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1.
The prion protein (PrP) is a metalloprotein with an unstructured region covering residues 60–91 that bind two to six Cu(II) ions cooperatively. Cu can bind to PrP regions C-terminally to the octarepeat region involving residues His111 and/or His96. In addition to Cu(II), PrP binds Zn(II), Mn(II) and Ni(II) with binding constants several orders of magnitudes lower than those determined for Cu. We used for the first time surface plasmon resonance (SPR) analysis to dissect metal binding to specific sites of PrP domains and to determine binding kinetics in real time. A biosensor assay was established to measure the binding of PrP-derived synthetic peptides and recombinant PrP to nitrilotriacetic acid chelated divalent metal ions. We have identified two separate binding regions for binding of Cu to PrP by SPR, one in the octarepeat region and the second provided by His96 and His111, of which His96 is more essential for Cu coordination. The octarepeat region at the N-terminus of PrP increases the affinity for Cu of the full-length protein by a factor of 2, indicating a cooperative effect. Since none of the synthetic peptides covering the octarepeat region bound to Mn and recombinant PrP lacking this sequence were able to bind Mn, we propose a conformational binding site for Mn involving residues 91–230. A novel low-affinity binding site for Co(II) was discovered between PrP residues 104 and 114, with residue His111 being the key amino acid for coordinating Co(II). His111 is essential for Co(II) binding, whereas His96 is more important than His111 for binding of Cu(II).  相似文献   

2.
The prion protein (PrP) is a Cu2+ binding cell surface glyco-protein. Misfolding of PrP into a beta-sheet rich conformation is associated with transmissible spongiform encephalopathies. Here we use Ni2+ as a diamagnetic probe to further understand Cu2+ binding to PrP. Like Cu2+, Ni2+ preferentially binds to an unstructured region between residues 90 and 126 of PrP, which is a key region for amyloidogenicity and prion propagation. Using both 1H NMR and visible-circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy, we show that two Ni2+ ions bind to His96 and His111 independently of each other. 1H NMR indicates that both Ni2+ binding sites form square-planar diamagnetic complexes. We have previously shown that Cu2+ forms a paramagnetic square-planar complex in this region, suggesting that Ni2+ could be used as a probe for Cu2+ binding. In addition, competition studies show that two Cu2+ ions can displace Ni2+ from these sites. Upon Ni2+ addition 1H NMR changes in chemical shifts indicate the imidazole ring and amide nitrogen atoms to the N terminus of both His96 and His111 act as coordinating ligands. Use of peptide fragments confirm that PrP(92-96) and PrP(107-111) represent the minimal binding motif for the two Ni2+ binding sites. Analysis of Cu2+ loaded visible-CD spectra show that as with Ni2+, PrP(90-115) binds two Cu2+ ions at His96 and His111 independently of each other. Visible CD studies with PrP(23-231Delta51-90), a construct of PrP(23-231) with the octarepeat region deleted to improve solubility, confirm binding of Ni2+ to His96 and His111 in octarepeat deleted PrP(23-231). The structure of the Cu/Ni complexes is discussed in terms of the implications for prion protein function and disease.  相似文献   

3.
The prion protein (PrP) is a cell-surface Cu(2+)-binding glycoprotein that when misfolded is responsible for a number of transmissible spongiform encephalopathies. Full-length PrP-(23-231) and constructs in which the octarepeat region has been removed, or His(95) and His(110) is replaced by alanine residues, have been used to elucidate the order and mode of Cu(2+) coordination to PrP-(23-231). We have built on our understanding of the appearance of visible CD spectra and EPR for various PrP fragments to characterize Cu(2+) coordination to full-length PrP. At physiological pH, Cu(2+) initially binds to full-length PrP in the amyloidogenic region between the octarepeats and the structured domain at His(95) and His(110). Only subsequent Cu(2+) ions bind to single histidine residues within the octarepeat region. Ni(2+) ions are used to further probe metal binding and, like Cu(2+), Ni(2+) will bind individually to His(95) and His(110), involving preceding main chain amides. Competitive chelators are used to determine the affinity of the first mole equivalent of Cu(2+) bound to full-length PrP; this approach places the affinity in the nanomolar range. The affinity and number of Cu(2+) binding sites support the suggestion that PrP could act as a sacrificial quencher of free radicals generated by copper redox cycling.  相似文献   

