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1.
As a means for probing the microenvironment of zinc in the insulin hexamer and to investigate the effects of calcium ion on the assembly and the structure of the two-zinc insulin hexamer, the thermodynamics and kinetics of the reaction between the chromophoric divalent metal ion chelator 4-(2-pyridylazo)resorcinol (PAR) and zinc-insulin have been investigated over a wide range of conditions. For [PAR]0 much greater than [Zn2+]0 and [Zn2+]/[In] less than or equal to 0.33, the reaction leads to the sequestering and ultimate removal of all of the insulin-bound Zn2+; for [Zn2+]0 much greater than [PAR]0, two stable ternary complexes are formed where Zn2+ has ligands derived from PAR as well as from hexameric insulin. For [Zn2+]/[In] ratios below 0.33, the equilibrium distribution between the two ternary complexes is dependent on the [Zn2+]/[In] ratio. One of the complexes is assigned to the monoanion of PAR coordinated to Zn2+ that resides in a His-B10 site. The other complex is proposed to involve the coordination of (PAR)Zn to the site formed by the alpha-NH2 group of Phe-B1 and the gamma-carboxylate ion of Glu-A17 across the dimer-dimer interface on the surface of the hexamer. With either PAR or zinc-insulin in large excess, the kinetics of the PAR optical density changes are remarkably similar and biphasic. The faster step is first order in PAR and first order in insulin-bound Zn2+ (k congruent to 3 X 10(3) M-1 s-1) and involves the formation of an intermediate in which PAR is coordinated to insulin-bound zinc at the His-B10 site.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
The thermal stability of human insulin was studied by differential scanning microcalorimetry and near-UV circular dichroism as a function of zinc/protein ratio, to elucidate the dissociation and unfolding processes of insulin in different association states. Zinc-free insulin, which is primarily dimeric at room temperature, unfolded at approximately 70 degrees C. The two monomeric insulin mutants Asp(B28) and Asp(B9),Glu(B27) unfolded at higher temperatures, but with enthalpies of unfolding that were approximately 30% smaller. Small amounts of zinc caused a biphasic thermal denaturation pattern of insulin. The biphasic denaturation is caused by a redistribution of zinc ions during the heating process and results in two distinct transitions with T(m)'s of approximately 70 and approximately 87 degrees C corresponding to monomer/dimer and hexamer, respectively. At high zinc concentrations (>or=5 Zn(2+) ions/hexamer), only the hexamer transition is observed. The results of this study show that the thermal stability of insulin is closely linked to the association state and that the zinc hexamer remains stable at much higher temperatures than the monomer. This is in contrast to studies with chemical denaturants where it has been shown that monomer unfolding takes place at much higher denaturant concentrations than the dissociation of higher oligomers [Ahmad, A., et al. (2004) J. Biol. Chem. 279, 14999-15013].  相似文献   

3.
An ingenious system evolved to facilitate insulin binding to the insulin receptor as a monomer and at the same time ensure sufficient stability of insulin during storage. Insulin dimer is the cornerstone of this system. Insulin dimer is relatively weak, which ensures dissociation into monomers in the circulation, and it is stabilized by hexamer formation in the presence of zinc ions during storage in the pancreatic β-cell. Due to the transient nature of insulin dimer, direct investigation of this important form is inherently difficult. To address the relationship between insulin oligomerization and insulin stability and function, we engineered a covalently linked insulin dimer in which two monomers were linked by a disulfide bond. The structure of this covalent dimer was identical to the self-association dimer of human insulin. Importantly, this covalent dimer was capable of further oligomerization to form the structural equivalent of the classical hexamer. The covalently linked dimer neither bound to the insulin receptor, nor induced a metabolic response in vitro. However, it was extremely thermodynamically stable and did not form amyloid fibrils when subjected to mechanical stress, underlining the importance of oligomerization for insulin stability.  相似文献   

