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1.
The active site metal in horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase has been studied by metal-directed affinity labeling of the native zinc(II) enzyme and that substituted with cobalt(II) or cadmium(II). Reversible binding of bromoimidazolyl propionic acid to the cobalt enzyme blueshifts the visible absorption band originating from the catalytic cobalt atom at 655 to 630 nm. Binding of imidazole to the cobalt(II) enzyme redshifts the 655 nm band to 667 nm. Addition of bromoimidazolyl propionic acid blueshifts this 667 nm band back to 630 nm. This proves direct binding of the label to the active site metal in competition with imidazole. The affinity of the label for the reversible binding site in the three enzymes follows the order Zn ? Cd ? Co. After reversible complex formation, bromoimidazolyl propionic acid alkylates cysteine-46, one of the protein ligands to the active site metal. The nucleophilic reactivity of this metal-mercaptide bond in each reversible complex follows the order Co ? Zn ? Cd.  相似文献   

2.
Modification of heme·heme oxygenase by iron(III) and cobalt(II) tetrasulfonated phthalocyanines has been performed. New compounds have been isolated and their properties have been investigated by difference spectroscopy, electrophoresis, molecular weight estimation, electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and carboxymethylation at histidyl groups. Spectrophotometric titration data indicate the ratio of the reagents in this process to be 1:1. The visible absorption spectra show the main peak at 650 nm for the iron compound and 682 nm for the cobalt one. Electrophoresis and molecular weight estimation show both complexes to be monomers. Cobalt(II) tetrasulfonated phthalocyanine, under aerobic conditions with heme oxygenase protein, undergoes autooxidation to the cobalt(III) complex, as has been proved by EPR and spectroscopic data. Iron and cobalt phthalocyanine modified heme·heme oxygenase with excess dithionite is reduced at the phthalocyanine ligand. In the presence of oxygen, the reduction product transforms into oxygenated Fe(III)Lheme oxygenase or Co(III)heme oxygenase, respectively. Reduction of the iron(III) model complex with ascorbic acid under anaerobic conditions leads to degradation of the phthalocyanine moiety, while Co(III)heme oxygenase with ascorbic acid is reduced to Co(II)Lheme oxygenase. As has been shown by carboxymethylation of the heme oxygenase protein at the histidine residues, the predominant binding site of both phthalocyanine complexes is the heme-binding histidyl residue. There is evidence that there is a second binding site with lower affinity towards Co(II)L on the heme oxygenase protein. Iron and cobalt tetrasulfonated phthalocyanines are not able to displace heme from the heme·heme oxygenase complex. In this reaction the iron complex undergoes degradation and the cobalt one gives a hybrid compound with heme·heme oxygenaseHeme oxygenase protein complexes with iron and cobalt tetrasulfonated phthalocyanines do not exhibit activity in their oxidative degradation.  相似文献   

