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1.
The binding ability of a protein with a metal binding tag towards Ni(2+) was investigated by longitudinal paramagnetic NMR relaxation, and the possibility of obtaining long-range structure information from the paramagnetic relaxation was explored. A protein with a well-defined solution structure (Escherichia coli thioredoxin) was used as the model system, and the peptide His-His-Pro (HHP) fused to the N-terminus of the protein was used as the metal binding tag. It was found that the tag forms a stable dimer complex with the paramagnetic Ni(2+) ion, where each metal ion binds two HHP-tagged protein molecules. However, it was also found that additional sites in the protein compete with the HHP-tag for the binding of the metal ion. These binding sites were identified as the side chain carboxylate groups of the aspartic and glutamic acid residues. Yet, the carboxylate groups bind the Ni(2+) ions considerably weaker than the HHP-tag, and only protons spatially close to the carboxylate sites are affected by the Ni(2+) ions bound to these groups. As for the protons that are unaffected by the carboxylate-bound Ni(2+) ions, it was found that the long-range distances derived from the paramagnetic relaxation enhancements are in good agreement with the solution structure of thioredoxin. Specifically, the obtained long-range paramagnetic distance constraints revealed that the dimer complex is asymmetric with different orientations of the two protein molecules relative to the Ni(2+) ion.  相似文献   

2.
Paramagnetic metal ions generate pseudocontact shifts (PCSs) in nuclear magnetic resonance spectra that are manifested as easily measurable changes in chemical shifts. Metals can be incorporated into proteins through metal binding tags, and PCS data constitute powerful long-range restraints on the positions of nuclear spins relative to the coordinate system of the magnetic susceptibility anisotropy tensor (Δχ-tensor) of the metal ion. We show that three-dimensional structures of proteins can reliably be determined using PCS data from a single metal binding site combined with backbone chemical shifts. The program PCS-ROSETTA automatically determines the Δχ-tensor and metal position from the PCS data during the structure calculations, without any prior knowledge of the protein structure. The program can determine structures accurately for proteins of up to 150 residues, offering a powerful new approach to protein structure determination that relies exclusively on readily measurable backbone chemical shifts and easily discriminates between correctly and incorrectly folded conformations.  相似文献   

3.
The program DYANA, for calculation of solution structures of biomolecules with an algorithm based on simulated annealing by torsion angle dynamics, has been supplemented with a new routine, PSEUDYANA, that enables efficient use of pseudocontact shifts as additional constraints in structure calculations of paramagnetic metalloproteins. PSEUDYANA can determine the location of the metal ion inside the protein frame and allows to define a single tensor of magnetic susceptibility from a family of conformers. As an illustration, a PSEUDYANA structure calculation is provided for a metal-undecapeptide complex, where simulated pseudocontact shifts but no NOE restraints are used as conformational constraints.  相似文献   

4.
We have determined the crystal structure of the PvuII endonuclease in the presence of Mg(2+). According to the structural data, divalent metal ion binding in the PvuII subunits is highly asymmetric. The PvuII-Mg(2+) complex has two distinct metal ion binding sites, one in each monomer. One site is formed by the catalytic residues Asp58 and Glu68, and has extensive similarities to a catalytically important site found in all structurally examined restriction endonucleases. The other binding site is located in the other monomer, in the immediate vicinity of the hydroxyl group of Tyr94; it has no analogy to metal ion binding sites found so far in restriction endonucleases. To assign the number of metal ions involved and to better understand the role of Mg(2+) binding to Tyr94 for the function of PvuII, we have exchanged Tyr94 by Phe and characterized the metal ion dependence of DNA cleavage of wild-type PvuII and the Y94F variant. Wild-type PvuII cleaves both strands of the DNA in a concerted reaction. Mg(2+) binding, as measured by the Mg(2+) dependence of DNA cleavage, occurs with a Hill coefficient of 4, meaning that at least two metal ions are bound to each subunit in a cooperative fashion upon formation of the active complex. Quenched-flow experiments show that DNA cleavage occurs about tenfold faster if Mg(2+) is pre-incubated with enzyme or DNA than if preformed enzyme-DNA complexes are mixed with Mg(2+). These results show that Mg(2+) cannot easily enter the active center of the preformed enzyme-DNA complex, but that for fast cleavage the metal ions must already be bound to the apoenzyme and carried with the enzyme into the enzyme-DNA complex. The Y94F variant, in contrast to wild-type PvuII, does not cleave DNA in a concerted manner and metal ion binding occurs with a Hill coefficient of 1. These results indicate that removal of the Mg(2+) binding site at Tyr94 completely disrupts the cooperativity in DNA cleavage. Moreover, in quenched-flow experiments Y94F cleaves DNA about ten times more slowly than wild-type PvuII, regardless of the order of mixing. From these results we conclude that wild-type PvuII cleaves DNA in a fast and concerted reaction, because the Mg(2+) required for catalysis are already bound at the enzyme, one of them at Tyr94. We suggest that this Mg(2+) is shifted to the active center during binding of a specific DNA substrate. These results, for the first time, shed light on the pathway by which metal ions as essential cofactors enter the catalytic center of restriction endonucleases.  相似文献   

