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1.
The focus of this article is on progress in establishing structure-function relationships through site-directed mutagenesis and direct binding assay of Tl(+), Rb(+), K(+), Na(+), Mg(2+) or free ATP at equilibrium in Na,K-ATPase. Direct binding may identify residues coordinating cations in the E(2)[2K] or E(1)P[3Na] forms of the ping-pong reaction sequence and allow estimates of their contributions to the change of Gibbs free energy of binding. This is required to understand the molecular basis for the pronounced Na/K selectivity at the cytoplasmic and extracellular surfaces. Intramembrane Glu(327) in transmembrane segment M4, Glu(779) in M5, Asp(804) and Asp(808) in M6 are essential for tight binding of K(+) and Na(+). Asn(324) and Glu(327) in M4, Thr(774), Asn(776), and Glu(779) in 771-YTLTSNIPEITP of M5 contribute to Na(+)/K(+) selectivity. Free ATP binding identifies Arg(544) as essential for high affinity binding of ATP or ADP. In the 708-TGDGVND segment, mutations of Asp(710) or Asn(713) do not interfere with free ATP binding. Asp(710) is essential and Asn(713) is important for coordination of Mg(2+) in the E(1)P[3Na] complex, but they do not contribute to Mg(2+) binding in the E(2)P-ouabain complex. Transition to the E(2)P form involves a shift of Mg(2+) coordination away from Asp(710) and Asn(713) and the two residues become more important for hydrolysis of the acyl phosphate bond at Asp(369).  相似文献   

2.
The segment (708)TGDGVNDSPALKK(720) in the alpha-subunit P domain of Na,K-ATPase is highly conserved among cation pumps, but little is known about its role in binding of Mg(2+) or ATP and energy transduction. Here, 11 mutations of polar residues are expressed at reduced temperature in yeast with preserved capacities for high affinity binding of ouabain and ATP, whereas the Thr(708) --> Ser mutation and alterations of Asp(714) abolish all catalytic reactions. In mutations of Asp(710) and Asn(713), ATP affinity is preserved or increased, whereas Na,K-ATPase activity is severely reduced. Assay of phosphorylation from ATP in the presence of oligomycin shows that Asp(710) contributes to coordination of Mg(2+) during transfer of gamma-phosphate to Asp(369) in the high energy Mg.E(1)P[3Na] intermediate and that Asn(713) is involved in these processes. In contrast, Asp(710) and Asp(713) do not contribute to Mg(2+) binding in the E(2)P.ouabain complex. Transition to E(2)P thus involves a shift of Mg(2+) coordination away from Asp(710) and Asn(713), and the two residues become more important for hydrolysis of the acyl phosphate bond at Asp(369). The Asp(710) --> Ala mutation blocks interaction with vanadate, whereas Asn(713) --> Ala interferes with phosphorylation from P(i) of the E(2).ouabain complex, showing that the GDGVND segment is required for stabilization of the transition state and for the phosphorylation reaction. The Asp(710) --> Ala mutation also interferes with transmission of structural changes to the ouabain site and reduces the affinity for binding of Tl(+) 2- to 3-fold, suggesting a role in transmission of K(+) stimulation of phospho-enzyme hydrolysis from transmembrane segment 5 to the P domain.  相似文献   

3.
Fedosova NU  Esmann M 《Biochemistry》2007,46(31):9116-9122
Investigation of the ionic strength effect on the interactions between nucleotides (ATP and ADP) and Na,K-ATPase in a broad pH range was aimed at revealing pK values of the charged groups of the interacting species. Ionic strength experiments suggested that an amino acid residue with a pK > 8.0 is part of the protein binding site. A combination of equilibrium and transient experiments at various pH values allowed for the characterization of the groups electrostatically involved in either the association process (kon) or the stability of the preformed complexes (koff). Two groups (pK1 = 6.7 and pK2 = 8.4) appear to be important for the proper organization of the binding site and, therefore, the association reaction. Moreover, deprotonation of the basic group completely precludes association. pH dependencies of the dissociation rate constants for ATP and ADP are very different. An increase in pH from 5 to 9.5 induces a 9-fold increase in koff for ATP, whereas koff for ADP decreases 4-fold between pH 5 and 8, and decreases further in the alkaline region. A comparison of the pH dependencies for koff for ATP and ADP suggests two effects: (1) at acidic pH, the value of the total negative charge of the nucleotide determines the tightness of binding; and (2) short-range interactions involving the terminal phosphate group are important for nucleotide dissociation from the site. The difference in the pH dependencies of koff for the nucleotides suggests the existence of positive charges in close proximity to Asp369, relieving the repulsion between the gamma-phosphate of ATP and Asp369.  相似文献   

