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1.
Chen Z  Xu P  Barbier JR  Willick G  Ni F 《Biochemistry》2000,39(42):12766-12777
The solution conformations of a selectively osteogenic 1-31 fragment of the human parathyroid hormone (hPTH), hPTH(1-31)NH(2), have been characterized by use of very high field NMR spectroscopy at 800 MHz. The combination of the CalphaH proton and (13)Calpha chemical shifts, (3)J(NH)(alpha) coupling constants, NH proton temperature coefficients, and backbone NOEs reveals that the hPTH(1-31)NH(2) peptide has well-formed helical structures localized in two distinct segments of the polypeptide backbone. There are also many characteristic NOEs defining specific side-chain/backbone and side-chain/side-chain contacts within both helical structures. The solution structure of hPTH(1-31)NH(2) contains a short N-terminal helical segment for residues 3-11, including the helix capping residues 3 and 11 and a long C-terminal helix for residues 16-30. The two helical structures are reinforced by well-defined capping motifs and side-chain packing interactions within and at both ends of these helices. On one face of the C-terminal helix, there are side-chain pairs of Glu22-Arg25, Glu22-Lys26, and Arg25-Gln29 that can form ion-pair and/or hydrogen bonding interactions. On the opposite face of this helix, there are characteristic hydrophobic interactions involving the aromatic side chain of Trp23 packing against the aliphatic side chains of Leu15, Leu24, Lys27, and Leu28. There is also a linear array of hydrophobic residues from Val2, to Leu7, to Leu11 and continuing on to residues His14 and Leu15 in the hinge region and to Trp23 in the C-terminal helix. Capping and hydrophobic interactions at the end of the N-terminal and at the beginning of the C-terminal helix appear to consolidate the helical structures into a V-shaped overall conformation for at least the folded population of the hPTH(1-31)NH(2) peptide. Stabilization of well-folded conformations in this linear 1-31 peptide fragment and possibly other analogues of human PTH may have a significant impact on the biological activities of the PTH peptides in general and specifically for the osteogenic/anabolic activities of bone-building PTH analogues.  相似文献   

2.
The tertiary structure of lipid-free apolipoprotein (apo) A-I in the monomeric state comprises two domains: a N-terminal alpha-helix bundle and a less organized C-terminal domain. This study examined how the N- and C-terminal segments of apoA-I (residues 1-43 and 223-243), which contain the most hydrophobic regions in the molecule and are located in opposite structural domains, contribute to the lipid-free conformation and lipid interaction. Measurements of circular dichroism in conjunction with tryptophan and 8-anilino-1-naphthalenesulfonic acid fluorescence data demonstrated that single (L230P) or triple (L230P/L233P/Y236P) proline insertions into the C-terminal alpha helix disrupted the organization of the C-terminal domain without affecting the stability of the N-terminal helix bundle. In contrast, proline insertion into the N terminus (Y18P) disrupted the bundle structure in the N-terminal domain, indicating that the alpha-helical segment in this region is part of the helix bundle. Calorimetric and gel-filtration measurements showed that disruption of the C-terminal alpha helix significantly reduced the enthalpy and free energy of binding of apoA-I to lipids, whereas disruption of the N-terminal alpha helix had only a small effect on lipid binding. Significantly, the presence of the Y18P mutation offset the negative effects of disruption/removal of the C-terminal helical domain on lipid binding, suggesting that the alpha helix around Y18 concealed a potential lipid-binding region in the N-terminal domain, which was exposed by the disruption of the helix-bundle structure. When these results are taken together, they indicate that the alpha-helical segment in the N terminus of apoA-I modulates the lipid-free structure and lipid interaction in concert with the C-terminal domain.  相似文献   

