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1.
To address the effects of local structures on structural fluctuations of Escherichia coli dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR), the backbone-fluctuation map was determined by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometry (MALDI-MS) coupled with H/D exchange and pepsin digestion. H/D exchange kinetics was examined at 15 degrees C with 18 identified digestion fragments covering almost the entire amino acid sequence of DHFR. These fragments exhibited significant variations in the first-order rate constant of proton exchange, k(ex) (0.47-0.71 min(-1)), the fraction of deuterium incorporation at the initial stage, D(o) (0.20-0.60), the fraction of deuterium incorporation at infinite time, D(infinity) (0.75-0.97), and the number of protons protected from exchange, P (0.4-4.7), relative to the corresponding values for the whole DHFR molecule (k(ex) = 0.51 min(-1), D(o) = 0.41, D(infinity) = 0.85, and P = 20.7). H/D exchange was very fast in the fragment comprising residues 5-28 (Met20 loop), which participates in substrate uptake, and reasonably fast in disordered and hydrophobic fragments, but slow in beta-strand-rich fragments. These results indicate that the local structures contribute differently to the fluctuation of the DHFR molecule, and that mass spectrometry coupled with H/D exchange and protease digestion is a useful tool for detecting segment-dependent protein fluctuation.  相似文献   

2.
In order to examine the origins of the large positive cooperativity (ΔG(0)(coop) = -2.9 kcal mol(-1)) of trimethoprim (TMP) binding to a bacterial dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) in the presence of NADPH, we have determined and compared NMR solution structures of L. casei apo DHFR and its binary and ternary complexes with TMP and NADPH and made complementary thermodynamic measurements. The DHFR structures are generally very similar except for the A-B loop region and part of helix B (residues 15-31) which could not be directly detected for L. casei apo DHFR because of line broadening from exchange between folded and unfolded forms. Thermodynamic and NMR measurements suggested that a significant contribution to the cooperativity comes from refolding of apo DHFR on binding the first ligand (up to -0.95 kcals mol(-1) if 80% of A-B loop requires refolding). Comparisons of Cα-Cα distance differences and domain rotation angles between apo DHFR and its complexes indicated that generally similar conformational changes involving domain movements accompany formation of the binary complexes with either TMP or NADPH and that the binary structures are approaching that of the ternary complex as would be expected for positive cooperativity. These favorable ligand-induced structural changes upon binding the first ligand will also contribute significantly to the cooperative binding. A further substantial contribution to cooperative binding results from the proximity of the bound ligands in the ternary complex: this reduces the solvent accessible area of the ligand and provides a favorable entropic hydrophobic contribution (up to -1.4 kcal mol(-1)).  相似文献   

3.
To address the effects of single amino acid substitutions on the structural fluctuation of Escherichia coli dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR), hydrogen/deuterium exchange kinetics were investigated at 15 degrees C with wild-type and mutant DHFRs at Gly67 (six mutants) and Gly121 (eight mutants) located in two flexible loops, by means of electrospray ionization mass spectrometry. These mutations induced significant changes in the first-order rate constant of proton exchange, k(ex) (0.10-0.27 min(-1)), the number of fast-exchangeable protons, Delta M(o) (164-222 Da), and the number of protons protected from exchange, Delta M(infinity) (15-56 Da), relative to the corresponding values for the wild-type enzyme (k(ex) = 0.18 min(-1), Delta M(o) = 164 Da, and Delta M(infinity) = 50.5 Da). These kinetic parameters were strongly correlated with the volume of introduced amino acids, but partly correlated with adiabatic compressibility (volume fluctuation), stability, and enzymatic activity. These results indicate that the local structure change due to a single amino acid substitution in loop regions is dramatically magnified to affect the structural fluctuation of the whole DHFR molecule, resulting in complicated changes in its stability and function.  相似文献   