5.
The latency of Micrococcus lysodeikticus membrane-bound Mg(2+)-adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase) is expressed by the ratio of its activity assayed in the presence of trypsin ("total") versus the activity assayed in absence of the protease ("basal"). By isolating membranes in the presence of variable concentrations of Mg(2+) (50 mM, 10 mM, or none) and by washing them with different Mg(2+)- and ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid-containing tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane-hydrochloride buffers (pH 7.5), we showed that the enzyme latency was dependent on the environmental concentration of this divalent metal ion. Mg(2+) bound to at least two classes of sites. The binding of Mg(2+) to low-affinity sites (saturation at approximately 40 mM external Mg(2+)) induced a high basal ATPase activity, whereas its binding to medium-affinity sites (saturation at about 2 mM Mg(2+)) correlated with low basal activity and a very high stimulation by trypsin. Membranes with tightly bound Mg(2+) (high affinity?) revealed an intermediate behavior for the latency of M. lysodeikticus ATPase. The Mg(2+)/Ca(2+) antagonism as activators of the membrane ATPase was not directly related to Mg(2+) binding by the membranes. The efficiency of the ATPase release from M. lysodeikticus membrane by 3 mM tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane-hydrochloride buffer (pH 7.5) was inversely proportional to the concentration of external and/or bound Mg(2+). Deoxycholate (DOC) (1%) solubilized the ATPase from all types of membrane. All the soluble ATPases behaved as Ca(2+)-ATPases, but the DOC-soluble fractions showed degrees of latency like those of the original membranes. The DOC-soluble ATPase preparation revealed a vesicular structure and complex protein patterns by sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis. We propose that ATPase latency is modulated via a Mg(2+)-ATPase-membrane complex.  相似文献   

6.
Binding of a transition metal ion to specific sites in concanavalin A induces the formation of specific Ca(2+) ion-binding sites. Sites for binding alpha-methyl d-glucopyranoside exist only when a transition metal ion and Ca(2+) ion are bound.  相似文献   

7.
BACKGROUND: The drug chromomycin-A(3) binds to the minor groove of DNA and requires a divalent metal ion for complex formation. (1)H, (31)P and (13)C pseudocontact shifts occurring in the presence of a tightly bound divalent cobalt ion in the complex between d(TTGGCCAA)(2) and chromomycin-A(3) have been used to determine the structure of the complex. The accuracy of the structure was verified by validation with nuclear Overhauser enhancements (NOEs) and J-coupling constants not used in the structure calculation. RESULTS: The final structure was determined to 0.7 A resolution. The structure was compared with a structure obtained in an earlier study using NOEs, in order to assess the accuracy of NOEs in giving global structural information for a DNA complex. Although some basic features of the structures agreed, they differed substantially in the fine structural details and in the DNA axis curvature generated by the drug. The distortion of base-pair planarity that was observed in the NOE structure was not seen in our structure. Differences in drug orientation and hydrogen bonding also occurred. The curvature and elongation of the DNA that was obtained previously was not found to occur in our study. CONCLUSIONS: The use of pseudocontact shifts has enabled us to obtain a high-precision global structure of the chromomycin-DNA complex, which provides an accurate template on which to consider targeting minor groove binding drugs. The effect of such binding is not propagated far along the helix but is restricted to a local kink in the axis that reverts to its original direction within four base pairs.  相似文献   

