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1.
The histidine C-2 proton NMR titration curves of ribonuclease S-peptide (residues 1 to 20) and S-protein (residues 21 to 124) are reported. Although S-protein contains 3 histidine residues, four discrete resonances are observed to titrate. One of these arises from the equivalent histidine residues of unfolded S-protein. The variation in area of the four resonances indicate that there is a reversible pH-dependent equilibrium between the folded and unfolded forms of S-protein, with some unfolded material being present at most pH values. Two of the resonances of the folded S-protein can be assigned to 2 of the histidine residues, 48 and 105, from the close similarity of their titration curves to those in ribonuclease. These similarities indicate a homology of portions of the folded conformation of S-protein to that of ribonuclease in solution. These results indicate that the complete amino acid sequence is not required to produce a folded conformation similar to the native globular protein, and they appear to eliminate the possibility that proteins fold from their NH2 terminus during protein synthesis. The low pH inflection present in the titration curve assigned to histidine residue 48 in ribonuclease is absent from this curve in S-protein. This is consistent with our previous conclusion that this inflection arises from the interaction of histidine 48 with aspartic acid residue 14, which is also absent in S-protein. The third titrating resonance of native S-protein is assigned to the remaining histidine residue at position 119. The properties of this resonance are not identical with either of the titration curves of the active site histidine residues 12 and 119 of ribonuclease. The resonance assigned to histidine 119 is the only one significantly affected on the addition of sodium phosphate to S-protein, indicating that some degree of phosphate binding occurs. In both the absence and presence of phosphate this curve also lacks the low pH inflection observed in the histidine 119 NMR titration curve in ribonuclease. This difference presumably arise from a conformational between ribonuclease and the folded S-protein involving a carboxyl group.  相似文献   

2.
One of the four titrating histidine ring C-2 proton resonances of bovine pancreatic ribonuclease has been assigned to histidine residue 12. This was accomplished by a direct comparison of the rate of tritium incorporation into position C-2 of histidine 12 of S-peptide (residues 1 to 20) derived from ribonuclease S, with the rates of deuterium exchange of the four histidine C-2 proton resonances of ribonuclease S under the same experimental conditions. The same assignment was obtained by a comparison of the NMR titration curves of ribonuclease S, the noncovalent complex of S-peptide and S-protein (residues 21 to 124) with the results for the recombined complex in which position C-2 of histidine 12 was fully deuterated. The second active site histidine resonance was assigned to histidine residue 119 by consideration of the NMR titration results fro carboxymethylated histidines and 1-carboxymethylhistidine 119 ribonuclease. This assignment is a reversal of that originally reported, and has important implications for the interpretation of NMR titration data of ribonuclease.  相似文献   

3.
J A Carver  J H Bradbury 《Biochemistry》1984,23(21):4890-4905
The resolved 1H NMR resonances of the aromatic region in the 270-MHz NMR spectrum of sperm whale, horse, and pig metmyoglobin (metMb) have been assigned, including the observable H-2 and H-4 histidine resonances, the tryptophan H-2 resonances, and upfield-shifted resonances from one tyrosine residue. The use of different Mb species, carboxymethylation, and matching of pK values allows the assignment of the H-4 resonances, which agree in only three cases out of seven with scalar-correlated two-dimensional NMR spectroscopy assignments by others. The conversion to hydroxymyoglobin at high pH involves rearrangements throughout the molecule and is observed by many assigned residues. In sperm whale ferric cyanomyoglobin, nine H-2 and eight H-4 histidine resonances have been assigned, including the His-97 H-2 resonance and tyrosine resonances from residues 103 and 146. The hyperfine-shifted resonances from heme and near-heme protons observe a shift with a pK = 5.3 +/- 0.3 (probably due to deprotonation of His-97, pK = 5.6) and another shift at pK = 10.8 +/- 0.3. The spectrum of high-spin ferrous sperm whale deoxymyoglobin is very similar to that of metMb, which allows the assignment of seven surface histidine H-2 and H-4 resonances and also resonances from the two tryptophan residues and one tyrosine. In diamagnetic sperm whale (carbon monoxy)myoglobin (COMb), 10 His H-2 and 11 His H-4 resonances are observed, and 8 H-2 and 9 H-4 resonances are assigned, including His-64 H-4, the distal histidine. This important resonance is not observed in sperm whale oxymyoglobin, which in general shows very similar titration curves to COMb. Histidine-36 shows unusual titration behavior in the paramagnetic derivatives but normal behavior in the diamagnetic derivatives, which is discussed in the accompanying paper [Bradbury, J. H., & Carver, J. A. (1984) Biochemistry (following paper in this issue)].  相似文献   

