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1.
Sorcin, a 21.6 kDa two-domain penta-EF-hand (PEF) protein, when activated by Ca(2+) binding, interacts with target proteins in a largely uncharacterized process. The two physiological EF-hands EF3 and EF2 do not belong to a structural pair but are connected by the D helix. To establish whether this helix is instrumental in sorcin activation, two D helix residues were mutated: W105, located near EF3 and involved in a network of interactions, and W99, located near EF2 and facing solvent, were substituted with glycine. Neither mutation alters calcium affinity. The interaction of the W105G and W99G mutants with annexin VII and the cardiac ryanodine receptor (RyR2), requiring the sorcin N-terminal and C-terminal domain, respectively, was studied. Surface plasmon resonance experiments show that binding of annexin VII to W99G occurs at the same Ca(2+) concentration as that of the wild type, whereas W105G requires a significantly higher Ca(2+) concentration. Ca(2+) spark activity of isolated heart cells monitors the sorcin-RyR2 interaction and is unaltered by W105G but is reduced equally by W99G and the wild type. Thus, substitution of W105, via disruption of the network of D helix interactions, affects the capacity of sorcin to recognize and interact with either target at physiological Ca(2+) concentrations, while mutation of solvent-facing W99 has little effect. The D helix appears to amplify the localized structural changes that occur at EF3 upon Ca(2+) binding and thereby trigger a structural rearrangement that enables interaction of sorcin with its molecular targets. The same activation process may apply to other PEF proteins in view of the D helix conservation.  相似文献   

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Background

Human serum albumin is the principal protein in human serum. It participates in regulation of plasma oncotic pressure and transports endogenous and exogenous ligands such as thyroxine, free fatty acids, bilirubin, and various drugs. Therefore, studying its ligand binding mechanism is important in understanding many functions of the protein.

Scope of review

This review discusses the pleiotropic biochemical effects and their relevance to physiologic functions of albumin.

Major conclusions

Although HSA is traditionally recognized for its ligand transport and oncotic effects in human circulation, our studies have revealed its participation in several other important physiological functions. In some instances, it may function as a catalyst. Pleiotropic properties of HSA have been exploited by development of recombinant HSA and its mutants, and the use of these recombinant proteins in studies with various biochemical and biophysical techniques. These studies allowed us to obtain new insights on the diverse roles of HSA in human physiology. The following aspects of HSA were discussed in this review: 1) HSA and its mutants' role in thyroxine transport, 2) structural details of the ligand binding functions of HSA to ligands such as warfarin, digoxin, halothane anesthetics, nitric oxide, bilirubin, free fatty acids, etc, and 3) the formation of modified albumin during myocardial ischemia, its diagnostic significance, and HSA's role in cardiovascular disease.

General significance

The appreciation and understanding of structural details and new physiological roles has provided a renewed interest in HSA research. Specific structural information gained on various mechanisms of HSA–ligand interaction can be used to develop a model to better understand protein–drug interactions, aid in the development of new drugs with improved pharmacokinetic effects, and ultimately be used to improve the quality of healthcare. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled Serum Albumin.  相似文献   

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Background

Many biologically active compounds bind to plasma transport proteins, and this binding can be either advantageous or disadvantageous from a drug design perspective. Human serum albumin (HSA) is one of the most important transport proteins in the cardiovascular system due to its great binding capacity and high physiological concentration. HSA has a preference for accommodating neutral lipophilic and acidic drug-like ligands, but is also surprisingly able to bind positively charged peptides. Understanding of how short cationic antimicrobial peptides interact with human serum albumin is of importance for developing such compounds into the clinics.

Results

The binding of a selection of short synthetic cationic antimicrobial peptides (CAPs) to human albumin with binding affinities in the μM range is described. Competitive isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) and NMR WaterLOGSY experiments mapped the binding site of the CAPs to the well-known drug site II within subdomain IIIA of HSA. Thermodynamic and structural analysis revealed that the binding is exclusively driven by interactions with the hydrophobic moieties of the peptides, and is independent of the cationic residues that are vital for antimicrobial activity. Both of the hydrophobic moieties comprising the peptides were detected to interact with drug site II by NMR saturation transfer difference (STD) group epitope mapping (GEM) and INPHARMA experiments. Molecular models of the complexes between the peptides and albumin were constructed using docking experiments, and support the binding hypothesis and confirm the overall binding affinities of the CAPs.

