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1.
We have solved the high-resolution crystal structures of the Drosophila melanogaster alcohol-binding protein LUSH in complex with a series of short-chain n-alcohols. LUSH is the first known nonenzyme protein with a defined in vivo alcohol-binding function. The structure of LUSH reveals a set of molecular interactions that define a specific alcohol-binding site. A group of amino acids, Thr57, Ser52 and Thr48, form a network of concerted hydrogen bonds between the protein and the alcohol that provides a structural motif to increase alcohol-binding affinity at this site. This motif seems to be conserved in a number of mammalian ligand-gated ion channels that are directly implicated in the pharmacological effects of alcohol. Further, these sequences are found in regions of ion channels that are known to confer alcohol sensitivity. We suggest that the alcohol-binding site in LUSH represents a general model for alcohol-binding sites in proteins.  相似文献   

2.
LUSH is a soluble odorant-binding protein of the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster. Mutants not expressing this protein have been reported to lack the avoidance behaviour, exhibited by wild type flies, to high concentrations of ethanol. Very recently, the three-dimensional structure of LUSH complexed with short-chain alcohols has been resolved supporting a role for this protein in binding and detecting small alcohols. Here we report that LUSH does not bind ethanol and that wild type flies are in fact attracted by high concentrations of ethanol. We also report that LUSH binds some phthalates and that flies are repelled by such compounds. Finally, our fluorescence data, interpreted in the light of the three-dimensional structure of LUSH, indicate that the protein undergoes a major conformational change, similar to that reported for the pheromone-binding protein of Bombyx mori, but triggered, in our case, by ligand.  相似文献   

3.
Pheromones form an essential chemical language of intraspecific communication in many animals. How olfactory systems recognize pheromonal signals with both sensitivity and specificity is not well understood. An important in vivo paradigm for this process is the detection mechanism of the sex pheromone (Z)-11-octadecenyl acetate (cis-vaccenyl acetate [cVA]) in Drosophila melanogaster. cVA-evoked neuronal activation requires a secreted odorant binding protein, LUSH, the CD36-related transmembrane protein SNMP, and the odorant receptor OR67d. Crystallographic analysis has revealed that cVA-bound LUSH is conformationally distinct from apo (unliganded) LUSH. Recombinantly expressed mutant versions of LUSH predicted to enhance or diminish these structural changes produce corresponding alterations in spontaneous and/or cVA-evoked activity when infused into olfactory sensilla, leading to a model in which the ligand for pheromone receptors is not free cVA, but LUSH that is “conformationally activated” upon cVA binding. Here we present evidence that contradicts this model. First, we demonstrate that the same LUSH mutants expressed transgenically affect neither basal nor pheromone-evoked activity. Second, we compare the structures of apo LUSH, cVA/LUSH, and complexes of LUSH with non-pheromonal ligands and find no conformational property of cVA/LUSH that can explain its proposed unique activated state. Finally, we show that high concentrations of cVA can induce neuronal activity in the absence of LUSH, but not SNMP or OR67d. Our findings are not consistent with the model that the cVA/LUSH complex acts as the pheromone ligand, and suggest that pheromone molecules alone directly activate neuronal receptors.  相似文献   

4.
Laughlin JD  Ha TS  Jones DN  Smith DP 《Cell》2008,133(7):1255-1265
Detection of volatile odorants by olfactory neurons is thought to result from direct activation of seven-transmembrane odorant receptors by odor molecules. Here, we show that detection of the Drosophila pheromone, 11-cis vaccenyl acetate (cVA), is instead mediated by pheromone-induced conformational shifts in the extracellular pheromone-binding protein, LUSH. We show that LUSH undergoes a pheromone-specific conformational change that triggers the firing of pheromone-sensitive neurons. Amino acid substitutions in LUSH that are predicted to reduce or enhance the conformational shift alter sensitivity to cVA as predicted in vivo. One substitution, LUSH(D118A), produces a dominant-active LUSH protein that stimulates T1 neurons through the neuronal receptor components Or67d and SNMP in the complete absence of pheromone. Structural analysis of LUSH(D118A) reveals that it closely resembles cVA-bound LUSH. Therefore, the pheromone-binding protein is an inactive, extracellular ligand converted by pheromone molecules into an activator of pheromone-sensitive neurons and reveals a distinct paradigm for detection of odorants.  相似文献   