4.
Amide protection factors have been determined from NMR measurements of hydrogen/deuterium amide NH exchange rates measured on assigned signals from Lactobacillus casei apo-DHFR and its binary and ternary complexes with trimethoprim (TMP), folinic acid and coenzymes (NADPH/NADP(+)). The substantial sizes of the residue-specific DeltaH and TDeltaS values for the opening/closing events in NH exchange for most of the measurable residues in apo-DHFR indicate that sub-global or global rather than local exchange mechanisms are usually involved. The amide groups of residues in helices and sheets are those most protected in apo-DHFR and its complexes, and the protection factors are generally related to the tightness of ligand binding. The effects of ligand binding that lead to changes in amide protection are not localised to specific binding sites but are spread throughout the structure via a network of intramolecular interactions. Although the increase in protein stability in the DHFR.TMP.NADPH complex involves increased ordering in the protein structure (requiring TDeltaS energy) this is recovered, to a large extent, by the stronger binding (enthalpic DeltaH) interactions made possible by the reduced motion in the protein. The ligand-induced protection effects in the ternary complexes DHFR.TMP.NADPH (large positive binding co-operativity) and DHFR.folinic acid.NADPH (large negative binding co-operativity) mirror the co-operative effects seen in the ligand binding. For the DHFR.TMP.NADPH complex, the ligand-induced protection factors result in DeltaDeltaG(o) values for many residues being larger than the DeltaDeltaG(o) values in the corresponding binary complexes. In contrast, for DHFR.folinic acid.NADPH, the DeltaDeltaG(o) values are generally smaller than many of those in the corresponding binary complexes. The results indicate that changes in protein conformational flexibility on formation of the ligand complex play an important role in determining the co-operativity in the ligand binding.  相似文献   

5.
Escherichia coli dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) has several flexible loops surrounding the active site that play a functional role in substrate and cofactor binding and in catalysis. We have used heteronuclear NMR methods to probe the loop conformations in solution in complexes of DHFR formed during the catalytic cycle. To facilitate the NMR analysis, the enzyme was labeled selectively with [(15)N]alanine. The 13 alanine resonances provide a fingerprint of the protein structure and report on the active site loop conformations and binding of substrate, product, and cofactor. Spectra were recorded for binary and ternary complexes of wild-type DHFR bound to the substrate dihydrofolate (DHF), the product tetrahydrofolate (THF), the pseudosubstrate folate, reduced and oxidized NADPH cofactor, and the inactive cofactor analogue 5,6-dihydroNADPH. The data show that DHFR exists in solution in two dominant conformational states, with the active site loops adopting conformations that closely approximate the occluded or closed conformations identified in earlier X-ray crystallographic analyses. A minor population of a third conformer of unknown structure was observed for the apoenzyme and for the disordered binary complex with 5,6-dihydroNADPH. The reactive Michaelis complex, with both DHF and NADPH bound to the enzyme, could not be studied directly but was modeled by the ternary folate:NADP(+) and dihydrofolate:NADP(+) complexes. From the NMR data, we are able to characterize the active site loop conformation and the occupancy of the substrate and cofactor binding sites in all intermediates formed in the extended catalytic cycle. In the dominant kinetic pathway under steady-state conditions, only the holoenzyme (the binary NADPH complex) and the Michaelis complex adopt the closed loop conformation, and all product complexes are occluded. The catalytic cycle thus involves obligatory conformational transitions between the closed and occluded states. Parallel studies on the catalytically impaired G121V mutant DHFR show that formation of the closed state, in which the nicotinamide ring of the cofactor is inserted into the active site, is energetically disfavored. The G121V mutation, at a position distant from the active site, interferes with coupled loop movements and appears to impair catalysis by destabilizing the closed Michaelis complex and introducing an extra step into the kinetic pathway.  相似文献   

6.
Heteronuclear NMR methods have been used to probe the conformation of four complexes of Escherichia coli dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) in solution. (1)H(N), (15)N, and (13)C(alpha) resonance assignments have been made for the ternary complex with folate and oxidized NADP(+) cofactor and the ternary complex with folate and a reduced cofactor analog, 5,6-dihydroNADPH. The backbone chemical shifts have been compared with those of the binary complex of DHFR with the substrate analog folate and the binary complex with NADPH (the holoenzyme). Analysis of (1)H(N) and (15)N chemical shifts has led to the identification of marker resonances that report on the active site conformation of the enzyme. Other backbone amide resonances report on the presence of ligands in the pterin binding pocket and in the adenosine and nicotinamide-ribose binding sites of the NADPH cofactor. The chemical shift data indicate that the enzyme populates two dominant structural states in solution, with the active site loops in either the closed or occluded conformations defined by X-ray crystallography; there is no evidence that the open conformation observed in some X-ray structures of E. coli DHFR are populated in solution.  相似文献   

