首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到10条相似文献,搜索用时 250 毫秒
1.
Several lines of functional evidence have shown that anion binding to a nonsynergistic site is a prerequisite for the anion-mediated iron release mechanism of transferrins. We report here structural evidence of the location of sulfate anion binding sites of the ovotransferrin N-lobe via the 1.90 A resolution apo crystal structure. The crystals were grown in an ammonium sulfate solution and belonged to space group P6(3)22 with the following unit cell dimensions: a = b = 125.17 A and c = 87.26 A. The structural determination was performed by isomorphous replacement, using Pt and Au derivatives. The structure refinement gave an R-factor of 0.187 in the resolution range of 7.0-1.90 A for the final model. From the electron density map, the existence of four bound SO(4)(2)(-) anions was detected. Three of them that exhibited reasonably low B-factors were all located in the opened interdomain cleft (sites 1-3). In site 1, the bound anion directly interacts with an Fe(3+)-coordinating ligand; SO(4) O1 and SO(4) O3 form hydrogen bonds with His250 NE2. Oxygen atom O3 of the same sulfate anion makes a hydrogen bond with Ser91 OG in a hinge strand. The sulfate anion in site 2 partially occupies the synergistic anion binding sites; SO(4) O2 and SO(4) O3 are hydrogen bonded to Arg121 NE and NH2, respectively, both of which are consensus anchor groups for CO(3)(2)(-) anion in holotransferrins. The former oxygen atom of SO(4)(2)(-) is also hydrogen bonded to Ser122 N, which forms a hydrogen bond with Fe(3+)-coordinating ligand Asp60 OD2 in holotransferrins. Some of the SO(4)(2)(-) oxygen atoms in sites 1 and 2 interact indirectly through H(2)O molecules with functionally important protein groups, such as the other Fe(3+)-coordinating ligands, Tyr92 OH and Tyr191 OH, and a dilysine trigger group, Lys209 NZ. In site 3, SO(4) O1 and SO(4) O4 form hydrogen bonds with Ser192 OG and Tyr191 N, respectively, and SO(4) O2 forms hydrogen bonds with Ser192 N and Ser192 OG. These structural data are consistent with the view that the anion bindings to the interdomain cleft, especially to sites 1 and 2, play crucial roles in the domain opening and synergistic carbonate anion release in the iron release mechanism of the ovotransferrin N-lobe.  相似文献   

2.
The crystal structure of the iron-free (apo) form of the Haemophilus influenzae Fe(3+)-binding protein (hFbp) has been determined to 1.75 A resolution. Information from this structure complements that derived from the holo structure with respect to the delineation of the process of iron binding and release. A 21 degrees rotation separates the two structural domains when the apo form is compared with the holo conformer, indicating that upon release of iron, the protein undergoes a change in conformation by bending about the central beta-sheet hinge. A surprising finding in the apo-hFbp structure was that the ternary binding site anion, observed in the crystals as phosphate, remained bound. In solution, apo-hFbp bound phosphate with an affinity K(d) of 2.3 x 10(-3) M. The presence of this ternary binding site anion appears to arrange the C-terminal iron-binding residues conducive to complementary binding to Fe(3+), while residues in the N-terminal binding domain must undergo induced fit to accommodate the Fe(3+) ligand. These observations suggest a binding process, the first step of which is the binding of a synergistic anion such as phosphate to the C-terminal domain. Next, iron binds to the preordered half-site on the C-terminal domain. Finally, the presence of iron organizes the N-terminal half-site and closes the interdomain hinge. The use of the synergistic anion and this iron binding process results in an extremely high affinity of the Fe(3+)-binding proteins for Fe(3+) (nFbp K'(eff) = 2.4 x 10(18) M(-1)). This high-affinity ligand binding process is unique among the family of bacterial periplasmic binding proteins and has interesting implications in the mechanism of iron removal from the Fe(3+)-binding proteins during FbpABC-mediated iron transport across the cytoplasmic membrane.  相似文献   

