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1.
Protein engineering was used previously to convert maltose-binding protein (MBP) into a zinc biosensor. Zn(2+) binding by the engineered MBP was thought to require a large conformational change from "open" to "closed", similar to that observed when maltose is bound by the wild-type protein. We show that although this re-designed MBP molecule binds Zn(2+) with high affinity as previously reported, it does not adopt a closed conformation in solution as assessed by small-angle X-ray scattering. High-resolution crystallographic studies of the engineered Zn(2+)-binding MBP molecule demonstrate that Zn(2+) is coordinated by residues on the N-terminal lobe only, and therefore Zn(2+) binding does not require the protein to adopt a fully closed conformation. Additional crystallographic studies indicate that this unexpected Zn(2+) binding site can also coordinate Cu(2+) and Ni(2+) with only subtle changes in the overall conformation of the protein. This work illustrates that the energetic barrier to domain closure, which normally functions to maintain MBP in an open concentration in the absence of ligand, is not easily overcome by protein design. A comparison to the mechanism of maltose-induced domain rearrangement is discussed.  相似文献   

2.
RG13 is an engineered allosteric beta-lactamase (BLA) for which maltose is a positive effector. RG13 is a hybrid protein between TEM1 BLA and maltose-binding protein (MBP). Maltose binding to MBP is known to convert the open form of the protein to the closed form through conformational changes about the hinge region. We have constructed and genetically selected several variants of RG13 modified in the hinge region of the MBP domain and explored their effect on beta-lactam hydrolysis, maltose affinity and maltose-induced switching. Hinge mutations that increased maltose affinity the most (and thus presumably close the apo-MBP domain the most) also abrogated switching the most. We provide evidence for a model of RG13 switching in which there exists a threshold conformation between the open to closed form of the MBP domain that divides states that catalyze beta-lactam hydrolysis with different relative rates of acylation and deacylation.  相似文献   

3.
In the past decade, single-molecule force spectroscopy has provided new insights into the key interactions stabilizing folded proteins. A few recent studies probing the effects of ligand binding on mechanical protein stability have come to quite different conclusions. While some proteins seem to be stabilized considerably by a bound ligand, others appear to be unaffected. Since force acts as a vector in space, it is conceivable that mechanical stabilization by ligand binding is dependent on the direction of force application. In this study, we vary the direction of the force to investigate the effect of ligand binding on the stability of maltose binding protein (MBP). MBP consists of two lobes connected by a hinge region that move from an open to a closed conformation when the ligand maltose binds. Previous mechanical experiments, where load was applied to the N and C termini, have demonstrated that MBP is built up of four building blocks (unfoldons) that sequentially detach from the folded structure. In this study, we design the pulling direction so that force application moves the two MBP lobes apart along the hinge axis. Mechanical unfolding in this geometry proceeds via an intermediate state whose boundaries coincide with previously reported MBP unfoldons. We find that in contrast to N-C-terminal pulling experiments, the mechanical stability of MBP is increased by ligand binding when load is applied to the two lobes and force breaks the protein-ligand interactions directly. Contour length measurements indicate that MBP is forced into an open conformation before unfolding even if ligand is bound. Using mutagenesis experiments, we demonstrate that the mechanical stabilization effect is due to only a few key interactions of the protein with its ligand. This work illustrates how varying the direction of the applied force allows revealing important details about the ligand binding mechanics of a large protein.  相似文献   