4.
The prion protein is a membrane attached glycoprotein that is involved in binding of divalent copper ions. In vivo human and chicken PrPs exhibit SOD-like activity associated with octarepeat and hexarepeat regions, respectively, when bind Cu(II) ions. However, the species of Cu(II)-PrP involved in the Cu(II) center which determines the highest SOD-like activity is still unknown. The data presented here clearly show that the single Cu(II) ion bound to PrP octapeptide repeat region of mammalian prion and hexapeptide repeat region of avian prion via 4 His side-chain imidazoles reveals the highest SOD activity.  相似文献   

5.
Nickel(II) complexes of the peptide fragments of human prion protein containing histidyl residues both inside and outside the octarepeat domain have been studied by the combined application of potentiometric, UV-visible and circular dichroism spectroscopic methods. The imidazole-N donor atoms of histidyl residues are the exclusive metal binding sites below pH 7.5, but the formation of stable macrochelates was characteristic only for the peptide HuPrP(76-114) containing four histidyl residues. Yellow colored square planar complexes were obtained above pH 7.5-8 with the cooperative deprotonation of three amide nitrogens in the [Nim,N,N,N] coordination mode. It was found that the peptides can bind as many nickel(II) ions as the number of independent histidyl residues. All data supported that the complex formation processes of nickel(II) are very similar to those of copper(II), but with a significantly reduced stability for nickel(II), which shifts the complex formation reactions into the slightly alkaline pH range. The formation of coordination isomers was characteristic of the mononuclear complexes with a significant preference for the nickel(II) binding at the histidyl sites outside the octarepeat domain. The results obtained for the two-histidine fragments of the protein, HuPrP(91-115), HuPrP(76-114)H85A and HuPrP(84-114)H96A, made it possible to compare the binding ability of the His96 and His111 sites. These data reveal a significant difference in the nickel(II) and copper(II) binding sites of the peptides: His96 was found to predominate almost completely for nickel(II) ions, while the opposite order, but with comparable concentrations, was reported for copper(II).  相似文献   

6.
Metal selective fluorescent peptide probes (dansyl-Cys-X-Gly-His-X-Gly-Glu-NH2, X = Pro or Gly) were developed by synthesizing peptides containing His, Cys, and Glu residues with Pro-Gly sequence to stabilize a turn structure and Gly-Gly sequence to adopt a random coil. The probe containing two Gly-Gly sequences exhibited marked selectivity only for Cu2+ over 13 metal ions including competitive transition and Group I and II metal ions under physiological buffer condition. In contrast, the probe containing double Pro-Gly sequences showed high selectivity for Zn2+. The peptide probe containing one Pro-Gly sequence exhibited selectivity for Zn2+ and Cu2+. CD spectra indicated that the secondary structure of the probes played an important role in the selective metal monitoring and a pre-organized secondary structure is not required for the selective detection of Cu2+ ion, but is required for the detection of Zn2+. We investigated and characterized the binding affinity, binding stoichiometry, reversibility, and pH sensitivity of the peptide probes.  相似文献   

7.
The octarepeat region of the prion protein can bind Cu2+ ions up to full occupancy (one ion per octarepeat) at neutral pH. While crystallographic data show that the HGGG octarepeat subdomain is the basic binding unit, multiple histidine coordination at lower Cu occupancy has been reported by X-ray absorption spectroscopy, EPR, and potentiometric experiments. In this paper we investigate, with first principles Car–Parrinello simulations, the first step for the formation of the Cu low-level binding mode, where four histidine side chains are coordinated to the same Cu2+ ion. This step involves the further binding of a second histidine to an already HGGG domain bonded Cu2+ ion. The influence of the pH on the ability of Cu to bind two histidine side chains was taken into account by simulating different protonation states of the amide N atoms of the two glycines lying nearest to the first histidine. Multiple histidine coordination is also seen to occur when glycine deprotonation occurs and the presence of the extra histidine stabilizes the Cu–peptide complex. Though the stabilization effect slightly decreases with the number of deprotonated glycines (reaching a minimum when both N atoms of the two nearest glycines are available as Cu ligands), the system is still capable of binding the second histidine in a 4N tetrahedral (though slightly distorted) coordination, whose energy is very near to that of the crystallographic square-planar 3N1O coordination. This result suggests that at low metal concentration the reorganization energy associated with Cu(II)/Cu(I) reduction is small also at pH ~ 7, when glycines are deprotonated. Electronic supplementary material  The online version of this article (doi:) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
Giovanni La PennaEmail:
  相似文献   