4.
The microenvironments of the histidines in three isoforms of Ca(II)-bound parvalbumin (carp, pI = 4.25; pike, pI = 5.00; rat, pI = 5.50) have been examined with 1H NMR techniques to probe their protonation characteristics and photochemically induced dynamic nuclear polarizability (photo-CIDNP). The histidine at position 26 (or 25), present in all three of these proteins, shows absolutely no photo-CIDNP enhancement of its C2H or C5H resonances. Nor does this nonpolarizable histidine possess a normal pKa: values range only from 4.20 for carp to 4.32 for pike to 4.44 for rat. The C2H and C5H resonances of the histidine in this carp isoform split into doublets as the pH is lowered. The magnitude of this splitting depends on the magnetic field strength, temperature, and pH; however, the line intensities within each doublet are temperature-independent. Although the crystal structure of carp parvalbumin indicates that His-26 is exposed to solvent [Kretsinger, R. H., & Nockolds, C. E. (1973) J. Biol. Chem. 248, 3313-3326], we conclude that in solution this residue, in its unprotonated state, is part of the hydrophobic core of the protein. In contrast, His-48 in rat parvalbumin and His-106 in pike III parvalbumin show dramatic photo-CIDNP enhancements of their C2H, C5H, and beta-CH2 1H NMR resonances. Combined with its nearly normal pKa, 6.14, and exchange-broadened C2H resonance, the photo-CIDNP enhancement results for His-48 indicate that its microenvironment differs little from random-coil exposure, consistent with its presumed position on the solvent surface of helix C.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
The effects of pH upon the C-2 resonances of the 5 histidine residues of Escherichia coli MB 1428 dihydrofolate reductase in binary complexes with methotrexate, aminopterin, folate, methopterin, and trimethoprim were studied by 300-MHz 1H nmr spectroscopy. Three of the five histidine residues, labeled 1, 2, and 3, exhibited similar pK' values and chemical shifts for their C-2 protons in the five binary complexes. One histidine, 4, was quite different in the folate complex and the last histidine, 5 was quite different in the trimethoprim complex. For all five binary complexes, each histidine had a pK' which was significantly different from the other 4 histidines of that complex. Titration of the binary methotrexate complex of a 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoate)-modified enzyme showed that 2 histidines were not perturbed by this modification of Cys 152, and that the alkaline form of histidine 2, the acid form of histidine 4, and, to a lesser extent, the acid form of histidine 3 were slightly perturbed. Titration of the binary methotrexate complex of a N-bromosuccinimide-modified enzyme demonstrated that this modification slightly affected all of the histidines and drastically affected histidine 5. Histidines 3 and 5 of the binary methotrexate complex reacted rapidly with the histidine-specific reagent, ethoxyformic anhydride, while histidines 2 and 4 reacted at a moderate rate and histidine 1 reacted slowly if at all. The local electrostatic environments of the 5 histidine residues as deduced from the crystal structure of the binary complex of the enzyme with methotrexate (Matthews, D.A., Alden, R.A., Bolin, J.T., Freer, S.T., Hamlin, R., Xuong, N., Kraut, J., Poe, M., Williams, M.N., and Hoogsteen, K. (1977) Science 197, 594-597) were used as the basis for proposed assignments of the five histidine C-2 nmr resonances. The assignments were: 1, pK' 7.9 to 8.2, His 124; 2, pK' 7.2 to 7.4, His 141; 3, pK' 6.5 to 6.7, His 149; 4, pK' 5.7 to 6.3, His 114; and 5, pK' 5.2 to 5.9, His 45. The effect of the chemical modifications upon the enzyme's histidine residues were consistent with the assignments, but no direct chemical evidence in support of the assignments was obtained. It was proposed that, since the crystallographic data provided consistent assignments of the histidine nmr data for both native and chemically modified enzyme, the local environment of each of the 5 histidine residues was similar in the crystal and in solution.  相似文献   