3.
Transferrins bind Fe3+ very tightly in a closed interdomain cleft by the coordination of four protein ligands (Asp60, Tyr92, Tyr191, and His250 in ovotransferrin N-lobe) and of a synergistic anion, physiologically bidentate CO32-. Upon Fe3+ uptake, transferrins undergo a large scale conformational transition: the apo structure with an opening of the interdomain cleft is transformed into the closed holo structure, implying initial Fe3+ binding in the open form. To solve the Fe3+-loaded, domain-opened structure, an ovotransferrin N-lobe crystal that had been grown as the apo form was soaked with Fe3+-nitrilotriacetate, and its structure was solved at 2.1 A resolution. The Fe3+-soaked form showed almost exactly the same overall open structure as the iron-free apo form. The electron density map unequivocally proved the presence of an iron atom with the coordination by the two protein ligands of Tyr92-OH and Tyr191-OH. Other Fe3+ coordination sites are occupied by a nitrilotriacetate anion, which is stabilized through the hydrogen bonds with the peptide NH groups of Ser122, Ala123, and Gly124 and a side chain group of Thr117. There is, however, no clear interaction between the nitrilotriacetate anion and the synergistic anion binding site, Arg121.  相似文献   

4.
Structure-function relationships for transferrins are discussed in the light of recent X-ray crystal structure determinations. A common folding pattern into two lobes, each comprising two domains is adopted; this allows the tight, but reversible binding of iron. Uptake and release of iron involve substantial domain movements which open and close the binding clefts. The iron binding sites are similar and the key role of the CO3(2-) anion bound with each Fe3+ can now be understood; structural differences near the iron binding sites suggest reasons for the different binding properties of serum transferrin and lactoferrin. The glycan moieties do not appear to affect the protein structure or metal binding properties; they are not clearly seen in the X-ray analyses but have been modelled. The accommodation of different metals and anions is illustrated by the crystal structures of Cu2+ and oxalate-substituted lactoferrins; Al3+ binding is of particular interest. New results on transferrin-receptor interactions with transferrin, and melanotransferrin and an invertebrate transferrin (both of which have defective C-terminal binding sites), emphasize possible functional differences between the two lobes. The availability of site-specific mutants of both transferrin and lactoferrin now offers the opportunity to probe the structural determinants of iron binding, iron release, and receptor binding.  相似文献   

5.
This is the first protein intermediate obtained in the crystalline state by the simultaneous process of Fe(3+) binding and crystal nucleation and is also the first structure of an intermediate of lactoferrin in the Fe(3+) binding pathway. Lactoferrin is an iron-binding 80-kDa glycoprotein. It binds Fe(3+) very tightly in a closed interdomain cleft in both lobes. The iron-free structure of lactoferrin, on the other hand, adopts an open conformation with domains moving widely apart. These studies imply that initial Fe(3+) binding must be in the open form. The protein intermediate was crystallized by the microdialysis method. The protein solution, with a concentration of 100 mg/ml in 10 mm Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, was loaded in a capillary and dialyzed against the same buffer containing 26% (v/v) ethanol placed in a reservoir. FeCl(3) and CO(3)(2-) in excess molar ratios to that of protein in its solution were added to the reservoir buffer. The crystals appeared after some hours and grew to the optimum size within 36 h. The structure was determined by molecular replacement method and refined to final R- and R-free factors of 0.187 and 0.255, respectively. The present structure showed that the protein molecule adopts an open conformation similar to that of camel apolactoferrin. The electron density map clearly indicated the presence of two iron atoms, one in each lobe with 4-fold coordinations: two by the protein ligands of Tyr-92(433) OH and Tyr-192(526) OH and two other coordination sites occupied by oxygen atoms of bidentate CO(3)(2-) ions leading to a tetrahedral intermediate. The CO(3)(2-) anion is stabilized through hydrogen bonds with the synergistic anion-binding site Arg-121(463) and with Ser-122 Ogamma in the N-lobe and Thr-464 Ogamma in C-lobe. The third oxygen atom of CO(3)(2-) interacts with a water molecule in both lobes.  相似文献   