3.
The unique 88 amino acid N-terminal region of cAMP-specific phosphodiesterase-4D5 (PDE4D5) contains overlapping binding sites conferring interaction with the signaling scaffold proteins, betaarrestin and RACK1. A 38-mer peptide, whose sequence reflected residues 12 through 49 of PDE4D5, encompasses the entire N-terminal RACK1 Interaction Domain (RAID1) together with a portion of the beta-arrestin binding site. (1)H NMR and CD analyses indicate that this region has propensity to form a helical structure. The leucine-rich hydrophobic grouping essential for RACK1 interaction forms a discrete hydrophobic ridge located along a single face of an amphipathic alpha-helix with Arg34 and Asn36, which also play important roles in RACK1 binding. The Asn22/Pro23/Trp24/Asn26 grouping, essential for RACK1 interaction, was located at the N-terminal head of the amphipathic helix that contained the hydrophobic ridge. RAID1 is thus provided by a distinct amphipathic helical structure. We suggest that the binding of PDE4D5 to the WD-repeat protein, RACK1, may occur in a manner akin to the helix-helix interaction shown for G(gamma) binding to the WD-repeat protein, G(beta). A more extensive section of the PDE4D5 N-terminal sequence (Thr11-Ala85) is involved in beta-arrestin binding. Several residues within the RAID1 helix contribute to this interaction however. We show here that these residues form a focused band around the centre of the RAID1 helix, generating a hydrophobic patch (from Leu29, Val30 and Leu33) flanked by polar/charged residues (Asn26, Glu27, Asp28, Arg34). The interaction with beta-arrestin exploits a greater circumference on the RAID1 helix, and involves two residues (Glu27, Asp28) that do not contribute to RACK1 binding. In contrast, the interaction of RACK1 with RAID1 is extended over a greater length of the helix and includes Leu37/Leu38, which do not contribute to beta-arrestin binding. A membrane-permeable, stearoylated Val12-Ser49 38-mer peptide disrupted the interaction of both beta-arrestin and RACK1 with endogenous PDE4D5 in HEKB2 cells, whilst a cognate peptide with a Glu27Ala substitution selectively failed to disrupt PDE4D5/RACK1 interaction. The stearoylated Val12-Ser49 38-mer peptide enhanced the isoprenaline-stimulated PKA phosphorylation of the beta(2)-adrenergic receptors (beta(2)AR) and its activation of ERK, whilst the Glu27Ala peptide was ineffective in both these regards.  相似文献   

4.
The third extracellular loop of the human delta-opioid receptor (hDOR) is known to play an important role in the binding of delta-selective ligands. In particular, mutation of three amino acids (Trp(284), Val(296), and Val(297)) to alanine significantly diminished delta-opioid receptor affinity for delta-selective ligands. To assess the changes in conformation accompanying binding of the endogenous opioid peptide deltorphin II to the delta-opioid receptor at both the receptor and ligand levels as well as to determine points of contact between the two, an in-depth spectroscopic study that addressed these points was initiated. Fragments of the delta-opioid receptor of variable length and containing residues in the third extracellular loop were synthesized and studied by NMR and CD spectroscopy in a membrane-mimetic milieu. The receptor peptides examined included hDOR-(279-299), hDOR-(283-299), hDOR-(281-297), and hDOR-(283-297). A helical conformation was observed for the longest receptor fragment between Val(283) and Arg(291), whereas a nascent helix occurred in a similar region for hDOR-(281-297). Further removal of N-terminal residues Val(281) and Ile(282) abolished helical conformation completely. Binding of the delta-selective ligand deltorphin II to hDOR-(279-299) destabilized the helix at the receptor peptide N terminus. Dramatic changes in the alpha-proton chemical shifts for Trp(284) and Leu(286) in hDOR-(279-299) also accompanied this loss of helical conformation. Large upfield displacement of alpha-proton chemical shifts was observed for Leu(295), Val(296), and Val(297) in hDOR-(279-299) following its interaction with deltorphin II, thus identifying a gain in beta-conformation at the receptor peptide C terminus. Similar changes did not occur for the shorter peptide hDOR(281-297). A hypothesis describing the conformational events accompanying selective deltorphin II binding to the delta-opioid receptor is presented.  相似文献   