6.
J L Markley 《Biochemistry》1975,14(16):3546-3554
The deuterium exchange kinetics of the C(2) protons of the four histidine residues of native bovine pancreatic ribonuclease A have been followed at pH 6.5 and 8.0 by proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy (1H NMR). Comparison of the order of exchange of the histidine peaks with tritium exchange rates into individual histidine residues [Ohe, M., Matsuo, H., Sakiyama, F., and Narita, K. (1974), J. Biochem. (Tokyo) 75, 1197] supports the previous assignment of histidine NMR peaks H(1) and H(4) to histidine-105 and histidine-48 but requires reassignment of peaks H(2) and H(3) to histidine-119 and histidine-12, respectively. Ribonuclease A samples having differentially deuterated histidines have been used to verify the existence of crossover points in the histidine proton magnetic resonance titration curves and to observe the discontinuous titration curve of histidine-48. Proton magnetic resonance peaks have been assigned to the C(4) protons of the four histidine residues of ribonuclease A on the basis of their unit proton areas and by matching their titration shifts with the more readily visible C(2)-H peaks of the histidines. The pK' values derived from the C(4)-H data agree, within experimental limits, with those derived from C(2)-H data. The C(4)-H peaks were assigned to histidine-12, -48, -105, and -119 of ribonuclease A on the basis of their pH dependence, pK' values, shifts of their pK' values in the presence of inhibitor cytidine 3'-phosphate, and by comparison with the assignments of the histidine C(2)-H peaks above.  相似文献   

7.
The titration curves of the histidine residues of porcine lutropin and its isolated alpha and beta subunits have been determined by following the pH-dependence of the imidazole C-2 proton resonances. The isolated alpha subunit contains a buried histidine, whose C-2 proton does not exchange with solvent, and which has the unusually low pK of 3.3. In the native hormone all the histidine residues have relatively normal pK values (between 5.7 and 6.2). The four histidine C-2 proton resonances have been assigned to specific residues in the amino-acid sequence, by means of deuterium and tritium exchange experiments on the alpha subunit and its des(92-96) derivative. The histidine with a pK of 3.3 is identified as His-alpha87. The effects of pH on tyrosine and methyl proton resonances show that the titration of His-87 in the isolated alpha subunit is accompanied by a significant conformational change which involves loosening of the protein structure but which is not a normal unfolding transition. The role of conformational changes in the generation of biological activity by subunit association in the glycoprotein hormones is discussed.  相似文献   

8.
The 250 MHz 1H-NMR spectrum of horse carbonic anhydrase I (or B) (carbonate hydro-lyase, EC 4.2.1.1) was measured as a function of pH under various conditions. Eight resonances corresponding to histidine C-2 protons and four resonances corresponding to histidine C-4 protons were identified and assigned to individual histidine residues in the enzyme molecule. Substantial similarities between horse and human carbonic anhydrases I were demonstrated. While the human enzyme has three titratable histidine residues in its active site, the horse enzyme has only two, His-67 in the human enzyme being replaced by Gln in the horse enzyme (Jabusch, J.R., Bray, R.P. and Deutsch, H.F. (1980) J. Biol. Chem. 255, 9196-9204). This substitution has small but significant effects on the behaviour of the other active-site histidines. His-64 and His-200. However, His-64 has an anomalously low pKa value also in horse isoenzyme I, as previously observed in human isoenzyme I (Campbell, I.D., Lindskog, S. and White, A.I. (1974) J. Mol. Biol. 90, 469-489).  相似文献   

9.
1. The aromatic proton resonances in the 360-MHz 1H nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectrum of bovine pancreatic ribonuclease were divided into histidine, tyrosine and phenylalanine resonances by means of pH titrations and double resonance experiments. 2. Photochemically induced dynamic nuclear polarization spectra showed that one histidine (His-119) and two tyrosines are accessibly to photo-excited flavin. This permitted the identification of the C-4 proton resonance of His-119. 3. The resonances of the ring protons of Tyr-25, Tyr-76 and Tyr-115 and the C-4 proton of His-12 were identified by comparison with subtilisin-modified and nitrated ribonucleases. Other resonances were assigned tentatively to Tyr-73, Tyr-92 and Phe-46. 4. On addition of active-site inhibitors, all phenylalanine resonances broadened or disappeared. The resonance that was most affected was assigned tentatively to Phe-120. 5. Four of the six tyrosines of bovine RNase, identified as Tyr-76, Tyr-115 and, tentatively, Tyr-73 and Tyr-92, are titratable above pH 9. The rings of Tyr-73 and Tyr-115 are rapidly rotating or flipping by 180 degrees about their C beta--C gamma bond and are accessible to flavin in photochemically induced dynamic nuclear polarization experiments. Tyr-25 is involved in a pH-dependent conformational transition, together with Asp-14 and His-48. A scheme for this transition is proposed. 6. Binding of active-site inhibitors to bovine RNase only influences the active site and its immediate surroundings. These conformational changes are probably not connected with the pH-dependent transition in the region of Asp-14, Tyr-25 and His-48. 7. In NMR spectra of RNase A at elevated temperatures, no local unfolding below the temperature of the thermal denaturation was observed. NMR spectra of thermally unfolded RNase A indicated that the deviations from a random coil are small and might be caused by interactions between neighbouring residues.  相似文献   