4.
Productive cis folding by the chaperonin GroEL is triggered by the binding of ATP but not ADP, along with cochaperonin GroES, to the same ring as non-native polypeptide, ejecting polypeptide into an encapsulated hydrophilic chamber. We examined the specific contribution of the gamma-phosphate of ATP to this activation process using complexes of ADP and aluminium or beryllium fluoride. These ATP analogues supported productive cis folding of the substrate protein, rhodanese, even when added to already-formed, folding-inactive cis ADP ternary complexes, essentially introducing the gamma-phosphate of ATP in an independent step. Aluminium fluoride was observed to stabilize the association of GroES with GroEL, with a substantial release of free energy (-46 kcal/mol). To understand the basis of such activation and stabilization, a crystal structure of GroEL-GroES-ADP.AlF3 was determined at 2.8 A. A trigonal AlF3 metal complex was observed in the gamma-phosphate position of the nucleotide pocket of the cis ring. Surprisingly, when this structure was compared with that of the previously determined GroEL-GroES-ADP complex, no other differences were observed. We discuss the likely basis of the ability of gamma-phosphate binding to convert preformed GroEL-GroES-ADP-polypeptide complexes into the folding-active state.  相似文献   

5.
Point mutants with alterations to amino acid residues Thr(247), Pro(248), Glu(340), Asp(813), Arg(819), and Arg(822) of sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+)-ATPase were analyzed by transient kinetic measurements. In the Ca(2+)-ATPase crystal structures, most of these residues participate in a hydrogen-bonding network between the phosphorylation domain (domain P), the third transmembrane helix (M3), and the cytoplasmic loop connecting the sixth and the seventh transmembrane helices (L6-7). In several of the mutants, a pronounced phosphorylation "overshoot" was observed upon reaction of the Ca(2+)-bound enzyme with ATP, because of accumulation of dephosphoenzyme at steady state. Mutations of Glu(340) and its partners, Thr(247) and Arg(822), in the bonding network markedly slowed the Ca(2+) binding transition (E2 --> E1 --> Ca(2)E1) as well as Ca(2+) dissociation from Ca(2+) site II back toward the cytosol but did not affect the apparent affinity for vanadate. These mutations may have caused a slowing, in both directions, of the conformational change associated directly with Ca(2+) interaction at Ca(2+) site II. Because mutation of Asp(813) inhibited the Ca(2+) binding transition, but not Ca(2+) dissociation, and increased the apparent affinity for vanadate, the effect on the Ca(2+) binding transition seems in this case to be exerted by slowing the E2 --> E1 conformational change. Because the rate was not significantly enhanced by a 10-fold increase of the Ca(2+) concentration, the slowing is not the consequence of reduced affinity of any pre-binding site for Ca(2+). Furthermore, the mutations interfered in specific ways with the phosphoenzyme processing steps of the transport cycle; the transition from ADP-sensitive phosphoenzyme to ADP-insensitive phosphoenzyme (Ca(2)E1P --> E2P) was accelerated by mutations perturbing the interactions mediated by Glu(340) and Asp(813) and inhibited by mutation of Pro(248), and mutations of Thr(247) induced charge-specific changes of the rate of dephosphorylation of E2P.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Inesi G  Lewis D  Ma H  Prasad A  Toyoshima C 《Biochemistry》2006,45(46):13769-13778
We relate solution behavior to the crystal structure of the Ca2+ ATPase (SERCA). We find that nucleotide binding occurs with high affinity through interaction of the adenosine moiety with the N domain, even in the absence of Ca2+ and Mg2+, or to the closed conformation stabilized by thapsigargin (TG). Why then is Ca2+ crucial for ATP utilization? The influence of adenosine 5'-(beta,gamma-methylene) triphosphate (AMPPCP), Ca2+, and Mg2+ on proteolytic digestion patterns, interpreted in the light of known crystal structures, indicates that a Ca2+-dependent conformation of the ATPase headpiece is required for a further transition induced by nucleotide binding. This includes opening of the headpiece, which in turn allows inclination of the "A" domain and bending of the "P" domain. Thereby, the phosphate chain of bound ATP acquires an extended configuration allowing the gamma-phosphate to reach Asp351 to form a complex including Mg2+. We demonstrate by Asp351 mutation that this "productive" conformation of the substrate-enzyme complex is unstable because of electrostatic repulsion at the phosphorylation site. However, this conformation is subsequently stabilized by covalent engagement of the -phosphate yielding the phosphoenzyme intermediate. We also demonstrate that the ADP product remains bound with high affinity to the transition state complex but dissociates with lower affinity as the phosphoenzyme undergoes a further conformational change (i.e., E1-P to E2-P transition). Finally, we measured low-affinity ATP binding to stable phosphoenzyme analogues, demonstrating that the E1-P to E2-P transition and the enzyme turnover are accelerated by ATP binding to the phosphoenzyme in exchange for ADP.  相似文献   