3.
The exchange-inert tetra-ammino-chromium complex of ATP [Cr(NH3)4ATP], unlike the analogous cobalt complex Co(NH3)4ATP, inactivated Na+/K(+)-ATPase slowly by interacting with the high-affinity ATP binding site. The inactivation proceeded at 37 degrees C with an inactivation rate constant of 1.34 x 10(-3) min-1 and with a dissociation constant of 0.62 microM. To assess the potential role of the water ligands of metal in binding and inactivation, a kinetic analysis of the inactivation of Na+/K(+)-ATPase by Cr(NH3)4ATP, and its H2O-substituted derivatives Cr(NH3)3(H2O)ATP, Cr(NH3)2(H2O)2ATP and Cr(H2O)4ATP was carried out. The substitution of the H2O ligands with NH3 ligands increased the apparent binding affinity and decreased the inactivation rate constants of the enzyme by these complexes. Inactivation by Cr(H2O)4ATP was 29-fold faster than the inactivation by Cr(NH3)4ATP. These results suggested that substitution to Cr(III) occurs during the inactivation of the enzyme. Additionally hydrogen bonding between water ligands of metal and the enzyme's active-site residues does not seem to play a significant role in the inactivation of Na+/K(+)-ATPase by Cr(III)-ATP complexes. Inactivation of the enzyme by Rh(H2O)nATP occurred by binding of this analogue to the high-affinity ATP site with an apparent dissociation constant of 1.8 microM. The observed inactivation rate constant of 2.11 x 10(-3) min-1 became higher when Na+ or Mg2+ or both were present. The presence of K+ however, increased the dissociation constant without altering the inactivation rate constant. High concentrations of Na+ reactivated the Rh(H2O)nATP-inactivated enzyme. Co(NH3)4ATP inactivates Na+/K(+)-ATPase by binding to the low-affinity ATP binding site only at high concentrations. However, inactivation of the enzyme by Cr(III)-ATP or Rh(III)-ATP complexes was prevented when low concentrations of Co(NH3)4ATP were present. This indicates that, although Co(NH3)4ATP interacts with both ATP sites, inactivation occurs only through the low-affinity ATP site. Inactivation of Na+/K(+)-ATPase was faster by the delta isomer of Co(NH3)4ATP than by the delta isomer. Co(NH3)4ATP, but not Cr(H2O)4ATP or adenosine 5'-[beta,gamma-methylene]triphosphate competitively inhibited K(+)-activated p-nitrophenylphosphatase activity of Na+/K(+)-ATPase, which is assumed to be a partial reaction of the enzyme catalyzed by the low-affinity ATP binding site.  相似文献   

4.
Three separate classes of ribonucleotide reductases are known, each with a distinct protein structure. One common feature of all enzymes is that a single protein generates each of the four deoxyribonucleotides. Class I and III enzymes contain an allosteric substrate specificity site capable of binding effectors (ATP or various deoxyribonucleoside triphosphates) that direct enzyme specificity. Some (but not all) enzymes contain a second allosteric site that binds only ATP or dATP. Binding of dATP to this site inhibits the activity of these enzymes. X-ray crystallography has localized the two sites within the structure of the Escherichia coli class I enzyme and identified effector-binding amino acids. Here, we have studied the regulation of three class II enzymes, one from the archaebacterium Thermoplasma acidophilum and two from eubacteria (Lactobacillus leichmannii and Thermotoga maritima). Each enzyme has an allosteric site that binds ATP or various deoxyribonucleoside triphosphates and that regulates its substrate specificity according to the same rules as for class I and III enzymes. dATP does not inhibit enzyme activity, suggesting the absence of a second active allosteric site. For the L. leichmannii and T. maritima enzymes, binding experiments also indicate the presence of only one allosteric site. Their primary sequences suggest that these enzymes lack the structural requirements for a second site. In contrast, the T. acidophilum enzyme binds dATP at two separate sites, and its sequence contains putative effector-binding amino acids for a second site. The presence of a second site without apparent physiological function leads to the hypothesis that a functional site was present early during the evolution of ribonucleotide reductases, but that its function was lost from the T. acidophilum enzyme. The other two B12 enzymes lost not only the function, but also the structural basis for the site. Also a large subgroup (Ib) of class I enzymes, but none of the investigated class III enzymes, has lost this site. This is further indirect evidence that class II and I enzymes may have arisen by divergent evolution from class III enzymes.  相似文献   

