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1.
T R Krugh  Y C Chen 《Biochemistry》1975,14(22):4912-4922
The use of proton and carbon-13 magnetic resonance spectroscopy for the determination of the geometry and the stoichiometry of the actinomycin D-deoxyguanosine 5'-monophosphate complex is outlined. The dimerization of actinomycin D has been reexamined by recording the proton magnetic resonance spectrum of actinomycin D to much lower concentrations through the use of Fourier transform nuclear magnetic resonance techniques. The effect of the actinomycin D dimerization on the observed chemical shifts that results from the additon of nucleotides to an actinomycin D solution is directly demonstrated by comparing the actinomycin D-nucleotide titrations at both low (approximately 0.3 mM) and high (approximately 12 mM) concentrations of actinomycin D. In the presence of excess nucleotide the chemical shifts of the actinomycin D groups were essentially the same for both the low and high concentration titrations. The complexes of actinomycin D with pdG-dC, dG-dC, deoxyguanosine 3'-monophosphate, G-C, C-G, dIMP(5'), 2, 6-diaminopurine deoxyribose, and other nucleotides were also investigated by proton magnetic resonance and visible spectral titrations. These data were interpreted in terms of the molecular geometry of the complexes and in terms of the effect of the structure of the nucleotide base on the relative binding affinity of the nucleotides for the two nucleotide binding sites of actinomycin D. The carbon-13 chemical shifts of dGMP(5') were measured as a function of concentration over the concentration range of 0.5-0.025 M. The infinite dilution carbon-13 chemical shifts were graphically estimated from the dilution curves. These values were used to calculate the changes in the chemical shifts of the dGMP carbons that result from the formation of an actinomycin D-(dGMP)2 complex. It was not possible to interpret these carbon-13 chemical shift changes in terms of only ring current effects, which thus rules out the use of carbon-13 spectroscopy in the determination of the geometries of the actinomycin D complexes with the mono- and dinucleotides. The induced chemical shifts in the proton spectra may be used in the determination of the geometries of the complexes. A consideration of these data for the above nucleotide series shows that the predominant complex formed is one in which the guanine rings in the two nucleotide binding sites of actinomycin D are oriented in a manner very similar to that observed in the cocrystalline complex of actinomycin D with deoxyguanosine.  相似文献   

2.
High magnetic field high frequency electron paramagnetic resonance techniques were used to measure in situ Mn(II) speciation in Deinococcus radiodurans, a radiation-resistant bacteria capable of accumulating high concentrations of Mn(II). It was possible to identify and quantify the evolution of Mn(II) species in intact cells at various stages of growth. Aside from water, 95-GHz high field electron nuclear double resonance showed that the Mn(II) ions are bound to histidines and phosphate groups, mostly from fructose-1,6-bisphosphate but also inorganic phosphates and nucleotides. During stationary growth phase, 285-GHz continuous wave EPR measurements showed that histidine is the most common ligand to Mn(II) and that significant amounts of cellular Mn(II) in D. radiodurans are bound to peptides and proteins. As much as 40% of the total Mn(II) was in manganese superoxide dismutase, and it is this protein and not smaller manganese complexes, as has been suggested recently, that is probably the primary defense against superoxide.  相似文献   

3.
Titrations of the paramagnetic rate earth ions Ce(III), Nd(III), Er(III), and Yb(III) with ATP, ADP, adenosine, and the hexametaphosphate ligands have been performed in order to establish the conditions required to form saturated complexes. These titrations have been made by recording the decay envelope of electron spin echoes for a range of different concentrations of the species concerned and observing the ‘nuclear modulation effect’ in the echo envelope. This novel method can be used when optical titrations are not feasible. It also yields additional information concerning changes in the number and nature of the coordinating groups, in the distances of these groups from the paramagnetic ion, and in the degree of water coordination in the primary sphere. It was shown that: (a) ATP has a greater affinity than ADP for rate earth ions; (b) Ce(III) has a greater affinity than Nd(III) for ATP; (c) the interaction between rate earth ions and 31P nuclei in the added phosphates is greatest for cations with the smallest radii; (d) more phosphate groups are bound in hexametaphosphate complexes of rate earth ions than in the corresponding ATP complexes; (e) some of the coordination sites in rare earth ATP complexes are occupied by water. In othe studies performed with paramagnetic transition metal ions, it was shown that Co(II) can, under certain conditions, bind to the adenine moiety of ATP.  相似文献   