4.
The affinity of maltose-binding protein (MBP) for maltose and related carbohydrates was greatly increased by removal of groups in the interface opposite the ligand binding cleft. The wild-type protein has a KD of 1200 nM for maltose; mutation of residues Met-321 and Gln-325, both to alanine, resulted in a KD for maltose of 70 nM; deletion of 4 residues, Glu-172, Asn-173, Lys-175, and Tyr-176, which are part of a poorly ordered loop, results in a KD for maltose of 110 nM. Combining the mutations yields an increased affinity for maltodextrins and a KD of 6 nM for maltotriose. Comparison of ligand binding by the mutants, using surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy, indicates that decreases in the off-rate are responsible for the increased affinity. Small-angle x-ray scattering was used to demonstrate that the mutations do not significantly affect the solution conformation of MBP in either the presence or absence of maltose. The crystal structures of selected mutants showed that the mutations do not cause significant structural changes in either the closed or open conformation of MBP. These studies show that interactions in the interface opposite the ligand binding cleft, which we term the "balancing interface," are responsible for modulating the affinity of MBP for its ligand. Our results are consistent with a model in which the ligand-bound protein alternates between the closed and open conformations, and removal of interactions in the balancing interface decreases the stability of the open conformation, without affecting the closed conformation.  相似文献   

5.
The uptake of nutrients is essential for the survival of bacterial cells. Many specialized systems have evolved, such as the maltose-dependent ABC transport system that transfers oligosaccharides through the cytoplasmic membrane. The maltose/maltodextrin-binding protein (MBP) serves as an initial high-affinity binding component in the periplasm that delivers the bound sugar into the cognate ABC transporter MalFGK(2). We have investigated the domain motions induced by the binding of the ligand maltotriose into the binding cleft using molecular dynamics simulations. We find that MBP is predominantly in the open state without ligand and in the closed state with ligand bound. Oligosaccharide binding induces a closure motion (30.0 degrees rotation), whereas ligand removal leads to domain opening (32.6 degrees rotation) around a well-defined hinge affecting key areas relevant for chemotaxis and transport. Our simulations suggest that a "hook-and-eye" motif is involved in the binding. A salt bridge between Glu-111 and Lys-15 forms that effectively locks the protein-ligand complex in a semiclosed conformation inhibiting any further opening and promoting complete closure. This previously unrecognized feature seems to secure the ligand in the binding site and keeps MBP in the closed conformation and suggests a role in the initial steps of substrate transport.  相似文献   

6.
The protein design rules for engineering allosteric regulation are not well understood. A fundamental understanding of the determinants of ligand binding in an allosteric context could facilitate the design and construction of versatile protein switches and biosensors. Here, we conducted extensive in vitro and in vivo characterization of the effects of 285 unique point mutations at 15 residues in the maltose‐binding pocket of the maltose‐activated β‐lactamase MBP317‐347. MBP317‐347 is an allosteric enzyme formed by the insertion of TEM‐1 β‐lactamase into the E. coli maltose binding protein (MBP). We find that the maltose‐dependent resistance to ampicillin conferred to the cells by the MBP317‐347 switch gene (the switch phenotype) is very robust to mutations, with most mutations slightly improving the switch phenotype. We identified 15 mutations that improved switch performance from twofold to 22‐fold, primarily by decreasing the catalytic activity in the absence of maltose, perhaps by disrupting interactions that cause a small fraction of MBP in solution to exist in a partially closed state in the absence of maltose. Other notable mutations include K15D and K15H that increased maltose affinity 30‐fold and Y155K and Y155R that compromised switching by diminishing the ability of maltose to increase catalytic activity. The data also provided insights into normal MBP physiology, as select mutations at D14, W62, and F156 retained high maltose affinity but abolished the switch's ability to substitute for MBP in the transport of maltose into the cell. The results reveal the complex relationship between ligand binding and allostery in this engineered switch.  相似文献   

7.
Protein binding and function often involves conformational changes. Advanced nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) experiments indicate that these conformational changes can occur in the absence of ligand molecules (or with bound ligands), and that the ligands may “select” protein conformations for binding (or unbinding). In this review, we argue that this conformational selection requires transition times for ligand binding and unbinding that are small compared to the dwell times of proteins in different conformations, which is plausible for small ligand molecules. Such a separation of timescales leads to a decoupling and temporal ordering of binding/unbinding events and conformational changes. We propose that conformational‐selection and induced‐change processes (such as induced fit) are two sides of the same coin, because the temporal ordering is reversed in binding and unbinding direction. Conformational‐selection processes can be characterized by a conformational excitation that occurs prior to a binding or unbinding event, while induced‐change processes exhibit a characteristic conformational relaxation that occurs after a binding or unbinding event. We discuss how the ordering of events can be determined from relaxation rates and effective on‐ and off‐rates determined in mixing experiments, and from the conformational exchange rates measured in advanced NMR or single‐molecule fluorescence resonance energy transfer experiments. For larger ligand molecules such as peptides, conformational changes and binding events can be intricately coupled and exhibit aspects of conformational‐selection and induced‐change processes in both binding and unbinding direction.  相似文献   