5.
In an effort to prepare Co(II)-substituted metallo-beta-lactamase L1 from Stenotrophomonas maltophilia for future spectroscopic and mechanistic studies, two methods for the preparation of Co(II)-L1 were tested. Method A involved adding CoCl2 directly to apo-L1 under anaerobic conditions. The resulting enzyme contained 1.9 moles of cobalt and exhibited very little activity, and UV-Vis, 1H NMR, and EPR studies indicated that most of the cobalt in this sample was Co(III). Method B involved reducing the single and unique disulfide bridge in L1 with tris(carboxyethyl)phosphine prior to adding CoCl2. The resulting enzyme was pink, contained 2.5 moles of cobalt per mole of enzyme, and exhibited kcat and Km values of 18+1 s(-1) and 10+/-1 microM, respectively, when using nitrocefin as the substrate. UV-Vis, 1H NMR, and EPR studies revealed that this enzyme sample contained high-spin Co(II). The UV-Vis spectra also provided evidence for Co(II) bound to one or both of the reduced cysteines. Efforts to block this non-specific Co(II) binding site using a chemical modification agent or site-directed mutagenesis were unsuccessful. The data presented here demonstrate the problem of solvent-exposed disulfides when preparing Co(II)-substituted enzymes and offers a convenient method to circumvent the problem.  相似文献   

6.
J K Wright  J Feldman  M Takahashi 《Biochemistry》1976,15(17):3704-3710
The kinase active site of the aspartokinase-homoserine dehydrogenase enzyme complex of Excherichia coli has been affinity labeled both with substrates aspartate and adenosine triphosphate and feedback inhibitor threonine. Co(III) exchange-inert adducts of aspartokinase and inhibitor or substrates were produced in situ by oxidation of Co(II) with H2O2. Emzyme-Co(III)-adenosine 5'-triphosphate (ATP), enzyme-Co(III)-aspartate, and enzyme-Co(III)-threonine ternary adducts were produced in this manner. The formation of the enzyme-Co(III)-threonine adduct leads us to conclude that threonine inhibits the kinase activity of this enzyme complex by binding in the first coordination sphere of the catalytic metal ion cofactor, a conclusion which is consistent with evidence derived from previous nuclear magnetic resonance data obtained in this laboratory. The quaternary adducts formed by H2O2 oxidation in the presence of aspartokinase, Co(II), ATP, aspartate, and threonine comprised a mixture of both ezyme-Co(III)-ATP-aspartate and enzyme-Co(III)-ATP-threonine adducts. The formation of the quaternary aspartate-containing adduct was unexpected, since the presence of threonine was expected to prevent access of the aspartate to the active site; most significantly however, the the sum of the numbers of aspartate plus threonine molecules incorporated per active site is one. We believe that this shows direct steric overlap between the metal-adjacent binding sites for aspartate and threonine. Aspartate or threonine can not occupy the kinase active site simultaneously; this conclusion is consistent with the direct competitive inhibition of aspartate by threonine observed in steady-state kinetic studies.  相似文献   