4.
S-Adenosylmethionine synthetase from Escherichia coli is shown to require 2 divalent metal ions/enzyme subunit for maximal enzymatic activity. In the absence of substrate, the tetrameric enzyme binds 1 Mn(II) ion/subunit, whereas in the presence of a nucleotide substrate, adenylylimidodiphosphate, or the product pyrophosphate, there are two Mn(II)-binding sites/subunit. Electron paramagnetic resonance spectra of Mn(II) bound to the enzyme reveal a spin exchange interaction between 2 Mn(II) ions in complexes of enzyme and Mn(II) which also contain adenosylmethionine, K+, and either pyrophosphate or imidotriphosphate. Since a spin exchange interaction requires orbital overlap between the 2 ions, the metal ions must be bound close to one another, and they may share a common ligand.  相似文献   

5.
Mechanism of actinomycin D (AMD) and 7-aminoactinomycin D (7AAMD) interaction with DNA and model nucleotide compounds was studied by absorption and fluorescence spectroscopy (steady-state, phase-modulation, and polarization). It was shown that complex formation does not result in energy transfer from photoexcited nucleotides to phenoxazone chromophore of 7AAMD that indicates the absence of stacking-like intercalation. This fact is fundamentally important to explain the biological effect of actinomycin on cells. It was revealed a fundamental difference in the complex-forming properties of AMD and 7AAMD. Thus AMD is capable of binding to guanine micelles to destroy them. 7AAMD forms complexes neither guanine micelles nor polyguanilic acid. 7AAMD binding sites on DNA can differ substantially from AMD binding sites. However, a strong competition is observed between AMD and 7AAMD for binding site in oligonucleotide HP1 used as DNA hairpin model. The efficient diameters of 7AAMD-HP1 complex and free 7AAMD were determined using the Levshin-Perren equation.  相似文献   

6.
Replacement of Mg (II), the natural activator of brain hexokinase (EC 2.7.1.1) by paramagnetic Mn (II) without affecting the physiological properties of the enzyme, has rendered brain hexokinase accessible to investigations by magnetic resonance methods. Based on such studies, a site on the enzyme, where Mn (II) binds directly with high affinity has been identified and characterized in detail. Use ofβ,γ-bidentate Cr (III) ATP as an exchange-inert analogue for Mn (II) ATP has shown that Mn (II) binding directly to the enzyme has no catalytic role but another Mn (II) ion binding simultaneously and independently to the enzyme through the nucleotide bridge participates in enzyme function. However, using this direct binding Mn (II) ion and a covalently bound spin label as paramagnetic probes a beginning has been made in mapping the ligand binding sites of the enzyme. Ultra-violet difference spectroscopy has revealed the presence of at least two glucose 6-phosphate locations on the enzyme one of which presumably is the high affinity regulatory site modulated by substrate glucose. Elution behaviour of the enzyme on a phosphocellulose column suggests that glucose induces a specific phosphate site on the enzyme to which the phosphate bearing regulatory ligands of the enzyme may bind.  相似文献   

7.
《Inorganica chimica acta》1986,124(3):133-136
The preparation and properties of the copper(II) halide complexes CuX2(NIDOL)2 (where X = Cl, Br) are reported for the anti-inflammatory drug nictindole (NIDOL). The diffuse reflectance spectra, magnetic moments and electron spin resonance spectra are consistent with a tetragonally distorted pseudo-octahedral environment around the copper(II) ions. The infrared spectra indicate monodentate coordination of the neutral drug to the central metal ion via the nitrogen atom of the pyridine ring.  相似文献   