8.
9.
Shields SB  Franklin SJ 《Biochemistry》2004,43(51):16086-16091
A chimeric Cu-binding peptide has been designed on the basis of a turn substitution of the prion (PrP) octarepeat Cu-binding site into the engrailed homeodomain helix-turn-helix motif (HTH). This system is a model for the investigation of a single PrP Cu-binding site in a defined protein context. The 28-mer Cu-HTH peptide P7 spectroscopically mimics the PrP octarepeat (P7 = TERRRQQLSHGGGWGEAQIKIWFQNKRA). The Cu(II)-binding affinity of P7 was determined by ESI-MS and tryptophan fluorescence titrations to be K(d) = 2.5 +/- 0.7 microM at pH = 7.0. The quenching of fluorescence of the Trp within the binding loop (underlined above) is pH dependent and highly specific for Cu(II). No Trp quenching was observed in the presence of divalent Zn, Mn, Co, Ni, or Ca ions, and ESI-MS titrations confirmed that these divalent ions do not appreciably bind to P7. The EPR spectrum of Cu(II)-P7 shows that the Cu environment is axial and consistent with 6-coordinate N(3)O(H(2)O)(2) or N(4)(H(2)O)(2) coordination (A( parallel) = 172 x10(-)(4) cm(-)(1); g( parallel) = 2.27), very similar to that of the PrP octarepeat itself. Also like PrP, circular dichroism studies show that apo P7 is predominantly disordered in solution, and the structure is slightly enhanced by Cu binding. These data show the Cu-PrP HTH peptide reproduces the Cu-binding behavior of a single PrP octarepeat in a new context.  相似文献   

10.
J P Laussac  B Sarkar 《Biochemistry》1984,23(12):2832-2838
As a basis for understanding the role of albumin in the transport of metal ions, detailed investigations have been carried out to elucidate the structure of Ni(II)- and Cu(II)-binding site of the peptide residue corresponding to the NH2-terminal peptide fragment 1-24 of human serum albumin by 1H and 13C NMR spectroscopy. These studies have been conducted in aqueous medium at different pH values and at different ligand/metal ratios. The results show the following: (i) Diamagnetic Ni(II) complex and paramagnetic Cu(II) complex are in slow exchange NMR time scale. (ii) Titration results of Ni(II)-bound form of peptide 1-24 show the presence of a 1:1 complex in the wide pH range (6.0-11.0), and the same stoichiometry is proposed for Cu(II) as well. (iii) Analysis of the spectra suggests that both Ni(II) and Cu(II) have one specific binding site at the NH2-terminal tripeptide segment (Asp-Ala-His...) involving the Asp alpha-NH2, His N(1) imidazole, two deprotonated peptide nitrogens (Ala NH and His NH), and the Asp COO- group. (iv) Complexation of Ni(II) and Cu(II) causes conformational change near the metal-binding site of the polypeptide chain, but there is no other binding group involved besides those in the first three residues.  相似文献   

11.
We previously reported the IZ-3adH peptide, which formed a triple-stranded coiled-coil after binding Ni(II), Cu(II), or Zn(II). In this paper, we report the peptide, IZ-3aH, having a new metal binding specificity. The IZ-3aH peptide was found to bind Cu(II) and Zn(II) and form a triple-stranded coiled-coil. However, it did not bind Ni(II). Metal ion titrations monitored by circular dichroism revealed that the dissociation constants, K(d) were 9 microm for Zn(II) and 10 microm for Cu(II). The bound Cu(II) ion has a planar tetragonal geometry, where the coordination positions are three nitrogens of the His residues and one H(2)O.  相似文献   

12.
Based on the hypothetical proposal of Sulkowski [E. Sulkowski, FEBS Lett. 307 (2) (1992) 129] for the implication of transition metal ions in the structural changes/oligomerisation of normal cellular prion protein (PrPc) resulting in the pathological isoform (PrPsc), we focused our study on the octarepat domain of this protein which has been supposed to be the metal binding site. We have studied the copper binding to synthetic prion octarepeat peptides (PHGGGWGQ)n (n=1, 3, 6) using metal chelate and size-exclusion modes of chromatographies. This copper binding induces oligomerisation resulting in multiple aggregates. Moreover, heterogeneity of metal bound octarepeat oligomers by ESI-MS has been demonstrated. In addition, anti prion antibodies specific to the octarepeat region were used to discriminate between metal free and copper, nickel and zinc bound hexamer octarepeat peptide. Differential recognition of Cu(II) and Zn(II) bound complexes has been observed which signify differences in exposed epitopes of aggregated peptides.  相似文献   

