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1.
2.
The principal lipid binding protein in tears, tear lipocalin (TL), binds acid and the fluorescent fatty acid analogs, DAUDA and 16-AP at one site TL compete for this binding site. A fluorescent competitive binding assay revealed that apo-TL has a high affinity for phospholipids and stearic acid (Ki) of 1.2 microM and 1.3 microM, respectively, and much less affinity for cholesterol (Ki) of 15.9 of the hydrocarbon chain. TL binds most strongly the least soluble lipids permitting these lipids to exceed their maximum solubility in aqueous solution. These data implicate TL in solubilizing and transporting lipids in the tear film. Phenylalanine, tyrosine and cysteine+ were substituted for TRP 17, the only invariant residue throughout the lipocalin superfamily. Cysteine substitution resulted in some loss os secondary structure, relaxation of aromatic side chain rigidity, decreased binding affinity for DAUDA and destabilization of structure. Mutants of TL, W17Y, and W17F showed a higher binding affinity for DAUDA than wild-type TL. Comparison of the results of the tryptophan 17 substitution in lipocalin with those of tryptophan 19 substitution in beta-lactoglobulin revealed important differences in binding characteristics that reflect the functional heterogeneity within the lipocalin family.  相似文献   

3.
Cys-loop receptors are molecular targets of general anesthetics, but the knowledge of anesthetic binding to these proteins remains limited. Here we investigate anesthetic binding to the bacterial Gloeobacter violaceus pentameric ligand-gated ion channel (GLIC), a structural homolog of cys-loop receptors, using an experimental and computational hybrid approach. Tryptophan fluorescence quenching experiments showed halothane and thiopental binding at three tryptophan-associated sites in the extracellular (EC) domain, transmembrane (TM) domain, and EC-TM interface of GLIC. An additional binding site at the EC-TM interface was predicted by docking analysis and validated by quenching experiments on the N200W GLIC mutant. The binding affinities (KD) of 2.3 ± 0.1 mM and 0.10 ± 0.01 mM were derived from the fluorescence quenching data of halothane and thiopental, respectively. Docking these anesthetics to the original GLIC crystal structure and the structures relaxed by molecular dynamics simulations revealed intrasubunit sites for most halothane binding and intersubunit sites for thiopental binding. Tryptophans were within reach of both intra- and intersubunit binding sites. Multiple molecular dynamics simulations on GLIC in the presence of halothane at different sites suggested that anesthetic binding at the EC-TM interface disrupted the critical interactions for channel gating, altered motion of the TM23 linker, and destabilized the open-channel conformation that can lead to inhibition of GLIC channel current. The study has not only provided insights into anesthetic binding in GLIC, but also demonstrated a successful fusion of experiments and computations for understanding anesthetic actions in complex proteins.  相似文献   

4.
Hoffman GR  Nassar N  Cerione RA 《Cell》2000,100(3):345-356
The RhoGDI proteins serve as key multifunctional regulators of Rho family GTP-binding proteins. The 2.6 A X-ray crystallographic structure of the Cdc42/RhoGDI complex reveals two important sites of interaction between GDI and Cdc42. First, the amino-terminal regulatory arm of the GDI binds to the switch I and II domains of Cdc42 leading to the inhibition of both GDP dissociation and GTP hydrolysis. Second, the geranylgeranyl moiety of Cdc42 inserts into a hydrophobic pocket within the immunoglobulin-like domain of the GDI molecule leading to membrane release. The structural data demonstrate how GDIs serve as negative regulators of small GTP-binding proteins and how the isoprenoid moiety is utilized in this critical regulatory interaction.  相似文献   

