double-labeling, and an independent knowledge of the amide proton exchange rates determined from neighboring assigned 13C-labeled carbonyl carbons. 1H/15N heteronuclear multiple quantum coherence (HMQC) spectroscopy of both uniform and site-selectively-labeled proteins subsequently correlated amide nitrogen with amide proton chemical shifts, and the assignments were completed sequentially from homonuclear NOESY and HMQC-NOESY spectra. The most slowly exchanging amide protons were shown to occur in a continuous stretch extending from methionine-28 to phenylalanine-42. This sequence includes most of the resonances of the hydrophobic core, although it is shifted toward the C-terminal end of the protein. Strong NH to NH (i,i+1) nuclear Overhauser enhancements are a feature of the coat protein, which appears to be largely helical. Between 20 and 25 residues give rise to 2 juxtaposed resonances which can be seen clearly in the HMQC spectrum of uniform 15N-labeled coat protein. These residues are concentrated in a region extending from the beginning of the membrane-spanning sequence through to the disordered region near the C-terminus. We propose that dodecyl sulfate-bound M13 coat protein consists of two independent domains, an N-terminal helix which is in a state of moderately fast dynamic flux and a long, stable, C-terminal membrane-spanning helix, which undergoes extensive interactions with a second monomer. Amide 1H chemical shifts are consistent with this picture; in addition, a marked periodicity is observed at the C-terminal end of the molecule.  相似文献   

15.
Proton nuclear magnetic resonance (1H NMR) assignments for the murine epidermal growth factor (mEGF) in aqueous solution were determined by using two-dimensional NMR at pH 3.1 and 28 degrees C. The assignments are complete for all backbone hydrogen atoms, with the exception of the N-terminal amino group, and for 46 of the 53 side chains. Among the additional seven amino acid residues, three have complete assignments for all but one side-chain proton, and between two and four protons are missing for the remaining four residues. The sequential assignments by nuclear Overhauser effect spectroscopy are consistent with the chemically determined amino acid sequence. The NMR data show that the conformations of both the Tyr3-Pro4 and Cys6-Pro7 peptide bonds are trans in the predominant solution structure. Proton-deuterium exchange rate constants were also measured for 13 slowly exchanging amide protons. The information presented here has been used elsewhere to determine the three-dimensional structure of mEGF in aqueous solution.  相似文献   

16.
Determination of precise and accurate protein structures by NMR generally requires weeks or even months to acquire and interpret all the necessary NMR data. However, even medium-accuracy fold information can often provide key clues about protein evolution and biochemical function(s). In this article we describe a largely automatic strategy for rapid determination of medium-accuracy protein backbone structures. Our strategy derives from ideas originally introduced by other groups for determining medium-accuracy NMR structures of large proteins using deuterated, (13)C-, (15)N-enriched protein samples with selective protonation of side-chain methyl groups ((13)CH(3)). Data collection includes acquiring NMR spectra for automatically determining assignments of backbone and side-chain (15)N, H(N) resonances, and side-chain (13)CH(3) methyl resonances. These assignments are determined automatically by the program AutoAssign using backbone triple resonance NMR data, together with Spin System Type Assignment Constraints (STACs) derived from side-chain triple-resonance experiments. The program AutoStructure then derives conformational constraints using these chemical shifts, amide (1)H/(2)H exchange, nuclear Overhauser effect spectroscopy (NOESY), and residual dipolar coupling data. The total time required for collecting such NMR data can potentially be as short as a few days. Here we demonstrate an integrated set of NMR software which can process these NMR spectra, carry out resonance assignments, interpret NOESY data, and generate medium-accuracy structures within a few days. The feasibility of this combined data collection and analysis strategy starting from raw NMR time domain data was illustrated by automatic analysis of a medium accuracy structure of the Z domain of Staphylococcal protein A.  相似文献   

17.
13C nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and circular dichroism (CD) have been used for studies on the conformation of alamethicin. The 13C NMR spectrum is assigned with the aid of signals of synthetic partial sequences and selective proton decoupling. The solvent and temperature-dependence of the 13C NMR spectra, T1 measurements and the use of lanthanide-shift reagents allow the differentiation between the amino acids belonging to a rigid alpha-helical portion of the alamethicin sequence and those belonging to a more flexible part. The 13C NMR results are in agreement with results obtained from extended solvent and temperature-dependent CD studies which indicate a highly stabilized nonpolar and intrachenar alpha-helical part. The concentration-dependence of the CD spectrum of alamethicin in a nematic phase revealed aggregation phenomena which might simulate those observed in natural and synthetic membranes. After dissolving alamethicin in aqueous alcohol there is a time-dependence of the ellipticity of the Cotton effects showing a sort of memory effect on the mode of dissolution. Four different conformations can be characterized by CD spectra depending on the solvent and concentration. A model illustrating the dynamic conformations and aggregation phenomena within a membrane is proposed.  相似文献   