4.
Metal ion binding to the insulin hexamer has been investigated by crystallographic analysis. Cadmium, lead, and metal-free hexamers have been refined to R values of 0.181, 0.172, and 0.172, against data of 1.9-, 2.5-, and 2.5-A resolution, respectively. These structures have been compared with each other and with the isomorphous two-zinc insulin. The structure of the metal-free hexamer shows that the His(B10) imidazole rings are arranged in a preformed site that binds a water molecule and is poised for Zn2+ coordination. The structure of the cadmium derivative shows that the binding of Cd2+ at the center of the hexamer is unusual. There are three symmetry-related sites located within 2.7 A of each other, and this position is evidently one-third occupied. It is also shown that the coordinating B13 glutamate side chains of this derivative have two partially occupied conformations. One of these conformations is two-thirds occupied and is very similar to that seen in two-zinc insulin. The other, one-third-occupied conformation, is seen to coordinate the one-third-occupied metal ion. The binding of Ca2+ to insulin is assumed to be essentially identical with that of Cd2+. Thus, we conclude that the Ca2+ binding site in the insulin hexamer is unlike that of any other known calcium binding protein. The crystal structures reported herein explain how binding of metal ions stabilizes the insulin hexamer. The role of metal ions in hexamer assembly and dissociation is discussed.  相似文献   

5.
The assembly of the insulin hexamer brings the six B13 glutamate side-chains at the centre into close proximity. Their mutual repulsion is unfavourable and zinc co-ordination to B10 histidine is necessary to stabilize the well known zinc-containing hexamers. Since B13 is always a carboxylic acid in all known sequences of hexamer forming insulins, it is likely to be important in the hormone's biology. The mutation of B13 Glu-->Gln leads to a stable zinc-free hexamer with somewhat reduced potency. The structures of the zinc-free B13 Gln hexamer and the 2Zn B13 insulin hexamer have been determined by X-ray analysis and refined with 2.5 A and 2.0 A diffraction data, respectively. Comparisons show that in 2Zn B13 Gln insulin, the hexamer structure (T6) is very like that of the native hormone. On the other hand, the zinc-free hexamer assumes a quaternary structure (T3/R3) seen in the native 4Zn insulin hexamer, and normally associated only with high chloride ion concentrations in the medium. The crystal structures show the B13 Gln side-chains only contact water in contrast to the B13 glutamate in 2Zn insulin. The solvation of the B13 Gln may be associated with this residue favouring helix at B1 to B8. The low potency of the B13 Gln insulin also suggests the residue influences the hormone's conformation.  相似文献   

6.
The influence of ligand binding and conformation state on the thermostability of hexameric zinc-insulin was studied by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC). The insulin hexamer exists in equilibrium between the forms T6, T3R3, and R6. Phenolic ligands induce and stabilize the T3R3- and R6-states which are further stabilized by binding of certain anions that do not stabilize the T6-state. It was shown that the thermostability of the resorcinol-stabilized R6-state was significantly higher than that of the T6-state. Further analysis showed that phenol- and m-cresol-stabilized R6-hexamer loses three ligands before reaching the unfolding temperature and hence unfolds from the T3R3-state. The relative affinity of the four tested anionic ligands was found, by DSC, to be thiocyanate > or = 4-hydroxy-3-nitrobenzoate > p-aminobenzoate > chloride. The results correlate with other methods and demonstrate that DSC provides a general and useful method of evaluation of both phenolic and anionic ligand binding to insulin without the use of probes or other alterations of the system of interest. However, it is a prerequisite that the binding is strong enough to saturate the binding sites at temperatures around the unfolding transition.  相似文献   

7.
High-resolution 270-MHz proton nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectra of the native two-zinc insulin hexamer at pH 9 have been obtained, and assignments of key resonances have been made. Spectra of zinc-free insulin titrated with Zn2+ are unchanged after the addition of 1 equiv of zinc per insulin hexamer, indicating that the conformation of the hexamer is fixed at this point and that the second zinc ion does not significantly change the conformation. Titration of the two-zinc insulin hexamer with anions high on the Hofmeister series such as SCN- causes marked changes in the NMR spectra which are interpreted as the result of major conformational changes to a new hexameric form of insulin having a twofold axis perpendicular to the threefold axis. Analysis of difference spectra indicates that this new hexamer (which should be capable of binding six zinc ions) binds 2 equiv of SCN- at two sites which are assumed to be identical and independent (K1 = 10(3), K2 = 2.5 X 10(2) M-1).  相似文献   