5.
Rab GTPases require special machinery for protein prenylation, which include Rab escort protein (REP) and Rab geranylgeranyl transferase (RGGT). The current model of Rab geranylgeranylation proposes that REP binds Rab and presents it to RGGT. After geranylgeranylation of Rab C-terminal cysteines, REP delivers the prenylated protein to membranes. The REP-like protein Rab GDP dissociation inhibitor (RabGDI) then recycles the prenylated Rab between the membrane and the cytosol. The recent solution of crystal structures of the Rab prenylation machinery has helped to refine this model and provided further insights. The hydrophobic prenyl binding pocket of RGGT and geranylgeranyl transferase type-I (GGT-I) differs from that of farnesyl transferase (FT). A bulky tryptophan residue in FT restricts the size of the pocket, whereas in RGGT and GGT-I, this position is occupied by smaller residues. A highly conserved phenylalanine in REP, which is absent in RabGDI, is critical for the formation of the REP:RGGT complex. Finally, a geranylgeranyl binding site conserved in REP and RabGDI has been identified within helical domain II. The postprenylation events, including the specific targeting of Rabs to target membranes and the requirement for single versus double geranylgeranylation by different Rabs, remain obscure and should be the subject of future studies.  相似文献   

6.
The structural features of volatile anesthetic binding sites on proteins are being examined with the use of a defined model system consisting of a four-alpha-helix bundle scaffold with a hydrophobic core. Previous work has suggested that introducing a cavity into the hydrophobic core improves anesthetic binding affinity. The more polarizable methionine side chain was substituted for a leucine, in an attempt to enhance the dispersion forces between the ligand and the protein. The resulting bundle variant has an improved affinity (K(d) = 0.20 +/- 0.01 mM) for halothane binding, compared with the leucine-containing bundle (K(d) = 0.69 +/- 0.06 mM). Photoaffinity labeling with (14)C-halothane reveals preferential labeling of the W15 residue in both peptides, supporting the view that fluorescence quenching by bound anesthetic reports both the binding energetics and the location of the ligand in the hydrophobic core. The rates of amide hydrogen exchange were similar for the two bundles, suggesting that differences in binding affinity were not due to changes in protein stability. Binding of halothane to both four-alpha-helix bundle proteins stabilized the native folded conformations. Molecular dynamics simulations of the bundles illustrate the existence of the hydrophobic core, containing both W15 residues. These results suggest that in addition to packing defects, enhanced dispersion forces may be important in providing higher affinity anesthetic binding sites. Alternatively, the effect of the methionine substitution on halothane binding energetics may reflect either improved access to the binding site or allosteric optimization of the dimensions of the binding pocket. Finally, preferential stabilization of folded protein conformations may represent a fundamental mechanism of inhaled anesthetic action.  相似文献   

7.
Firefly luciferase is considered a reasonable model of in vivo anesthetic targets despite being destabilized by anesthetics, as reflected by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC). We examined the interaction between two inhaled anesthetics, ATP, luciferase, and temperature, using amide hydrogen exchange, tryptophan fluorescence, and photolabeling in an attempt to examine this apparent discrepancy. In the absence of ATP/Mg2+, halothane and bromoform cause destabilization, as measured by hydrogen exchange, suggesting nonspecific interactions. In the presence of ATP/Mg2+ and at room temperature, the anesthetics produce considerable stabilization with a negative DeltaH, indicating population of a conformer with a specific anesthetic binding site. Stabilizing interactions are lost, however, at unfolding temperatures. We suggest that preferential binding to aggregated forms of luciferase explain the higher temperature destabilization detected with DSC. Our results demonstrate a cooperative binding equilibrium between native ligands and anesthetics, suggesting that similar interactions could underlie actions at biologically relevant targets.  相似文献   