13.
Electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (ESI-MS) was used to measure the binding of Cu2+ ions to synthetic peptides corresponding to sections of the sequence of the mature prion protein (PrP). ESI-MS demonstrates that Cu2+ is unique among divalent metal ions in binding to PrP and defines the location of the major Cu2+ binding site as the octarepeat region in the N-terminal domain, containing multiple copies of the repeat ProHisGlyGlyGlyTrpGlyGln. The stoichiometries of the complexes measured directly by ESI-MS are pH dependent: a peptide containing four octarepeats chelates two Cu2+ ions at pH 6 but four at pH 7.4. At the higher pH, the binding of multiple Cu2+ ions occurs with a high degree of cooperativity for peptides C-terminally extended to incorporate a fifth histidine. Dissociation constants for each Cu2+ ion binding to the octarepeat peptides, reported here for the first time, are mostly in the low micromolar range; for the addition of the third and fourth Cu2+ ions to the extended peptides at pH 7.4, K(D)'s are <100 nM. N-terminal acetylation of the peptides caused some reduction in the stoichiometry of binding at both pH's. Cu2+ also binds to a peptide corresponding to the extreme N-terminus of PrP that precedes the octarepeats, arguing that this region of the sequence may also make a contribution to the Cu2+ complexation. Although the structure of the four-octarepeat peptide is not affected by pH changes in the absence of Cu2+, as judged by circular dichroism, Cu2+ binding induces a modest change at pH 6 and a major structural perturbation at pH 7.4. It is possible that PrP functions as a Cu2+ transporter by binding Cu2+ ions from the extracellular medium under physiologic conditions and then releasing some or all of this metal upon exposure to acidic pH in endosomes or secondary lysosomes.  相似文献   

14.
《Inorganica chimica acta》2009,362(3):707-229
Aminophosphonates were found to be effective metal ion chelators. Ethylenediamine (EN) itself binds strongly to a series of metal ions forming efficient five-membered chelate ring using two nitrogen donors. Combination of EN with phosphonate function results in the family of low molecular chelating agents. Introduction of a pyridine moiety into EN-phosphonate structure results in the very effective ligands involving a four-nitrogen donor set to coordinate the metal ion. In this work, the potentiometric and spectroscopic data for two analogues 2,2′-(ethylenedi-imino)bis(3-pyridylphosphonic-acid) - L2 and 2,2′-(ethylenedi-imino)bis(2-pyridyl-phosphonic-acid) - L3, comprising EN, two phosphonates and two pyridines with Cu(II), Ni(II) and Zn(II) ions are presented showing very high efficacy of one of the ligands studied.  相似文献   

15.
Among the common features shared by neurodegenerative diseases there is the central role played by specific proteins or peptides which accumulate in neurons as insoluble plaques or tangles, containing abnormal amounts of redox-active metal ions, like copper and iron. In the case of transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSE), the involved protein is known as "prion protein" (PrP(C)) since "prions" (proteinaceous and infectious) are the agents which make TSE transmissible. It is widely accepted that PrP(C), in its wild-type form, can bind up to six Cu(II) ions, four of them in the so-called "octarepeat domain" and the others in the "fifth (non-octarepeat) binding-site". The latter domain contains two His residues, acting as anchoring sites for Cu(II) ions, and other potential binding residues, such as Lys and Met. While it is widely accepted that Lys residues do not take part in complex-formation, the role of methionines is still debated. In order to shed light on this issue, some peptides have been synthesized, either directly mimicking the sequence of the second half of the fifth binding site of human-PrP(C) (apo-form) or analogues where Met residues have been substituted by n-leucine. In addition, a series of short peptides, containing both His and Met residues in different relative positions, have been investigated, for the sake of comparison. Spectroscopic results, including NMR spectra of systems containing Ni(II) as a probe for the paramagnetic Cu(II) ion, agree on the exclusion of any direct interaction between the sulphur atom of Met residues and the Cu(II) ion already bound to His-imidazole side-chains. However, thermodynamic data show that Met-109 somewhat contributes to stability of complex species and this can be attributed to different electronic and steric effects.  相似文献   

16.
We studied the redox behavior of copper-binding sites in prion protein (PrP) to clarify copper’s role in the pathological mechanism underlying prion diseases. We investigated the coordination structures, binding affinities, and redox potentials of copper-binding peptide fragments derived from the N-terminal domain of PrP by density functional theory calculations. We used four models for copper-binding moieties in PrP(60–96): two were derived from the PHGGGWGQ octapeptide repeat region of PrP(60–91), and the others were tripeptide Gly-Thr-His fragments derived from the copper-binding nonoctarepeat site around His96. We found that such PrP-derived copper-binding complexes exhibit conformationally dependent redox behavior; for example, the copper-binding complex derived from the octarepeat region tends to possess high reduction potential for the Cu(II)/Cu(I) couple, exceeding 0 V versus the standard hydrogen electrode, whereas the copper-binding nonoctarepeat model around His96 tends to possess high oxidation potential for the Cu(II)/Cu(III) couple and stabilize the higher-valent Cu(III) state. It is possible that such distinct redox activities of a copper-binding PrP are involved in the mechanism underlying prion diseases.  相似文献   