5.
Stowers L  Logan DW 《Cell》2008,133(7):1137-1139
In the fruit fly Drosophila, odorant-binding proteins are secreted into the fluid that bathes olfactory neurons. Laughlin et al. (2008) now challenge the assumption that the odorant-binding protein LUSH passively transports its pheromone to a specific olfactory receptor. Instead, LUSH undergoes a conformational change upon pheromone binding that is sufficient for neuronal activation.  相似文献   

6.
We have systematically investigated the effect of short-chain n-alcohols and glycerol on the pretransition of 1,2-dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) by spectrophotometry. It is found that the n-alcohols and glycerol remove the pretransition above a critical concentration for each ligand. In addition, the short-chain n-alcohols below the critical concentration decrease the pretransition temperature. The longer the aliphatic chain length of the n-alcohol (up to butanol) the greater the decrease in the pretransition temperature, and the lower the concentration necessary to remove the pretransition. However, glycerol differs from the short-chain n-alcohols in that it has no significant effect on either the pretransition or the main transition, but it is also capable of removing the pretransition above a critical concentration. It has previously been shown that alcohols have a biphasic effect on the main transition temperature of phosphatidylcholines (Rowe, E.S. (1983) Biochemistry 22, 3299-3305). At high alcohol concentrations, the main transition is not thermodynamically reversible (Rowe, E.S. (1985) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 813, 321-330). Recently, Simon and McIntosh (Biochim. Biophys. Acta (1984) 773, 169-172) have identified that at high ethanol concentration DPPC exists in the interdigitated phase. The critical ligand concentration at which the pretransition disappears coincides with the induction of main transition hysteresis and the biphasic alcohol effect in the main transition. These three effects appear to correlate with the induction of the interdigitated gel state by alcohols and glycerol.  相似文献   

7.
Hori Y  Sugiura Y 《Biochemistry》2004,43(11):3068-3074
Ligand-induced conformation change is a general strategy for controlling protein function. In this work, we demonstrate the relationships between ligand binding and conformational stability using a previously designed protein, Ant-F, which undergoes a conformation change upon Zn(II) binding. To investigate the effect of stabilization of the apo structure on the conformation change, we also created a novel protein, Ant-F-H1, into which mutations are introduced to increase its stability over that of Ant-F. The chemical denaturation experiments clarified that apo-Ant-F-H1 is more stable than apo-Ant-F (DeltaDeltaG = -1.28 kcal/mol) and that the stability of holo-Ant-F-H1 is almost the same as that of holo-Ant-F. The Zn(II) binding assay shows that the affinity of Zn(II) for Ant-F-H1 is weaker than that for Ant-F (DeltaDeltaG = 1.40 kcal/mol). A large part of the increased value of free energy in stability corresponds to the decreased value of free energy in Zn(II) binding, indicating that the stability of the apo structure directly affects the conformation change. The denaturation experiments also reveal that Zn(II) destabilizes the conformation of both proteins. From the thermodynamic linkage, Zn(II) is thought to bind to the unfolded state with high affinity. These results suggest that the binding of Zn(II) to the unfolded state is an important factor in the conformational change as well as the stability of the apo and holo structures.  相似文献   

8.
Once captured by the antenna, the male‐specific pheromone 11‐cis vaccenyl acetate (cVA) binds to an extracellular binding protein called LUSH that undergoes a conformational shift upon cVA binding. The stable LUSH–cVA complex is the activating ligand for pheromone receptors present on the dendrites of the aT1 neurones, comprising the only class of neurones that detect volatile cVA pheromone. This mechanism can explain the single molecule sensitivity of pheromone detection. The receptor that recognizes activated LUSH consists of a complex of several proteins, including Or67d, a member of the tuning odourant receptor family, Orco, a co‐receptor ion channel, and SNMP, a CD36 homologue that may be an inhibitory subunit. In addition, genetic screens and reconstitution experiments reveal additional factors that are important for pheromone detection. Identification and functional dissection of these factors in Drosophila melanogaster Meigen should permit the identification of homologous factors in pathogenic insects and agricultural pests, which, in turn, may be viable candidates for novel classes of compounds to control populations of target insect species without impacting beneficial species.  相似文献   