8.
A detailed structural analysis of interactions between denatured proteins and GroEL is essential for an understanding of its mechanism. Minichaperones constitute an excellent paradigm for obtaining high-resolution structural information about the binding site and conformation of substrates bound to GroEL, and are particularly suitable for NMR studies. Here, we used transferred nuclear Overhauser effects to study the interaction in solution between minichaperone GroEL(193-335) and a synthetic peptide (Rho), corresponding to the N-terminal alpha-helix (residues 11 to 23) of the mitochondrial rhodanese, a protein whose in vitro refolding is mediated by minichaperones. Using a 60 kDa maltose-binding protein (MBP)-GroEL(193-335) fusion protein to increase the sensitivity of the transferred NOEs, we observed characteristic sequential and mid-range transferred nuclear Overhauser effects. The peptide adopts an alpha-helical conformation upon binding to the minichaperone. Thus the binding site of GroEL is compatible with binding of alpha-helices as well as extended beta-strands. To locate the peptide-binding site on GroEL(193-335), we analysed changes in its chemical shifts on adding an excess of Rho peptide. All residues with significant chemical shift differences are localised in helices H8 and H9. Non-specific interactions were not observed. This indicates that the peptide Rho binds specifically to minichaperone GroEL(193-335). The binding region identified by NMR in solution agrees with crystallographic studies with small peptides and with fluorescence quenching studies with denatured proteins.  相似文献   

9.
W C Lam  D H Tsao  A H Maki  K A Maegley  N O Reich 《Biochemistry》1992,31(43):10438-10442
The interactions of an arsenic (III) reagent, (CH3)2AsSCH2CONH2, with two Escherichia coli RI methyltransferase mutants, W183F and C223S, have been studied by phosphorescence, optically detected magnetic resonance, and fluorescence spectroscopy. The phosphorescence spectrum of the W183F mutant containing only one tryptophan at position 225 reveals a single 0,0-band that is red-shifted by 9.8 nm upon binding of As(III). Fluorescence titration of W183F with (CH3)2AsSCH2CONH2 produces a large tryptophan fluorescence quenching. Analysis of the quenching data points to a single high-affinity As(III) binding site that is associated with the fluorescence quenching. Triplet-state kinetic measurements performed on the perturbed tryptophan show large reductions in the lifetimes of the triplet sublevels, especially that of the T chi sublevel. As(III) binding to the enzyme at a site very close to the Trp225 residue induces an external heavy-atom effect, showing that the perturber atom is in van der Waals contact with the indole chromophore. In the case of the C223S mutant, a single tryptophan 0,0-band also is observed in the phosphorescence spectrum, but no change occurs upon addition of the As(III) reagent. Fluorescence titration of C223S with As(III) shows essentially no quenching of tryptophan fluorescence, in contrast with W183F. These results, along with previous triplet-state and biochemical studies on the wild-type enzyme [Tsao, D. H.H., & Maki, A. H. (1991) Biochemistry 30, 4565-4572], show that As(III) binds with high affinity to the Cys223 residue and that the Trp225 side chain is located close enough to that of Cys223 to produce a heavy-atom perturbation when As(III) is bound.  相似文献   