8.
Destripeptide (B28-B30) insulin (DTRI) is an insulin analogue that has much weaker association ability than native insulin but keeps most of its biological activity. It can be crystallized from a solution containing zinc ions at near-neutral pH. Its crystal structure has been determined by molecular replacement and refined at 1.9 A resolution. DTRI in the crystal exists as a loose hexamer compared with 2Zn insulin. The hexamer only contains one zinc ion that coordinates to the B10 His residues of three monomers. Although residues B28-B30 are located in the monomer-monomer interface within a dimer, the removal of them can simultaneously weaken both the interactions between monomers within the dimer and the interactions between dimers. Because the B-chain C-terminus of insulin is very flexible, we take the DTRI hexamer as a transition state in the native insulin dissociation process and suggest a possible dissociation process of the insulin hexamer based on the DTRI structure.  相似文献   

9.
For hexamer formation of native insulin the repulsive potential of six B13 Glu carboxylate groups coming together in the centre is overcome by zinc binding to B10 His. Substitution of Gln for Glu in position B13 by site-directed mutagenesis, i.e. replacement of the repelling carboxylates by amide groups, which are offering H-bonding potential, enhances association and allows a metal-free hexamer to form. Merely upon addition of zinc ions this hexamer undergoes the T6----T3R3 respectively T6----R6 structural transition which in the native 2Zn insulin hexamer is inducible only by additives like inorganic anions or phenolic compounds. [B13 Gln]Insulin hexamers are transformed by phenolic compounds, but not by anions, even in the absence of any metal. The structural transformation of insulin can thus be brought about in two ways: By inorganic ions with the zinc ions as their points of attack, which preexist in the nontransformed hexamer, and by phenol, for which the binding sites close to the B5 histidines come into existence only with the transformation. Therefore transformed and non-transformed hexamers, i.e. molecules with helical and extended B chain N-terminus, must be related in a dynamic equilibrium. Phenol acts as a wedge jamming the structure in the transformed state and trapping the zinc ions. Combination of transformed 2Zn[B13 Gln]insulin and metal-free native insulin in the absence of additives results in a redistribution of the zinc ions in favour of native insulin which is an outcome of the dynamic equilibrium and also demonstrates an influence of B13 charge on metal binding affinity. Transformation of a single subunit in a hexamer would lead to bad contacts.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
1H n.m.r. studies at 270 MHz were made of the transformation of 2 Zn insulin hexamer to 4 Zn hexamer produced by the addition of anions (thiocyanate ion). Four separate H2 histidine resonances were observed for the B5 and B10 histidines in 2 Zn hexamer at pH 7 and 9 and four separate resonances also occurred in the 4 Zn hexamer. The observation of these resonances and others from phenylalanine, tyrosine and leucine residues showed that the 2 Zn to 4 Zn transformation probably occurred in solution in a similar manner to that observed in the crystal. Furthermore as occurred in the crystal, it was found that in solution the transformation was reversible (on removal of thiocyanate) and that 2 Cd insulin was unable to undergo the transformation. Des-Phe-Bl-insulin did not undergo the transformation. Addition of SCN- to Zn-free insulin (mainly dimer) produced only a small transformation, consistent with the idea that Zn2+ promotes formation of hexamer from dimer but probably does not otherwise affect the transformation.  相似文献   

11.
用分子动力学(MD)模拟方法设计了两个模拟时间为600ps的对比计算机模拟实验,研究了R6态的胰岛素六聚体在水溶液中的构象柔性。通过对MD模拟所得到的轨迹的分析发现,包含锌离子和苯酚的胰岛素六聚体体系的构象柔性弱于不含锌离子和苯酚的胰岛素六聚体体系,对于不包含锌离子和苯酚的体系,胰岛素六聚体的构象柔性表现得较为突出,特别是在实验研究认为与胰岛素和受体结合位点有关的每个单体的B链羧端的β折叠部分,发生了快速而显著的构象变化,表现出了很大的构象柔性。这些模拟结果与实验观测结果相吻合。  相似文献   