8.
The homologous sequences observed for many calcium binding proteins such as parvalbumin, troponin C, the myosin light chains, and calmodulin has lead to the hypothesis that these proteins have homologous structures at the level of their calcium binding sites. This paper discusses the development of a nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) technique which will enable us to test this structural hypothesis in solution. The technique involves the substitution of a paramagnetic lanthanide ion for the calcium ion which results in lanthanide induced shifts and broadening in the 1H NMR spectrum of the protein. These shifts are sensitive monitors of the precise geometrical orientation of each proton nucleus relative to the metal. The values of several parameters in the equation relating the NMR shifts to the structure are however known as priori. We have attempted to determine these parameters, the orientation and principal elements of the magnetic susceptibility tensor of the protein bound metal, by studying the lanthanide induced shifts for the protein parvalbumin whose structure has been determined by x-ray crystallographic techniques. The interaction of the lanthanide ytterbium with parvalbumin results in high resolution NMR spectra exhibiting a series of resonances with shifts spread over the range 32 to -19 ppm. The orientation and principal elements of the ytterbium magnetic susceptibility tensor have been determined using three assigned NMR resonances, the His-26 C2 and C4 protons and the amino terminal acetyl protons, and seven methyl groups; all with known geometry relative to the EF calcium binding site. The elucidation of these parameters has allowed us to compare the observed spectrum of the nuclei surrounding the EF calcium binding site of parvalbumin with that calculated from the x-ray structure. A significant number of the calculated shifts are larger than any of the observed shifts. We feel that a refinement of the x-ray based proton coordinates will be possible utilizing the geometric information contained in the lanthanide shifted NMR spectrum.  相似文献   

9.
Divalent metal ions are required for splicing of group I introns, but their role in maintaining the structure of the active site is still under investigation. Ribonuclease and hydroxyl radical footprinting of a small group I intron from Azoarcus pre-tRNA(Ile) showed that tertiary interactions between helical domains are stable in a variety of cations. Only Mg(2+), however, induced a conformational change in the intron core that correlates with self-splicing activity. Three metal ion binding sites in the catalytic core were identified by Tb(III)-dependent cleavage. Two of these are near bound substrates in a three-dimensional model of the ribozyme. A third metal ion site is near an A minor motif in P3. In the pre-tRNA, Tb(3+) cleavage was redirected to the 5' and 3' splice sites, consistent with metal-dependent activation of splice site phosphodiesters. The results show that many counterions induce global folding, but organization of the group I active site is specifically linked to Mg(2+) binding at a few sites.  相似文献   

10.
Calcineurin, a calmodulin-regulated phosphatase, is composed of two distinct subunits (A and B) and requires certain metal ions for activity. The binding of the two most potent activators, Ni2+ and Mn2+, to calcineurin and its subunits has been studied. Incubation of the protein with 63Ni2+ (or 54Mn2+) followed by gel filtration to separate free and protein-bound ions indicated that calcineurin could maximally bind 2 mol/mol of Ni2+ or Mn2+. While isolated A subunit also bound 2 mol/mol of Ni2+, no Mn2+ binding was demonstrated for either isolated A or B subunit. When bindings were monitored by nitrocellulose filter assay, only 1 mol/mol bound Ni2+ or Mn2+ was detected, suggesting that the two Ni2+ (or Mn2+) binding sites had different relative affinities and that only metal ions bound at the higher affinity sites were detected by the filter assay. Preincubation of calcineurin with Mn2+ (or Ni2+) decreased the filter assay-measured Ni2+ (or Mn2+) binding by only 30%. Preincubation of the protein with Zn2+ decreased the filter assay-measured Ni2+ or Mn2+ binding by 90 or 17%, respectively. The results suggest that the higher affinity sites are a Ni2+-specific site and a distinct Mn2+-specific site. Preincubation of calcineurin with Mn2+ (or Ni2+) decreased the gel filtration-determined Ni2+ (or Mn2+) binding from 2 to 1 mol/mol suggesting that calcineurin also contains a site which binds either metal ion. The time course of Ni2+ (or Mn2+) binding was correlated with that of the enzyme activation, and the extent of deactivation of the Ni2+-activated calcineurin by EDTA or by incubation with Ca2+ and calmodulin (Pallen, C. J., and Wang, J. H. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 6134-6141) was correlated with the release of the bound ions, thus suggesting that the bound ion is directly responsible for enzyme activation.  相似文献   