7.
There is marked pH dependence of the rate constant (koff) for tetrahydrofolate (H4folate) dissociation from its ternary complex with human dihydrofolate reductase (hDHFR) and NADPH. Similar pH dependence of H4folate dissociation from the ternary complex of a variant of hDHFR with the substitution Phe31----Leu (F31L hDHFR) causes this dissociation to become rate limiting in the enzyme mechanism at pH approximately 5, and this accounts for the marked decrease in kcat for this variant as the pH is decreased from 7 to 5. This decreased kcat at low pH is not seen for most DHFRs. koff for dissociation of folate, dihydrofolate (H2folate), and H4folate from their binary complexes with hDHFR is similarly pH dependent. For all the complexes examined, the pH dependence of koff in the range pH 5-7 is well described by a pKa of about 6.2 and must be due to ionization of a group on the enzyme. In the higher pH range (7-10), koff increases further as the pH is raised, and this relation is governed by a second pKa which is close to the pKa for ionization of the amide group (HN3-C4O) of the respective ligands. Thus, ionization of the ligand amide group also increases koff. Evidence is presented that the dependence of pH on koff for hDHFR accounts for the shape of the kcat versus pH curve for both hDHFR as well as its F31L variant and contributes to the higher efficiency of hDHFR compared with bacterial DHFR.  相似文献   

8.
R67 dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) is a novel bacterial protein that possesses 222 symmetry and a single active site pore. Although the 222 symmetry implies that four symmetry-related binding sites must exist for each substrate as well as for each cofactor, various studies indicate only two molecules bind. Three possible combinations include two dihydrofolate molecules, two NADPH molecules, or one substrate plus one cofactor. The latter is the productive ternary complex. To explore the role of various ligand substituents during binding, numerous analogues, inhibitors, and fragments of NADPH and/or folate were used in both isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) and K(i) studies. Not surprisingly, as the length of the molecule is shortened, affinity is lost, indicating that ligand connectivity is important in binding. The observed enthalpy change in ITC measurements arises from all components involved in the binding process, including proton uptake. As a buffer dependence for binding of folate was observed, this likely correlates with perturbation of the bound N3 pK(a), such that a neutral pteridine ring is preferred for pairwise interaction with the protein. Of interest, there is no enthalpic signal for binding of folate fragments such as dihydrobiopterin where the p-aminobenzoylglutamate tail has been removed, pointing to the tail as providing most of the enthalpic signal. For binding of NADPH and its analogues, the nicotinamide carboxamide is quite important. Differences between binary (binding of two identical ligands) and ternary complex formation are observed, indicating interligand pairing preferences. For example, while aminopterin and methotrexate both form binary complexes, albeit weakly, neither readily forms ternary complexes with the cofactor. These observations suggest a role for the O4 atom of folate in a pairing preference with NADPH, which ultimately facilitates catalysis.  相似文献   

9.
An unresolved key issue in the mechanism of protein folding assisted by the molecular chaperone GroEL is the nature of the substrate protein bound to the chaperonin at different stages of its reaction cycle. Here we describe the conformational properties of human dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) bound to GroEL at different stages of its ATP-driven folding reaction, determined by hydrogen exchange labeling and electrospray ionization mass spectrometry. Considerable protection involving about 20 hydrogens is observed in DHFR bound to GroEL in the absence of ATP. Analysis of the line width of peaks in the mass spectra, together with fluorescence quenching and ANS binding studies, suggest that the bound DHFR is partially folded, but contains stable structure in a small region of the polypeptide chain. DHFR rebound to GroEL 3 min after initiating its folding by the addition of MgATP was also examined by hydrogen exchange, fluorescence quenching, and ANS binding. The results indicate that the extent of protection of the substrate protein rebound to GroEL is indistinguishable from that of the initial bound state. Despite this, small differences in the quenching coefficient and ANS binding properties are observed in the rebound state. On the basis of these results, we suggest that GroEL-assisted folding of DHFR occurs by minor structural adjustments to the partially folded substrate protein during iterative cycling, rather than by complete unfolding of this protein substrate on the chaperonin surface.  相似文献   