10.
Solt K  Johansson JS  Raines DE 《Biochemistry》2006,45(5):1435-1441
Inhaled anesthetics are thought to alter the conformational states of Cys-loop ligand-gated ion channels (LGICs) by binding within discrete cavities that are lined by portions of four alpha-helical transmembrane domains. Because Cys-loop LGICs are complex molecules that are notoriously difficult to express and purify, scaled-down models have been used to better understand the basic molecular mechanisms of anesthetic action. In this study, stopped-flow fluorescence spectroscopy was used to define the kinetics with which inhaled anesthetics interact with (Aalpha(2)-L1M/L38M)(2), a four-alpha-helix bundle protein that was designed to model anesthetic binding sites on Cys-loop LGICs. Stopped-flow fluorescence traces obtained upon mixing (Aalpha(2)-L1M/L38M)(2) with halothane revealed immediate, fast, and slow components of quenching. The immediate component, which occurred within the mixing time of the spectrofluorimeter, was attributed to direct quenching of tryptophan fluorescence upon halothane binding to (Aalpha(2)-L1M/L38M)(2). This was followed by a biexponential fluorescence decay containing fast and slow components, reflecting anesthetic-induced conformational transitions. Fluorescence traces obtained in studies using sevoflurane, isoflurane, and desflurane, which poorly quench tryptophan fluorescence, did not contain the immediate component. However, these anesthetics did produce the fast and slow components, indicating that they also alter the conformation of (Aalpha(2)-L1M/L38M)(2). Cyclopropane, an anesthetic that acts with unusually low potency on Cys-loop LGICs, acted with low apparent potency on (Aalpha(2)-L1M/L38M)(2). These results suggest that four-alpha-helix bundle proteins may be useful models of in vivo sites of action that allow the use of a wide range of techniques to better understand how anesthetic binding leads to changes in protein structure and function.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Human alkyladenine DNA glycosylase (AAG) locates and excises a wide variety of structurally diverse alkylated and oxidized purine lesions from DNA to initiate the base excision repair pathway. Recognition of a base lesion requires flipping of the damaged nucleotide into a relatively open active site pocket between two conserved tyrosine residues, Y127 and Y159. We have mutated each of these amino acids to tryptophan and measured the kinetic effects on the nucleotide flipping and base excision steps. The Y127W and Y159W mutant proteins have robust glycosylase activity toward DNA containing 1,N(6)-ethenoadenine (εA), within 4-fold of that of the wild-type enzyme, raising the possibility that tryptophan fluorescence could be used to probe the DNA binding and nucleotide flipping steps. Stopped-flow fluorescence was used to compare the time-dependent changes in tryptophan fluorescence and εA fluorescence. For both mutants, the tryptophan fluorescence exhibited two-step binding with essentially identical rate constants as were observed for the εA fluorescence changes. These results provide evidence that AAG forms an initial recognition complex in which the active site pocket is perturbed and the stacking of the damaged base is disrupted. Upon complete nucleotide flipping, there is further quenching of the tryptophan fluorescence with coincident quenching of the εA fluorescence. Although these mutations do not have large effects on the rate constant for excision of εA, there are dramatic effects on the rate constants for nucleotide flipping that result in 40-100-fold decreases in the flipping equilibrium relative to wild-type. Most of this effect is due to an increased rate of unflipping, but surprisingly the Y159W mutation causes a 5-fold increase in the rate constant for flipping. The large effect on the equilibrium for nucleotide flipping explains the greater deleterious effects that these mutations have on the glycosylase activity toward base lesions that are in more stable base pairs.  相似文献   

13.
The cycling of Rac GTPases, alternating between an active GTP- and an inactive GDP-bound state, is controlled by guanine nucleotide exchange factors, GTPase-activating proteins (GAPs), and guanine nucleotide dissociation inhibitors (GDIs). Little is known about how these controlling activities are coordinated. Studies using null mutant mice have demonstrated that Bcr and Abr are two physiologically important GAPs for Rac. Here, we report that in the presence of RhoGDIalpha, Bcr is unable to convert Rac-GTP to Rac-GDP because RhoGDI forms a direct protein complex with Bcr. Interestingly, RhoGDIalpha binds to the GAP domain in Bcr and Abr, a domain that also binds to Rac-GTP and catalyzes conversion of the bound GTP to GDP on Rac. The presence of activated Rac diminished the Bcr/RhoGDIalpha interaction. Moreover, a Bcr mutant that lacks the ability to promote hydrolysis of Rac-GTP bound to its GAP domain did not bind to RhoGDIalpha in cell lysates, indicating that binding of RhoGDIalpha and Rac-GTP to the Bcr GAP domain is mutually exclusive. Our results provide the first identification of a protein that regulates BcrGAP activity.  相似文献   

14.
Rho termination factor is an essential hexameric helicase responsible for terminating 20-50% of all mRNA synthesis in Escherichia coli. We used single-molecule force spectroscopy to investigate Rho-RNA binding interactions at the Rho utilization site of the λtR1 terminator. Our results are consistent with Rho complexes adopting two states: one that binds 57 ± 2 nt of RNA across all six of the Rho primary binding sites, and another that binds 85 ± 2 nt at the six primary sites plus a single secondary site situated at the center of the hexamer. The single-molecule data serve to establish that Rho translocates 5′ → 3′ toward RNA polymerase (RNAP) by a tethered-tracking mechanism, looping out the intervening RNA between the Rho utilization site and RNAP. These findings lead to a general model for Rho binding and translocation and establish a novel experimental approach that should facilitate additional single-molecule studies of RNA-binding proteins.  相似文献   