11.
UreE is a homodimeric metallo-chaperone that assists the insertion of Ni(2+) ions in the active site of urease. The crystal structures of UreE from Bacillus pasteurii and Klebsiella aerogenes have been determined, but the details of the nickel-binding site were not elucidated due to solid-state effects that caused disorder in a key portion of the protein. A complementary approach to this problem is described here. Titrations of wild-type Bacillus pasteurii UreE (BpUreE) with Ni(2+), followed by metal ion quantitative analysis using inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectrometry (ICP-OES), established the binding of 2 Ni(2+) ions to the functional dimer, with an overall dissociation constant K(D) = 35 microM. To establish the nature, the number, and the geometry of the ligands around the Ni(2+) ions in BpUreE-Ni(2), X-ray absorption spectroscopy data were collected and analyzed using an approach that combines ab initio extended X-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS) calculations with a systematic search of several possible coordination geometries, using the Simplex algorithm. This analysis indicated the presence of Ni(2+) ions in octahedral coordination geometry and an average of two histidine residues and four O/N ligands bound to each metal ion. The fit improved significantly with the incorporation, in the model, of a Ni-O-Ni moiety, suggesting the presence of a hydroxide-bridged dinuclear cluster in the Ni-loaded BpUreE. These results were interpreted using two possible models. One model involves the presence of two identical metal sites binding Ni(2+) with negative cooperativity, with each metal ion bound to the conserved His(100) as well as to either His(145) or His(147) from each monomer, residues found largely conserved at the C-terminal. The alternative model comprises the presence of two different binding sites featuring different affinity for Ni(2+). This latter model would involve the presence of a dinuclear metallic core, with one Ni(2+) ion bound to one His(100) from each monomer, and the second Ni(2+) ion bound to a pair of either His(145) or His(147). The arguments in favor of one model as compared to the other are discussed on the basis of the available biochemical data.  相似文献   

12.
Our structural comparison of the TIM barrel metal-dependent hydrolase(-like) superfamily suggests a classification of their divergent active sites into four types: alphabeta-binuclear, alpha-mononuclear, beta-mononuclear, and metal-independent subsets. The d-aminoacylase from Alcaligenes faecalis DA1 belongs to the beta-mononuclear subset due to the fact that the catalytically essential Zn(2+) is tightly bound at the beta site with coordination by Cys(96), His(220), and His(250), even though it possesses a binuclear active site with a weak alpha binding site. Additional Zn(2+), Cd(2+), and Cu(2+), but not Ni(2+), Co(2+), Mg(2+), Mn(2+), and Ca(2+), can inhibit enzyme activity. Crystal structures of these metal derivatives show that Zn(2+) and Cd(2+) bind at the alpha(1) subsite ligated by His(67), His(69), and Asp(366), while Cu(2+) at the alpha(2) subsite is chelated by His(67), His(69) and Cys(96). Unexpectedly, the crystal structure of the inactive H220A mutant displays that the endogenous Zn(2+) shifts to the alpha(3) subsite coordinated by His(67), His(69), Cys(96), and Asp(366), revealing that elimination of the beta site changes the coordination geometry of the alpha ion with an enhanced affinity. Kinetic studies of the metal ligand mutants such as C96D indicate the uniqueness of the unusual bridging cysteine and its involvement in catalysis. Therefore, the two metal-binding sites in the d-aminoacylase are interactive with partially mutual exclusion, thus resulting in widely different affinities for the activation/attenuation mechanism, in which the enzyme is activated by the metal ion at the beta site, but inhibited by the subsequent binding of the second ion at the alpha site.  相似文献   

