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1.
The Tn10-encoded Tet repressor contains two tryptophan residues at positions 43 and 75. The typical tryptophan fluorescence is decreased upon binding of tet operator. The Tet repressor gene was engineered to replace either or both of the Trp codons by Phe codons. The resulting single tryptophan mutants are called F43 and F75 and the double mutant F43F75. The mutant proteins were purified to homogeneity. They recognize tet operator DNA only in the absence of the inducer tetracycline, indicating an intact tertiary structure of the engineered proteins. F75 and wild-type bind tet operator with the same association constant. The association constants of F43 and F43F75 with tet operator are about 3 orders of magnitude smaller. This indicates that Trp43 is important for tet operator recognition. Trp43 fluorescence is completely quenched in the complex with tet operator DNA while Trp75 remains unaffected. Binding to nonspecific DNA leads only to a 40% decrease of Trp43 fluorescence. This is interpreted as the contribution of the changed environment while the complete quench reflects a tight sequence-specific contact of tryptophan 43 to tet operator DNA. Trp43 is solvent-exposed, while Trp75 is buried in the hydrophobic interior of the protein. These results are discussed in light of the alpha-helix turn-alpha-helix DNA binding motif deduced from homology to other repressor proteins.  相似文献   

2.
The effects of Trp to Phe exchanges in the Tet repressor on the thermal stability of the proteins and their complexes with operator DNA and inducer have been studied by temperature gradient polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The denaturation temperatures obtained by this method are compared with the results from temperature-dependent fluorescence and binding activities of the proteins. It is established that exchanging the interior Trp75 to Phe reduces the thermal stability of the Tet repressor by 8 degrees C while exchanging the exterior Trp43 to Phe has no effect on the stability of the protein. Binding of the inducer tetracycline increases the thermal stability of wild-type and Trp43 to Phe mutant Tet repressors by 5 degrees C, while the ones with the Trp75 to Phe mutation are stabilized by 10 degrees C. The stabilizing effect of operator binding is 20 degrees C in the Trp75 to Phe mutant and only 9 degrees C in the ones with the Trp43 to Phe exchange. In addition to the denaturation temperatures, the gel mobility shifts observed in temperature gradient gel electrophoresis reveal also information about the intermediates of the denaturation reaction. The free proteins and their complexes with the inducer tetracycline exhibit monophasic transitions upon denaturation. The operator complexes of wild-type and Trp75 to Phe mutant repressors denature in more complex reactions. At low temperature they exhibit a stoichiometry of two repressor dimers per tandem tet operator DNA. Upon elevating the temperature they form complexes with only one repressor dimer per DNA fragment. When the temperature is further increased the double-stranded DNA begins to melt from one end resulting in a complex with partially single-stranded DNA which exists only in a narrow temperature range. Finally, the denatured protein and single-stranded DNA are formed at high temperature. The associated mobility shifts are analyzed by changing the ionic strength and characterizing multiphasic melting of a pure DNA fragment by temperature gradient gel electrophoresis.  相似文献   

3.
The interaction of Tet repressor protein with the inducer tetracycline was studied by fluorescence measurements, equilibrium dialysis and nitrocellulose filter binding. The repressor-tetracycline complex was formed from two molecules of tetracycline and one Tet repressor dimer. Formation of the complex requires divalent cations, and results in drastic effects upon the fluorescence spectra of both compounds. The fluorescence of Tet repressor was quenched about 70%, while that of tetracycline was increased between three- and eightfold, depending upon pH. In addition, the emission maximum of the protein was shifted from 330 to 340 nm, and the excitation maximum of tetracycline dropped from 380 to 370 nm. The latter shift is accompanied by a similar change in the absorption spectra. An analogous effect was observed upon changing the environment of the drug by the addition of sodium dodecyl sulphate. These results suggest that tetracycline binds to a hydrophobic region of the protein. A new excitation band in the fluorescence spectrum of the complex is observed. This presumably arises from energy transfer from a tryptophan to the drug. The association rate constant for formation of the complex is 3.3(+/- 0.3) X 10(5) M-1 s-1, and the equilibrium association constant is 2.8(+/- 0.5) X 10(9) M-1. These results are discussed with respect to the biological function of the Tet repressor.  相似文献   