8.
Analysis of titration data of EF-Tu-GDP with Mn(II) where free and bound Mn(II) were determined by proton relaxation rate of water (PRR) yields one tight Mn(II) binding site and a value of 2 muM for the dissociation constant of Mn(II) from the EF-Tu-MnGDP complex, K'A. The dissociation constant of manganese nucleotide from the ternary EF-Tu-MnGDP complex, K2, 0.2 muM, was derived from the known value of Ks, the dissociation constant for the binary EF-Tu-GDP complex, and the titration data of the ternary complex with excess GDP as titrant. The apparent number, n, of rapidly exchanging water ligands coordinated to bound Mn(II) in the ternary complex EF-Tu-MnGDP is estimated from the frequency dependence of the PRR of the complex to be approximately 1. The value of n and the values of PRR enhancements, epsilont = 4.3 for EF-Tu-MnGDP at 21 degrees, 24.3 MHZ and epsilont = 4.1 for the ternary GTP complex, are unusually low for protein-Mn-nucleotide complexes. The antibiotic X5108 which induces GTPase activity in EF-Tu-MgGTP was shown to bind stoichiometrically to EF-Tu-MnGDP and thereby change the PRR enhancement of the complex from 4.3 to 7.4. The characteristic broad lines in the EPR spectra of Mn(II) nucleotides are strikingly narrowed upon binding of Mn(II) nucleotides to EF-Tu. The long electron spin relaxation times inferred from the EPR spectra indicate a limited access of solvent water to the first coordination sphere of Mn(II) in its EF-Tu-nucleotide complexes. The frequency dependence of the PRR indicates that the electron spin relaxation time, T1e, is the dominant process modulating the Mn(II)-H2O interaction of the EF-Tu-MnGDP complex and consequently determines the correlation time. The value of T1e, estimated from the PRR experiments to be 2.5 ns at 21 degrees, is consistent with the lower limit of T1e obtained from the line widths of the EPR spectrum of the complex. Upon binding of a stoichiometric quantity of the antibiotic X5108, the EPR spectrum of EF-Tu-MnGDP is severely broadened indicating greater access of solvent water to the manganese coordination sphere, i.e. an opening of the nucleotide binding site as already suggested by the increased PRR enhancement.  相似文献   

9.
Savintsev  I. V.  Vekshin  N. L. 《Molecular Biology》2002,36(4):575-580
The mechanism of actinomycin D (AMD) and 7-aminoactinomycin D (7AAMD) interaction with DNA and model nucleotide compounds was studied by absorption and fluorescence spectroscopy (steady-state, phase-modulation, and polarization). It was shown that complex formation does not result in energy transfer from photoexcited nucleotides to the phenoxazone chromophore of 7AAMD, which indicates the absence of stacking-like intercalation. This fact is fundamentally important to explain the biological effect of actinomycin on cells. A basic difference was revealed in the complex-forming properties of AMD and 7AAMD. Thus AMD is capable of binding to guanine micelles to destroy them; 7AAMD forms no complexes with either guanine micelles or polyguanylic acid. 7AAMD binding sites on DNA can differ substantially from AMD binding sites. However, strong competition is observed between AMD and 7AAMD for the binding site in oligonucleotide HP1 used as a DNA hairpin model. The effective diameters of 7AAMD–HP1 complex and free 7AAMD were determined using the Levshin–Perren equation.  相似文献   