8.
The periplasmic maltose-binding protein (MBP) of Escherichia coli is the recognition component of the maltose chemoreceptor and of the active transport system for maltose. It interacts with the Tar chemotactic signal transducer and the integral cytoplasmic-membrane components (the MalF and MalG proteins) of the maltose transport system. Maltose binds in a cleft between the globular N-terminal and C-terminal domains of MBP, which are connected by a moveable hinge. The two domains undergo a large motion relative to one another as the protein moves from the open, unbound state to the closed, ligand-bound state. We generated, by doped-primer mutagenesis, amino acid substitutions that specifically disrupt the chemotactic function of MBP. These substitutions cluster in two well-defined regions that are nearly contiguous on the surface of MBP in its closed conformation. One region is in the N-terminal domain and one is in the C-terminal domain. The distance between the two regions is expected to change substantially as the protein goes from the open to the closed form. These results support a model in which ligand binding brings two recognition sites on MBP into the proper spatial relationship to interact with complementary sites on Tar. Mutations in MBP that appear to cause defects in interaction with MalF and MalG are distributed differently from mutations that primarily affect maltose taxis. We conclude that the regions of MBP that contact Tar and those that contact MalF and MalG are adjacent on the face of the protein opposite the hinge connecting the two domains and that those regions are largely, although perhaps not entirely, distinct.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Human MICAL1 is a member of a recently discovered family of multidomain proteins that couple a FAD‐containing monooxygenase‐like domain to typical protein interaction domains. Growing evidence implicates the NADPH oxidase reaction catalyzed by the flavoprotein domain in generation of hydrogen peroxide as a second messenger in an increasing number of cell types and as a specific modulator of actin filaments stability. Several proteins of the Rab families of small GTPases are emerging as regulators of MICAL activity by binding to its C‐terminal helical domain presumably shifting the equilibrium from the free – auto‐inhibited – conformation to the active one. We here extend the characterization of the MICAL1–Rab8 interaction and show that indeed Rab8, in the active GTP‐bound state, stabilizes the active MICAL1 conformation causing a specific four‐fold increase of kcat of the NADPH oxidase reaction. Kinetic data and small‐angle X‐ray scattering (SAXS) measurements support the formation of a 1:1 complex between full‐length MICAL1 and Rab8 with an apparent dissociation constant of approximately 8 μM. This finding supports the hypothesis that Rab8 is a physiological regulator of MICAL1 activity and shows how the protein region preceding the C‐terminal Rab‐binding domain may mask one of the Rab‐binding sites detected with the isolated C‐terminal fragment. SAXS‐based modeling allowed us to propose the first model of the free full‐length MICAL1, which is consistent with an auto‐inhibited conformation in which the C‐terminal region prevents catalysis by interfering with the conformational changes that are predicted to occur during the catalytic cycle.  相似文献   