4.
Previous studies [Wasylewskiet al. (1996),J. Protein Chem. 15, 45–58] have shown that the W43 residue localized within the helix-turn-helix structure domain of Tet repressor can exist in the ground state in two conformational states. In this paper we investigate the fluorescence properties of W43 of TetR upon binding of tetracycline inducer and its chemical analogs such as anhydro- and epitetracycline. Binding of the drug inducer to the protein indicates that the W43 residue still exists in two conformational states; however, its environment changes drastically, as can be judged by the changes in fluorescence parameters. The FQRS (fluorescence-quenching-resolved spectra) method was used to decompose the total emission spectrum. The resolved spectra exhibit maxima of fluorescence at 346 and 332 nm and the component quenchable by KI (346 nm) is shifted 9 nm toward the blue side of the spectrum upon inducer binding. The observed shift does not result from the changes in the exposure of W43, since the bimolecular quenching rate constant remains the same and is equal to about 2.7×109M–1sec–1. The binding of tetracycline leads to drastic decrease of the W43 fluorescence intensity and increase of the tetracycline intensity as well as the decrease of fluorescence lifetime, especially of the W43 component characterized by the emission at 332 nm. The observed energy transfer from W43 to tetracycline is more efficient for the state characterized by the fluorescence emission at 332 nm (88%) than for the component quenchable by iodide (53%) Tetracycline and several of its derivatives were also used to observe how chemical modifications of the hydrophilic groups in tetracycline influence the mechanism of binding of the antibiotic to Tet repressor. By use of pulsed-laser photoacoustic spectroscopy it is shown that the binding of tetracyclines to Tet repressor leads to significant increase of tetracycline fluorescence quantum yields. Steady-state fluorescence quenching of tetracycline analogs in complexes with Tet repressor using potassium iodide as a quencher allowed us to determine the dependence of the exposure of bound antibiotic on the modifications of hydrophilic substituents of tetracycline. Circular dichroism studies of the TetR-[Mg · tc]+ complex do not indicate dramatic changes in the secondary structure of the protein; however, the observed small decrease in the TetR helicity may occur due to partial unfolding of the DNA recognition helix of the protein. The observed changes may play an important role in the process of induction in which tetracycline binding results in the loss of specific DNA binding.Abbreviations FQRS fluorescence-quenching-resolved spectra - HTH helix-turn-helix motif - tc tetracycline - TetR tetracycline repressor from Escherichia coli - TetR WT wild-type TetR - TetR W43 single point mutant with phenylalanine substituted for tryptophan at position 75 in both subunits  相似文献   

5.
An engineered Tn10-encoded Tet repressor, bearing a single Trp residue at position 43, in the putative alpha-helix-turn-alpha-helix motif of the operator binding domain, was studied by time-resolved fluorescence and anisotropy. Fluorescence intensity decay data suggested the existence of two classes of Trp-43, defined by different lifetimes. Analysis of anisotropy data were consistent with a model in which each class was defined by a different lifetime, rotational correlation time, and fluorescence emission maximum. The long-lifetime class had a red-shifted spectrum, similar to that of tryptophan zwitterion in water, and a short rotational correlation time. In contrast, the spectrum of the short-lifetime class was blue-shifted 10 nm compared to that of the long-lifetime class. Its correlation time was similar to that of the protein, which showed that Trp in this class was entirely constrained. Trp in this latter class could not be quenched by iodide, whereas most of the long-lifetime class was easily accessible. Presence of disruptive agents, such as 1 M GuCl or 3 M KCl, did not alter markedly the lifetimes but increased the weight of the short-lifetime component. In the same time, the rotational correlation time of this component was dramatically reduced. Taken together, our data suggest that the long-lifetime class could correspond to the tryptophan residues exposed to solvent whereas the short-lifetime class would correspond to the tryptophan residues embedded inside the hydrophobic core holding the helix-turn-helix motif. Destabilization of hydrophobic interactions would lead to an increase in the weight of the latter class for entropic reasons. Analysis of the fluorescence parameters of Trp-43 could provide structural information on the operator binding domain of Tet repressor.  相似文献   