10.
A series of copper(II) complexes of the type [Cu(L)]2+, where L = N,N'-dialkyl-1,10-phenanthroline-2,9-dimethanamine and R = methyl (L1), n-propyl (L2), isopropyl (L3), sec-butyl (L4), or tert-butyl (L5) group, have been synthesized. The interaction of the complexes with DNA has been studied by DNA fiber electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy, emission, viscosity and electrochemical measurements and agarose gel electrophoresis. In the X-ray crystal structure of [Cu(HL2)Cl2]NO3, copper(II) is coordinated to two ring nitrogens and one of the two secondary amine nitrogens of the side chains and two chloride ions as well and the coordination geometry is best described as trigonal bipyramidal distorted square based pyramidal (TBDSBP). Electronic and EPR spectral studies reveal that all the complexes in aqueous solution around pH 7 possess CuN3O2 rather than CuN4O chromophore with one of the alkylamino side chain not involved in coordination. The structures of the complexes in aqueous solution around pH 7 change from distorted tetragonal to trigonal bipyramidal as the size of the alkyl group is increased. The observed changes in the physicochemical features of the complexes on binding to DNA suggest that the complexes, except [Cu(L5)]2+, bind to DNA with partial intercalation of the derivatised phen ring in between the DNA base pairs. Electrochemical studies reveal that the complexes prefer to bind to DNA in Cu(II) rather than Cu(I) oxidation state. Interestingly, [Cu(L5)]2+ shows the highest DNA cleavage activity among all the present copper(II) complexes suggesting that the bulky N-tert-butyl group plays an important role in modifying the coordination environment around the copper(II) center, the Cu(II)/Cu(I) redox potential and hence the formation of activated oxidant responsible for the cleavage. These results were compared with those for bis(1,10-phenanthroline)copper(II), [Cu(phen)2]2+.  相似文献   

11.
Measurements of the relaxation rate of water protons (PRR) have been used to study the interaction of yeast phosphoglycerate kinase with the manganous complexes of a number of nucleotides. The results indicate that phosphoglycerate kinase belongs to the same class of enzymes as creatine kinase, adenylate kinase, formyltetrahydrofolate synthetase, and arginine kinase, with maximal binding of metal ion to tne enzyme in the presence of the nucleotide substrate. However, an analysis of titration curves for a number of nucleoside diphosphates (ADP, IDP, GDP) showed that there is a substantial synergism in binding of the metal ion and nucleotide to the enzyme in the ternary complex. The metal-substrate binds to the enzyme approximately two orders of magnitude more tightly than the free nucleotide; Other evidence for an atypical binding scheme for Mn(II)-nucleoside diphosphates was obtained by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) studies; the EPR spectrum for the bound Mn(II) in the enzyme-MnADP complex differed substantially from those obtained for other kinases. An identical EPR spectrum is observed with the MnADP complex with the rabbit muscle enzyme as with the yeast enzyme. In contrast, the dissociation constant for the enzyme-MnATP complex is approximately fourfold lower than that for enzyme-ATP, and there are no substantial changes in the electron paramagnetic resonance spectrum of MnATP2- when the complex is bound to phosphoglycerate kinase. A small but significant change in the PRR of water is observed on addition of 3-phosphoglycerate (but not 2-phosphoglycerate) to the MnADP-enzyme complex. However, addition of 3-phosphoglycerate to enzyme-MnADP did not influence the EPR spectrum of the enzyme-bound Mn(II).  相似文献   

12.
Complexes of 7-aminoactinomycin D (7AAMD), a fluorescent analogue of the natural antitumor antibiotic actinomycin D (AMD), with its potential carriers: purine nucleotides (guanine and adenine), caffeine, and fragmented DNA have been studied by fluorescence spectroscopy. It has been shown that 7AAMD binds on the surface of purine aggregates and caffeine clusters and is particularly well incorporated into unwound DNA regions. The process is accompanied by a strong long-wavelength shift of the excitation spectrum of 7AAMD. From the magnitude of the shift, the energy of interaction has been found. In the case of the interaction of 7AAMD with guanine, adenine, and caffeine, it is about 7 kcal/mol, which differs little from the energy of its interaction with DNA (7.7 kcal/mol). This indicates that the contribution of deoxyribose and phosphate to the energy of interaction is very small. On interaction with all compounds examined, except DNA, 7AAMD emits from the water phase, as judged from emission spectra. It has been concluded that, upon photoexcitation, 7AAMD passes readily from all clusters to the polar water phase but does not leave DNA and remains in the hydrophobic surroundings. Presumably, the rigidity of the binding of 7AAMD is determined not only by the enthalpic energy of interaction but also the entropic steric factor, the location of the antibiotic in the hydrophobic part of the unwound region.  相似文献   