8.
Xu H  Frank J  Niedenzu T  Saenger W 《Biochemistry》2000,39(40):12225-12233
The steady-state kinetic parameters of the ATPase activity of the homohexameric DNA helicase RepA and the binding of the fluorescent analogue epsilonADP to RepA have been studied. ssDNA stimulates RepA ATPase activity optimally at acidic pH 5.3-6.0. The sigmoidal kinetic curves in both the absence and presence of ssDNA show strong positive cooperativity for ATP hydrolysis, with oligonucleotides longer than 10mer optimal for ssDNA-stimulated ATPase activity. Fluorescence titrations show that, at 25 degrees C and in the absence of DNA, the binding of epsilonADP to RepA is biphasic with three high (K(1) = 1.54 x 10(6) M(-1)) and three low (K(2) = 4.71 x 10(4) M(-)(1)) affinity binding sites differing by 30-40-fold in binding constants. In the absence of cofactors, RepA melts cooperatively at T(m) = 65.8 +/- 0.1 degrees C and is more stable in the presence of ATPgammaS, T(m) = 68.1 +/- 0.2 degrees C (DeltaDeltaG 0.95 kcal/mol), than in the presence of ADP, T(m) = 66. 5 +/- 0.1 degrees C (DeltaDeltaG 0.29 kcal/mol), indicating that the additional phosphate group in ATPgammaS has a significant influence on RepA structure. A model is proposed in which individual subunits of RepA sequentially and cooperatively perform a multistep ATP hydrolytic cycle.  相似文献   

9.
Changes in the vibrational spectrum of the sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+)-ATPase upon nucleotide binding were recorded in H(2)O and (2)H(2)O at -7 degrees C and pH 7.0. The reaction cycle was triggered by the photochemical release of nucleotides (ATP, ADP, and AMP-PNP) from a biologically inactive precursor (caged ATP, P(3)-1-(2-nitrophenyl) adenosine 5'-triphosphate, and related caged compounds). Infrared absorbance changes due to ATP release and two steps of the Ca(2+)-ATPase reaction cycle, ATP binding and phosphorylation, were followed in real time. Under the conditions used in our experiments, the rate of ATP binding was limited by the rate of ATP release (k(app) congruent with 3 s(-1) in H(2)O and k(app) congruent with 7 s(-1) in (2)H(2)O). Bands in the amide I and II regions of the infrared spectrum show that the conformation of the Ca(2+)-ATPase changes upon nucleotide binding. The observation of bands in the amide I region can be assigned to perturbations of alpha-helical and beta-sheet structures. According to similar band profiles in the nucleotide binding spectra, ATP, AMP-PNP, and ADP induce similar conformational changes. However, subtle differences between ATP and AMP-PNP are observed; these are most likely due to the protonation state of the gamma-phosphate group. Differences between the ATP and ADP binding spectra indicate the significance of the gamma-phosphate group in the interactions between the Ca(2+)-ATPase and the nucleotide. Nucleotide binding affects Asp or Glu residues, and bands characteristic of their protonated side chains are observed at 1716 cm(-1) (H(2)O) and 1706 cm(-1) ((2)H(2)O) and seem to depend on the charge of the phosphate groups. Bands at 1516 cm(-1) (H(2)O) and 1514 cm(-1) ((2)H(2)O) are tentatively assigned to a protonated Tyr residue affected by nucleotide binding. Possible changes in Arg, Trp, and Lys absorption and in the nucleoside are discussed. The spectra are compared with those of nucleotide binding to arginine kinase, creatine kinase, and H-ras P21.  相似文献   