9.
Liu Z  Li W  Zhang H  Han Y  Lai L 《Proteins》2001,42(1):6-16
The influence of long-range interactions on local structures is an important issue in understanding protein folding process and protein structure stability. Using short-chain snake venom neurotoxin as a model system, we have studied the conformational properties of eight different loop III sequences either in the environment of one of the short-chain neurotoxin, erabutoxin b (PDB ID 1nxb), or in free state by Monte Carlo simulated annealing method. The surrounding protein structure was found to be crucial in stabilizing the loop conformation. Although all the eight peptides prefer type V beta turn in solution, three of them (KPGI, KPGV, KSGI) turn to type II beta turn and the other five (KKGI, KKGV, KNGI, KQGI, and KRGV) are confined to more rigid type V beta turn conformation in the protein structure. Using flexible tetra-glycine-peptide to screen the backbone conformational space in the protein environment also validates the results. This study shows that long-range interactions do contribute to the stability and the types of conformation for a surface loop in protein, while short-range interactions may only provide candidate conformations, which then have to be filtered by the long-range interactions further.  相似文献   

10.
It is now generally accepted that many of the physiological effects of alcohol consumption are a direct result of binding to specific sites in neuronal proteins such as ion channels or other components of neuronal signaling cascades. Binding to these targets generally occurs in water-filled pockets and leads to alterations in protein structure and dynamics. However, the precise interactions required to confer alcohol sensitivity to a particular protein remain undefined.Using information from the previously solved crystal structures of the Drosophila melanogaster protein LUSH in complexes with short-chain alcohols, we have designed and tested the effects of specific amino acid substitutions on alcohol binding. The effects of these substitutions, specifically S52A, T57S, and T57A, were examined using a combination of molecular dynamics, X-ray crystallography, fluorescence spectroscopy, and thermal unfolding. These studies reveal that the binding of ethanol is highly sensitive to small changes in the composition of the alcohol binding site. We find that T57 is the most critical residue for binding alcohols; the T57A substitution completely abolishes binding, while the T57S substitution differentially affects ethanol binding compared to longer-chain alcohols. The additional requirement for a potential hydrogen-bond acceptor at position 52 suggests that both the presence of multiple hydrogen-bonding groups and the identity of the hydrogen-bonding residues are critical for defining an ethanol binding site. These results provide new insights into the detailed chemistry of alcohol's interactions with proteins.  相似文献   

11.
Haloalkane dehalogenase (DhlA) hydrolyzes short-chain haloalkanes to produce the corresponding alcohols and halide ions. Release of the halide ion from the active-site cavity can proceed via a two-step and a three-step route, which both contain slow enzyme isomerization steps. Thermodynamic analysis of bromide binding and release showed that the slow unimolecular isomerization steps in the three-step bromide export route have considerably larger transition state enthalpies and entropies than those in the other route. This suggests that the three-step route involves different and perhaps larger conformational changes than the two-step export route. We propose that the three-step halide export route starts with conformational changes that result in a more open configuration of the active site from which the halide ion can readily escape. In addition, we suggest that the two-step route for halide release involves the transfer of the halide ion from the halide-binding site in the cavity to a binding site somewhere at the protein surface, where a so-called collision complex is formed in which the halide ion is only weakly bound. No large structural rearrangements are necessary for this latter process.  相似文献   