12.
Insulin allergy and lipoatrophy in type 1 diabetic patients have been previously reported but the mechanisms are not well documented. Here, we report a case emphasizing the role of abnormal local immune reaction associated with cytokine hyper production. The patient is a 7-year-old boy with a familial history of common variable immunodeficiency. Eight months after the diagnosis of type 1 diabetes, he developed signs of insulin allergy expressed as continuously extensive and profound lipoatrophy contrasting with a well-preserved metabolic control. Specific insulin allergy was confirmed by skin prick tests that showed lymphoid activated cells in the subcutaneous tissue at the site of insulin injection. All therapies reported in the literature (antihistaminic, local steroid, change to lispro insulin, immunosuppressive treatment, subcutaneous insulin pump, peritoneal insulin infusion) were not efficient. It is suggested that familial disorders of immune cell functions with abnormal and excessive cytokine production might explain these adverse effects triggered by insulin with severe allergic reactions and lipoatrophy.  相似文献   

13.
Mutations in the insulin gene can impair proinsulin folding and cause diabetes mellitus. Although crystal structures of insulin dimers and hexamers are well established, proinsulin is refractory to crystallization. Although an NMR structure of an engineered proinsulin monomer has been reported, structures of the wild-type monomer and hexamer remain undetermined. We have utilized hydroxyl radical footprinting and molecular modeling to characterize these structures. Differences between the footprints of insulin and proinsulin, defining a "shadow" of the connecting (C) domain, were employed to refine the model. Our results demonstrate that in its monomeric form, (i) proinsulin contains a native-like insulin moiety and (ii) the C-domain footprint resides within an adjoining segment (residues B23-B29) that is accessible to modification in insulin but not proinsulin. Corresponding oxidation rates were observed within core insulin moieties of insulin and proinsulin hexamers, suggesting that the proinsulin hexamer retains an A/B structure similar to that of insulin. Further similarities in rates of oxidation between the respective C-domains of proinsulin monomers and hexamers suggest that this loop in each case flexibly projects from an outer surface. Although dimerization or hexamer assembly would not be impaired, an ensemble of predicted C-domain positions would block hexamer-hexamer stacking as visualized in classical crystal lattices. We anticipate that protein footprinting in combination with modeling, as illustrated here, will enable comparative studies of diabetes-associated mutant proinsulins and their aberrant modes of aggregation.  相似文献   

14.
1H NMR and UV-visible electronic absorption studies have been performed to investigate the effects of anions and cyclic organic molecules on the interconversion of the T- and R-conformational states (Kaarsholm et al., 1989) of hexameric M (II)-substituted insulin in solution (M = Zn or Co.). Two ligand binding processes that stabilize the R-state conformation of the M(II)-substituted insulin hexamer [M(II)-R6] have been distinguished: (i) The binding of neutral organic molecules to the six, crystallographically identified, protein pockets in the Zn(II)-R6 insulin hexamer (Derewenda et al. 1989) generate homotropic site-site interactions that stabilize the R-state. Cyclohexanol, phenol, 4-nitrophenol, and 4-hydroxymethylbenzoate are shown to bind at these sites. (ii) The coordination of singly charged anions that are able to gain access to the two HisB10 coordinated metal ions of the M(II)-R6 hexamer stabilizes the R-state. Adducts of the M(II)-R6 hexamer are formed, thereby, in which the solvent-accessible fourth coordination position of the M(II) ion is replaced by a competing anion. Binding to these two classes of sites introduces strong heterotropic interactions that stabilize the R-state. UV-visible spectral data and apparent affinity constants for the adducts formed by the Co(II)-R6 hexamer with a wide range of anionic ligands are presented. The Co(II)-R6 adducts have a strong preference for the formation of pseudotetrahedral Co(II) centers. The HCO3- and pyridine-2-thiolate ions form Co(II)-R6 adducts that are proposed to possess pentacoordinate Co(II) geometries. The relevance of the Co(II)-R6 complexes to carbonic anhydrase catalysis and zinc enzyme model systems is discussed.  相似文献   