10.
In Arabidopsis, oxidation of the large (46-kDa) isoform activase to form a disulfide bond in the C-terminal extension (C-extension) significantly increases its ADP sensitivity for both ATP hydrolysis and ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) activation, thereby decreasing both activities at physiological ratios of ADP/ATP. In this study, we demonstrate that the C-extension of the oxidized large activase isoform can be cross-linked with regions containing residues that contribute to the nucleotide-binding pocket, with a higher efficiency in the presence of ADP or the absence of nucleotides than with ATP. Coupled with measurements demonstrating a redox-dependent protease sensitivity of the C-extension and a lower ATP or adenosine 5'-O-(thiotriphosphate) (ATPgammaS) affinity of the oxidized large isoform than either the reduced form or the smaller isoform, the results suggest that the C-extension plays an inhibitory role in ATP hydrolysis, regulated by redox changes. In contrast, the ADP affinities of the small isoform and the reduced or oxidized large isoform were similar, which indicates that the C-extension selectively interferes with the proper binding of ATP, possibly by interfering with the coordination of the gamma-phosphate. Furthermore, replacement of conserved, negatively charged residues (Asp390, Glu394, and Asp401) in the C-extension with alanine significantly reduced the sensitivities of the mutants to ADP inhibition, which suggests the involvement of electrostatic interactions between them and positively charged residues in or near the nucleotide-binding pocket. These studies provide new insights into the mechanism of redox regulation of activase by the C-extension in the large isoform.  相似文献   

11.
Residues in conserved motifs (625)TGD, (676)FARXXPXXK, and (701)TGDGVND in domain P of sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+)-ATPase, as well as in motifs (601)DPPR and (359)NQR(/K)MSV in the hinge segments connecting domains N and P, were examined by mutagenesis to assess their roles in nucleotide and Mg(2+) binding and stabilization of the Ca(2+)-activated transition state for phosphoryl transfer. In the absence of Mg(2+), mutations removing the charges of domain P residues Asp(627), Lys(684), Asp(703), and Asp(707) increased the affinity for ATP and 2',3'-O-(2,4,6-trinitrophenyl)-8-azidoadenosine 5'-triphosphate. These mutations, as well as Gly(626)--> Ala, were inhibitory for ATP binding in the presence of Mg(2+) and for tight binding of the beta,gamma-bidentate chromium(III) complex of ATP. The hinge mutations had pronounced, but variable, effects on ATP binding only in the presence of Mg(2+). The data demonstrate an unfavorable electrostatic environment for binding of negatively charged nucleotide in domain P and show that Mg(2+) is required to anchor the phosphoryl group of ATP at the phosphorylation site. Mutants Gly(626) --> Ala, Lys(684) --> Met, Asp(703) --> Ala/Ser/Cys, and mutants with alteration to Asp(707) exhibited very slow or negligible phosphorylation, making it possible to measure ATP binding in the pseudo-transition state attained in the presence of both Mg(2+) and Ca(2+). Under these conditions, ATP binding was almost completely blocked in Gly(626) --> Ala and occurred with 12- and 7-fold reduced affinities in Asp(703) --> Ala and Asp(707) --> Cys, respectively, relative to the situation in the presence of Mg(2+) without Ca(2+), whereas in Lys(684) --> Met and Asp(707) --> Ser/Asn the affinity was enhanced 14- and 3-5-fold, respectively. Hence, Gly(626) and Asp(703) seem particularly critical for mediating entry into the transition state for phosphoryl transfer upon Ca(2+) binding at the transport sites.  相似文献   