12.
Reversible binding of a ligand to an enzyme active site can elicit a variety of changes in the protein, such as conformational changes (close to the site of binding or communicated over long distances), changes in the ionization state of surrounding amino acid side chains, changes in the interaction of the target protein with other subunits (or other proteins), or even changes in the thermodynamic stability of the protein. Relatively little attention has been given to studying these effects in proteins to which the ligand has been irreversibly bound, yet this can be a convenient way of studying the effects of ligand binding in the absence of association/dissociation equilibria. We report the dramatic changes which occur to the shikimate pathway enzyme dehydroquinase when ligand is attached to its active site after borohydride reduction of the mechanistically important Schiff's base intermediates. The effects of this modification have been characterized by limited proteolysis, circular dichroism, guanidine hydrochloride denaturation, and differential scanning calorimetry. The conclusions from these studies are that although anchoring the ligand at the active site does not cause a gross change in conformation, it does increase markedly the conformational stability of the protein. This is conclusively established by three separate experiments: 1) the modified protein is completely resistant to proteases, whereas the unmodified protein is very susceptible to proteolysis; 2) the concentration of guanidine hydrochloride required to unfold the ligand-linked dehydroquinase is 3-4-fold greater than that of the unmodified protein; 3) the melting temperature (Tm) of the modified protein is 40 degrees C higher than that of the unmodified protein. These results are a very clear example of the thermodynamic link between ligand binding, conformational stability, and proteolytic susceptibility in vitro and will be a useful system for dissecting the contributions of individual protein-ligand interactions to these parameters.  相似文献   

13.
Examining solute-induced changes in protein conformational equilibria is a long-standing method for probing the role of water in maintaining protein stability. Interpreting the molecular details governing the solute-induced effects, however, remains controversial. We present experimental and theoretical data for osmolyte-induced changes in the stabilities of the A and N states of yeast iso-1-ferricytochrome c. Using polyol osmolytes of increasing size, we observe that osmolytes alone induce A-state formation from acid-denatured cytochrome c and N state formation from the thermally denatured protein. The stabilities of the A and N states increase linearly with osmolyte concentration. Interestingly, osmolytes stabilize the A state to a greater degree than the N state. To interpret the data, we divide the free energy for the reaction into contributions from nonspecific steric repulsions (excluded volume effects) and from binding interactions. We use scaled particle theory (SPT) to estimate the free energy contributions from steric repulsions, and we estimate the contributions from water-protein and osmolyte-protein binding interactions by comparing the SPT calculations to experimental data. We conclude that excluded volume effects are the primary stabilizing force, with changes in water-protein and solute-protein binding interactions making favorable contributions to stability of the A state and unfavorable contributions to the stability of the N state. The validity of our interpretation is strengthened by analysis of data on osmolyte-induced protein stabilization from the literature, and by comparison with other analyses of solute-induced changes in conformational equilibria.  相似文献   

14.
The interactions of yeast iso-1 cytochrome c with bovine cytochrome c oxidase were studied using cytochrome c variants in which lysines of the binding domain were substituted by alanines. Resonance Raman spectra of the fully oxidized complexes of both proteins reveal structural changes of both the heme c and the hemes a and a3. The structural changes in cytochrome c are the same as those observed upon binding to phospholipid vesicles where the bound protein exists in two conformers, B1 and B2. Whereas the structure of B1 is the same as that of the unbound cytochrome c, the formation of B2 is associated with substantial alterations of the heme pocket. In cytochrome c oxidase, the structural changes in both hemes refer to more subtle perturbations of the immediate protein environment and may be a result of a conformational equilibrium involving two states. These changes are qualitatively different to those observed for cytochrome c oxidase upon poly-l-lysine binding. The resonance Raman spectra of the various cytochrome c/cytochrome c oxidase complexes were analyzed quantitatively. The spectroscopic studies were paralleled by steady-state kinetic measurements of the same protein combinations. The results of the spectra analysis and the kinetic studies were used to determine the stability of the complexes and the conformational equilibria B2/B1 for all cytochrome c variants. The complex stability decreases in the order: wild-type WT > J72K > K79A > K73A > K87A > J72A > K86A > K73A/K79A (where J is the natural trimethyl lysine). This order is not exhibited by the conformational equilibria. The electrostatic control of state B2 formation does not depend on individual intermolecular salt bridges, but on the charge distribution in a specific region of the front surface of cytochrome c that is defined by the lysyl residues at positions 72, 73 and 79. On the other hand, the conformational changes in cytochrome c oxidase were found to be independent of the identity of the bound cytochrome c variant. The maximum rate constants determined from steady-state kinetic measurements could be related to the conformational equilibria of the bound cytochrome c using a simple model that assumes that the conformational transitions are faster than product formation. Within this model, the data analysis leads to the conclusion that the interprotein electron transfer rate constant is around two times higher in state B2 than in B1. These results can be interpreted in terms of an increase of the driving force in state B2 as a result of the large negative shift of the reduction potential.  相似文献   