Conclusions

The biophysical and structural characterizations of albumin-peptide complexes reported here provide detailed insight into how albumin can bind short cationic peptides. The hydrophobic elements of the peptides studied here are responsible for the main interaction with HSA. We suggest that albumin binding should be taken into careful consideration in antimicrobial peptide studies, as the systemic distribution can be significantly affected by HSA interactions.  相似文献   

6.
Binding of metal ions to the heteroatomic sites of proteins is undoubtedly fundamental to their observed physiological effects. In this paper, the interactions of inorganic mercury (Hg2+), methylmercury (MeHg+), ethylmercury (EtHg+), and phenylmercury (PhHg+) with human serum albumin (HSA) were studied from the electrophoretic behaviors, stoichiometry, thermodynamics, and kinetics by using a new hybrid technique, capillary electrophoresis on-line coupled with electrothermal atomic absorption spectrometry (CE-ETAAS), together with the consequent structural information from circular dichroism and Raman spectroscopy. The stoichiometry (mercurial species to HSA) for the interactions of Hg2+, MeHg+, EtHg+, and PhHg+ with HSA was found to be 6:1, 4:1, 4:1, and 3:1, respectively. Two types of binding sites in HSA were observed for the binding of mercurial species with the orders of magnitude of binding constants of 10(7) and 10(6) L mol-1, respectively, showing strong affinity of mercurial species for HSA. The interactions of mercurial species with both types of binding sites in HSA are exothermic and thermodynamically favorable and are both enthalpically and entropically driven. The binding of mercurial species to HSA follows the first-order kinetics for mercurial species and zero-order kinetics for HSA with the apparent activation energy of 57-59 kJ mol-1. Among the four mercurial species examined, only Hg2+ induces the secondary structure transition of HSA. Mercury-HSA adducts are formed mainly through metal-sulfur binding with participation of C=O and/or C-N groups of amino acid residues in HSA molecules. The present work represents the most comprehensive study on the interactions between various mercurial species with HSA and provides new evidence for and insights into the interactions of mercurial species with HSA for further understanding of the toxicological effects of mercurial species.  相似文献   

7.
研究一种酪氨酸激酶抑制剂(tyrosine kinase inhibitor, TKI)伊马替尼(imatinib, IMA)与人血清清蛋白(HSA)及牛血清清蛋白(BSA)的相互作用,比较分析HSA和BSA与IMA相互作用机制的差异. 模拟生理条件下,计算机模拟技术结合荧光光谱和紫外光谱法,研究IMA与蛋白质的作用机制. 分子模建IMA与血清清蛋白的结合模型,表明伊马替尼与蛋白质的相互作用力为疏水作用力,兼有氢键作用. 光谱结果表明,IMA与HSA和BSA的相互作用表现为静态结合过程,结合强度较强,IMA与HSA和BSA分子的结合距离r值较小,说明发生了能量转移现象. IMA对HSA和BSA的结构域微区构象产生影响,使结合位域的疏水性发生改变. 荧光相图技术解析出IMA与HSA和BSA反应构象型态的变迁为“二态”模型. HSA与IMA相互作用的热力学参数表明,IMA与HSA之间是以疏水作用为主的分子间作用,而IMA与BSA之间的作用力为氢键和范德华力,兼有少量的疏水作用力. 光谱实验与计算机模拟结果基本一致,可为研究IMA与HSA和BSA相互作用本质提供一定参考.  相似文献   

8.
《MABS-AUSTIN》2013,5(7):1319-1330
ABSTRACT

Biotherapeutic proteins are commonly dosed at high concentrations into the blood, which is an inherently complex, crowded solution with substantial protein content. The effects of macromolecular crowding may lead to an appreciable level of non-specific hetero-association in this physiological environment. Therefore, developing a method to characterize the diverse consequences of non-specific interactions between proteins under such non-ideal, crowded conditions, which deviate substantially from those commonly employed for in vitro characterization, is vital to achieving a more complete picture of antibody function in a biological context. In this study, we investigated non-specific interactions between human serum albumin (HSA) and two monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) by static light scattering and determined these interactions are both ionic strength-dependent and mAb-dependent. Using biolayer interferometry (BLI), we assessed the effect of HSA on antigen binding by mAbs, demonstrating that these non-specific interactions have a functional impact on mAb:antigen interactions, particularly at low ionic strength. While this effect is mitigated at physiological ionic strength, our in vitro data support the notion that HSA in the blood may lead to non-specific interactions with mAbs in vivo, with a potential impact on their interactions with antigen. Furthermore, the BLI method offers a high-throughput advantage compared to orthogonal techniques such as analytical ultracentrifugation and is amenable to a greater variety of solution conditions compared to nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Our study demonstrates that BLI is a viable technology for examining the impact of non-specific interactions on specific biologically relevant interactions, providing a direct method to assess binding events in crowded conditions.  相似文献   