10.
We make use of the known exchange rates of individual amide proton in the S-peptide moiety of ribonuclease S (RNAase S) to determine when during folding the alpha-helix formed by residues 3 to 13 becomes stable. The method is based on pulse-labeling with [3H]H2O during the folding followed by an exchange-out step after folding that removes 3H from all amide protons of the S-peptide except from residues 7 to 14, after which S-peptide is separated rapidly from S-protein by high performance liquid chromatography. The slow-folding species of unfolded RNAase S are studied. Folding takes place in strongly native conditions (pH 6.0, 10 degrees C). The seven H-bonded amide protons of the 3-13 helix become stable to exchange at a late stage in folding at the same time as the tertiary structure of RNAase S is formed, as monitored by tyrosine absorbance. At this stage in folding, the isomerization reaction that creates the major slow-folding species has not yet been reversed. Our result for the 3-13 helix is consistent with the finding of Labhardt (1984), who has studied the kinetics of folding of RNAase S at 32 degrees C by fast circular dichroism. He finds the dichroic change expected for formation of the 3-13 helix occurring when the tertiary structure is formed. Protected amide protons are found in the S-protein moiety earlier in folding. Formation or stabilization of this folding intermediate depends upon S-peptide: the intermediate is not observed when S-protein folds alone, and folding of S-protein is twice as slow in the absence of S-peptide. Although S-peptide combines with S-protein early in folding and is needed to stabilize an S-protein folding intermediate, the S-peptide helix does not itself become stable until the tertiary structure of RNAase S is formed.  相似文献   

11.
L-Histidine labeled with deuterium at the C-5' position of the imidazole ring, L-[5'-2H]histidine (His-5'-D), was used as a probe for investigating a stepwise reversible mechanism via a carbanion intermediate in the elimination of ammonia catalyzed by histidine ammonia-lyase (EC 4.3.1.3). The labeled L-histidine (His-5'-D) (2.45 mM) was incubated with histidine ammonia-lyase (200 units) from Pseudomonas fluorescens at pH 7.0 or 9.0 at 25.0 degrees C for 24 h. The time course of the reaction was examined to determine the rates of enzyme-catalyzed hydrogen exchange at C-5' of L-histidine and urocanic acid. The finding of the enzyme-catalyzed hydrogen exchange at C-5' of both L-histidine and urocanic acid in the presence of L-histidine provided a rational explanation for a stepwise reversible mechanism via a carbanion intermediate in the elimination reaction. The rate of increase in the concentration of urocanic acid exchanged with hydrogen (UA-5'-H) did not depend on the formation rate of urocanic acid and UA-5'-H was continuously formed at a constant rate (25.6 microM/h) even after the completion of urocanic acid formation. These observations suggested the presence of the reversible reaction of urocanic acid and a carbanion intermediate. Since there was only a minor contribution for the formation of UA-5'-H from L-histidine exchanged with solvent hydrogen (His-5'-H), the main pathway in the enzymatic reaction of His-5'-D must be the formation of UA-5'-D via a carbanion intermediate (carbanion-D). Regeneration of the carbanion-D from UA-5'-D by its reverse reaction and subsequent hydrogen incorporation at C-5' would contribute to a large extent for the formation of UA-5'-H. The stability of carbanion was also demonstrated to be approximately three times higher at pH 7.0 than at pH 9.0.  相似文献   