15.
W Kadima 《Biochemistry》1999,38(41):13443-13452
The role of metal ions in the T- to R-allosteric transition is ascertained from the investigation of the T- to R-allosteric transition of transition metal ions substituted-insulin hexamers, as well as from the kinetics of their dissociation. These studies establish that ligand field stabilization energy (LFSE), coordination geometry preference, and the Lewis acidity of the metal ion in the zinc sites modulate the T- to R-state transition. (1)H NMR, (113)Cd NMR, and UV-vis measurements demonstrate that, under suitable conditions, Fe2+/3+, Ni2+, and Cd2+ bind insulin to form stable hexamers, which are allosteric species. (1)H NMR R-state signatures are elicited by addition of phenol alone in the case of Ni(II)- and Cd(II)-substituted insulin hexamers. The Fe(II)-substituted insulin hexamer is converted to the ferric analogue upon addition of phenol. For the Fe(III)-substituted insulin hexamer, appearance of (1)H NMR R-state signatures requires, additionally to phenol, ligands containing a nitrogen that can donate a lone pair of electrons. This is consistent with stabilization of the R-state by heterotropic interactions between the phenol-binding pocket and ligand binding to Fe(III) in the zinc site. UV-vis measurements indicate that the (1)H NMR detected changes in the conformation of the Fe(III)-insulin hexamer are accompanied by a change in the electronic structure of the iron site. Kinetic measurements of the dissociation of the hexamers provide evidence for the modulation of the stability of the hexamer by ligand field stabilization effects. These kinetic studies also demonstrate that the T- to R-state transition in the insulin hexamer is governed by coordination geometry preference of the metal ion in the zinc site and the compatibility between Lewis acidity of the metal ion in the zinc site and the Lewis basicity of the exogenous ligands. Evidence for the alteration of the calcium site has been obtained from (113)Cd NMR measurements. This finding adds to the number of known conformational changes that occur during the T- to R-transition and is an important consideration in the formulation of allosteric mechanisms of the insulin hexamer.  相似文献   

16.
Change in aggregation state of insulin upon conjugation with 5-dimethylaminonaphthalene-1-sulfonyl (DNS) group was investigated at neutral pH. DNS group was introduced exclusively into B1 phenylalanine, the N-terminus of the B-chain of insulin. The association state of insulin shifted toward a more highly aggregated one upon conjugation, depending on the mole fraction (d) of DNS group to insulin monomer; at d equal 0.3 the equilibrium between dimer and hexamer was dominant over the range of 1-600 microM, while at d equal 1.0-1.5 DNS-insulin formed a larger aggregate (dodecamer) which is stable over the range of 67-600 microM. The dissociation constant of dimer-hexamer equilibrium at d=0.3 was evaluated to be 2.5 x 10(-10) M2 from the fluorescence anisotropy of the DNS group, which was about one order of magnitude smaller than that of the dimer-hexamer equilibrium in native insulin. Spectroscopic data and fluorescence decay analyses indicated that there exist at least two different environments surrounding the dye bound to B1 phenylalanine and that they are both relatively hydrophilic. It is considered that the major part of DNS group has excitation and emission maxima at longer wavelength with relatively low quantum yield, while the minor part has excitation and emission maxima at shorter wavelengths with relatively high quantum yield. The fluorescence lifetime of the dye was modified by the change in quaternary structure of DNS-lifetime of the dye was modified by the change in quaternary structure of DNS-insulin. Remarkable depolarization of DNS fluorescence was observed at d equal 1.0 and d equal 1.5 due to energy transfer between DNS groups conjugated to B1 phenylalanine in the hexamer or the dodecamer. Critical transfer distance for inter-DNS energy transfer was evaluated to be 15 A. From the molecular model of the insulin crystal, this energy transfer is ascribed to the close proximity, within about 15 A, between DNS groups in dimer units of the hexamer or the dodecamer.  相似文献   