13.
The catalytic core of Escherichia coli DNA polymerase III contains three tightly associated subunits, the alpha, epsilon, and theta subunits. The theta subunit is the smallest and least understood subunit. The three-dimensional structure of theta in a complex with the unlabeled N-terminal domain of the epsilon subunit, epsilon186, was determined by multidimensional nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. The structure was refined using pseudocontact shifts that resulted from inserting a lanthanide ion (Dy3+, Er3+, or Ho3+) at the active site of epsilon186. The structure determination revealed a three-helix bundle fold that is similar to the solution structures of theta in a methanol-water buffer and of the bacteriophage P1 homolog, HOT, in aqueous buffer. Conserved nuclear Overhauser enhancement (NOE) patterns obtained for free and complexed theta show that most of the structure changes little upon complex formation. Discrepancies with respect to a previously published structure of free theta (Keniry et al., Protein Sci. 9:721-733, 2000) were attributed to errors in the latter structure. The present structure satisfies the pseudocontact shifts better than either the structure of theta in methanol-water buffer or the structure of HOT. satisfies these shifts. The epitope of epsilon186 on theta was mapped by NOE difference spectroscopy and was found to involve helix 1 and the C-terminal part of helix 3. The pseudocontact shifts indicated that the helices of theta are located about 15 A or farther from the lanthanide ion in the active site of epsilon186, in agreement with the extensive biochemical data for the theta-epsilon system.  相似文献   

14.
Lanthanide ions (Ln(3+)), which have ionic radii similar to those of Ca(2+), can displace the latter in a calcium binding protein, without affecting its tertiary structure. The paramagnetic Ln(3+) possesses large anisotropic magnetic susceptibilities and produce pseudocontact shifts (PCSs), which have r(-3) dependence. The PCS can be seen for spins as far as 45 A from the paramagnetic ion. They aid in structure refinement of proteins by providing long-range distance constraints. Besides, they can be used to determine the interdomain orientation in multidomain proteins. This is particularly important in the context of a calcium binding protein from Entamoeba histolytica (EhCaBP), which consists of two globular domains connected by a flexible linker region containing 8 residues. As a first step to obtain the interdomain orientation in EhCaBP, a suite of 2D and 3D heteronuclear experiments were recorded on EhCaBP by displacing calcium with Ce(3+), Ho(3+), Er(3+), Tm(3+), Dy(3+), and Yb(3+) ions in separate experiments, and the PCS of (1)H(N) and (15)N spins were measured. Such data have been used in the refinement of the individual domain structures of the protein in parallel with the calculation of the respective magnetic anisotropy tensorial values, which differ substantially (2.1-2.8 times) from what is found in other Ca(2+) binding loops. This study provides a structural basis for such variations in the magnetic anisotropy tensorial values.  相似文献   

15.
Residual dipolar couplings (RDCs) and pseudocontact shifts are experimentally accessible properties in nuclear magnetic resonance that are related to structural parameters and to the magnetic susceptibility anisotropy. We have determined RDCs due to field-induced orientation of oxidized-K79A and reduced cytochrome c at pH 7.0 and oxidized-K79A cytochrome c at pH 11.1 through measurements of amide (15)N-(1)H (1)J couplings at 800 and 500 MHz. The pH 7.0 RDCs for Fe(III)- and Fe(II)-cytochrome c together with available nuclear Overhauser effects were used to recalculate solution structures that were consistent with both sets of constraints. Molecular magnetic susceptibility anisotropy values were calculated for both redox states of the protein. By subtracting the residual dipolar couplings (RDCs) of the reduced form from those of the oxidized form measured at the same magnetic field (800 MHz), we found the RDC contribution of the paramagnetic metal ion in the oxidized protein. The magnetic susceptibility anisotropy, which was calculated from the structure, was found to be the same as that of the paramagnetic metal ion obtained independently from pseudocontact shifts, thereby indicating that the elements of secondary structure either are rigid or display the same mobility in both oxidation states. The residual dipolar coupling values of the alkaline-K79A form are small with respect to those of oxidized native cytochrome, whereas the pseudocontact shifts are essentially of the same magnitude, indicating local mobility. Importantly, this is the first time that mobility has been found through comparison of RDCs with pseudocontact shifts.  相似文献   