7.
A Théobald  D Kern  R Giegé 《Biochimie》1988,70(2):205-213
Essential lysine residues were sought in the catalytic site of baker's yeast aspartyl-tRNA synthetase (an alpha 2 dimer of Mr 125,000) using affinity labeling methods and periodate-oxidized adenosine, ATP, and tRNA(Asp). It is shown that the number of periodate-oxidized derivatives which can be bound to the synthetase via Schiff's base formation with epsilon-NH2 groups of lysine residues exceeds the stoichiometry of specific substrate binding. Furthermore, it is found that the enzymatic activities are not completely abolished, even for high incorporation levels of the modified substrates. The tRNA(Asp) aminoacylation reaction is more sensitive to labeling than is the ATP-PPi exchange one; for enzyme preparations modified with oxidized adenosine or ATP this activity remains unaltered. These results demonstrate the absence of a specific lysine residue directly involved in the catalytic activities of yeast aspartyl-tRNA synthetase. Comparative labeling experiments with oxidized ATP were run with several other aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases. Residual ATP-PPi exchange and tRNA aminoacylation activities measured in each case on the modified synthetases reveal different behaviors of these enzymes when compared to that of aspartyl-tRNA synthetase. When tested under identical experimental conditions, pure isoleucyl-, methionyl-, threonyl- and valyl-tRNA synthetases from E. coli can be completely inactivated for their catalytic activities; for E. coli alanyl-tRNA synthetase only the tRNA charging activity is affected, whereas yeast valyl-tRNA synthetase is only partly inactivated. The structural significance of these experiments and the occurrence of essential lysine residues in aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases are discussed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
Intramolecular distance measurements in alpha-lactalbumin   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
G Musci  L J Berliner 《Biochemistry》1986,25(17):4887-4891
The distance between the calcium site (site I) and the zinc site (site II) in alpha-lactalbumin was estimated from Forster energy-transfer measurements between donor Eu(III) [or Tb(III)] at site I and acceptor Co(II) at site II to be 11.5 +/- 1.5 A. Intersite distances were also measured between the bis-ANS [4,4'-bis[1-(phenylamino)-8-naphthalenesulfonate]] binding locus and cobalt at site II (13.6 +/- 1.0 A), between bis-ANS and a fluorescein moiety covalently bound to Met-90 (33.5 +/- 3.0 A), and between Met-90 (fluorescein) and cobalt at site II (16.7 +/- 1.0 A). The apparent Kd for cobalt binding to site II agreed well with the value measured previously by intrinsic fluorescence [Murakami, K., & Berliner, L. J. (1983) Biochemistry 22, 3370-3374]. A Zn(II) titration of Eu(III)-alpha-lactalbumin reconfirmed that both sites I and II can be occupied simultaneously [Musci, G., & Berliner, L. J. (1985) Biochemistry 24, 3852-3856], since the lanthanide fluorescence was unaffected.  相似文献   

9.
Cobalt(III)bovine carbonic anhydrase B was prepared by the oxidation of the cobalt(II) enzyme with hydrogen peroxide and was purified by affinity chromatography. The oxidation reaction is inhibited by specific inhibitors of carbonic anhydrase. The inhibition is explained by the fact that the Co(II)-enzyme . inhibitor complex cannot be directly oxidized by hydrogen peroxide, but has to dissociate to give free Co(II) enzyme which is then oxidized. The Co(III) ion in Co(III) carbonic anhydrase cannot be directly substituted by zinc ions. It can be reduced by either dithionite or BH-4 ions to give, first, their complexes with the Co(II) enzyme, and upon their removal, a fully active Co(II) enzyme. Cyanide and azide bind to cobalt(III) carbonic anhydrase with similar rate constants of 0.060 +/- 0.005 and 0.070 +/- 0.007 M-1 S-1 respectively. These rates are faster than those found for Co(III) inorganic complexes. The Co(III) ion in both Co(III) carbonic anhydrase and Co(III) carboxypeptidase A was found to be diamagnetic, indicating a near octahedral symmetry.  相似文献   

10.
P D Wagner  R G Yount 《Biochemistry》1975,14(9):1900-1907
A site-specific analog of ATP, 6,6'-dithiobis (inosinyl imidodiphosphate (S2P-PNP), inactivates the ATPase activities of myosin's proteolytic fragments, heavy meromyosin (HMM) and subfragment one (SF1), by formation of mixed disulfides between the 6 position of the purine ring and certain key cysteines. The stoichiometry of the reaction was determined by quantitatively displacing the thiopurine nucleotides from the labeled enzymes with sodium[14-C]cyanide. The thiocyanatoenzyme formed regained 25 percent of the original activity showing that the cysteines modified were not essential for catalysis. The rate of uptake of label paralleled the rate of inactivation. HMM was completely inactivated when 4 mol of thiopurine nucleotide was bound. SF1 made by a papain digestion of myosin incorporarted 2 mol of thiopurine nucleotide when completely inactivated. Having adenylyl imidodiphosphate, areversible competitive inhibitor of myosin's ATPase, present during the inactivation of HMM by S2P-PNP demonstrated that only one cysteine per head needed to be blocked to inactivate the enzyme. Moreover, SF1 made by a trypsin digest of HMM was completely inactivated when only 1.1 mol of the thiopurine nucleotide bound again indicating that blocking only a single cysteine per head was sufficient to cause inactivation. This sulfhydryl is thought to be at an ATP binding site distinct from the ATPase site. The properties of this second ATP binding site are consistent with it being an ATP regulatory site.  相似文献   