17.
The addition of phenols to hexameric insulin solutions produces a particularly stable hexamer, resulting from a rearrangement in which residues B1-B8 change from an extended conformation (T-state) to form an alpha-helix (R-state). The R-state is, in part, stabilized by nonpolar interactions between the phenolic molecule and residue B5 His at the dimer-dimer interface. The B5 His --> Tyr mutant human insulin was constructed to see if the tyrosine side chain would mimic the effect of phenol binding in the hexamer and induce the R-state. In partial support of this hypothesis, the molecule crystallized as a half-helical hexamer (T(3)R(3)) in conditions that conventionally promote the fully nonhelical (T6) form. As expected, in the presence of phenol or resorcinol, the B5 Tyr hexamers adopt the fully helical (R6) conformation. Molecular modeling calculations were performed to investigate the conformational preference of the T-state B5 Tyr side chain in the T(3)R(3) form, this side chain being associated with structural perturbations of the A7-A10 loop in an adjacent hexamer. For an isolated dimer, several different orientations of the side chain were found, which were close in energy and readily interconvertible. In the crystal environment only one of these conformations remains low in energy; this conformation corresponds to that observed in the crystal structure. This suggests that packing constraints around residue B5 Tyr result in the observed structural rearrangements. Thus, rather than promoting the R-state in a manner analogous to phenol, the mutation appears to destabilize the T-state. These studies highlight the role of B5 His in determining hexamer conformation and in mediating crystal packing interactions, properties that are likely be important in vivo.  相似文献   

18.
Muzaffar M  Ahmad A 《PloS one》2011,6(11):e27906
The high propensity of insulin to fibrillate causes severe biomedical and biotechnological complications. Insulin fibrillation studies attain significant importance considering the prevalence of diabetes and the requirement of functional insulin in each dose. Although studied since the early years of the 20(th) century, elucidation of the mechanism of insulin fibrillation has not been understood completely. We have previously, through several studies, shown that insulin hexamer dissociates into monomer that undergoes partial unfolding before converting into mature fibrils. In this study we have established that NaCl enhances insulin fibrillation mainly due to subtle structural changes and is not a mere salt effect. We have carried out studies both in the presence and absence of urea and Gdn.HCl and compared the relationship between conformation of insulin induced by urea and Gdn.HCl with respect to NaCl at both pH 7.4 (hexamer) and pH 2 (monomer). Fibril formation was followed with a Thioflavin T assay and structural changes were monitored by circular dichroism and size-exclusion chromatography. The results show salt-insulin interactions are difficult to classify as commonly accepted Debye-Hückel or Hofmeister series interactions but instead a strong correlation between the association states and conformational states of insulin and their propensity to fibrillate is evident.  相似文献   

19.
The self-association of Zn-free human insulin, Zn-free insulin analogue B13-glutamine, 2-Zn insulin and cobalt(III) human insulin in the millimolar concentration range has been investigated by measuring the osmotic pressure at pH 7.5 in 0.05 M NaCl, 25 degrees C. The pH dependence of association has been measured in the pH range 6.8-9. For all insulins, except Zn-free human insulin, the major association state has been found to be the hexamer. Maximal association of hexamer has been observed for Zn-free human insulin at high concentration (2-7 mM) and physiological pH. At concentrations less than 1 mM and pH greater than 7.0, dissociation to a lower state than the hexamer is found. The conclusion has been drawn that, in the absence of metal ions, human insulin and insulin analogue B13-glutamine associate to the hexamer in the physiological pH range at concentrations in the millimolar range.  相似文献   

20.
Olsen HB  Kaarsholm NC 《Biochemistry》2000,39(39):11893-11900
Intracellular proteins are frequently modified by covalent addition of lipid moieties such as myristate. Although a functional role of protein lipidation is implicated in diverse biological processes, only a few examples exist where the structural basis for the phenomena is known. We employ the insulin molecule as a model to evaluate the detailed structural effects induced by myristoylation. Several lines of investigation are used to characterize the solution properties of Lys(B29)(N(epsilon)-myristoyl) des(B30) insulin. The structure of the polypeptide chains remains essentially unchanged by the modification. However, the flexible positions taken up by the hydrocarbon chain selectively modify key structural properties. In the insulin monomer, the myristoyl moiety binds in the dimer interface and modulates protein-protein recognition events involved in insulin dimer formation and receptor binding. Myristoylation also contributes stability expressed as an 30% increase in the free energy of unfolding of the protein. Addition of two Zn(2+)/hexamer and phenol results in the displacement of the myristoyl moiety from the dimer interface and formation of stable R(6) hexamers similar to those formed by human insulin. However, in its new position on the surface of the hexamer, the fatty acid chain affects the equilibria of the phenol-induced interconversions between the T(6), T(3)R(3), and R(6) allosteric states of the insulin hexamer. We conclude that insulin is an attractive model system for analyzing the diverse structural effects induced by lipidation of a compact globular protein.  相似文献   

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