15.
Recent work on the thermodynamics of protein denatured states is providing insight into the stability of residual structure and the conformational constraints that affect the disordered states of proteins. Current data from native state hydrogen exchange and the pH dependence of protein stability indicate that residual structure can modulate the stability of the denatured state by up to 4 kcal mol(-1). NMR structural data have emphasized the role of hydrophobic clusters in stabilizing denatured state residual structures, however recent results indicate that electrostatic interactions, both favorable and unfavorable, are also important modulators of the stability of the denatured state. Thermodynamics methods that take advantage of histidine-heme ligation chemistry have also been developed to probe the conformational constraints that act on denatured states. These methods have provided insights into the role of excluded volume, chain stiffness, and loop persistence in modulating the conformational preferences of highly disordered proteins. New insights into protein folding and novel methods to manipulate protein stability are emerging from this work.  相似文献   

16.
The conformational state of C-terminally truncated staphylococcal nuclease R (SNR135), with and without bound ligands, has been studied by performing limited proteolysis with a specific endoproteinase Glu-C followed by electrophoresis and mass spectrometry. Comparison of the accessibility of the cleavage sites shows that the C-terminal truncation of 14 amino-acid residues causes significant unfolding of the C-terminal part of alpha helix 1 and the center of alpha helix 2, but there is little effect on other regions of the nuclease, in particular the N-terminal subdomain, which includes the active site of the nuclease. The truncation also makes the overall conformation of the nuclease more loose and flexible. Binding of ligands makes helices 1 and 2 more resistant to protease Glu-C attack and converts the partially unfolded state to a native-like state, although the conformational stability of the SNR135 complex is still much lower than that of the full-length enzyme. The results suggest that the amino-acid residues around the active site in the truncated nuclease are arranged in a similar topology to those in the full-length nuclease. The study shows that there is a clear-cut correlation between protease susceptibility and conformational stability of the protein, and the initial proteolytic events are the most critical for evaluating the conformational features of the protein. This study demonstrates how mass spectrometry can be combined with limited proteolysis to observe conformational changes induced by ligand binding.  相似文献   

17.
Lavery DN  McEwan IJ 《Biochemistry》2008,47(11):3360-3369
The androgen receptor (AR) mediates the action of the steroid hormones testosterone and dihydrotestosterone. The protein contains two globular alpha-helical domains responsible for binding hormone and DNA. In contrast, the N-terminal domain is less well structurally defined and contains the main determinants for receptor-dependent transactivation, termed AF1. Previously, we have shown this region has the propensity to form alpha-helix structure. Significantly, the binding of specific protein targets or a natural osmolyte resulted in a more protease resistant conformation for the AF1 domain, consistent with an increase in conformational stability. Computational and experimental analyses were used to investigate the conformational properties of the native AF1 domain. This region of the receptor is predicted to contain significant regions of natural disordered structure, when analyzed by amino acid composition, PONDR (Predictor of Natural Disordered Regions), RONN (Regional Order Neural Network), and GlobPlot, but is grouped with ordered proteins on a charge-hydropathy plot. The binding of a hydrophobic fluorescence probe, 8-anilinonaphthalene-1-sulfonic acid (ANS), together with size-exclusion chromatography suggests that native AR-AF1 exists in a collapsed disordered conformation, distinct from extended disordered (random coil) and a stable globular fold. This state has also been described as premolten or molten globule-like. These findings are discussed in terms of the functional importance of the intrinsic plasticity of the AF1 domain.  相似文献   