6.
Steady-state fluorescence quenching and time-resolved measurements have been performed to resolve the fluorescence contributions of the two tryptophan residues, W43 and W75, in the subunit of the homodimer of the Tet repressor fromEscherichia coli. The W43 residue is localized within the helix-turn-helix structural domain, which is responsible for sequence-specific binding of the Tet repressor to thetet operator. The W75 residue is in the protein matrix near the tetracycline-binding site. The assignment of the two residues has been confirmed by use of single-tryptophan mutants carrying either W43 or W75. The FQRS (fluorescence-quenching-resolved-spectra) method has been used to decompose the total emission spectrum of the wild-type protein into spectral components. The resolved spectra have maxima of fluorescence at 349 and 324 nm for the W43 and W75 residues, respectively. The maxima of the resolved spectra are in excellent agreement with those found using single-tryptophan-containing mutants. The fluorescence decay properties of the wild type as well as of both mutants of Tet repressor have been characterized by carrying out a multitemperature study. The decays of the wild-type Tet repressor and W43-containing mutant can be described as being of double-exponential type. The W75 mutant decay can be described by a Gaussian continuous distribution centered at 5.0 nsec with a bandwidth equal to 1.34 nsec. The quenching experiments have shown the presence of two classes of W43 emission. One of the components, exposed to solvent, has a maximum of fluorescence emission at 355 nm, with the second one at about 334 nm. The red-emitting component can be characterized by bimolecular-quenching rate constant,k q equal to 2.6×109, 2.8×109, and 2.0×109 M–1 sec–1 for acrylamide, iodide, and succinimide, respectively. The bluer component is unquenchable by any of the quenchers used. The W75 residue of the Tet repressor has quenching rate constant equal to 0.85×109 and 0.28 × 109 M–1 sec–1 for acrylamide and succinimide, respectively. These values indicate that the W75 is not deeply buried within the protein matrix. Our results indicate that the Tet repressor can exist in its ground state in two distinct conformational states which differ in the microenvironment of the W43 residue.Abbreviations FQRS fluorescence-quenching-resolved spectra - HTH helix-turn-helix motif - TetR tetracycline repressor fromE. coli - WT wild-type TetR - W43 single point mutant with phenyloalanine substituted for tryptophan at position 75 in both subunits - W75 single point mutant with phenyloalanine substituted for tryptophan at position 43 in both subunits  相似文献   

7.
Steady-state fluorescence quenching and time-resolved measurements have been performed to resolve the fluorescence contributions of the two tryptophan residues, W43 and W75, in the subunit of the homodimer of the Tet repressor fromEscherichia coli. The W43 residue is localized within the helix-turn-helix structural domain, which is responsible for sequence-specific binding of the Tet repressor to thetet operator. The W75 residue is in the protein matrix near the tetracycline-binding site. The assignment of the two residues has been confirmed by use of single-tryptophan mutants carrying either W43 or W75. The FQRS (fluorescence-quenching-resolved-spectra) method has been used to decompose the total emission spectrum of the wild-type protein into spectral components. The resolved spectra have maxima of fluorescence at 349 and 324 nm for the W43 and W75 residues, respectively. The maxima of the resolved spectra are in excellent agreement with those found using single-tryptophan-containing mutants. The fluorescence decay properties of the wild type as well as of both mutants of Tet repressor have been characterized by carrying out a multitemperature study. The decays of the wild-type Tet repressor and W43-containing mutant can be described as being of double-exponential type. The W75 mutant decay can be described by a Gaussian continuous distribution centered at 5.0 nsec with a bandwidth equal to 1.34 nsec. The quenching experiments have shown the presence of two classes of W43 emission. One of the components, exposed to solvent, has a maximum of fluorescence emission at 355 nm, with the second one at about 334 nm. The red-emitting component can be characterized by bimolecular-quenching rate constant,k q equal to 2.6×109, 2.8×109, and 2.0×109 M?1 sec?1 for acrylamide, iodide, and succinimide, respectively. The bluer component is unquenchable by any of the quenchers used. The W75 residue of the Tet repressor has quenching rate constant equal to 0.85×109 and 0.28 × 109 M?1 sec?1 for acrylamide and succinimide, respectively. These values indicate that the W75 is not deeply buried within the protein matrix. Our results indicate that the Tet repressor can exist in its ground state in two distinct conformational states which differ in the microenvironment of the W43 residue.  相似文献   