13.
Ag(I) is a strong nucleic acids binder and forms several complexes with DNA such as types I, II, and III. However, the details of the binding mode of silver(I) in the Ag-polynucleotides remains unknown. Therefore, it was of interest to examine the binding of Ag(I) with calf-thymus DNA and bakers yeast RNA in aqueous solutions at pH 7.1-6.6 with constant concentration of DNA or RNA and various concentrations of Ag(I). Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy and capillary electrophoresis were used to analyze the Ag(I) binding mode, the binding constant, and the polynucleotides' structural changes in the Ag-DNA and Ag-RNA complexes. The spectroscopic results showed that in the type I complex formed with DNA, Ag(I) binds to guanine N7 at low cation concentration (r = 1/80) and adenine N7 site at higher concentrations (r = 1/20 to 1/10), but not to the backbone phosphate group. At r = 1/2, type II complexes formed with DNA in which Ag(I) binds to the G-C and A-T base pairs. On the other hand, Ag(I) binds to the guanine N7 atom but not to the adenine and the backbone phosphate group in the Ag-RNA complexes. Although a minor alteration of the sugar-phosphate geometry was observed, DNA remained in the B-family structure, whereas RNA retained its A conformation. Scatchard analysis following capillary electrophoresis showed two binding sites for the Ag-DNA complexes with K(1) = 8.3 x 10(4) M(-1) for the guanine and K(2) = 1.5 x 10(4) M(-1) for the adenine bases. On the other hand, Ag-RNA adducts showed one binding site with K = 1.5 x 10(5) M(-1) for the guanine bases.  相似文献   

14.
The paramagnetic effects of the bound manganese ion and of a covalently attached spin label on proton nuclear spin relaxation rates have been used to calculate distances for a structural model of the MnADP and creatine complexed to creatine kinase from rabbit muscle. The nucleotide and guanidino substrates are so aligned on the enzyme that the transferable phosphoryl group on one substrate is in apposition to the acceptor moiety on the second substrate. The divalent metal ion is most probably liganded to the alpha and beta phosphates of the nucleotide substrate, both in the abortive MnADP-creatine-enzyme complex and in the active MnATP-creatine-enzyme complex. The metal ion-formate distance approximately 5 A in the Mn(II)ADP-formate-creatine-enzyme complex and less than 5 A in the Co(II)ADP-formate-creatine-enzyme complex is consistent with the suggestion that the monovalent anion is binding at the site normally occupied by the transferable phosphoryl group, thus producing a complex which mimics the transition state. Although only an upper limit of the distance from Mn(II) to the guanidino substrate could be determined in the presence of formate, it could be concluded that the disposition of the guanidino substrate changes upon addition of formate, since the relative distances of the methyl and methylene group are inverted. The effect of formate and nitrate on increasing the residence time of creatine in the MnADP-creatine-enzyme complex as determined by NMR provides evidence that the complexes observed by NMR are identical with those involved in the catalytic mechanism, since a parallel effect of formate and nitrate is observed in the kinetics of the enzymatic reaction, where the dissociation constant of creatine from the abortive quaternary complex decreases in the presence of the anions as had been determined from their inhibition of the forward reaction (Milner-White, E.J., and Watts, D.C. (1971) Biochem. J. 122, 727-740). Although the guanidino substrate is not directly liganded to the divalent metal ion, the electron paramagnetic resonance spectrum of manganese in the transition state analog complexes, i.e. nitrate-ADP-guanidino substrate-enzyme, is strongly dependent on catalytic activity of the guanidino substrate. The structural differences observed by EPR among transition state analog complexes with various guanidino substrates were not reflected in distances from Mn(II) to the guanidino substrate, which were 10% and 0.3% as active as creatine. Within the experimental error of 1 A, the distances were the same. The enzyme or the enzyme-substrate complexes may be considered to exist in a number of structurally distinct conformations in equilibrium based on the EPR spectra and on the anomalous temperature-dependence of the relaxation rates of the formate proton of the transition state analog complexes...  相似文献   