11.
Three cobalt derivatives of bovine erythrocyte superoxide dismutase (superoxide:superoxide oxidoreductase, EC 1.15.1.1) have been prepared under different pH conditions using a cobalt-thiocyanate complex which has already proved to yield specific substitutions on other copper proteins. The cobalt-protein derivatives have been characterized by optical, circular dichroism and fluorescence spectroscopies. One derivative, referred to as Co2Co2-protein, contains Co(II) ions specifically bound at both Zn(II) and Cu(II) sites. On the basis of their spectroscopic properties, the other two derivatives can be referred as E2Co2- and Co2E2-superoxide dismutase, with cobalt substituting, respectively, at the zinc and the copper sites leaving the contiguous site empty (E). The Co2E2-protein complex represents a novel derivative, since it has never been described in literature. The optical spectrum in the visible region of Co2-Co2-protein well corresponds to the sum of the spectra of the other two derivatives. The circular dichroism spectrum of Co2Co2-derivative, however, is not the sum of individual E2Co2- and Co2E2-proteins, suggesting that the presence of Co(II) in one site strongly affects the geometry of the neighbouring site. Some discrepancies between our spectroscopic data and those reported in literature are discussed. The results obtained from fluorescence experiments indicate that Co(II) ions exert a different quenching effect on the tyrosine emission, depending on whether they are located in the Zn(II) or in the Cu(II) site. The fluorescence quenching can be attributed to a 'heavy atom' and 'paramagnetic ion' effect by Co(II) ions.  相似文献   

12.
The photoreactive gamma-(p-azidoanilidate) analog of ATP, AzAnATP, was used to affinity-label the chloroplastic and cytoplasmic leucyl-tRNA synthetases of Euglena gracilis. The analog is able to replace the substrate ATP in the tRNA leucylation reaction catalyzed by both enzymes. In the presence of ATP, it is a competitive inhibitor against ATP as well as leucine for the two isoenzymes, as is also shown for the photoinactive gamma-anilidate analog of ATP, AnATP, which does not serve as substrate in the enzyme reaction. During ultraviolet irradiation, the enzymes are irreversibly inactivated by AzAnATP in a concentration-dependent and time-dependent manner indicative of photoaffinity labeling. Both ATP and leucine, but not tRNA, protect the enzymes against ultraviolet-induced inactivation by AzAnATP. Comparative kinetic characterization of the inactivation process reveals differences in the active centers of the two intracellular isoenzymes.  相似文献   