6.
The structures of the native fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase (Fru-1,6-Pase), from pig kidney cortex, and its fructose 2,6-bisphosphate (Fru-2,6-P2) complexes have been refined to 2.8 A resolution to R-factors of 0.194 and 0.188, respectively. The root-mean-square deviations from the standard geometry are 0.021 A and 0.016 A for the bond length, and 4.4 degrees and 3.8 degrees for the bond angle. Four sites for Fru-2,6-P2 binding per tetramer have been identified by difference Fourier techniques. The Fru-2,6-P2 site has the shape of an oval cave about 10 A deep, and with other dimensions about 18 A by 12 A. The two Fru-2,6-P2 binding caves of the dimer in the crystallographically asymmetric unit sit next to one another and open in opposite directions. These two binding sites mutually exchange their Arg243 side-chains, indicating the potential for communication between the two sites. The beta, D-fructose 2,6-bisphosphate has been built into the density and refined well. The oxygen atoms of the 6-phosphate group of Fru-2,6-P2 interact with Arg243 from the adjacent monomer and the residues of Lys274, Asn212, Tyr264, Tyr215 and Tyr244 in the same monomer. The sugar ring primarily contacts with the backbone atoms from Gly246 to Met248, as well as the side-chain atoms, Asp121, Glu280 and Lys274. The 2-phosphate group interacts with the side-chain atoms of Ser124 and Lys274. A negatively charged pocket near the 2-phosphate group includes Asp118, Asp121 and Glu280, as well as Glu97 and Glu98. The 2-phosphate group showed a disordered binding perhaps because of the disturbance from the negatively charged pocket. In addition, Asn125 and Lys269 are located within a 5 A radius of Fru-2,6-P2. We argue that Fru-2,6-P2 binds to the active site of the enzyme on the basis of the following observations: (1) the structure similarity between Fru-2,6-P2 and the substrate; (2) sequence conservation of the residues directly interacting with Fru-2,6-P2 or located at the negatively charged pocket; (3) a divalent metal site next to the 2-phosphate group of Fru-2,6-P2; and (4) identification of some active site residues in our structure, e.g. tyrosine and Lys274, consistent with the results of the ultraviolet spectra and the chemical modification. The structures are described in detail including interactions of interchain surfaces, and the chemically modifiable residues are discussed on the basis of the refined structures.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
Phosphoserine aminotransferase (PSAT; EC 2.6.1.52), a member of subgroup IV of the aminotransferases, catalyses the conversion of 3-phosphohydroxypyruvate to l-phosphoserine. The crystal structure of PSAT from Escherichia coli has been solved in space group P212121 using MIRAS phases in combination with density modification and was refined to an R-factor of 17.5% (Rfree=20.1 %) at 2.3 A resolution. In addition, the structure of PSAT in complex with alpha-methyl-l-glutamate (AMG) has been refined to an R-factor of 18.5% (Rfree=25.1%) at 2.8 A resolution. Each subunit (361 residues) of the PSAT homodimer is composed of a large pyridoxal-5'-phosphate binding domain (residues 16-268), consisting of a seven-stranded mainly parallel beta-sheet, two additional beta-strands and seven alpha-helices, and a small C-terminal domain, which incorporates a five-stranded beta-sheet and two alpha-helices. A three-dimensional structural comparison to four other vitamin B6-dependent enzymes reveals that three alpha-helices of the large domain, as well as an N-terminal domain (subgroup II) or subdomain (subgroup I) are absent in PSAT. Its only 15 N-terminal residues form a single beta-strand, which participates in the beta-sheet of the C-terminal domain. The cofactor is bound through an aldimine linkage to Lys198 in the active site. In the PSAT-AMG complex Ser9 and Arg335 bind the AMG alpha-carboxylate group while His41, Arg42 and His328 are involved in binding the AMG side-chain. Arg77 binds the AMG side-chain indirectly through a solvent molecule and is expected to position itself during catalysis between the PLP phosphate group and the substrate side-chain. Comparison of the active sites of PSAT and aspartate aminotransferase suggests a similar catalytic mechanism, except for the transaldimination step, since in PSAT the Schiff base is protonated. Correlation of the PSAT crystal structure to a published profile sequence analysis of all subgroup IV members allows active site modelling of nifs and the proposal of a likely molecular reaction mechanism.  相似文献   