12.
The amino groups of ribonuclease A (RNase-A) have been methylated with formaldehyde and borohydride to provide observable resonances for proton magnetic resonance (PMR) studies. Although enzymatic activity is lost, PMR difference spectroscopy and PMR studies of thermal denaturation show native conformation is largely preserved in methylated RNase-A. Resonances corresponding to the NH2-terminal alpha-amino and 10 xi-amino N-methyl groups are titrated at 220 MHz to obtain pK values. After correction for the effects of methylation, using values previously derived from model compound studies, a pK of 6.6 is found for the alpha-amino group, a pK of 8.6 for the xi-amino group of lysine-41 and pK values ranging from 10.6 to 11.2 for the other lysine xi-amino groups. Interactions between lysine-7 and lysine-41 or between the alpha-amino and xi-amino groups of lysine-1 have been proposed to account for deviations from simple titration behaviour. The correct continuities for the titration curves of the histidine H-2 proton resonances have been confirmed by selective deuteration of the H-2 protons. Titration curves for the H-2 proton resonances of histidine-12 and histidine-119 of methylated RNase-A show deviations from the titration curves for the native enzyme, indicating some alteration of the active-site conformation. In the presence of phosphate, titration curves for the H-2 proton resonances of histidine-12 and histidine-119 of methylated RNase-A indicate binding of phosphate at the active site, but these curves continue to show deviations from the titration behaviour of native RNase-A. The titration curve for the N-methyl resonance of lysine-41 is perturbed considerably by the presence of phosphate, which indicates a possible catalytic role for lysine-41.  相似文献   

13.
The fine structure of bovine semen RNAase was studied with proton NMR spectroscopy making use of the four-protein system constituted by dimeric bovine semen RNAase, its catalytically active monomeric bis-(S-carboxymethyl-31,32) derivative, the naturally monomeric RNAase A from the pancrease of the same species, and dimerized RNAase A. Only four histidine C-2 H resonances were observed in the aromatic spectrum of bovine semen RNAase, which belong to the four histidine residues present in the sequence of bovine semen RNAase subunits at positions identical with those of the histidines of RNAase A. This is indicative of identical environments for the individual histidine residues in both subunits. These resonances were assigned (i) by comparing their titration curves with the corresponding curves obtained with RNAase A and with monomeric bovine semen RNAase and (ii) by evaluating the effects on their titration curves of nucleotide binding. Very similar NMR parameters were measured for His-105 and also for His-119 of seminal and pancreatic RNAase, while His-12 was found to have different environments in the two proteins. The distinctive NMR features of His-48 in bovine semen RNAase confirmed the role of the hinge regions of the subunits in maintaining the dimeric structure of the protein. While monomerization of the seminal enzyme reduced the differences between the histidine C-2 H resonances of RNAase A and bovine semen RNAase, dimerization of RNAase A did not affect the NMR spectrum of this protein, thus indicating as unlikely the possibility that the quaternary structure of bovine semen RNAase resembles that of dimerized RNAase A.  相似文献   

14.
M Krieger  R E Koeppe  R M Stroud 《Biochemistry》1976,15(16):3458-3464
At pH 8.9 and 37 degrees C the half-times for tritium exchange with the C-2 protons of the histidines of trypsin are 73 days for His-57, and greater than 1000 days for His-40 and His-91. These half-times are much longer than the half-life of exchange for the C-2 proton of free histidine (2.8 days at pD 8.2), and longer than any previously reported half-time of exchange at pH greater than 8. These very low rates of exchange are discussed with reference to the refined structure of trypsin. The tritium exchange of His-57 depends on an apparent pKa of 6.6. This pKa may represent the pKa of the imidazole of His-57 in an inactive conformation of the enzyme.  相似文献   

15.
A medium resolution hydrogen exchange method (Rosa & Richards, 1979) has been used to measure the average rates of amide hydrogen exchange for known segments of the S-protein portion of ribonuclease-S. The analytical procedure permitted exchange rates to be monitored for seven S-protein fragments distributed throughout the structure, including regions of α-helix and β-sheet. Kinetics were measured as a function of pH, temperature and S-peptide binding.The pH dependence of exchange from isolated S-protein between pH 2·8 and pH 7·0 was found to deviate significantly from a first-order dependence on hydroxide ion concentration. The protection against exchange with increasing pH appeared to be closely related to the electrostatic stabilization of S-protein. It is suggested that such favorable electrostatic interactions result in increased energy barriers to the conformational fluctuations that provide solvent access to the time-average crystallographic structure. This explanation of the observed correlation between stability and exchange kinetics is also consistent with the calculated apparent activation energies for exchange from S-protein between 5·5 and 20 °C.S-peptide binding dramatically slows exchange from many S-protein sites, even those distant from the area of S-peptide contact. Interestingly, the effects of complex formation are not evenly propagated throughout S-protein. The most significantly perturbed sites (≥103-fold reduction in exchange rate constants) lie within fragments derived from regions of secondary structure. Exchange from several other fragments is not significantly affected. The S-peptide—S-protein dissociation constant at neutral pH is so small that the measured exchange must have occurred from the complex and not from the dissociated parts.  相似文献   