12.
Bradshaw JM  Waksman G 《Biochemistry》1999,38(16):5147-5154
SH2 domains are protein modules which interact with specific tyrosine phosphorylated sequences in target proteins. The SH2 domain of the Src kinase binds with high affinity to a tyrosine phosphorylated peptide containing the amino acids Glu, Glu, and Ile (EEI) at the positions +1, +2, and +3 C-terminal to the phosphotyrosine, respectively. To investigate the degree of selectivity of the Src SH2 domain for each amino acid of the EEI motif, the binding thermodynamics of a panel of substitutions at the +1 (Gln, Asp, Ala, Gly), +2 (Gln, Asp, Ala, Gly), and +3 (Leu, Val, Ala, Gly) positions were examined using titration microcalorimetry. It was revealed that the Src SH2 domain is insensitive (DeltaDeltaG degrees 相似文献   

13.
In the absence of ATP the sarcoplasmic reticulum ATPase (SERCA) binds two Ca(2+) with high affinity. The two bound Ca(2+) rapidly undergo reverse dissociation upon addition of EGTA, but can be distinguished by isotopic exchange indicating fast exchange at a superficial site (site II), and retardation of exchange at a deeper site (site I) by occupancy of site II. Site II mutations that allow high affinity binding to site I, but only low affinity binding to site II, show that retardation of isotopic exchange requires higher Ca(2+) concentrations with the N796A mutant, and is not observed with the E309Q mutant even at millimolar Ca(2+). Fluoroaluminate forms a complex at the catalytic site yielding stable analogs of the phosphoenzyme intermediate, with properties similar to E2-P or E1-P.Ca(2). Mutational analysis indicates that Asp(351), Lys(352), Thr(353), Asp(703), Asn(706), Asp(707), Thr(625), and Lys(684) participate in stabilization of fluoroaluminate and Mg(2+) at the phosphorylation site. In the presence of fluoroaluminate and Ca(2+), ADP (or AMP-PCP) favors formation of a stable ADP.E1-P.Ca(2) analog. This produces strong occlusion of Ca(2+) bound to both sites (I and II), whereby dissociation occurs very slowly even following addition of EGTA. Occlusion by fluoraluminate and ADP is not observed with the E309Q mutant, suggesting a gating function of Glu(309) at the mouth of a binding cavity with a single path of entry. This phenomenon corresponds to the earliest step of the catalytic cycle following utilization of ATP. Experiments on limited proteolysis reveal that a long range conformational change, involving displacement of headpiece domains and transmembrane helices, plays a mechanistic role.  相似文献   

14.
MRP1 belongs to subfamily "C" of the ABC transporter superfamily. The nucleotide-binding domains (NBDs) of the C family members are relatively divergent compared with many ABC proteins. They also differ in their ability to bind and hydrolyze ATP. In MRP1, NBD1 binds ATP with high affinity, whereas NBD2 is hydrolytically more active. Furthermore, ATP binding and/or hydrolysis by NBD2 of MRP1, but not NBD1, is required for MRP1 to shift from a high to low affinity substrate binding state. Little is known of the structural basis for these functional differences. One minor structural difference between NBDs is the presence of Asp COOH-terminal to the conserved core Walker B motif in NBD1, rather than the more commonly found Glu present in NBD2. We show that the presence of Asp or Glu following the Walker B motif profoundly affects the ability of the NBDs to bind, hydrolyze, and release nucleotide. An Asp to Glu mutation in NBD1 enhances its hydrolytic capacity and affinity for ADP but markedly decreases transport activity. In contrast, mutations that eliminate the negative charge of the Asp side chain have little effect. The decrease in transport caused by the Asp to Glu mutation in NBD1 is associated with an inability of MRP1 to shift from high to low affinity substrate binding states. In contrast, mutation of Glu to Asp markedly increases the affinity of NBD2 for ATP while decreasing its ability to hydrolyze ATP and to release ADP. This mutation eliminates transport activity but potentiates the conversion from a high to low affinity binding state in the presence of nucleotide. These observations are discussed in the context of catalytic models proposed for MRP1 and other ABC drug transport proteins.  相似文献   