9.
Catechins are polyphenolic antioxidants found in green tea leaves. Recent studies have reported that various polyphenolic compounds, including catechins, cause protein carbonyl formation in proteins via their pro-oxidant actions. In this study, we evaluate the formation of protein carbonyl in human serum albumin (HSA) by tea catechins and investigate the relationship between catechin chemical structure and its pro-oxidant property. To assess the formation of protein carbonyl in HSA, HSA was incubated with four individual catechins under physiological conditions to generate biotin-LC-hydrazide labeled protein carbonyls. Comparison of catechins using Western blotting revealed that the formation of protein carbonyl in HSA was higher for pyrogallol-type catechins than the corresponding catechol-type catechins. In addition, the formation of protein carbonyl was also found to be higher for the catechins having a galloyl group than the corresponding catechins lacking a galloyl group. The importance of the pyrogallol structural motif in the B-ring and the galloyl group was confirmed using methylated catechins and phenolic acids. These results indicate that the most important structural element contributing to the formation of protein carbonyl in HSA by tea catechins is the pyrogallol structural motif in the B-ring, followed by the galloyl group. The oxidation stability and binding affinity of tea catechins with proteins are responsible for the formation of protein carbonyl, and consequently the difference in these properties of each catechin may contribute to the magnitude of their biological activities.  相似文献   

10.
Human immunodeficiency virus type-1 (HIV-1) envelope glycoprotein gp140 interacts with its specific receptors on the surface of the target cells leading to cellular activation through various signaling pathways. The effect of blocking the chemokine repertoire in human brain microvascular endothelial cells in HIV dementia (HAD) disease has not been reported. Characterizing the nature of HIV-1 envelope protein gp140 (T-tropic, HXBc2) receptor binding conditions to HBMEC is critical to gain insight into the HIV dementia, and eventually to rationally design the agents to block envelope protein receptor interactions. HIV-1 gp140 oligomers were purified and separated to monomers, dimers, and trimers. The binding conditions of gp140 to HBMEC chemokine receptor, CXCR4, were optimized with an aim of understanding the structural interactions in HAD. Analysis of the interaction between HIV-1 gp140 and CXCR4 of HBMEC by saturation binding, cross-competition analysis with radiolabeled SDF and gp140, revealed a strong interaction, specificity between HIV-1 gp140 and CXCR4. Our binding data demonstrate that HIV-1 envelope protein gp140 enters cells by protein receptor mediated interactions that are regulated by the conformational state of the gp140 at physiological environment (pH and temperature). The CXCR4 antibody 12G5 inhibited SDF-1 binding to HBMEC indicating the specificity of gp140 binding to HBMEC. Scatchard analysis revealed the presence of approximately 70250 gp140 binding sites per cell with a K(d) of 4.5 nM. Cross-competition experiments using labeled SDF-1 and gp140 revealed that both unlabeled SDF-1 and gp140 are capable of displacing their radiolabeled counterparts. The binding assay conditions and radioligand binding assay are highly valuable to identify and design better HIV inhibitors for HAD.  相似文献   

11.
A proton transfer triggered by a ligand interacting with the receptor had been suggested as the initial step in the activation of a receptor for the neurotransmitter serotonin (5-hydroxy-tryptamine; 5-HT). To evaluate the role of the receptor macromolecule in modulating the primary molecular event in ligand-mediated activation, the process of proton transfer was analysed in the environment of a protein model for the 5-HT receptor. In the absence of a detailed receptor structure, the enzyme actinidin was chosen as the model for the receptor based on criteria obtained from structure-activity considerations on the ligands. The first simulation of a mechanism for receptor activation was performed on this model using methods of theoretical chemistry to study the effect of specific structural elements. The premise is that the role of the elements of secondary structure of soluble proteins (e.g. actinidin) in determining structure-function relations in these macromolecules is maintained when these elements are part of membrane-bound receptor proteins. Results from the calculations of the effects of the six alpha helices of actinidin on the proton transfer process from the imidazolium side chain of His 162 to the thiol side chain of Cys 25 in the protein show that the helices contribute in different ways to modulate the energy of proton transfer. The largest helix, A1, opposes the proton transfer through the effect of the helix dipole. The charged residues (primary structure) in helix A3 favor the proton transfer, and mask the effect of its helix dipole (secondary structure) which opposes the transfer. The direction of the proton transfer simulated for the activation mechanism is opposite to that assumed in the catalytic process of the thiol protease, and the entire protein environment opposes the transfer. This supports the specific role of the ligand in triggering the proton transfer as a response to its binding.  相似文献   