16.
Rosell FI  Mauk MR  Mauk AG 《Biochemistry》2007,46(32):9301-9309
Hemopexin (Hx) functions as a major heme scavenging protein in blood plasma and as such circulates without heme bound. In recent work, we have demonstrated that Hx binds metal ions in vitro in a manner that varies from one metal ion to another and that changes with heme binding. The structural consequences of metal ion binding to the form of Hx that dominates in plasma have now been evaluated by monitoring metal ion-linked changes in tertiary structure of the protein as reflected by changes in the near-UV CD spectrum and the ultraviolet absorption spectrum as a function of temperature. As part of this analysis we have developed thermally induced difference absorption maps (TIDAMs) to afford efficient visualization of temperature-dependent changes in the UV spectrum of Hx that are induced by binding of metal ions. The results are interpreted in terms of recent models proposed for metal ion binding sites on Hx and have implications for the possible modulation of heme binding to Hx by metal ions in vivo.  相似文献   

17.
The binding sites for the two cations essential for the catalytic function of 5-phospho-D-ribosyl alpha-1-diphosphate (PRPP) synthases have been identified from the structure of the Bacillus subtilis phosphoribosyldiphosphate synthetase (PRPPsase) with bound Cd(2+). The structure determined from X-ray diffraction data to 2.8-A resolution reveals the same hexameric arrangement of the subunits that was observed in the complexes of the enzyme with the activator sulfate and the allosteric inhibitor ADP. Two cation binding sites were localized in each of the two domains of the subunits that compose the hexamer; each domain of the subunit has an associated cation. In addition to the bound Cd(2+), the Cd(2+)-PRPPsase structure contains a sulfate ion in the regulatory site, a sulfate ion at the ribose-5-phosphate binding site, and an AMP moiety at the ATP binding site. Comparison of the Cd(2+)-PRPPsase to the structures of the PRPPsase complexed with sulfate and mADP reveals the structural rearrangement induced by the binding of the free cation, which is essential for the initiation of the reaction. The comparison to the cPRPP complex of glutamine phosphoribosylpyrophosphate amidotransferase from Escherichia coli, a type I phosphoribosyltransferase, provided information about the binding of PRPP. This strongly indicates that the binding of both substrates must lead to a stabilized conformation of the loop region, which remains unresolved in the known PRPPsase complex structures.  相似文献   