15.
The interactions of mandelate racemase with divalent metal ion, substrate, and competitive inhibitors were investigated. The enzyme was found by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) to bind 0.9 Mn2+ ion per subunit with a dissociation constant of 8 muM, in agreement with its kinetically determined activator constant. Also, six additional Mn2+ ions were found to bind to the enzyme, much more weakly, with a dissociation constant of 1.5 mM. Binding to the enzyme at the tight site enhances the effect of Mn2+ on the longitudinal relaxation rate (1/T1p) of water protons by a factor of 11.9 at 24.3 MHz. From the frequency dependence of 1/T1p, it was determined that there are similar to 3 water ligands on enzyme-bound Mn2+ which exchange at a rate larger than or equal to 10-7 sec-1. The correlation time for enzyme-bound Mn2+-water interaction is frequency-dependent, indicating it to be dominated by the electron spin relaxation time of Mn2+. Formation of the ternary enzyme-Mn2+-mandelate complex decreases the number of fast exchanging water ligands by similar to 1, but does not affect tau-c, suggesting the displacement or occlusion of a water ligand. The competitive inhibitors D,L-alpha-phenylglycerate and salicylate produce little or no change in the enzyme-Mn2+-H2O interaction, but ternary complexes are detected indirectly by changes in the dissociation constant of the enzyme-Mn2+ complex and by mutual competition experiments. In all cases the dissociation constants of substrates and competitive inhibitors from ternary complexes determined by magnetic resonance titrations agree with K-M and K-i values determined kinetically and therefore reflect kinetically active complexes. From the paramagnetic effects of Mn2+ on 1/T1 and 1/T2 of the 13C-enriched carbons of 1-[13C]-D,L-mandelate and 2-[13C]-D,L-mandelate, Mn2+ to carboxylate carbon and Mn2+ to carbinol carbon distances of 2.93 plus or minus 0.04 and 2.71 plus or minus 0.04 A, respectively, were calculated, indicating bidentate chelation in the binary Mn2+-mandelate complex. In the active ternary complex of enzyme, Mn2+, and D,L-mandelate, these distances increase to 5.5 plus or minus 0.2 and 7.2 plus or minus 0.2 A, respectively, indicating the presence of at least 98.9% of a second sphere complex in which Mn2+, and C1 and C2 carbon atoms are in a linear array. The water relaxation data suggest that a water ligand is immobilized between the enzyme-bound Mn2+ and the carboxylate of the bound substrate. This intervening water ligand may polarize or protonate the carboxyl group. From 1/T2p the rate of dissociation of the substrate from this ternary complex (larger than or equal to 5.6 times 10-4 sec-1) is at least 52 times greater than the maximal turnover number of the enzyme (1070 sec-1), indicating that the complex detected by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) is kinetically competent to participate in catalysis. Relationships among the microscopic rate constants are considered.  相似文献   