12.
The functions of N-acylethanolamines, minor constituents of mammalian cells, are poorly understood. It was suggested that NAEs might have some pharmacological actions and might serve as a cytoprotective response, whether mediated by physical interactions with membranes or enzymes or mediated by activation of cannabinoid receptors. Albumins are identified as the major transport proteins in blood plasma for many compounds including fatty acids, hormones, bilirubin, ions, and many drugs. Moreover, albumin has been used as a model protein in many areas, because of its multifunctional binding properties. Bovine (BSA) and human (HSA) serum albumin are similar in sequence and conformation, but differ for the number of tryptophan residues. This difference can be used to monitor unlike protein domains. Our data suggest that NOEA binds with high affinity to both albumins, modifying their conformational features. In both proteins, NOEA molecules are linked with higher affinity to hydrophobic sites near Trp-214 in HSA or Trp-212 in BSA. Moreover, fluorescence data support the hypothesis of the presence of other NOEA binding sites on BSA, likely affecting Trp-134 environment. The presence of similar binding sites is not measurable on HSA, because it lacks of the second Trp residue.  相似文献   

13.
Protein physical and chemical properties can be altered by polymer interaction. The presence of several high affinity binding sites on human serum albumin (HSA) makes it a possible target for many organic and polymer molecules. This study was designed to examine the interaction of HSA with poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) in aqueous solution at physiological conditions. Fourier transform infrared, ultraviolet-visible, and CD spectroscopic methods were used to determine the polymer binding mode, the binding constant, and the effects of polymer complexation on protein secondary structure.The spectroscopic results showed that PEG is located along the polypeptide chains through H-bonding interactions with an overall affinity constant of K = 4.12 x 10(5) M(-1). The protein secondary structure showed no alterations at low PEG concentration (0.1 mM), whereas at high polymer content (1 mM), a reduction of alpha-helix from 59 (free HSA) to 53% and an increase of beta-turn from 11 (free HSA) to 22% occurred in the PEG-HSA complexes (infrared data). The CDSSTR program (CD data) also showed no major alterations of the protein secondary structure at low PEG concentrations (0.1 and 0.5 mM), while at high polymer content (1 mM), a major reduction of alpha-helix from 69 (free HSA) to 58% and an increase of beta-turn from 7 (free HSA) to 18% was observed.  相似文献   

14.
Using intrinsic and probe fluorescence, microcalorimetry and isotopic methods, the interactions of prostaglandins (PG) E2 and F2 alpha and some fatty acids with native and alkylated proteins (human serum albumin (HSA) and rat liver plasma membrane PG receptors), were studied. The fatty acid and PG interactions with human serum albumin (HSA) resulted in effective quenching of fluorescence of the probe, 1.8-anilinonaphthalene sulfonate (ANS), bound to the protein. Fatty acids competed with ANS for the binding sites; the efficiency of this process increased with an increase in the number of double bonds in the fatty acid molecule. PG induced a weaker fluorescence quenching of HSA-bound ANS and stabilized the protein molecule in a lesser degree compared to fatty acids. The sites of PG E2 and F2 alpha binding did not overlap with the sites of fatty acid binding on the HSA molecule. Nonenzymatic alkylation of HSA by acetaldehyde resulted in the abnormalities of binding sites for fatty acids and PG. Modification of the plasma membrane proteins with acetaldehyde sharply diminished the density of PG E2 binding sites without changing the association constants. Alkylation did not interfere with the parameters of PG F2 alpha binding to liver membrane proteins.  相似文献   

15.
Xiaojun Wei  Qian Wang  Chang Liu 《Proteomics》2022,22(5-6):2100058
Perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) has been one of the most common perfluorochemicals, which are globally pervasive contaminants that are persistent, bioaccumulative, toxic, and have adverse impacts on human health. The highest concentration of PFOA occurs in the blood, where it strongly binds to human serum albumins (HSA). Thus, a method to reverse the HSA-PFOA binding is critical to help facilitate the faster elimination of PFOA from the body to minimize its toxicological effects. Inspired by the remediation effect of cyclodextrin (CD) to PFOA through host-guest interactions, herein, by elucidating inter-molecular interactions using a nanopore sensor, we demonstrated in vitro reversal of the binding of PFOA to HSA using γ-cyclodextrin (γ-CD). The competition behavior for the complexation of PFOA between HSA and γ-CD was discussed in combination with in situ nanopore current recording and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) characterization. The present work not only demonstrates the potential therapeutic application of γ-CD for PFOA removal from human blood, but also provides an emerging method for investigating interactions between organic compounds and proteins.  相似文献   