18.
M Kainosho  H Nagao  T Tsuji 《Biochemistry》1987,26(4):1068-1075
The carbonyl carbon NMR signals of the Phe residues in Streptomyces subtilisin inhibitor (SSI) were selectively observed for [F]SSI, in which all phenylalanines were uniformly labeled with [1-13C]Phe. The three enhanced resonances in the spectrum of [F]SSI were unambiguously assigned to the specific sites in the amino acid sequence by means of 15N,13C double-labeling techniques. Namely, the resonances at 174.9 and 172.6 ppm (in D2O, pH 7.3, 50 degrees C) showed the satellite peaks due to 13C-15N spin coupling in the spectra of [F,GS]SSI and [F,A]SSI, in which Ser/Gly and Ala residues were labeled with [15N]Gly/Ser and [15N]Ala, respectively, together with [1-13C]Phe. The carbonyl groups of Phe-97 and Phe-111 are involved in peptide bonds with the amino nitrogens of Ser-98 and Ala-112, respectively. These results clearly indicate that the signals at 174.5 and 172.6 ppm are due to Phe-97 and Phe-111, respectively. The signal at the lowest field (177.1 ppm) was thus assigned to the carboxyl carbon of the C-terminal Phe-113. The lifetimes of the amide hydrogens of the three Phe residues and their C-terminal-side neighbors (Ser-98 and Ala-112) were investigated by using the effect of deuterium-hydrogen exchange of amide on the line shapes (DEALS) for the Phe carbonyl carbon resonances. In this method, the NMR spectra of [F]SSI dissolved in 50% D2O (pH 7.3) were measured at various temperatures, and the line shape changes caused by deuteriation isotope shifts were analyzed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
In the pyrimidine biosynthetic pathway, N-carbamyl-L-aspartate (CA-asp) is converted to L-dihydroorotate (DHO) by dihydroorotase (DHOase). The mechanism of this important reaction was probed using primary and secondary 15N and 13C isotope effects on the ring opening of DHO using isotope ratio mass spectrometry (IRMS). The reaction was performed at three different temperatures (25, 37, and 45 degrees C for hamster DHOase; 37, 50, and 60 degrees C for Bacillus caldolyticus), and the product CA-asp was purified for analysis. The primary and secondary kinetic isotope effects for the ring opening of the DHO were determined from analysis of the N and C of the carbamyl group after hydrolysis. In addition, the beta-carboxyl of the residual aspartate was liberated enzymatically by transamination to oxaloacetate with aspartate aminotransferase and then decarboxylation with oxaloacetate decarboxylase. The 13C/12C ratio from the released CO2 was determined by IRMS, yielding a second primary isotope effect. The primary and secondary isotope effects for the reaction catalyzed by DHOase showed little variation between enzymes or temperatures, the primary 13C and 15N isotope effects being approximately 1% on average, while the secondary 13C isotope effect is negligible or very slightly normal (>1.0000). These data indicate that the chemistry is at least partially rate-limiting while the secondary isotope effects suggest that the transition state may have lost some bending and torsional modes leading to a slight lessening of bond stiffness at the carbonyl carbon of the amide of CA-asp. The equilibrium isotope effects for DHO --> CA-asp have also been measured (secondary 13K(eq) = 1.0028 +/- 0.0002, primary 13K(eq) = 1.0053 +/- 0.0003, primary 15K(eq) = 1.0027 +/- 0.0003). Using these equilibrium isotope effects, the kinetic isotope effects for the physiological reaction (CA-asp --> DHO) have been calculated. These values indicate that the carbon of the amide group is more stiffly bonded in DHO while the slightly lesser, but still normal, values of the primary kinetic isotope effect show that the chemistry remains at least partially rate-limiting for the physiological reaction. It appears that the ring opening and closing is the slow step of the reaction.  相似文献   

20.
A (13)C and (31)P nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) study has been carried out on beta-casein adsorbed at the interface of a tetradecane/water emulsion. (13)C NMR spectra show signals from the carbonyl, carboxyl, aromatic, and C alpha carbons in beta-casein, well resolved from solvent resonances. Only a small fraction of all carbon atoms in beta-casein contribute to detectable signals; intensity measurements show that the observable spectrum is derived from about 30 to 40 amino acid residues.(31)P NMR spectra show signals from the five phosphoserines on the hydrophilic N-terminal part of the protein. Analysis of T(1) relaxation times of these nuclei, using the model free approach for the spectral density function and the line shape of the alpha-carbon region, indicates that a large part of the protein is in a random coil conformation with restricted motion and a relatively long internal correlation time. The NMR results show that the conformation and dynamics of the N-terminal part of beta-casein are not strongly altered at the oil/water interface, as compared to beta-casein in micelle-like aggregates in aqueous solution.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号