15.
Cao R  Chen CK  Guo RT  Wang AH  Oldfield E 《Proteins》2008,73(2):431-439
We report the X-ray crystallographic structures of the bisphosphonate N-[methyl(4-phenylbutyl)]-3-aminopropyl-1-hydroxy-1,1-bisphosphonate (BPH-210), a potent analog of pamidronate (Aredia), bound to farnesyl diphosphate synthase (FPPS) from Trypanosoma brucei as well as to geranylgeranyl diphosphate synthase from Saccharomyces cerevisiae. BPH-210 binds to FPPS, together with 3 Mg(2+), with its long, hydrophobic phenylbutyl side-chain being located in the same binding pocket that is occupied by allylic diphosphates and other bisphosphonates. Binding is overwhelmingly entropy driven, as determined by isothermal titration calorimetry. The structure is of interest since it explains the lack of potency of longer chain analogs against FPPS, since these would be expected to have a steric clash with an aromatic ring at the distal end of the binding site. Unlike shorter chain FPPS inhibitors, such as pamidronate, BPH-210 is also found to be a potent inhibitor of human geranylgeranyl diphosphate synthase. In this case, the bisphosphonate binds only to the GGPP product inhibitory site, with only 1 (chain A) or 0 (chain B) Mg(2+), and DeltaS is much smaller and DeltaH is approximately 6 k cal more negative than in the case of FPPS binding. Overall, these results are of general interest since they show that some bisphosphonates can bind to more than one trans-prenyl synthase enzyme which, in some cases, can be expected to enhance their overall activity in vitro and in vivo.  相似文献   

16.
Warwicker J 《Planta》2001,212(3):343-347
Sequence comparison indicates that auxin-binding protein 1 (ABP1) belongs to a family of proteins with the core β-barrel structure of the vicilins. Previous modelling within this family correctly predicted metal-ion binding and oligomeric properties of oxalate oxidase. ABP1 also contains a putative metal-ion-binding cluster of amino acids, adjacent to a tryptophan side chain, leading to a proposed auxin-binding site that incorporates metal-ion interaction with the auxin carboxylate. Modelling implicates W44 (Zea mays ABP1) in auxin binding, rather than W136 or W151. Reduced sequence similarity for the C-terminal region prevents model building. It is proposed that one of these C-terminal tryptophans, along with a neighbouring negatively charged side chain, occupies the binding pocket in the absence of auxin, thereby linking auxin binding to conformational change and C-terminal involvement in signalling. Received: 10 December 1999 / Accepted: 4 August 2000  相似文献   

17.
Protein kinase C (PKC) is an important signal transduction protein whose cysteine-rich regulatory domain C1 has been proposed to interact with general anesthetics in both of its diacylglycerol/phorbol ester-binding subdomains, the tandem repeats C1A and C1B. Previously, we identified an allosteric binding site on one of the two cysteine-rich domains, PKCdelta C1B. To test the hypothesis that there is an additional anesthetic site on the other cysteine-rich subdomain, C1A, we subcloned, expressed in Escherichia coli, purified, and characterized mouse PKCdelta C1A. Octanol and butanol both quenched the intrinsic fluorescence of PKCdelta C1A in a saturable manner, suggesting the presence of a binding site. To locate this site, PKCdelta C1A was photolabeled with three diazirine-containing alkanols, 3-azioctanol, 7-azioctanol, and 3-azibutanol. Mass spectrometry revealed that at low concentrations all three photoincorporated into PKCdelta C1A with a stoichiometry of 1:1 in the labeled fraction, but higher stoichiometries occurred at higher concentrations, particularly with azibutanol. Photocomplexes of PKCdelta C1A with azioctanols were separated from the unlabeled protein by HPLC, reduced, alkylated, digested with trypsin, and sequenced by mass spectrometry. All the azioctanols photolabeled PKCdelta C1A at residue Tyr-29, corresponding to Tyr-187 of the full-length PKCdelta, and at a neighboring residue, Lys-40, suggesting there is an alcohol site in this vicinity. In addition, Glu-2 was photolabeled more efficiently by 3-azibutanol than by the azioctanols, suggesting the existence of a second, smaller site.  相似文献   