16.
Electrochemical studies on actinomycin D (1) and two analogs, 2-amino-3-phenoxazone (2) and 1,2,4-trichloro-7-nitrophenoxazone (3) were analyzed by polarography and ESR spectroscopy. The polarograms of the three compounds in acetonitrile all show two reduction waves. ESR experiments confirm that the first reduction wave corresponds to a one-electron transfer process which produces a phenoxazone free radical anion and the second wave corresponds to a subsequent one-electron transfer producing a diamagnetic dianion. Substitution with electron-withdrawing groups such as NO2 (at C-7) and chloro (at C-1, C-2 and C-4)3 facilitated the reduction of the phenoxazone ring system to a free radical (i.e., half-wave potentials; 1, -0.815 V; 2, -0.920 V; 3, -0.135 V). It was found, by computer simulation of the ESR spectra, that the spin density in the electrochemically generated free radicals from 1, 2 and 3 was preferentially located in the benzenoid ring and at the N-10 nitrogen. For radicals obtained from 1 and 2, only a small residual spin density could be detected in the quinoid ring. Since 1 can be metabolized to a free radical in cells, these free radical forms of 1 and its analogs may represent reactive forms of the phenoxazone nucleus.  相似文献   

17.
The S2 state electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) multiline signal of Photosystem II has been simulated at Q-band (35 Ghz), X-band (9 GHz) and S-band (4 GHz) frequencies. The model used for the simulation assumes that the signal arises from an essentially magnetically isolated MnIII-MnIV dimer, with a ground state electronic spin ST = 1/2. The spectra are generated from exact numerical solution of a general spin Hamiltonian containing anisotropic hyperfine and quadrupolar interactions at both Mn nuclei. The features that distinguish the multiline from the EPR spectra of model manganese dimer complexes (additional width of the spectrum (195 mT), additional peaks (22), internal "superhyperfine" structure) are plausibly explained assuming an unusual ligand geometry at both Mn nuclei, giving rise to normally forbidden transitions from quadrupole interactions as well as hyperfine anisotropy. The fitted parameters indicate that the hyperfine and quadrupole interactions arise from Mn ions in low symmetry environments, corresponding approximately to the removal of one ligand from an octahedral geometry in both cases. For a quadrupole interaction of the magnitude indicated here to be present, the MnIII ion must be 5-coordinate and the MnIV 5-coordinate or possibly have a sixth, weakly bound ligand. The hyperfine parameters indicate a quasi-axial anisotropy at MnIII, which while consistent with Jahn-Teller distortion as expected for a d4 ion, corresponds here to the unpaired spin being in the ligand deficient, z direction of the molecular reference axis. The fitted parameters for MnIV are very unusual, showing a high degree of anisotropy not expected in a d3 ion. This degree of anisotropy could be qualitatively accounted for by a histidine ligand providing pi backbonding into the metal dxy orbital, together with a weakly bound or absent ligand in the x direction.  相似文献   