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Lead is a potent environmental toxin that has accumulated above its natural level as a result of human activity. Pb cation shows major affinity towards protein complexation and it has been used as modulator of protein-membrane interactions. We located the binding sites of Pb(II) with human serum (HSA) and bovine serum albumins (BSA) at physiological conditions, using constant protein concentration and various Pb contents. FTIR, UV-visible, CD, fluorescence and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopic (XPS) methods were used to analyse Pb binding sites, the binding constant and the effect of metal ion complexation on HSA and BSA stability and conformations. Structural analysis showed that Pb binds strongly to HSA and BSA via hydrophilic contacts with overall binding constants of K(Pb-HSA)?=?8.2 (±0.8)×10(4) M(-1) and K(Pb-BSA)?=?7.5 (±0.7)×10(4) M(-1). The number of bound Pb cation per protein is 0.7 per HSA and BSA complexes. XPS located the binding sites of Pb cation with protein N and O atoms. Pb complexation alters protein conformation by a major reduction of α-helix from 57% (free HSA) to 48% (metal-complex) and 63% (free BSA) to 52% (metal-complex) inducing a partial protein destabilization.  相似文献   

18.
The hexameric ATPase, N-ethylmaleimide sensitive factor (NSF), is essential to vesicular transport and membrane fusion because it affects the conformations and associations of the soluble NSF attachment protein receptor (SNARE) proteins. NSF binds SNAREs through adaptors called soluble NSF attachment proteins (alpha- or beta-SNAP) and disassembles SNARE complexes to recycle the monomers. NSF contains three domains, two nucleotide-binding domains (NSF-D1 and -D2) and an amino terminal domain (NSF-N) that is required for SNAP-SNARE complex binding. Mutagenesis studies indicate that a cleft between the two sub-domains of NSF-N is critical for binding. The structural conservation of N domains in NSF, p97/VCP, and VAT suggests that a similar type of binding site could mediate substrate recognition by other AAA proteins. In addition to SNAP-SNARE complexes, NSF also binds other proteins and protein complexes such as AMPA receptor subunits (GluR2), beta2-adrenergic receptor, beta-Arrestin1, GATE-16, LMA1, rabs, and rab-containing complexes. The potential for these interactions indicates a broader role for NSF in the assembly/disassembly cycles of several cellular complexes and suggests that NSF may have specific regulatory effects on the functions of the proteins involved in these complexes. The structural requirements for these interactions and their physiological significance will be discussed.  相似文献   

19.
Human serum albumin (HSA) binding with endogenous metabolites and drugs is substantially decreased in chronic renal and liver diseases. To test the hypothesis that the decreased binding ability is caused by conformational changes of the protein, we analyzed infrared and Raman spectra of HSA isolated from healthy donors and patients with chronic uremia and liver cirrhosis. Uremia did not affect the secondary structure of HSA but modified the environment of its Asp/Glu residues. Liver cirrhosis increased the amount of extended and beta-structures, modified the environment of Asp/Glu and Tyr side chains, and changed the configuration of disulfide bridges in albumin molecules. The conformational changes of "cirrhotic" albumin were not caused by reversibly bound ligands and resembled a partial unfolding of the protein induced by adsorption on the charcoal surface. The dramatic structural alterations of HSA in liver cirrhosis may be caused by its oxidative modification and might underlie the decreased binding ability and changed body distribution of albumin.  相似文献   

20.
In this study, a cytotoxic Pt(IV) complex [Pt(5,5′-dmbpy)Cl4 (5,5′-dmbpy is 5,5′-dimethyl-2,2′-bipyridine) was selected to investigate its affinity to human serum albumin (HSA) by spectroscopy and molecular docking methods. This complex has a bidentate nitrogen donor ligand with four chloride anions attached to a Pt(IV) metal in a distorted octahedral environment. The ?uorescence data showed this complex quench the intrinsic ?uorescence of HSA through a static quenching mechanism. The binding constant (Kb) and the number of binding sites (n) were obtained based on the results of fluorescence measurements. UV–vis, circular dichroism spectroscopy, and three-dimensional fluorescence spectroscopy proved that the Pt(IV) complex could slightly change the secondary structure of protein. Thermodynamic parameters show that the Pt(IV) complex binds to HSA through electrostatic and Vander Waals interactions with one binding site. The molecular docking results confirmed the spectroscopic results and showed that Pt(IV) complex is embedded into subdomain IIA of protein. The aim of this study is to describe the performance of effective anti-cancer drugs when faced with proteins such as HSA.  相似文献   

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