8.
Molecular mechanics analysis of Tet repressor TRP-43 fluorescence.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
A 35% decrease in the fluorescence intensity of F75 TetR Trp-43 was observed upon binding of the tetracycline derivative 5a,6-anhydrotetracycline (AnTc) to the repressor. The fluorescence decay of Trp-43 in F75 TetR and in its complex with AnTc could be described by the sum of three exponential components, with lifetimes of about 6, 3, and 0.3 ns. The amplitudes, however, were markedly altered upon binding. The minimized energy mapping of Trp-43 chi 1 x chi 2 isomerization clearly indicated the existence of three main potential wells at positions (-160 degrees, -90 degrees) (rotamer I), (-170 degrees, 90 degrees) (rotamer II), and (-70, 150 degrees) (rotamer III). Our study of Trp-43 environment for each of the three rotamers suggests that the longest decay component may be assigned to rotamer II, the middle-lived component to rotamer I, and the subnanosecond component to rotamer III. The origin of the changes in the rotamer distribution upon AnTc binding is discussed. Anisotropy decays are also discussed within the framework of the rotamer model.  相似文献   

9.
We analysed the conformational states of free, tet operator-bound and anhydrotetracycline-bound Tet repressor employing a Trp-scanning approach. The two wild-type Trp residues in Tet repressor were replaced by Tyr or Phe and single Trp residues were introduced at each of the positions 162-173, representing part of an unstructured loop and the N-terminal six residues of alpha-helix 9. All mutants retained in vivo inducibility, but anhydrotetracycline-binding constants were decreased up to 7.5-fold when Trp was in positions 169, 170 and 173. Helical positions (168-173) differed from those in the loop (162-167) in terms of their fluorescence emission maxima, quenching rate constants with acrylamide and anisotropies in the free and tet operator-complexed proteins. Trp fluorescence emission decreased drastically upon atc binding, mainly due to energy transfer. For all proteins, either free, tet operator bound or anhydrtetracycline-bound, mean fluorescence lifetimes were determined to derive quenching rate constants. Solvent-accessible surfaces of the respective Trp side chains were calculated and compared with the quenching rate constants in the anhydrotetracycline-bound complexes. The results support a model, in which residues in the loop become more exposed, whereas residues in alpha-helix 9 become more buried upon the induction of TetR by anhydrotetracycline.  相似文献   