10.
Smiley RD  Stinnett LG  Saxton AM  Howell EE 《Biochemistry》2002,41(52):15664-15675
R67 dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) is an enzyme, encoded by an R-plasmid, that confers resistance to the antibacterial agent trimethoprim. This homotetramer possesses a single active site pore and exact 222 symmetry. The symmetry imposes constraints on the ability of the enzyme to optimize binding of the substrate, dihydrofolate (DHF), and the cofactor, NADPH, resulting in a "one site fits both ligands" approach. This approach allows formation of either a NADPH.NADPH, dihydrofolate.dihydrofolate, or NADPH.dihydrofolate complex. The first two complexes are nonproductive, while the third is the productive catalytic species. To break the symmetry of the active site, a tandem array of four R67 DHFR genes has been linked in frame, allowing individual manipulation of each gene copy. Various numbers and combinations of asymmetric Q67H mutations have been engineered into the tandem gene array. The Q67H mutation was chosen for investigation as it was previously found to tighten binding to both dihydrofolate and NADPH by approximately 100-fold in homotetrameric R67 DHFR [Park, H., Bradrick, T. D., and Howell, E. E. (1997) Protein Eng. 10, 1415-1424]. Nonadditive effects on ligand binding are observed when one to four mutations are inserted, indicating either conformational changes in the protein or different cooperativity patterns in the ligand-ligand interactions. From steady state kinetics, addition of Q67H mutations does not drastically affect formation of the NADPH.dihydrofolate complex; however, a large energy difference between the productive and nonproductive complexes is no longer maintained. A role for Q67 in discriminating between these various states is proposed. Since theories of protein evolution suggest gene duplication followed by accumulation of mutations can lead to divergence of activity, this study is a first step toward asking if introduction of asymmetric mutations in the quadrupled R67 DHFR gene can lead to optimization of ligand binding sites.  相似文献   

11.
Synthesis and biological evaluation of a fluorescent analogue of folic acid   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
A fluorescein derivative of the lysine analogue of folic acid, N alpha-pteroyl-N epilson-(4'-fluoresceinthiocarbamoyl)-L-lysine (PLF), was synthesized as a probe for dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) and a membrane folate binding protein (m-FBP). Excitation of PLF at 282 nm and at 497 nm gave a fluorescence emission maximum at 518 nm. Binding of PLF to human DHFR or human placental m-FBP results in approximately a 20-fold enhancement in the magnitude of the fluorescence emission, suggesting that the ligand interacts with a hydrophobic region on these proteins. Additional evidence suggests that an energy transfer may occur between the pteridine and the fluorescein moieties. PLF binds to the active site of human DHFR since methotrexate (MTX) competes stoichiometrically and the denatured enzyme in the presence of PLF did not exhibit fluorescent enhancement. The dissociation constant for the fluorescein derivative with respect to human DHFR is 115 nM as compared to 111 nM for folic acid. The Ki value for the competitive inhibition of human DHFR by the fluorescent analogue of folic acid is 2.0 microM compared to 0.48 microM for folic acid. PLF was reduced to N alpha-(7,8-dihydropteroyl)-N epilson-(4'-fluoresceinthiocarbamoyl)-L-lysine (H2PLF) and assayed by the enzymatic conversion to the tetrahydro derivative. The Km value for human DHFR for the dihydrofolate analogue is 2.0 microM. The KD value for H2PLF to human DHFR is 47 nM as compared to 44 nM for dihydrofolate. The KD values for both H2PLF and PLF indicate that the fluorescein moiety does not significantly affect folate binding in enzyme binary complexes.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
Plasmid-encoded bacterial R67 dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) is a NADPH-dependent enzyme unrelated to chromosomal DHFR in amino acid sequence and structure. R67 DHFR is insensitive to the bacterial drug trimethoprim in contrast to chromosomal DHFR. The crystal structure of Q67H mutant of R67 DHFR bound to NADP(+) has been determined at 1.15 angstroms resolution. The cofactor assumes an extended conformation with the nicotinamide ring bound near the center of the active site pore, the ribose and pyrophosphate group (PP(i)) extending toward the outer pore. The ribonicotinamide exhibits anti conformation as in chromosomal DHFR complexes. The relative orientation between the PP(i) and the nicotinamide ribose differs from that observed in chromosomal DHFR-NADP(+) complexes. The coenzyme displays symmetrical binding mode with several water-mediated hydrogen bonds with the protein besides ionic, stacking, and van der Waals interactions. The structure provides a molecular basis for the observed stoichiometry and cooperativity in ligand binding. The ternary model based on the present structure and the previous R67 DHFR-folate complex provides insight into the catalytic mechanism and indicates that the relative orientation of the reactants in plasmid DHFR is different from that seen in chromosomal DHFRs.  相似文献   