18.
Coordination of Mn(II) to the phosphate groups of the substrates and products in the central complexes of the creatine kinase reaction mixture has been investigated by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy with regiospecifically 17O-labeled substrates. The EPR pattern for the equilibrium mixture is a superposition of spectra for the two central complexes, and this pattern differs from those observed for the ternary enzyme-Mn(II)-nucleotide complexes and from that for the dead-end complex enzyme-Mn(II)ADP-creatine. In order to identify those signals that are associated with each of the central complexes of the equilibrium mixture, spectra were obtained for a complex of enzyme, Mn(II)ATP, and a nonreactive analogue of creatine, 1-(carboxymethyl)-2-iminoimidazolidin-4-one, which is a newly synthesized competitive inhibitor. This inhibitor permits an unobstructed view of the EPR spectrum for Mn(II)ATP in the closed conformation of the active site. The EPR spectrum for this nonreactive complex with Mn(II)ATP matches one subset of signals in the spectrum for the equilibrium mixture, i.e., those due to the enzyme-Mn(II)-ATP-creatine complex. Chemical quenching of the samples followed by chromatographic assays for both ATP and ADP indicates that the enzyme-Mn(II)ADP-phosphocreatine and the enzyme-Mn(II)ATP-creatine complexes are present in a ratio of approximately 0.7 to 1. A similar value for the equilibrium constant for enzyme-bound substrates is obtained directly from the EPR spectrum for the equilibrium mixture.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
G H Reed  T S Leyh 《Biochemistry》1980,19(24):5472-5480
The complete coordination scheme for Mn(II) in transition-state-analogue complexes with creatine kinase has been determined by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy. Perturbations in the EPR spectra for Mn(II) due to superhyperfine coupling to 17O of selectively labeled ligands have been used to identify oxygen ligands in the first coordination sphere of the metal ion. The results show that in the complex of enzyme-MnADP-formate-creatine, Mn(II) is bound to oxygen ligands from both the alpha- and beta-phosphate groups of ADP, to an oxygen from the carboxylate group of formate, and to three water molecules. In the complex with thiocyanate replacing formate as the stabilizing anion, previous infrared experiments [Reed, G. H., Barlow, C. H., & Burns, R. A., Jr. (1978) J. Biol. Chem. 253, 4153-4158] indicated that the nitrogen from thiocyanate was bound to the Mn(II). The magnitudes of the 17O superphyperfine coupling constants from the O- ligands of the ADP phosphate groups and from the formate carboxylate are approximately equal and are larger than that for the water ligands. The symmetry of the zero-field-splitting tensor for Mn(II) indicates that the oxygens from the alpha- and beta-phosphate groups of ADP and the ligand donor atom from the anion occupy mutually cis positions in the octahedral coordination geometry. Water proton relaxation time measurements show that the three water molecules which are bound to Mn(II) are not in free exchange with the bulk solvent. Hence, an enclosed structure at the active site is indicated. The results suggest that for creatine kinase the activating metal ion is bound to all three phosphate groups in the transition state of the reaction.  相似文献   

20.
E V Scott  G Zon  L G Marzilli  W D Wilson 《Biochemistry》1988,27(20):7940-7951
One- and two-dimensional NMR studies on the oligomer dA1T2G3C4G5C6A7T8, with and without actinomycin D (ActD), were conducted. Analysis of the NMR data, particularly 2D NOE intensities, revealed that the free oligonucleotide is a duplex in a standard right-handed B form. At the ratio of 1 ActD/duplex (R = 1), 1D NMR studies indicate that two 1:1 unsymmetric complexes form in unequal proportions with the phenoxazone ring intercalated at a GpC site, in agreement with previous studies [Scott, E.V., Jones, R.L., Banville, D.L., Zon, G., Marzilli, L.G., & Wilson, W.D. (1988) Biochemistry 27, 915-923]. The 2D COSY data also confirm this interpretation since eight cytosine H6 to H5 and two ActD H8 to H7 cross-peaks are observed. At R = 2, both COSY and NOESY spectra confirm the formation of a unique 2:1 species with C2 symmetry. The oligomer remains in a right-handed duplex but undergoes extreme conformational changes both at and adjacent to the binding site. The deoxyribose conformation of T2, C4, and C6 shifts from primarily C2'-endo in the free duplex to an increased amount of C3'-endo in the 2:1 complex as revealed by the greater intensity of the base H6 to 3' NOE cross-peak relative to the intensity of the H6 to H2' NOE cross-peak. This conformational change widens the minor groove and should help alleviate the steric crowding of the ActD peptides. The orientation of the ActD molecules at R = 2 has the quinoid portion of the phenoxazone ring at the G3pC4 site and the benzenoid portion of the phenoxazone ring at the G5pC6 site on the basis of NOE cross-peaks from ActD H7 and H8 to G5H8 and C6H6. All base pairs retain Watson-Crick type H-bonding, unlike echinomycin complexes [e.g., Gao, X., & Patel, D.J. (1988) Biochemistry 27, 1744-1751] where Hoogsteen base pairs have been observed. In contrast to previous studies on ActD, we were able to distinguish the two peptide chains.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

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