17.
ZntA from Escherichia coli is a P-type ATPase that confers resistance to Pb(II), Zn(II), and Cd(II) in vivo. We had previously shown that purified ZntA shows ATP hydrolysis activity with the metal ions Pb(II), Zn(II), and Cd(II). In this study, we utilized the acylphosphate formation activity of ZntA to further investigate the substrate specificity of ZntA. The site of phosphorylation was Asp-436, as expected from sequence alignments. We show that in addition to Pb(II), Zn(II), and Cd(II), ZntA is active with Ni(II), Co(II), and Cu(II), but not with Cu(I) and Ag(I). Thus, ZntA is specific for a broad range of divalent soft metal ions. The activities with Ni(II), Co(II), and Cu(II) are extremely low; the activities with these non-physiological substrates are 10-20-fold lower compared with the values obtained with Pb(II), Zn(II), and Cd(II). Similar results were obtained with DeltaN-ZntA, a ZntA derivative lacking the amino-terminal metal binding domain. By characterizing the acylphosphate formation reaction in ZntA in detail, we show that a step prior to enzyme phosphorylation, most likely the metal ion binding step, is the slow step in the reaction mechanism in ZntA. The low activities with Ni(II), Co(II), and Cu(II) are because of a further decrease in the rate of binding of these metal ions. Thus, metal ion selectivity in ZntA and possibly other P1-type ATPases is based on the charge and the ligand preference of particular metal ions but not on their size.  相似文献   

18.
The conformational and binding properties towards Cu(II) and Ni(II) ions of Gly-Gly-His derivatives of poly(l-lysine) have been investigated mainly using circular dichroism (c.d.) spectroscopy. These derivatized polymers can be considered macromolecular analogues of the Cu(II) and Ni(II) binding site of human serum albumin. It has been shown that modification up to 53% of the ε-amino groups of lysine side chains by covalent binding of the tripeptide unit Gly-Gly-His does not induce appreciable alteration of the α-helix forming tendency of the polylysine backbone. The derivatized polymers exhibit strong affinity towards Cu(II) and Ni(II) ions. At neutral pH, complexes are formed in which each tripeptide chelating unit is linked to one metal ion. The spectral characteristics in the visible absorption region are consistent with a square planar geometry of the complexes, with deprotonated peptide groups and one imidazole nitrogen in the coordination sphere of the ion. C.d. measurements in the far u.v. indicate that complex formation in the side chains causes an increase of ordered structure of the peptide backbone at neutral pH. This fact is interpreted in terms of a reduced electrostatic repulsion among side chains due to charge neutralization in the tripeptide units linked to metal ions.  相似文献   

19.
Conjugates of peptide nucleic acids (PNA) and metal binding ligands were prepared using solid-phase synthesis. Stability of duplexes of bis-picolylamine-PNA conjugates and DNA was found to be modulated by equimolar concentrations of bioavailable metal ions: Ni(2+), Zn(2+)>Cu(2+). Sequence specificity of PNA was not compromised in the presence of these metal ions.  相似文献   

20.
The conformational and binding properties towards Cu(II) and Ni(II) ions of Gly-Gly-His derivatives of poly(l-lysine) have been investigated mainly using circular dichroism (c.d.) spectroscopy. These derivatized polymers can be considered macromolecular analogues of the Cu(II) and Ni(II) binding site of human serum albumin. It has been shown that modification up to 53% of the ε-amino groups of lysine side chains by covalent binding of the tripeptide unit Gly-Gly-His does not induce appreciable alteration of the α-helix forming tendency of the polylysine backbone. The derivatized polymers exhibit strong affinity towards Cu(II) and Ni(II) ions. At neutral pH, complexes are formed in which each tripeptide chelating unit is linked to one metal ion. The spectral characteristics in the visible absorption region are consistent with a square planar geometry of the complexes, with deprotonated peptide groups and one imidazole nitrogen in the coordination sphere of the ion. C.d. measurements in the far u.v. indicate that complex formation in the side chains causes an increase of ordered structure of the peptide backbone at neutral pH. This fact is interpreted in terms of a reduced electrostatic repulsion among side chains due to charge neutralization in the tripeptide units linked to metal ions.  相似文献   

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