10.
Fluorescence and phosphorescence measurements have been carried out on single-p tryptophan (Trp 43 or Trp 75)-containing mutants of Tet repressor (Tet R). Tet R containing Trp 43, the residue localized in the DNA recognition helix of the repressor, has been used to observe the binding of Tet R to two 20-bp DNA sequences of tet O1 and tet O2 operators. Binding of Tet R to tet O1 operator leads to a 78% decrease of the repressor fluorescence intensity, with an accompanying 20-nm blue shift of its fluorescence emission maximum to 330 nm. Upon binding of Tet R to tet O2 operator, the Trp 43 fluorescence intensity is quenched by 60%, and a 10-nm shift of its emission maximum to 340 nm occurs. Solute fluorescence quenching studies, using acrylamide, performed at low ionic strength indicate that in both the complex of Tet R with the O1 and that with the O2 operator, Trp 43 is moderately buried, as indicated by a bimolecular rate quenching constant of about 1.8 × 109 M–1 sec–1. In contrast to the Tet R–tet O2 complex, the Stern–Volmer acrylamide quenching constant K sv of the complex with tet O1 operator changes from 7.5 M–1 at 5 mM NaCl to 22 M–1 at 200 mM NaCl, indicating different exposures of Trp 43 in the two complexes in solutions of higher ionic strength. Phosphorescence studies showed a 0–0 vibronic transition at 408 and 403 nm for Trp 43 and Trp 75, respectively. Upon binding of Tet R to the tet operators, we observed red shifts of 0–0 vibronic bands of Trp 43 to 413 and 412 nm for tet O1 and tet O2 operator, respectively, and the phosphorescence triplet lifetime of Trp 43 at 75 K was quenched from 6.0–5.5 to 3.5–3.3 sec. The thermal phosphorescence quenching profile ranged from –200°C to –20°C, and differed drastically for the two complexes, suggesting different dynamics of the microenvironment of the Trp 43 residue. The luminescence data for Trp 43 of Tet R suggest that the recognition helix of Tet R interacts in different fashions with the tet O1 and tet O2 operators.  相似文献   

11.
A method is presented that allows the calculation of the lifetimes of tryptophan residues on the basis of spectral and structural data. It is applied to two different proteins. The calcium binding protein from the sarcoplasm of the muscles of the sand worm Nereis diversicolor (NSCP) changes its conformation upon binding of Ca2+ or Mg2+. NSCP contains three tryptophan residues at position 4, 57, and 170, respectively. The fluorescence lifetimes of W57 are investigated in a mutant in which W4 and W170 have been replaced. The time resolved fluorescence properties of W57 are linked to its different microconformations, which were determined by a molecular dynamics simulation map. Together with the determination of the radiative rate constant from the wavelength of maximum intensity of the decay associated spectra, it was possible to determine an exponential relation between the nonradiative rate constant and the distance between the indole CE3 atom and the carbonyl carbon of the peptide bond reflecting a mechanism of electron transfer as the main determinant of the value for the nonradiative rate constant. This result allows the calculation of the fluorescence lifetimes from the protein structure and the spectra. This method was further tested for the tryptophan of Ha-ras p21 (W32) and for W43 of the Tet repressor, which resulted in acceptable values for the predicted lifetimes.  相似文献   

12.
alpha-Sarcin, a potent cytotoxic protein from Aspergillus giganteus, contains two tryptophan residues at positions 4 and 51. Two single, W4F and W51F, and the double mutant, W4/51F, have been produced and purified to homogeneity. These two residues are neither required for the highly specific ribonucleolytic activity of the protein on the ribosomes (production of the so called alpha-fragment) nor for its interaction with lipid membranes (aggregation and fusion of vesicles), although the mutant forms involving Trp-51 show a decreased ribonuclease activity. Proton NMR data reveal that no significant changes in the global structure of the enzyme occur upon replacement of Trp-51 by Phe. Substitution of each Trp residue results in a 4 degrees C drop in the thermal denaturation midpoint, and the double mutant's midpoint is 9 degrees C lower. Trp-51 is responsible for most of the near-UV circular dichroism of the protein and also contributes to the overall ellipticity of the protein in the peptide bond region. Trp-51 does not show fluorescence emission. The membrane-bound proteins undergo a thermal denaturation at a lower temperature than the corresponding free forms. The interaction of the protein with phospholipid bilayers promotes a large increase of the quantum yield of Trp-51 and its fluorescence emission is quenched by anthracene incorporated into the hydrophobic region of such bilayers. This indicates that the region around this residue is located in the hydrophobic core of the bilayer following protein-vesicle interaction.  相似文献   