11.
MalFGK2 is an ATP‐binding cassette (ABC) transporter that mediates the uptake of maltose/maltodextrins into Escherichia coli. A periplasmic maltose‐binding protein (MBP) delivers maltose to the transmembrane subunits (MalFG) and stimulates the ATPase activity of the cytoplasmic nucleotide‐binding subunits (MalK dimer). This MBP‐stimulated ATPase activity is independent of maltose for purified transporter in detergent micelles. However, when the transporter is reconstituted in membrane bilayers, only the liganded form of MBP efficiently stimulates its activity. To investigate the mechanism of maltose stimulation, electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy was used to study the interactions between the transporter and MBP in nanodiscs and in detergent. We found that full engagement of both lobes of maltose‐bound MBP unto MalFGK2 is facilitated by nucleotides and stabilizes a semi‐open MalK dimer. Maltose‐bound MBP promotes the transition to the semi‐open state of MalK when the transporter is in the membrane, whereas such regulation does not require maltose in detergent. We suggest that stabilization of the semi‐open MalK2 conformation by maltose‐bound MBP is key to the coupling of maltose transport to ATP hydrolysis in vivo, because it facilitates the progression of the MalK dimer from the open to the semi‐open conformation, from which it can proceed to hydrolyze ATP.  相似文献   

12.
RG13 is a 72 kDa engineered allosteric enzyme comprised of a fusion between maltose binding protein (MBP) and TEM1 β‐lactamase (BLA) for which maltose is a positive effector of BLA activity. We have used NMR spectroscopy to acquire [15N, 1H]‐TROSY‐HSQC spectra of RG13 in the presence and absence of maltose. The RG13 chemical shift data was compared to the published chemical shift data of MBP and BLA. The spectra are consistent with the expectation that the individual domain structures of RG13 are substantially conserved from MBP and BLA. Differences in the spectra are consistent with the fusion geometry of MBP and BLA and the maltose‐dependent differences in the kinetics of RG13 enzyme activity. In particular, the spectra provide evidence for a maltose‐dependent conformational change of a key active site glutamate involved in deacylation of the enzyme‐substrate intermediate. Proteins 2010. © 2009 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

13.
The maltose transport complex of Escherichia coli, a member of the ATP-binding cassette superfamily, mediates the high affinity uptake of maltose at the expense of ATP. The membrane-associated transporter consists of two transmembrane subunits, MalF and MalG, and two copies of the cytoplasmic ATP-binding cassette subunit, MalK. Maltose-binding protein (MBP), a soluble periplasmic protein, delivers maltose to the MalFGK(2) transporter and stimulates hydrolysis by the transporter. Site-directed spin labeling electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy is used to monitor binding of MBP to MalFGK(2) and conformational changes in MBP as it interacts with MalFGK(2). Cysteine residues and spin labels have been introduced into the two lobes of MBP so that spin-spin interaction will report on ligand-induced closure of the protein (Hall, J. A., Thorgeirsson, T. E., Liu, J., Shin, Y. K., and Nikaido, H. (1997) J. Biol. Chem. 272, 17610-17614). At least two different modes of interaction between MBP and MalFGK(2) were detected. Binding of MBP to MalFGK(2) in the absence of ATP resulted in a decrease in motion of spin label at position 41 in the C-terminal domain of MBP. In a vanadate-trapped transition state intermediate, all free MBP became tightly bound to MalFGK(2), spin label in both lobes became completely immobilized, and spin-spin interactions were lost, suggesting that MBP was in an open conformation. Binding of non-hydrolyzable MgATP analogs or ATP in the absence of Mg is sufficient to stabilize a complex of open MBP and MalFGK(2). Taken together, these data suggest that closure of the MalK dimer interface coincides with opening of MBP and maltose release to the transporter.  相似文献   

14.
Mamonova T  Yonkunas MJ  Kurnikova MG 《Biochemistry》2008,47(42):11077-11085
The ionotropic glutamate receptors are localized in the pre- and postsynaptic membrane of neurons in the brain. Activation by the principal excitatory neurotransmitter glutamate allows the ligand binding domain to change conformation, communicating opening of the channel for ion conduction. The free energy of the GluR2 S1S2 ligand binding domain (S1S2) closure transition was computed using a combination of thermodynamic integration and umbrella sampling modeling methods. A path that involves lowering the charge on E705 was chosen to clarify the role of this binding site residue. A continuum electrostatics approach in S1S2 is used to show E705, located in the ligand binding cleft, stabilizes the closed conformation of S1S2 via direct interactions with other protein residues, not through the ligand. In the closed conformation, in the absence of a ligand, S1S2 is somewhat more closed than what has been reported in X-ray structures. A semiopen conformation has been identified which is characterized by disruption of a single cross-cleft interaction and differs only slightly in energy from the fully closed S1S2. The fully open S1S2 conformation exhibits a wide energy well and shares structural similarity with the apo S1S2 crystal structure. Hybrid continuum electrostatics/MD calculations along the chosen closure transition pathway reveal solvation energies, and electrostatic interaction energies between two lobes of the protein increase the relative energetic difference between the open and closed conformational states. By analyzing the role of several cross-cleft contacts as well as other binding site residues, we demonstrate how S1S2 interactions facilitate formation of the closed conformation of the GluR2 ligand binding domain.  相似文献   