13.
Two distinctly different glutamine synthetase enzymes (EI and EII) have been isolated from the extreme thermophile Bacillus caldolyticus, grown on chemically defined medium at 70 degrees C. Purification to homogeneity mainly involves affinity chromatography and heat treatment with substrate protection. Biosynthesis of total enzyme activity can be repressed by at least 8-fold by high ammonia, with synthesis of EI being repressed more strongly than EII. A variety of chemical and biochemical tests failed to provide evidence for regulation of EI or EII by covalent modification, e.g. proteolysis, phosphorylation, or adenylylation. Neither of the thermophiic enzymes will cross-react with antibodies for the Escherichia coli or Bacillus subtilis glutamine synthetases. Both enzymes are composed of 12 subunits, each approximately 51,000 daltons. However, EI and EII differ significantly in their amino acid composition, isoelectric points (5.2 and 5.5, respectively), rates of migration on polyacrylamide electrophoresis gels at pH 6.8, and kinetic properties, EI is more active with Mg(II) than with Mn(II), but EII is more active with Mn(II) than Mg(II). Cd(II) activates EII more than EI, and only EI shows activity with Co(II). For both enzymes, the Mn(II)-stimulated activity is optimal at pH 6.0 to 6.5, with Mn(II)/ATP = 1.0, but the pH optimum with Mg(II) is near pH 7.5, however, with a ratio of Mg(II)/ATP > 2. Substrate Km values at 70 degrees C differ for EI versus EII but are quite comparable to those seen for mesophilic glutamine synthetases. Studies with structural analogs of substrates indicate that active site specificity is maintained at extreme temperatures: substitution of alpha-OH for alpha-HN2 is allowed, but unfavorable changes occur upon substitution of methyl groups for the alpha-H or onto the alpha-NH2 of L-Glu, and for D-Glu or L-Asp. EII is almost absdolutely specific for ATP, but EI can also use ITP, GTP, and UTP as substrates to some extent. The divalent metal ion that is present can affect both specificity for analogs and substrate Km values. Kinetic binding plots (v versus [S]) are biphasic for NH3 and L-Glu with the more active forms of each enzyme, EI-Mg and EII-Mn, respectively; but no positive cooperativity is observed. ATP binding is strictly hyperbolic, in contrast to the positive cooperativity previously observed with other Bacillus sp. enzymes. For purified EI and EII, Arrhenius plots are nonlinear with Mn(II) or Mg(II), exhibiting slope changes in the range of 55-65 degrees C; however, for EI-EII mixtures in crude cell extracts these plots are nearly linear.  相似文献   

14.
Bidentate cobalt(III)tetraamine adenosine triphosphate [Co(NH3)4ATP] was investigated as an inhibitor of the beef heart mitochondrial F1-ATPase. The compound was found to have a mixed noncompetitive mechanism with a Ki of 0.4 mM and an alpha of 1.4 during ATP hydrolysis. Co(NH3)4ATP also noncompetitively inhibited ATP hydrolysis in the presence of bicarbonate. ITP hydrolysis was similarly affected. Co(NH3)4ATP was also used in dual inhibitor studies with adenylylimidodiphosphate (AMP-PNP) and azide; it was found to be mutually exclusive with AMP-PNP and azide. The compound also protected the F1 from modification by 4-chloro-7-nitrobenzofurazan. These results are discussed in terms of the regulation of the ATP hydrolysis reaction.  相似文献   

15.
Inhibition of cytochrome c oxidase function by dicyclohexylcarbodiimide   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
Dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCCD) reacted with beef heart cytochrome c oxidase in inhibit the proton-pumping function of this enzyme and to a lesser extent to inhibit electron transfer. The modification of cytochrome c oxidase in detergent dispersion or in vesicular membranes was in subunits II-IV. Labelling followed by fragmentation studies showed that there is one major site of modification in subunit III. DCCD was also incorporated into several sites in subunit II and at least one site of subunit IV. The major site in subunit III has a specificity for DCCD at least one order of magnitude greater than that of other sites (in subunits II and IV). Its modification could account for all of the observed effects of the reagent, at least for low concentrations of DCCD. Labelling of subunit II by DCCD was blocked by prior covalent attachment of arylazidocytochrome c, a cytochrome c derivative which binds to the high-affinity binding site for the substrate. The major site of DCCD binding in subunit III was sequenced. The label was found in glutamic acid 90 which is in a sequence of eight amino acids remarkably similar to the DCCD-binding site within the proteolipid protein of the mitochondrial ATP synthetase.  相似文献   