13.
Time-resolved, steady-state fluorescence and fluorescence-detected circular dichroism (FDCD) have been used to resolve the fluorescence contributions of the two tryptophan residues, Trp-13 and Trp-85, in the cyclic AMP receptor protein (CRP). The iodide and acrylamide quenching data show that in CRP one tryptophan residue, Trp-85, is buried within the protein matrix and the other, Trp-13, is moderately exposed on the surface of the protein. Fluorescence-quenching-resolved spectra show that Trp-13 has emission at about 350 nm and contributes 76–83% to the total fluorescence emission. The Trp-85, unquenchable by iodide and acrylamide, has the fluorescence emission at about 337 nm. The time-resolved fluorescence measurements show that Trp-13 has a longer fluorescence decay time. The Trp-85 exhibits a shorter fluorescence decay time. In the CRP-cAMP complex the Trp-85, previously buried in the apoprotein becomes totally exposed to the iodide and acrylamide quenchers. The FDCD spectra indicate that in the CRP-cAMP complex Trp-85 remains in the same environment as in the protein alone. It has been proposed that the binding of cAMP to CRP is accompanied by a hinge reorientation of two protein domains. This allows for penetration of the quencher molecules into the Trp-85 residue previously buried in the protein matrix.  相似文献   

14.
Single tryptophan mutant proteins of a catalytically active domain III recombinant protein (PE24) from Pseudomonas aeruginosa exotoxin A were prepared by site-directed mutagenesis. The binding of the dinucleotide substrate, NAD+, to the PE24 active site was studied by exploiting intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence for the wild-type, single Trp, and tryptophan-deficient mutant proteins. Various approaches were used to study the substrate binding process, including dynamic quenching, CD spectroscopy, steady-state fluorescence emission analysis, NAD+-glycohydrolase activity, NAD+ binding analysis, protein denaturation experiments, fluorescence lifetime analysis, steady-state anisotropy measurement, stopped flow fluorescence spectroscopy, and quantum yield determination. It was found that the conservative replacement of tryptophan residues with phenylalanine had little or no effect on the folded stability and enzyme activity of the PE24 protein. Dynamic quenching experiments indicated that when bound to the active site of the enzyme, the NAD+ substrate protected Trp-558 from solvent to a large extent but had no effect on the degree of solvent exposure for tryptophans 417 and 466. Also, upon substrate binding, the anisotropy of the Trp-417(W466F/W558F) protein showed the largest increase, followed by Trp-466(W417F/W558F), and there was no effect on Trp-558(W417F/W466F). Furthermore, the intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence exhibited the highest degree of substrate-induced quenching for the wild-type protein, followed in decreasing order by Trp-417(W466F/W558F), Trp-558(W417F/W466F), and Trp-466(W417F/W558F). These data provide evidence for a structural rearrangement in the enzyme domain near Trp-417 invoked by the binding of the NAD+ substrate.  相似文献   

15.
Time-resolved, steady-state fluorescence and fluorescence-detected circular dichroism (FDCD) have been used to resolve the fluorescence contributions of the two tryptophan residues, Trp-13 and Trp-85, in the cyclic AMP receptor protein (CRP). The iodide and acrylamide quenching data show that in CRP one tryptophan residue, Trp-85, is buried within the protein matrix and the other, Trp-13, is moderately exposed on the surface of the protein. Fluorescence-quenching-resolved spectra show that Trp-13 has emission at about 350 nm and contributes 76–83% to the total fluorescence emission. The Trp-85, unquenchable by iodide and acrylamide, has the fluorescence emission at about 337 nm. The time-resolved fluorescence measurements show that Trp-13 has a longer fluorescence decay time. The Trp-85 exhibits a shorter fluorescence decay time. In the CRP-cAMP complex the Trp-85, previously buried in the apoprotein becomes totally exposed to the iodide and acrylamide quenchers. The FDCD spectra indicate that in the CRP-cAMP complex Trp-85 remains in the same environment as in the protein alone. It has been proposed that the binding of cAMP to CRP is accompanied by a hinge reorientation of two protein domains. This allows for penetration of the quencher molecules into the Trp-85 residue previously buried in the protein matrix.Abbreviations CRP cyclic AMP receptor protein - NATA N-acetyltryptophanamide - FQRS fluorescence-quenching-resolved spectra - FDCD fluorescence-detected circular dichroism - EDTA ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid - SDS sodium dodecyl sulfate - FPLC fast protein liquid chromatography  相似文献   