16.
The bisphosphatase domain derived from the rat liver 6-phosphofructo-2-kinase/fructose-2,6-bisphosphatase was studied by 1H-13C HMQC NMR spectroscopy of the histidine C2' and H2' nuclei. The bacterially expressed protein was specifically labeled with 13C at the ring C2' position of the histidines. Each of the seven histidine residues gave rise to a single cross-peak in the HMQC spectra, and these were assigned by use of a series of histidine-to-alanine point mutants. His-304, His-344, and His-469 exhibit 13C and 1H resonances that titrated with pH, while the remaining histidine-associated resonances did not. The 13C and 1H chemical shifts indicate that at neutral pH, His-304 and His-446 are deprotonated, while His-469 is protonated. The pKa of His-344 was determined to be 7.04. The 13C chemical shifts suggest that the deprotonated His-258 exists as the N1' tautomer, while His-392 and His-419 are protonated in the resting, wild-type enzyme. Mutation of the remaining member of the catalytic triad, Glu-327, to alanine in the resting enzyme caused an upfield shift of 1.58 and 1.30 ppm in the 1H and 13C dimensions, respectively, and significant narrowing of the His-258 cross-peak. Mutation of His-446 to alanine produced perturbations of the His-258 cross-peak that were similar to those detected in the E327A mutant. The His-392 resonances were also shifted by the E327A and H446A mutations. These observations strongly suggest that residues His-258, Glu-327, His-392, and His-446 exist within a network of interacting residues that encompasses the catalytic site of the bisphosphatase and includes specific contacts with the C-terminal regulatory region of the enzyme. The specifically 13C-labeled bisphosphatase was monitored during turnover by HMQC spectra acquired from the transient N3' phosphohistidine intermediate complex in the wild-type enzyme, the E327A mutant, and the H446A mutant. These complexes were formed during reaction with the physiological substrate fructose-2, 6-bisphosphate. Upon formation of the phosphohistidine at His-258, the 13C and 1H resonances of this residue were shifted downfield by 1.7 and 0.31 ppm, respectively, in the wild-type enzyme. The upfield shifts of the His-258 resonances in the E327A and H446A mutant resting enzymes were reversed when the phosphohistidine was formed, generating spectra very similar to that of the wild-type enzyme in the intermediate complex. In contrast, the binding of fructose-6-phosphate, the reaction product, to the resting enzyme did not promote significant changes in the histidine-associated resonances in either the wild-type or the mutant enzymes. The interpretation of these data within the context of the X-ray crystal structures of the enzyme is used to define the role of Glu-327 in the catalytic mechanism of the bisphosphatase and to identify His-446 as a putative link in the chain of molecular events that results in activation of the bisphosphatase site by cAMP-dependent phosphorylation of the hepatic bifunctional enzyme.  相似文献   

17.
IIIGlc is an 18.1-kDa signal-transducing phosphocarrier protein of the phosphoenolpyruvate:glycose phosphotransferase system from Escherichia coli. The 1H, 15N, and 13C histidine ring NMR signals of both the phosphorylated and unphosphorylated forms of IIIGlc have been assigned using two-dimensional 1H-15N and 1H-13C heteronuclear multiple-quantum coherence (HMQC) experiments and a two-dimensional 13C-13C-1H correlation spectroscopy via JCC coupling experiment. The data were acquired on uniformly 15N-labeled and uniformly 15N/13C-labeled protein samples. The experiments rely on one-bond and two-bond J couplings that allowed for assignment of the signals without the need for the analysis of through-space (nuclear Overhauser effect spectroscopy) correlations. The 15N and 13C chemical shifts were used to determine that His-75 exists predominantly in the N epsilon 2-H tautomeric state in both the phosphorylated and unphosphorylated forms of IIIGlc, and that His-90 exists primarily in the N delta 1-H state in the unphosphorylated protein. Upon phosphorylation of the N epsilon 2 nitrogen of His-90, the N delta 1 nitrogen remains protonated, resulting in the formation of a charged phospho-His-90 moiety. The 1H, 15N, and 13C signals of the phosphorylated and unphosphorylated proteins showed only minor shifts in the pH range from 6.0 to 9.0. These data indicate that the pK alpha values for both His-75 and His-90 in IIIGlc and His-75 in phospho-IIIGlc are less than 5.0, and that the pK alpha value for phospho-His-90 is greater than 10. The results are presented in relation to previously obtained structural data on IIIGlc, and implications for proposed mechanisms of phosphoryl transfer are discussed.  相似文献   