18.
Tissue transglutaminase (tTG) belongs to a class of enzymes that catalyze a cross-linking reaction between proteins or peptides. The protein activity is known to be finely tuned by Ca(2+) and GTP binding. In this study we report the effects of these ligands on the enzyme structure, as revealed by circular dichroism, and steady-state and dynamic fluorescence measurements. We have found that calcium and GTP induced opposite conformational changes at the level of the protein tertiary structure. In particular the metal ions were responsible for a small widening of the protein molecule, as indicated by anisotropy decay measurements and by the binding of a hydrophobic probe such as 1-anilino-8-naphthalenesulfonic acid (ANS). Unlike Ca(2+), the nucleotide binding increased the protein dynamics, reducing its rotational correlation lifetime from 32 to 25 ns, preventing also the binding of ANS into the protein matrix. Unfolding of tTG by guanidinium hydrochloride yielded a three-state denaturation mechanism, involving an intermediate species with the characteristics of the so-called "molten globule" state. The effect of GTP binding (but not that of Ca(2+)) had an important consequence on the stability of tissue transglutaminase, increasing the free energy change from the native to the intermediate species by at least approximately 0.7 kcal/mol. Also a greater stability of tTG to high hydrostatic pressure was obtained in presence of GTP. These findings suggest that the molecular mechanism by which tTG activity is inhibited by GTP is essentially due to a protein conformational change which, decreasing the accessibility of the protein matrix to the solvent, renders more difficult the exposure of the active site.  相似文献   

19.
The cyanobacterial water-soluble orange carotenoid binding protein (OCP) is an ideal system for study of the effects of protein environment on photophysical properties of carotenoids. It contains a single pigment, the carotenoid 3'-hydoxyechinenone (hECN). In this study, we focus on spectroscopic properties of hECN in solution and in the OCP, aiming to elucidate the spectroscopic effects of the carotenoid-protein interaction in the context of the function(s) of the OCP. The noncovalent binding of hECN to the OCP causes a conformational change in the hECN, leading to a prolongation of the effective conjugation length. This change is responsible for shortening of the S(1) lifetime from 6.5 ps in solution to 3.3 ps in the OCP. The conformational change and the hydrogen bonding via the carbonyl group of hECN result in stabilization of an intramolecular charge-transfer (ICT) state. No signs of the ICT state were found in hECN in solution, regardless of the solvent polarity; spectral bands in transient absorption spectra of OCP-bound hECN exhibit features typical for the ICT state. Application of global fitting analysis revealed further effects of binding hECN in the OCP. The S(1) state of hECN in the OCP decays with two time constants of 0.9 and 3.3 ps. Modeling of the excited-state processes suggests that these two components are due to two populations of hECN in the OCP that differ in the hydrogen bonding via the carbonyl group. These results support the hypothesis that the OCP functions as a photoprotective shield under excess light. Mechanistically, the broadening of the hECN absorption spectrum upon binding to OCP enhances filtering effect of hECN. Furthermore, the binding-induced conformational change and activation of the ICT state that leads to a shortening of hECN lifetime effectively makes the protein-bound hECN a more effective energy dissipator.  相似文献   

20.
The chaperoning activity of the heat shock protein hsp90 is directed, in part, by the binding and hydrolysis of ATP and also by association with co-chaperone proteins. One co-chaperone, p23, binds to hsp90 only when hsp90 is in a conformation induced by the binding of ATP. Once formed, the p23-hsp90 complex is very stable upon the removal of ATP and dissipates at 30 degrees with a half-life of about 45 min. This was shown to be due to the high stability of the ATP-induced state of hsp90, not to the rate of p23 dissociation. Further stabilization of this ATP-induced state is achieved by including molybdate or by use of the ATP analogue ATPgammaS. This conformational state of hsp90 is correlated with the tight binding of ADP resulting from hydrolysis of bound ATP. Both p23 and molybdate enhance and stabilize the nucleotide-bound state of hsp90, and this state is maximized by the presence of both agents. These results can be explained in a model where the binding of ATP induces a conformational transition in hsp90 that traps the nucleotide and is committed to ATP hydrolysis. p23 specifically recognizes this state and may also facilitate subsequent steps in the chaperoning cycle.  相似文献   

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