15.
alpha-Neurotoxins bind with high affinity to alpha-gamma and alpha-delta subunit interfaces of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor. Since this high affinity complex likely involves a van der Waals surface area of approximately 1200 A(2) and 25-35 residues on the receptor surface, analysis of side chains should delineate major interactions and the orientation of bound alpha-neurotoxin. Three distinct regions on the gamma subunit, defined by Trp(55), Leu(119), Asp(174), and Glu(176), contribute to alpha-toxin affinity. Of six charge reversal mutations on the three loops of Naja mossambica mossambica alpha-toxin, Lys(27) --> Glu, Arg(33) --> Glu, and Arg(36) --> Glu in loop II reduce binding energy substantially, while mutations in loops I and III have little effect. Paired residues were analyzed by thermodynamic mutant cycles to delineate electrostatic linkages between the six alpha-toxin charge reversal mutations and three key residues on the gamma subunit. Large coupling energies were found between Arg(33) at the tip of loop II and gammaLeu(119) (-5.7 kcal/mol) and between Lys(27) and gammaGlu(176) (-5.9 kcal/mol). gammaTrp(55) couples strongly to both Arg(33) and Lys(27), whereas gammaAsp(174) couples minimally to charged alpha-toxin residues. Arg(36), despite strong energetic contributions, does not partner with any gamma subunit residues, perhaps indicating its proximity to the alpha subunit. By analyzing cationic, neutral and anionic residues in the mutant cycles, interactions at gamma176 and gamma119 can be distinguished from those at gamma55.  相似文献   

16.
Time-resolved infrared difference spectra of the ATP-induced phosphorylation of the sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase have been recorded in H2O and 2H2O at pH 7.0 and 1 degrees C. The reaction was induced by ATP release from P3-1-(2-nitro)phenylethyladenosine 5'-triphosphate (caged ATP) and from [gamma-18O3]caged ATP. A band at 1546 cm-1, not observed with the deuterated enzyme, can be assigned to the amide II mode of the protein backbone and indicates that a conformational change associated with ATPase phosphorylation takes place after ATP binding. This is also indicated between 1700 and 1610 cm-1, where bandshifts of up to 10 cm-1 observed upon protein deuteration suggest that amide I modes of the protein backbone dominate the difference spectrum. From the band positions it is deduced that alpha-helical, beta-sheet, and probably beta-turn structures are affected in the phosphorylation reaction. Model spectra of acetyl phosphate, acetate, ATP, and ADP suggest the tentative assignment of some of the bands of the phosphorylation spectrum to the molecular groups of ATP and Asp351, which participate directly in the phosphate transfer reaction: a positive band at 1719 cm-1 to the C==O group of aspartyl phosphate, a negative band at 1239 cm-1 to the nuas(PO2-) modes of the bound ATP molecule, and a positive band at 1131 cm-1 to the nuas(PO32-) mode of the phosphoenzyme phosphate group, the latter assignment being supported by the band's sensitivity toward isotopic substitution in the gamma-phosphate of ATP. Band positions and shapes of these bands indicate that the alpha- and/or beta-phosphate(s) of the bound ATP molecule become partly dehydrated when ATP binds to the ATPase, that the phosphoenzyme phosphate group is unprotonated at pH 7.0, and that the C==O group of aspartyl phosphate does not interact with bulk water. The Ca2+ binding sites seem to be largely undisturbed by the phosphorylation reaction, and a functional role of the side chains of Asn, Gln, and Arg residues was not detected.  相似文献   

17.
The molecular mechanics Poisson-Boltzmann surface area (MM-PBSA) method combined with molecular dynamics (MD) simulations were used to investigate the functional role of protonation in human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) protease complexed with the inhibitor BEA369. Our results demonstrate that protonation of two aspartic acids (Asp25/Asp25′) has a strong influence on the dynamics behavior of the complex, the binding free energy of BEA369, and inhibitor–residue interactions. Relative binding free energies calculated using the MM-PBSA method show that protonation of Asp25 results in the strongest binding of BEA369 to HIV-1 protease. Inhibitor–residue interactions computed by the theory of free energy decomposition also indicate that protonation of Asp25 has the most favorable effect on binding of BEA369. In addition, hydrogen-bond analysis based on the trajectories of the MD simulations shows that protonation of Asp25 strongly influences the water-mediated link of a conserved water molecule, Wat301. We expect that the results of this study will contribute significantly to binding calculations for BEA369, and to the design of high affinity inhibitors.  相似文献   