16.
The acid release of endogenous peptides from immunoaffinity-pure human major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II proteins HLA-DR1 is accompanied by an 18% decrease in intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence. The effect is totally reversible upon readdition of an autologous endogenous peptide fraction. High-performance size-exclusion chromatographic (HPSEC) binding and release studies with a nonfluorescent HLA-DR1-restricted influenza matrix peptide IM(18-29) prove the fact that Trp residues of the HLA protein change their fluorescence intensities. Since the far-UV circular dichroism spectra of HLA molecules before and after peptide release, DR1[NAT] and DR1[REL], show very small differences, we can rule out the breakdown of secondary structural elements under release conditions, although DR[REL] consists of disassembled alpha- and beta-subunits, as evidenced by HPSEC. Quenching of DR1[NAT] and DR1[REL] using the neutral quencher acrylamide results in a 20% increase in total accessibility of the nine-residue Trp population whereas quenching by iodide yields only a 5% increase. Both results taken together tell us that two Trp residues, preferentially ones located in apolar pockets, become accessible upon the release of peptides. The significantly smaller fluorescence enhancement upon binding IM(18-29) of DR3[REL], exclusively lacking Trp-9(beta 1), and the missing tendency to reassemble under the influence of IM(18-29) compared to DR1[REL] suggest an important role for position 9(beta 1). The region around Trp-43(alpha 1) should be responsible for the binding of IM(18-29) to the alpha-subunits of DR1 and DR3, respectively, as verified by fluorometric HPSEC and SDS-PAGE. Obviously, our findings are in total agreement with the hypothetical MHC class II model, whereafter Trp-9(beta 1) and Trp-43(alpha 1) besides Trp-61(beta 1) are constituents of the binding groove of DR1. Extending the homology to MHC class I products, we postulate the existence of three hydrophobic pockets in the binding site of DR1 with the cited Trp residues being juxtaposed to contacting apolar peptide side chains in HLA-peptide complexes. According to the deduced two-residue-contact model the minimal consensus motif for DR1-restricted peptide antigens consists of two hydrophobic residues lying 14-16 A apart in the bound state of the peptide.  相似文献   

17.
B Unger  J Becker  W Hillen 《Gene》1984,31(1-3):103-108
The nucleotide sequence of the pSC101-encoded tetracycline repressor gene (tetR) was confirmed. The deduced amino acid sequence is compared to that of other repressor proteins. To overproduce the repressor protein, tetR was placed under the control of bacteriophage lambda promoter pL. Tet repressor protein was purified to homogeneity and shown to bind specifically to two tet operators and also to tetracycline (Tc). The inducer function of Tc is demonstrated by the loss of the specific binding between the tet operator DNA and the Tet repressor-Tc complex.  相似文献   