8.
The anion-binding properties of lactoferrin (Lf), with Fe3+ or Cu2+ as the associated metal ion, have been investigated by physicochemical and crystallographic techniques. These highlight differences between the two sites and in the anion-binding behavior when different metals are bound. Carbonate, oxalate, and hybrid carbonate-oxalate complexes have been prepared and their characteristic electronic and EPR spectra recorded. Oxalate can displace carbonate from either one or both anion sites of Cu2(CO3)2Lf, depending on the oxalate concentration, but no such displacement occurs for Fe2(CO3)2Lf. Addition of oxalate and the appropriate metal ion to apoLf under carbonate-free conditions gives dioxalate complexes with both Fe3+ and Cu2+, except when traces of EDTA remain associated with the protein, when hybrid complexes M2(CO3)(C2O4)Lf can result. The anion sites in the crystal structures of Fe2(CO3)2Lf, Cu2-(CO3)2Lf, and Cu2(CO3)(C2O4)Lf, refined at 2.2, 2.1, and 2.2 A, respectively, have been compared. In every case, the anion is hydrogen bonded to the N-terminus of helix 5, an associated arginine side chain, and a nearby threonine side chain. The carbonate ion binds in bidentate fashion to the metal, except in the N-lobe site of dicupric lactoferrin, where it is monodentate; the difference arises from slight movement of the metal ion. The hybrid complex shows that the oxalate ion binds preferentially in the C-lobe site, in 1,2-bidentate mode, but with the displacement of several nearby side chains. These observations lead to a generalized model for synergistic anion binding by transferrins.  相似文献   

9.
The amino acid sequence of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase from Rhodospirillum rubrum has been fitted to the electron density maps. The resulting protein model has been refined to a nominal resolution of 1.7 A using the constrained-restrained least-squares refinement program of Sussman and the restrained least-squares refinement program of Hendrickson & Konnert. The crystallographic refinement, based on 76,452 reflections with F greater than sigma (F) in the resolution range 5.5 to 1.7 A resulted in a crystallographic R-factor of 18.0%. The asymmetric unit contains one dimeric ribulose-1,5-biphosphate carboxylase molecule, consisting of 869 amino acid residues and 736 water molecules. The geometry of the refined model is close to ideal, with root-mean-square deviations of 0.018 A in bond lengths and 2.7 degrees in bond angles. Two loop regions, comprising residues 54 to 63 and 324 to 335, and the last ten amino acid residues at the C terminus are disordered in our crystals. The expected trimodal distribution is obtained for the side-chain chi 1-angles with a marked preference for staggered conformation. The hydrogen-bonding pattern in the N-terminal beta-sheet and the parallel sheet in the beta/alpha-barrel is described. A number of hydrogen bonds and salt bridges are involved in domain-domain and subunit-subunit interactions. The subunit-subunit interface in the dimer covers an area of 2800 A2. Considerable deviations from the local 2-fold symmetry are found at both the N terminus (residues 2 to 5) and the C terminus (residues 422 to 457). Furthermore, loop 8 in the beta/alpha-barrel domain has a different conformation in the two subunits. A number of amino acid side-chains have different conformations in the two subunits. Most of these residues are located at the surface of the protein. An analysis of the individual temperature factors indicates a high mobility of the C-terminal region and for some of the loops at the active site. The positions and B-factors for 736 solvent sites have been refined (average B: 45.9 A2). Most of the solvent molecules are bound as clusters to the protein. The active site of the enzyme, especially the environment of the activator Lys191 in the non-activated enzyme is described. Crystallographic refinement at 1.7 A resolution clearly revealed the presence of a cis-proline at the active site. This residue is part of the highly conserved region Lys166-Pro167-Lys168.  相似文献   

10.
The structure of carbon-monoxy (Fe II) myoglobin at 260 K has been solved at a resolution of 1.5 A by X-ray diffraction and a model refined against the X-ray data by restrained least-squares. The CO ligand is disordered and distorted from the linear conformation seen in model compounds. At least two conformations, with Fe--C--O angles of 140 degrees and 120 degrees, are required to model the system. The heme pocket is significantly larger than in deoxy-myoglobin because the distal residues have relaxed around the ligand; the largest displacement occurs for the distal histidine side-chain, which moves more than 1.4 A on ligand binding. The side-chain of Arg45 (CD3) is disordered and apparently exists in two equally populated conformations. One of these does not block the motion of the distal histidine out of the binding pocket, suggesting a mechanism for ligand entry. The heme group is planar (root-mean-square deviation from planarity is 0.08 A) with no doming of the pyrrole groups. The Fe--N epsilon 2 (His93) bond length is 2.2 A and the Fe--C bond length in the CO complex is 1.9 A. The iron is the least-squares plane of the heme, and this leads to the proximal histidine moving by 0.4 A relative to its position in deoxy-myoglobin. This shift correlates with a global structural change, with the proximal part of the molecule translated towards the heme plane.  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