13.
R67 dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) shares no sequence or structural homology with chromosomal DHFRs. This enzyme arose recently in response to the clinical use of the antibacterial drug trimethoprim. R67 DHFR is a homotetramer possessing a single active site pore. A high-resolution crystal structure shows the homotetramer possesses exact 222 symmetry [Narayana, N., et al. (1995) Nat. Struct. Biol. 2, 1018-1025]. This symmetry dictates four symmetry-related binding sites must exist for each substrate as well as each cofactor. Isothermal titration calorimetry studies, however, indicate only two molecules bind: either two dihydrofolate molecules, two NADPH molecules, or one substrate and one cofactor [Bradrick, T. D., et al. (1996) Biochemistry 35, 11414-11424]. The latter is the productive ternary complex. To evaluate the role of S65, Q67, I68, and Y69 residues, located near the center of the active site pore, site-directed mutagenesis was performed. One mutation in the gene creates four mutations per active site pore which typically result in large cumulative effects. Steady state kinetic data indicate the mutants have altered K(m) values for both cofactor and substrate. For example, the Y69F R67 DHFR displays an 8-fold increase in the K(m) for dihydrofolate and a 20-fold increase in the K(m) for NADPH. Residues involved in ligand binding in R67 DHFR display very little, if any, specificity, consistent with their possessing dual roles in binding. These results support a model where R67 DHFR utilizes an unusual "hot spot" binding surface capable of binding both ligands and indicate this enzyme has adopted a novel yet simple approach to catalysis.  相似文献   

14.
Conformational changes and protein dynamics play an important role in the catalytic efficiency of enzymes. Amide H/D exchange mass spectrometry (H/D exchange MS) is emerging as an efficient technique to study the local and global changes in protein structure and dynamics due to ligand binding, protein activation-inactivation by modification, and protein-protein interactions. By monitoring the selective exchange of hydrogen for deuterium along a peptide backbone, this sensitive technique probes protein motions and structural elements that may be relevant to allostery and function. In this report, several applications of H/D exchange MS are presented which demonstrate the unique capability of amide hydrogen/deuterium exchange mass spectrometry for examining dynamic and structural changes associated with enzyme catalysis.  相似文献   

15.
Nano-electrospray ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (ESI-MS) was used to study the conformational consequences of metal ion binding to the colicin E9 endonuclease (E9 DNase) by taking advantage of the unique capability of ESI-MS to allow simultaneous assessment of conformational heterogeneity and metal ion binding. Alterations of charge state distributions on metal ion binding/release were correlated with spectral changes observed in far- and near-UV circular dichroism (CD) and intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence. In addition, hydrogen/deuterium (H/D) exchange experiments were used to probe structural integrity. The present study shows that ESI-MS is sensitive to changes of the thermodynamic stability of E9 DNase as a result of metal ion binding/release in a manner consistent with that deduced from proteolysis and calorimetric experiments. Interestingly, acid-induced release of the metal ion from the E9 DNase causes dramatic conformational instability associated with a loss of fixed tertiary structure, but secondary structure is retained. Furthermore, ESI-MS enabled the direct observation of the noncovalent protein complex of E9 DNase bound to its cognate immunity protein Im9 in the presence and absence of Zn(2+). Gas-phase dissociation experiments of the deuterium-labeled binary and ternary complexes revealed that metal ion binding, not Im9, results in a dramatic exchange protection of E9 DNase in the complex. In addition, our metal ion binding studies and gas-phase dissociation experiments of the ternary E9 DNase-Zn(2+)-Im9 complex have provided further evidence that electrostatic interactions govern the gas phase ion stability.  相似文献   