18.
Several metmyoglobins (red kangaroo, horse and sperm whale), containing different numbers of tyrosines, but with invariant tryptophan residues (Trp-7, Trp-14), exhibit intrinsic fluorescence when studied by steady-state front-face fluorometry. The increasing tyrosine content of these myoglobins correlates with a shift in emission maximum to shorter wavelengths with excitation at 280 nm: red kangaroo (Tyr-146) emission maximum 335 nm; horse (Tyr-103, -146) emission maximum 333 nm; sperm whale (Tyr-103, -146, -151) emission maximum 331 nm. Since 280 nm excites both tyrosine and tryptophan, this strongly suggests that tyrosine emission is not completely quenched but also contributes to this fluorescence emission. Upon titration to pH 12.5, there is a reversible shift of the emission maximum to longer wavelengths with an increase greater than 2-fold in fluorescence intensity. With excitation at 305 nm, a tyrosinate-like emission is detected at a pH greater than 12. These studies show that: (1) metmyoglobins, Class B proteins containing both tyrosine and tryptophan residues, exhibit intrinsic fluorescence; (2) tyrosine residues also contribute to the observed steady-state fluorescence emission when excited by light at 280 nm; (3) the ionization of Tyr-146 is likely coupled to protein unfolding.  相似文献   

19.
Allosteric regulation of the Tet repressor (TetR) homodimer relies on tetracycline binding that abolishes the affinity for the DNA operator. Previously, interpretation of circular dichroism data called for unfolding of the α-helical DNA-binding domains in absence of binding to DNA or tetracycline. Our small angle X-ray scattering of TetR(D) in solution contradicts this unfolding as a physiological process. Instead, in the core domain crystal structures analyses show increased immobilisation of helix α9 and two C-terminal turns of helix α8 upon tetracycline binding. Tetracycline complexes of TetR(D) and four single-site alanine variants were characterised by isothermal titration calorimetry, fluorescence titration, X-ray crystal structures, and melting curves. Five crystal structures confirm that Thr103 is a key residue for the allosteric events of induction, with the T103A variant lacking induction by any tetracycline. The T103A variant shows anti-cooperative inducer binding, and a melting curve of the tetracycline complex different to TetR(D) and other variants. For the N82A variant inducer binding is clearly anti-cooperative but triggers the induced conformation.  相似文献   

20.
Peptide-induced conformational changes in five isofunctional mutants of calmodulin (CaM), each bearing a single tryptophan residue either at the seventh position of each of the four calcium-binding loops (i.e., amino acids 26, 62, 99, and 135) or in the central helix (amino acid 81) were studied by using fluorescence spectroscopy. The peptides RS20F and RS20CK correspond to CaM-binding amino acid sequence segments of either nonmuscle myosin light chain kinase (nmMLCK) or calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMPK-II), respectively. Both steady-state and time-resolved fluorescence data were collected from the various peptide-CaM complexes. Steady-state fluorescence intensity measurements indicated that, in the presence of an excess of calcium, both peptides bind to the calmodulin mutants with a 1:1 stoichiometry. The tryptophans located in loops I and IV exhibited red-shifted emission maxima (356 nm), high quantum yields (0.3), and long average lifetimes (6 ns). They responded in a similar manner to peptide binding, by only slight changes in their fluorescence features. In contrast, the fluorescence intensity of the tryptophans in loops II and III decreased markedly, and their fluorescence spectrum was blue-shifted upon peptide binding. Analysis of the tryptophan fluorescence decay of the last mentioned calmodulins supports a model in which the equilibrium between two (Trp-99) or three (Trp-62) states of these tryptophan residues, each characterized by a different lifetime, was altered toward the blue-shifted short lifetime component upon peptide binding. Taken together, these data provide new evidence that both lobes of calmodulin are involved in peptide binding. Both peptides induced similar changes in the fluorescence properties of the tryptophan residues located in the calcium-binding loops, with the exception of calmodulin with Trp-135. For this last mentioned calmodulin, slight differences were observed. Tryptophan in the central helix responded differently to RS20F and RS20CK binding. RS20F binding induced a red-shift in the emission maximum of Trp-81 while RS20CK induced a blue-shift. The quenching rate of Trp-81 by iodide was slightly reduced upon RS20CK binding, while RS20F induced a 2-fold increase. These results provide evidence that the environment of Trp-81 is different in each case and are, therefore, consistent with the hypothesis that the central helix can play a differential role in the recognition of, or response to, CaM-binding structures.  相似文献   

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