18.
C2 domains regulate numerous eukaryotic signaling proteins by docking to target membranes upon binding Ca(2+). Effective activation of the C2 domain by intracellular Ca(2+) signals requires high Ca(2+) selectivity to exclude the prevalent physiological metal ions K(+), Na(+), and Mg(2+). The cooperative binding of two Ca(2+) ions to the C2 domain of cytosolic phospholipase A(2) (cPLA(2)-alpha) induces docking to phosphatidylcholine (PC) membranes. The ionic charge and size selectivities of this C2 domain were probed with representative mono-, di-, and trivalent spherical metal cations. Physiological concentrations of monovalent cations and Mg(2+) failed to bind to the domain and to induce docking to PC membranes. Superphysiological concentrations of Mg(2+) did bind but still failed to induce membrane docking. In contrast, Ca(2+), Sr(2+), and Ba(2+) bound to the domain in the low micromolar range, induced electrophoretic mobility shifts in native polyacrylamide gels, stabilized the domain against thermal denaturation, and induced docking to PC membranes. In the absence of membranes, the degree of apparent positive cooperativity in binding of Ca(2+), Sr(2+), and Ba(2+) decreased with increasing cation size, suggesting that the C2 domain binds two Ca(2+) or Sr(2+) ions, but only one Ba(2+) ion. These stoichiometries were correlated with the abilities of the ions to drive membrane docking, such that micromolar concentrations of Ca(2+) and Sr(2+) triggered docking while even millimolar concentrations of Ba(2+) yielded poor docking efficiency. The simplest explanation is that two bound divalent cations are required for stable membrane association. The physiological Ca(2+) ion triggered membrane docking at 20-fold lower concentrations than Sr(2+), due to both the higher Ca(2+) affinity of the free domain and the higher affinity of the Ca(2+)-loaded domain for membranes. Kinetic studies indicated that Ca(2+) ions bound to the free domain are retained at least 5-fold longer than Sr(2+) ions. Moreover, the Ca(2+)-loaded domain remained bound to membranes 2-fold longer than the Sr(2+)-loaded domain. For both Ca(2+) and Sr(2+), the two bound metal ions dissociate from the protein-membrane complex in two kinetically resolvable steps. Finally, representative trivalent lanthanide ions bound to the domain with high affinity and positive cooperativity, and induced docking to PC membranes. Overall, the results demonstrate that both cation charge and size constraints contribute to the high Ca(2+) selectivity of the C2 domain and suggest that formation of a cPLA(2)-alpha C2 domain-membrane complex requires two bound multivalent metal ions. These features are proposed to stem from the unique structural features of the metal ion-binding site in the C2 domain.  相似文献   

19.
The Ni(II) and Zn(II) derivatives of Desulfovibrio vulgaris rubredoxin (DvRd) have been studied by NMR spectroscopy to probe the structure at the metal centre. The βCH2 proton pairs from the cysteines that bind the Ni(II) atom have been identified using 1D nuclear Overhauser enhancement (NOE) difference spectra and sequence specifically assigned via NOE correlations to neighbouring protons and by comparison with the published X-ray crystal structure of a Ni(II) derivative of Clostridium pasteurianum rubredoxin. The solution structures of DvRd(Zn) and DvRd(Ni) have been determined and the paramagnetic form refined using pseudocontact shifts. The determination of the magnetic susceptibility anisotropy tensor allowed the contact and pseudocontact contributions to the observed chemical shifts to be obtained. Analysis of the pseudocontact and contact chemical shifts of the cysteine Hβ protons and backbone protons close to the metal centre allowed conclusions to be drawn as to the geometry and hydrogen-bonding pattern at the metal binding site. The importance of NH–S hydrogen bonds at the metal centre for the delocalization of electron spin density is confirmed for rubredoxins and can be extrapolated to metal centres in Cu proteins: amicyanin, plastocyanin, stellacyanin, azurin and pseudoazurin.  相似文献   

20.
The iron-dependent regulator (IdeR) protein in Mycobacterium tuberculosis, and its better characterized homologue, the diphtheria toxin repressor (DtxR) from Corynebacterium diphtheriae, are iron-dependent regulatory proteins that control gene expression in response to iron availability in bacteria. IdeR regulates several genes required for iron uptake and storage including those involved in the synthesis of transition metal chelators called siderophores that are linked to the M. tuberculosis virulence. In this study, the metal ion and binding affinities for IdeR binding to an fxbA operator duplex DNA were estimated using fluorescence assays. The Fe(2+), Co(2+), and Ni(2+) affinities of the two metal ion binding sites in IdeR that are involved in the activation of the regulator DNA binding process in vitro were independently estimated. Binding to the two metal ion binding sites is apparently cooperative and the two affinities differ significantly. Occupation of the first metal ion binding site causes dimerization of IdeR, and the metal ion affinity is about 4 microM for Ni(2+) and much less for Fe(2+) and Co(2+). Binding of the second metal ion fully activates IdeR for binding to the fxbA operator. The equilibrium metal ion dissociation constants for IdeR-fxbA operator binding are approximately 9 microM for Fe(2+), 13 microM for Ni(2+), and 23 microM for Co(2+). Interestingly, the natural IdeR cofactor, Fe(2+), shows high affinities toward both binding sites. These results provide insight into the possible roles for each metal binding site in IdeR activation.  相似文献   

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