15.
16.
The aim of this article is to analyze conformational changes by comparing 10 different structures of Pseudomonas aeruginosa phosphomannomutase/phosphoglucomutase (PMM/PGM), a four‐domain enzyme in which both substrate binding and catalysis require substantial movement of the C‐terminal domain. We focus on changes in interdomain and active site crevices using a method called computational solvent mapping rather than superimposing the structures. The method places molecular probes (i.e., small organic molecules containing various functional groups) around the protein to find hot spots. One of the most important hot spots is in the active site, consistent with the ability of the enzyme to bind both glucose and mannose phosphosugar substrates. The protein has eight additional hot spots at domain‐domain interfaces and hinge regions. The locations and nature of six of these hot spots vary between the open, half‐open, and closed conformers of the enzyme, in good agreement with the ligand‐induced conformational changes. In the closed structures the number of probe clusters at the hinge region significantly depends on the position of the phosphorylated oxygen in the substrate (e.g., glucose 1‐phosphate versus glucose 6‐phosphate), but the protein remains almost unchanged in terms of the overall RMSD, indicating that computational solvent mapping is a more sensitive approach to detect changes in binding sites and interdomain crevices. Focusing on multidomain proteins we show that the subresolution conformational differences revealed by the mapping are in fact significant, and present a general statistical method of analysis to determine the significance of rigid body domain movements in X‐ray structures.  相似文献   

17.
Brylinski M  Skolnick J 《Proteins》2008,70(2):363-377
It is well known that ligand binding and release may induce a wide range of structural changes in a receptor protein, varying from small movements of loops or side chains in the binding pocket to large‐scale domain hinge‐bending and shear motions or even partial unfolding that facilitates the capture and release of a ligand. An interesting question is what in general are the conformational changes triggered by ligand binding? The aim of this work is analyze the magnitude of structural changes in a protein resulting from ligand binding to assess if the state of ligand binding needs to be included in template‐based protein structure prediction algorithms. To address this issue, a nonredundant dataset of 521 paired protein structures in the ligand‐free and ligand‐bound form was created and used to estimate the degree of both local and global structure similarity between the apo and holo forms. In most cases, the proteins undergo relatively small conformational rearrangements of their tertiary structure upon ligand binding/release (most root‐mean‐square‐deviations from native, RMSD, are <1 Å). However, a clear difference was observed between single‐ and multiple‐domain proteins. For the latter, RMSD changes greater than 1 Å and sometimes larger were found for almost 1/3 of the cases; these are mainly associated with large‐scale hinge‐bending movements of entire domains. The changes in the mutual orientation of individual domains in multiple‐domain proteins upon ligand binding were investigated using a mechanistic model based on mass‐weighted principal axes as well as interface buried surface calculations. Some preferences toward the anticipated mechanism of protein domain movements are predictable based on the examination of just the ligand‐free structural form. These results have applications to protein structure prediction, particularly in the context of protein domain assembly, if additional information concerning ligand binding is exploited. Proteins 2008. © 2007 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