16.
R67 dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) is a type II DHFR produced by bacteria as a resistance mechanism to the increased clinical use of the antibacterial drug trimethoprim. Type II DHFRs are not homologous in either sequence or structure with chromosomal DHFRs. The type II enzymes contain four identical subunits which form a homotetramer containing a single active site pore accessible from either end. Although the crystal structure of the complex of R67 DHFR with folate has been reported [Narayana et al. (1995) Nat. Struct. Biol. 2, 1018], the nature of the ternary complex which must form with substrate and cofactor is unclear. We have performed transferred NOE and interligand NOE (ILOE) studies to analyze the ternary complexes formed from NADP(+) and folate in order to probe the structure of the ternary complex. Consistent with previous studies of the binary complex formed from another type II DHFR, the ribonicotinamide bond of NADP(+) was found to adopt a syn conformation, while the adenosine moiety adopts an anti conformation. Large ILOE peaks connecting NADP(+) H4 and H5 with folate H9 protons are observed, while the absence of a large ILOE connecting NADP(+) H4 and H5 with folate H7 indicates that the relative orientation of the two ligands differs significantly from the orientation in the chromosomal enzyme. To obtain more detailed insight, we prepared and studied the folate analogue 2-deamino-2-methyl-5,8-dideazafolate (DMDDF) which contains additional protons in order to provide additional NOEs. For this analogue, the exchange characteristics of the corresponding ternary complex were considerably poorer, and it was necessary to utilize higher enzyme concentrations and higher temperature in order to obtain ILOE information. The results support a structure in which the NADP(+) and folate/DMDDF molecules extend in opposite directions parallel to the long axis of the pore, with the nicotinamide and pterin ring systems approximately stacked at the center. Such a structure leads to a ternary complex which is in many respects similar to the gas-phase theoretical calculations of the dihydrofolate-NADPH transition state by Andres et al. [(1996) Bioorg. Chem. 24, 10-18]. Analogous NMR studies performed on folate, DMDDF, and R67 DHFR indicate formation of a ternary complex in which two symmetry-related binding sites are occupied by folate and DMDDF.  相似文献   

17.
Glutathionyl hemoglobin, an example of post-translationally modified hemoglobin, has been studied as a marker of oxidative stress in various diseased conditions. Compared to normal hemoglobin, glutathionyl hemoglobin has been found to have increased oxygen affinity and reduced cooperativity. However, detailed information concerning the structural perturbation of hemoglobin associated with glutathionylation is lacking. In the present study, we report structural changes associated with glutathionylation of deoxyhemoglobin by hydrogen/deuterium (H/D) exchange coupled to matrix assisted laser desorption ionization (MALDI) mass spectrometry. We analyzed isotope exchange kinetics of backbone amide hydrogen of eleven peptic peptides in the deoxy state of both hemoglobin and glutathionyl hemoglobin molecules. Analysis of the deuterium incorporation kinetics for both molecules showed structural changes associated with the following peptides: α34-46, α1-29, β32-41, β86-102, β115-129, and β130-146. H/D exchange experiments suggest that glutathionylation of hemoglobin results in a change in conformation located at the above-mentioned regions of the hemoglobin molecule. MALDI mass spectrometry based H/D exchange experiment might be a simple way of monitoring structural changes associated with post-translational modification of protein.  相似文献   