16.
Tetrammine cobalt(III) phosphate [Co(NH3)4PO4] inactivates Na+/K(+)-ATPase in the E2 conformational state, dependent on time and concentration, according to Eqn (1): Co(NH3)4PO4 + E2 Kd in equilibrium E2.Co(NH3)4PO4k2----E'2.Co(NH3)4PO4. The inactivation rate constant k2 for the formation of a stable E'2.Co(NH3)4PO4 at 37 degrees C was 0.057 min-1; the dissociation constant, Kd = 300 microM. The activation energy for the inactivation process was 149 kJ/mol. ATP and the uncleavable adenosine 5'-[beta, gamma-methylene]triphosphate competed with Co(NH3)4PO4 for its binding site with Ks = 0.41 mM and 5 mM, respectively. MgPO4 competed with Co(NH3)4PO4 linearly, with Ks = 50 microM, as did phosphate (Ks = 16 mM) and Mg2+ (Ks = 160 microM). It is concluded that the MgPO4 analogue binds to the MgPO4-binding subsite of the low-affinity ATP-binding site (of the E2 conformation). Also, Na+ (Ks = 860 microM) protected the enzyme against inactivation in a competitive manner. From the intersecting (slope and intercept linear) noncompetitive effect of Na+ against the inactivation by Co(NH3)4PO4, apparent affinities of K+ for the free enzyme of 41 microM, and for the E.Co(NH3)4PO4 complex of 720 microM, were calculated. Binding of Co(NH3)4PO4 to the enzyme inactivated Na+/K(+)-ATPase and K(+)-activated phosphatase, and, moreover, prevented the occlusion of 86Rb+; however, the activity of the Na(+)-ATPase, the phosphorylation capacity of the high-affinity ATP-binding site and the ATP/ADP-exchange reaction remained unchanged. With Co(NH3)432PO4 a binding capacity of 135 pmol unit enzyme was found. Phosphorylation and complete inactivation of the enzyme with Co(NH3)432PO4 or the 32P-labelled tetramminecobalt ATP ([gamma-32P]Co(NH3)4ATP) at the low-affinity ATP-binding site, allowed (independent of the purity of the Na+/K(+)-ATPase preparation) a further incorporation of radioactivity from 32P-labelled tetraaquachromium(III) ATP ([gamma-32P]CrATP) to the high-affinity ATP-binding site with unchanged phosphorylation capacity. However, inactivation and phosphorylation of Na+/K(+)-ATPase by [gamma-32P]CrATP prevented the binding of Co(NH3)4 32PO4 or [gamma-32P]Co(NH3)4ATP to the enzyme. [gamma-32P]CO(NH3)4ATP and Co(NH3)432PO4 are mutually exclusive. The data are consistent with the assumption of a cooperation of catalytic subunits within an (alpha,beta)2-diprotomer, which change their interactions during the Na+/K(+)-pumping process. Our findings seem not to support a symmetrical Repke and Stein model of enzyme action.  相似文献   

17.
1. The reactivity of the zinc site of bovine superoxide dismutase has been probed by observing optical and electron paramagnetic resonance changes, under several conditions, of the Co(II)-substituted protein. 2. Only in the absence of copper are the optical and electron paramagnetic resonance spectra of the cobalt chromophore appreciably affected by alkaline pH or by cyanide. With both reagents the reaction with the copper-containing protein appears to involve the water molecule bound to the copper and does not affect the magnetic coupling between copper and cobalt. 3. The reaction of cyanide with the copper-free Co(II) protein leads to a slow detachment of cobalt from the protein as pentacyanocobalt. An oxygen adduct forms in air, analogous to that described in Co(II) carbonic anhydrase (Haffner, P. H. and Coleman, J. E. (1975) J. Biol. Chem. 250, 996--1005.) 4. Acid titration modifies the Co(II) spectra in the same way in the Cu-containing and in the Cu-free protein and brings about uncoupling of the Co(II)--Cu(II) system. Protonation of histidine-61 on the zinc facing nitrogen is suggested. 5. H2O2 modifies the cobalt chromophore only in the presence of copper. Magnetic coupling between Cu(II) and Co(II) seems to be still present after H2O2 inactivation of the enzyme.  相似文献   