18.
Metabotropic glutamate receptors (mGluRs) belong to the family 3 of G-protein-coupled receptors. On these proteins, agonist binding on the extracellular domain leads to conformational changes in the 7-transmembrane domains required for G-protein activation. To elucidate the structural features that might be responsible for such an activation mechanism, we have generated models of the amino terminal domain (ATD) of type 4 mGluR (mGlu4R). The fold recognition search allowed the identification of three hits with a low sequence identity, but with high secondary structure conservation: leucine isoleucine valine-binding protein (LIVBP) and leucine-binding protein (LBP) as already known, and acetamide-binding protein (AmiC). These proteins are characterized by a bilobate structure in an open state for LIVBP/LBP and a closed state for AmiC, with ligand binding in the cleft. Models for both open and closed forms of mGlu4R ATD have been generated. ACPT-I (1-aminocyclopentane 1,3,4-tricarboxylic acid), a selective agonist, has been docked in the two models. In the open form, ACPT-I is only bound to lobe I through interactions with Lys74, Arg78, Ser159, and Thr182. In the closed form, ACPT-I is trapped between both lobes with additional binding to Tyr230, Asp312, Ser313, and Lys317 from lobe II. These results support the hypothesis that mGluR agonists bind a closed form of the ATDs, suggesting that such a conformation of the binding domain corresponds to the active conformation.  相似文献   

19.
Maleylacetate reductase plays a crucial role in catabolism of resorcinol by catalyzing the NAD(P)H‐dependent reduction of maleylacetate, at a carbon–carbon double bond, to 3‐oxoadipate. The crystal structure of maleylacetate reductase from Rhizobium sp. strain MTP‐10005, GraC, has been elucidated by the X‐ray diffraction method at 1.5 Å resolution. GraC is a homodimer, and each subunit consists of two domains: an N‐terminal NADH‐binding domain adopting an α/β structure and a C‐terminal functional domain adopting an α‐helical structure. Such structural features show similarity to those of the two existing families of enzymes in dehydroquinate synthase‐like superfamily. However, GraC is distinct in dimer formation and activity expression mechanism from the families of enzymes. Two subunits in GraC have different structures from each other in the present crystal. One subunit has several ligands mimicking NADH and the substrate in the cleft and adopts a closed domain arrangement. In contrast, the other subunit does not contain any ligand causing structural changes and adopts an open domain arrangement. The structure of GraC reveals those of maleylacetate reductase both in the coenzyme, substrate‐binding state and in the ligand‐free state. The comparison of both subunit structures reveals a conformational change of the Tyr326 loop for interaction with His243 on ligand binding. Structures of related enzymes suggest that His243 is likely a catalytic residue of GraC. Mutational analyses of His243 and Tyr326 support the catalytic roles proposed from structural information. The crystal structure of GraC characterizes the maleylacetate reductase family as a third family in the dehydroquinate synthase‐like superfamily. Proteins 2016; 84:1029–1042. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

20.
The ribose-binding protein (RBP) is a sugar-binding bacterial periplasmic protein whose function is associated with a large allosteric conformational change from an open to a closed conformation upon binding to ribose. The crystal structures of RBP in open and closed conformations have been solved. It has been hypothesized that the open and closed conformations exist in a dynamic equilibrium in solution, and that sugar binding shifts the population from open conformations to closed conformations. Here, we study by computer simulations the thermodynamic changes that accompany this conformational change, and model the structural changes that accompany the allosteric transition, using umbrella sampling molecular dynamics and the weighted histogram analysis method. The open state is comprised of a diverse ensemble of conformations; the open ribose-free X-ray crystal conformations being representative of this ensemble. The unligated open form of RBP is stabilized by conformational entropy. The simulations predict detectable populations of closed ribose-free conformations in solution. Additional interdomain hydrogen bonds stabilize this state. The predicted shift in equilibrium from the open to the closed state on binding to ribose is in agreement with experiments. This is driven by the energetic stabilization of the closed conformation due to ribose-protein interactions. We also observe a significant population of a hitherto unobserved ribose-bound partially open state. We believe that this state is the one that has been suggested to play a role in the transfer of ribose to the membrane-bound permease complex.  相似文献   

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