18.
Amide hydrogen/deuterium exchange (H/D exchange) coupled with mass spectrometry has been widely used to analyze the interface of protein-protein interactions, protein conformational changes, protein dynamics and protein-ligand interactions. H/D exchange on the backbone amide positions has been utilized to measure the deuteration rates of the micro-regions in a protein by mass spectrometry(1,2,3). The resolution of this method depends on pepsin digestion of the deuterated protein of interest into peptides that normally range from 3-20 residues. Although the resolution of H/D exchange measured by mass spectrometry is lower than the single residue resolution measured by the Heteronuclear Single Quantum Coherence (HSQC) method of NMR, the mass spectrometry measurement in H/D exchange is not restricted by the size of the protein(4). H/D exchange is carried out in an aqueous solution which maintains protein conformation. We provide a method that utilizes the MALDI-TOF for detection(2), instead of a HPLC/ESI (electrospray ionization)-MS system(5,6). The MALDI-TOF provides accurate mass intensity data for the peptides of the digested protein, in this case protein kinase Pak2 (also called γ-Pak). Proteolysis of Pak 2 is carried out in an offline pepsin digestion. This alternative method, when the user does not have access to a HPLC and pepsin column connected to mass spectrometry, or when the pepsin column on HPLC does not result in an optimal digestion map, for example, the heavily disulfide-bonded secreted Phospholipase A(2;) (sPLA(2;)). Utilizing this method, we successfully monitored changes in the deuteration level during activation of Pak2 by caspase 3 cleavage and autophosphorylation(7,8,9).  相似文献   

19.
Peptides from human dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) generated by cyanogen bromide cleavage and corresponding to residues 15-52, 53-111, 112-125, and 140-186 (carboxyl terminus) were purified and used to immunize rats. Titration of the immune sera against denatured human DHFR by solid-phase immunoassay showed that peptides 15-52 and 140-186 were relatively highly immunogenic, unlike the native enzyme which is most immunogenic in the sequence 53-111. The antisera were specific for the corresponding peptides used for immunization. Antibodies to peptides 15-52, 53-111, and 140-186 cross-reacted with native human DHFR in solution in competition assays. However, the binding of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (reduced) (NADPH) and the inhibitors folate and methotrexate, both in binary and in ternary complexes with the enzyme, caused a striking reduction in binding of antibody. Using a sensitive radioactive assay, it was found that antisera to peptides 15-52 and 140-186, both of which exhibited a high antibody titer, caused significant inhibition of DHFR. Because peptide 140-186 does not include any active-site residues, it is concluded that at least in this case all the antibodies bound to regions outside the active site. Since comparison of the X-ray structures of the chicken liver DHFR holoenzyme with the apoenzyme reveals no changes in secondary structural elements (alpha-helices and beta-sheets), the reduction in antibody binding to DHFR-ligand complexes must not involve epitopes within these structures.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
Dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) has several flexible active site loops that facilitate ligand binding and catalysis. Previous studies of backbone dynamics in several complexes of DHFR indicate that the time scale and amplitude of motion depend on the conformation of the active site loops. In this study, information on dynamics is extended to methyl-containing side chains. To understand the role of side chain dynamics in ligand binding and loop conformation, methyl deuterium relaxation rates of Escherichia coli DHFR in binary folate and ternary folate:NADP+ complexes have been measured, together with chi(1) rotamer populations for threonine, isoleucine, and valine residues, determined from measurements of 3J(CgammaCO) and 3J(CgammaN) coupling constants. The results indicate that, in addition to backbone motional restriction in the adenosine-binding site, side chain flexibility in the active site and the surrounding active site loops is diminished upon binding NADP+. Resonances for several methyls in the active site and the surrounding active site loops were severely broadened in the folate:NADP+ ternary complex, suggesting the presence of motion on the chemical shift time scale. The side chains of Ile14 and Ile94, which pack against the nicotinamide and pterin rings of the cofactor and substrate, respectively, exhibit rotamer disorder in the ternary folate:NADP+ complex. Conformational fluctuations of these side chains may play a role in transition state stabilization; the observed line broadening for Ile14 suggests motions on a microsecond/millisecond time scale.  相似文献   

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