18.
Three cobalt complexes containing the salen type ligand, bis(salicylidene)-meso-1,2-diphenylethylenediaminato (mdpSal2−), are reported. The complexes differ in nuclearity and include the mononuclear, Co(mdpSal) (1), which contains a Co(II) metal center bound to one mdpSal−2 ligand frame in a square planar geometry. The second complex is the dinuclear [Co(mdpSal)Cl]2 (2) in which both cobalt ions have been oxidized to the +3 oxidation state. The overall geometry of complex 2 is an edge-sharing bioctahedron with the coordination sphere around each cobalt metal center consisting of one mdpSal−2 ligand and one Cl ion. The shared edge between the Co(III) ions contains two bridging phenolate groups, one from each ligand frame. Complex 3 is a linear, mixed valence, trinuclear species, [Co(mdpSal)(OAc)(μ-OAc)]2Co, with the oxidation states of the metal centers assigned as Co(III)-Co(II)-Co(III). The terminal Co(III) centers are equivalent with the central Co(II) lying on the inversion center of the molecule. Each cobalt ion in 3 adopts an octahedral geometry with the terminal Co(III) ions being bound to one mdpSal2− ligand each. All phenolate groups bridge to the central Co(II). The coordination sphere about each metal center in the trinuclear complex is completed by four acetate groups, two of which bind in a μ-fashion bridging from the terminal Co(III) metal centers to the central Co(II). The complexes have been characterized by X-ray crystallography as well as UV-Vis and IR spectroscopy.  相似文献   

19.
The DNA-dependent RNA polymerase containing two intrinsic cobalt ions (Co2-RPase) instead of the naturally occurring zinc was purified from Escherichia coli cells grown in zinc-depleted, cobalt-enriched media. Longitudinal NMR relaxation rates of the H2 and H8 protons of ATP were measured in the absence and presence of up to 92 microM Co2-RPase. No enhancement of the proton relaxation rates was observed in the presence of cobalt-containing enzyme, suggesting that the ATP substrate does not undergo rapid exchange at a site close to either of the intrinsic cobalt ions. This result is in contrast to that previously observed when Co2+ was incorporated into RPase by an in vitro procedure involving partial urea denaturation of the protein.  相似文献   

20.
3'-O-(4-Benzoyl)benzoyl-ATP (Bz2ATP), an analog of ATP containing a photoreactive benzophenone moiety, was used as a probe of the ATP binding site of myosin subfragment 1 (SF1). The inactivation of SF1 NH+4-EDTA ATPase by the bifunctional thiol crosslinking system cobalt(II)/cobalt(III) phenanthroline complexes was enhanced by Bz2ATP to the same degree as by ATP. This treatment resulted in the stable trapping of Bz2ATP at the active site in nearly stoichiometric amounts in a manner exactly analogous to ATP (Wells, J.A., and Yount, R.G. (1979) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 76, 4966-4970). Irradiation of SF1 containing trapped [3H]Bz2ATP gave approximately 50% covalent incorporation of the trapped nucleotide into the enzyme. Analysis of photolabeled SF1 by gel electrophoresis showed that all of the [3H]Bz2ATP was attached to the 95-kDa heavy chain fragment. No label was found in the light chains. Similar analysis of the same protein after limited trypsin treatment demonstrated that approximately 75% of the [3H]Bz2ATP was bound to the central 50-kDa peptide and its 75-kDa precursor from the heavy chain. The N-terminal 25-kDa tryptic peptide, shown to be photolabeled by other ATP analogs (Szilagyi, L., Balint, M., Sreter, F.A., and Gergely, J. (1979) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 87, 936-945; Okamoto, Y., and Yount, R.G. (1983) Biophys. J. 41, 298a), was not labeled (less than 1%) by Bz2ATP. These results demonstrate that portions of the 50 kDa-peptide of the heavy chain are within 6-7 A of the ATP binding site on SF1 and possibly contribute to nucleotide binding.  相似文献   

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