18.
The isolated activation segment (asA) from pig pancreatic procarboxypeptidase A was studied by 1H-n.m.r. spectroscopy over a wide range of solution conditions. Isolated asA shows many characteristics of compactly folded globular proteins, such as the observation of perturbed positions for resonances from methyl groups, alpha-carbon atoms, histidine residues and the tyrosine residue. The single tyrosine residue (Tyr-70) exhibits a very high pKa, and both histidine and tyrosine residues show slow chemical modification (deuteration and iodination). In contrast, asA shows rapid NH exchange. Analysis of the spectra by pH titration and nuclear Overhauser effects revealed several residue interactions. Quantitative analysis of deuterium and tritium exchange allowed the assignment of the histidine C-2-H resonances to their respective residues in the sequence. His-66, the closest to the sites of proteolytic attack in the proenzyme, is shown to be the most accessible to solvent in procarboxypeptidase A. It was also shown that asA is thermally very stable ['melting' temperature (Tm) 88 degrees C] and requires a high urea concentration for denaturation (6.25 M, at pH 7.5). Evidence is presented for some degree of conformational flexibility in the premelting range, a feature that could be ascribed to the preponderance of helical secondary structure and to the lack of disulphide bridges. The free solution structure of asA is probably unchanged when it binds to carboxypeptidase A.  相似文献   

19.
The reassignment of the 1H NMR C-2 histidine signals of the bovine pancreatic ribonuclease A has required a revision of the 1H NMR data on the role of the different histidines in their interaction with the Cu2+. The results of our measurements carried out at p2H 5.5 and 7.0 reduce the importance of His-12 as main site of interaction. At p2H 5.5 a very strong binding site involves His-119, while a weaker one contains certainly His-105. On the contrary, at p2H 7.0 the histidines 105 and 119 seem to possess binding constants of the same order of magnitude and in addition they provide stronger ligands for the Cu2+ than His-12. The comparison with X-ray data in the crystal shows numerous analogies. Finally, preliminary results on the competitive inhibition effect between the Cu2+ and 2',3'-cytidine monophosphoric acid are discussed.  相似文献   

20.
L P Yu  G M Smith 《Biochemistry》1990,29(12):2920-2925
The 15N-enriched ferricytochrome c2 from Rhodospirillum rubrum has been studied by 15N and 1H NMR spectroscopy as a function of pH. The 15N resonances of the heme and ligand tau nitrogen are broadened beyond detection because of paramagnetic relaxation. The 15N resonance of the ligand histidine phi nitrogen was unambiguously identified at 184 ppm (pH 5.6). The 15N resonances of the single nonligand histidine are observed only at low pH, as in the ferrocytochrome because of the severe broadening caused by tautomerization. The dependence of the 15N and 1H spectra of the ferricytochrome on pH indicated that the ligand histidine tau NH does not dissociate in the neutral pH range and is involved in a hydrogen bond, similar to that in the reduced state. Because neither deprotonated nor non-hydrogen-bonded forms of the ligand histidine are observed in the spectra of either oxidation state, the participation of such forms in producing heterogeneous populations having different electronic g tensors is ruled out. Transitions having pKa's of 6.2, 8.6, and 9.2 are observed in the ferricytochrome. The localized conformational change around the omega loops is observed in the neutral pH range, as in the ferrocytochrome. Structural heterogeneity leads to multiple resonances of the heme ring methyl at position 8. The exchange rate between the conformations is temperature dependent. The transition with a pKa of 6.2 is assigned to the His-42 imidazole group. The displacement of the ligand methionine, which occurs with a pKa of 9.2, causes gross conformational change near the heme center.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

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