18.
Cooperative hydrogen bond interactions in the streptavidin-biotin system   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The thermodynamic and structural cooperativity between the Ser45- and D128-biotin hydrogen bonds was measured by calorimetric and X-ray crystallographic studies of the S45A/D128A double mutant of streptavidin. The double mutant exhibits a binding affinity approximately 2x10(7) times lower than that of wild-type streptavidin at 25 degrees C. The corresponding reduction in binding free energy (DeltaDeltaG) of 10.1 kcal/mol was nearly completely due to binding enthalpy losses at this temperature. The loss of binding affinity is 11-fold greater than that predicted by a linear combination of the single-mutant energetic perturbations (8.7 kcal/mol), indicating that these two mutations interact cooperatively. Crystallographic characterization of the double mutant and comparison with the two single mutant structures suggest that structural rearrangements at the S45 position, when the D128 carboxylate is removed, mask the true energetic contribution of the D128-biotin interaction. Taken together, the thermodynamic and structural analyses support the conclusion that the wild-type hydrogen bond between D128-OD and biotin-N2 is thermodynamically stronger than that between S45-OG and biotin-N1.  相似文献   

19.
The Na,K-ATPase hydrolyzes ATP to drive the coupled extrusion and uptake of Na+ and K+ ions across the plasma membrane. Here, we report two high-resolution NMR structures of the 213-residue nucleotide-binding domain of rat alpha1 Na,K-ATPase, determined in the absence and the presence of ATP. The nucleotide binds in the anti conformation and shows a relative paucity of interactions with the protein, reflecting the low-affinity ATP-binding state. Binding of ATP induces substantial conformational changes in the binding pocket and in residues located in the hinge region connecting the N- and P-domains. Structural comparison with the Ca-ATPase stabilized by the inhibitor thapsigargin, E2(TG), and the model of the H-ATPase in the E1 form suggests that the observed changes may trigger the series of events necessary for the release of the K+ ions and/or disengagement of the A-domain, leading to the eventual transfer of the gamma-phosphate group to the invariant Asp369.  相似文献   

20.
Selenophosphate synthetase (SPS) catalyzes the activation of selenide with adenosine 5'-triphosphate (ATP) to generate selenophosphate, the essential reactive selenium donor for the formation of selenocysteine (Sec) and 2-selenouridine residues in proteins and RNAs, respectively. Many SPS are themselves Sec-containing proteins, in which Sec replaces Cys in the catalytically essential position (Sec/Cys). We solved the crystal structures of Aquifex aeolicus SPS and its complex with adenosine 5'-(alpha,beta-methylene) triphosphate (AMPCPP). The ATP-binding site is formed at the subunit interface of the homodimer. Four Asp residues coordinate four metal ions to bind the phosphate groups of AMPCPP. In the free SPS structure, the two loop regions in the ATP-binding site are not ordered, and no enzyme-associated metal is observed. This suggests that ATP binding, metal binding, and the formation of their binding sites are interdependent. To identify the amino-acid residues that contribute to SPS activity, we prepared six mutants of SPS and examined their selenide-dependent ATP consumption. Mutational analyses revealed that Sec/Cys13 and Lys16 are essential. In SPS.AMPCPP, the N-terminal loop, including the two residues, assumes different conformations ("open" and "closed") between the two subunits. The AMPCPP gamma-phosphate group is solvent-accessible, suggesting that a putative nucleophile could attack the ATP gamma-phosphate group to generate selenophosphate and adenosine 5'-diphosphate (ADP). Selenide attached to Sec/Cys13 as -Se-Se(-)/-S-Se(-) could serve as the nucleophile in the "closed" conformation. A water molecule, fixed close to the beta-phosphate group, could function as the nucleophile in subsequent ADP hydrolysis to orthophosphate and adenosine 5'-monophosphate.  相似文献   

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