18.
Protein kinase C (PKC) is an important signal transduction protein that has been proposed to interact with general anesthetics at its cysteine-rich diacylglycerol/phorbol ester-binding domain C1, a tandem repeat of C1A and C1B subdomains. To test this hypothesis, we expressed, purified, and characterized the high affinity phorbol-binding subdomain, C1B, of mouse protein kinase Cdelta, and studied its interaction with general anesthetic alcohols. When the fluorescent phorbol ester, sapintoxin-D, bound to PKCdelta C1B in buffer at a molar ratio of 1:2, its fluorescence emission maximum, lambda(max), shifted from 437 to 425 nm. The general anesthetic alcohols, butanol and octanol, further shifted lambda(max) of the PKCdelta C1B-bound sapintoxin-D in a concentration-dependent, saturable manner to approximately 415 nm, suggesting that alcohols interact at a discrete allosteric binding site. To identify this site, PKCdelta C1B was photolabeled with three photo-activable diazirine alcohol analogs, 3-azioctanol, 7-azioctanol, and 3-azibutanol. Mass spectrometry showed photoincorporation of all three alcohols in PKCdelta C1B at a stoichiometry of 1:1 in the labeled fraction. The photolabeled PKCdelta C1B was subjected to tryptic digest, the fragments were separated by online chromatography and sequenced by mass spectrometry. Each azialcohol photoincorporated at Tyr-236. Inspection of the known structure of PKCdelta C1B shows that this residue is situated adjacent to the phorbol ester binding pocket, and within approximately 10 A of the bound phorbol ester. The present results provide direct evidence for an allosteric anesthetic site on protein kinase C.  相似文献   

19.
Farnesyl diphosphate synthase (FPPase) catalyzes chain elongation of the C(5) substrate dimethylallyl diphosphate (DMAPP) to the C(15) product farnesyl diphosphate (FPP) by addition of two molecules of isopentenyl diphosphate (IPP). The synthesis of FPP proceeds in two steps, where the C(10) product of the first addition, geranyl diphosphate (GPP), is the substrate for the second addition. The product selectivity of avian FPPase was altered to favor synthesis of GPP by site-directed mutagenesis of residues that form the binding pocket for the hydrocarbon residue of the allylic substrate. Amino acid substitutions that reduced the size of the binding pocket were identified by molecular modeling. FPPase mutants containing seven promising modifications were constructed. Initial screens using DMAPP and GPP as substrates indicated that two of the substitutions, A116W and N144'W, strongly discriminated against binding of GPP to the allylic site. These observations were confirmed by an analysis of the products from reactions with DMAPP in the presence of excess IPP and by comparing the steady-state kinetic constants for the wild-type enzyme and the A116W and N114W mutants.  相似文献   

20.
A high-affinity folate binding protein was isolated and purified from cow's milk by a combination of cation exchange chromatography and methotrexate affinity chromatography. Chromatofocusing studies revealed that the protein possessed isoelectric points in the pH-interval 8–7. Polymers of the protein prevailing at pH values close to the isoelectric points seemed to be more hydrophobic than monomers present at pH 5.0 as evidenced by hydrophobic interaction chromatography and turbidity (absorbance at 340 nm) in aqueous buffer solutions (pH 5–8). Ligand binding seemed to induce a conformation change that decreased the hydrophobicity of the protein. In addition, Ligand binding quenched the tryptophan fluorescence of folate binding protein suggesting that tryptophan is present at the binding site and/or ligand binding induces a conformation change that affects tryptophan environment in the protein. There was a noticeable discordance between the ability of individual folate analogues to compete with folate for binding and the quenching effect.  相似文献   

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