5.
We have studied the effects of C-terminal group modifications (amide, methylamide, dimethylamide, aldehyde, and alcohol) on the conformation, adenylyl cyclase stimulation (AC), or binding of parathyroid hormone (hPTH) analogues, hPTH(1-28)NH(2) and hPTH(1-31)NH(2). hPTH(1-31)NH(2) has a C-terminal alpha-helix bounded by residues 17-29 [Chen, Z., et al. (2000) Biochemistry 39, 12766]. In both cases, relative to the natural analogue with a carboxyl C-terminus, the amide and methylamide had increased helix content whereas the dimethylamide forms had CD spectra more similar to the carboxyl one. Conformational effects were more pronounced with hPTH(1-28) than with hPTH(1-31), with increases in helix content of approximately 30% in contrast to 10%. Stabilization of the C-terminal helix of residues 1-28 seemed to correlate with an ability of the C-terminal function to H-bond appropriately. None of the analogues affected the AC stimulating activity significantly, but there was an up to 15-fold decrease in the level of apparent binding of the carboxyl hPTH(1-28) analogue compared to that of the methylamide and a 4-fold decrease in the level of binding of the aldehyde or dimethylamide. There was no significant change in binding activities for the 1-31 analogues. These observations are consistent with previous studies that imply the importance of a region of the hormone's C-terminal alpha-helix for tight binding to the receptor. They also show that modulation of helix stability does have an effect on the binding of the hormone, but only when the C-terminus is at the putative end of the helix. The similarity of AC stimulation even when binding changed 10-fold can be explained by assuming greater efficacy of the weaker binding PTH-receptor complexes in stimulating AC.  相似文献   

6.
Regulation of actin filament dynamics underlies many cellular functions. Tropomodulin together with tropomyosin can cap the pointed, slowly polymerizing, filament end, inhibiting addition or loss of actin monomers. Tropomodulin has an unstructured N-terminal region that binds tropomyosin and a folded C-terminal domain with six leucine-rich repeats. Of tropomodulin 1's 359 amino acids, an N-terminal fragment (Tmod1(1)(-)(92)) suffices for in vitro function, even though the C-terminal domain can weakly cap filaments independent of tropomyosin. Except for one short alpha-helix with coiled coil propensity (residues 24-35), the Tmod1(1)(-)(92) solution structure shows that the fragment is disordered and highly flexible. On the basis of the solution structure and predicted secondary structure, we have introduced a series of mutations to determine the structural requirements for tropomyosin binding (using native gels and CD) and filament capping (by measuring actin polymerization using pyrene fluorescence). Tmod1(1)(-)(92) fragments with mutations of an interface hydrophobic residue, L27G and L27E, designed to destroy the alpha-helix or coiled coil propensity, lost binding ability to tropomyosin but retained partial capping function in the presence of tropomyosin. Replacement of a flexible region with alpha-helical residues (residues 59-61 mutated to Ala) had no effect on tropomyosin binding but inhibited the capping function. A mutation in a region predicted to be an amphipathic helix (residues 65-75), L71D, destroyed the capping function. The results suggest that molecular flexibility and binding to actin via an amphipathic helix are both required for tropomyosin-dependent capping of the pointed end of the actin filament.  相似文献   

7.
H I Magazine  H M Johnson 《Biochemistry》1991,30(23):5784-5789
A receptor binding region of mouse interferon gamma (IFN gamma) has previously been localized to the N-terminal 39 amino acids of the molecule by use of synthetic peptides and monoclonal antibodies. In this report, a detailed analysis of the synthetic peptide corresponding to this region, IFN gamma (1-39), is presented. Circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy indicated that the peptide has stable secondary structure under aqueous conditions and adopts a combination of alpha-helical and random structure. A peptide lacking two N-terminal amino acids, IFN gamma (3-39), had similar secondary structure and equivalent ability to compete for receptor binding, while peptides lacking four or more N-terminal residues had reduced alpha-helical structure and did not inhibit 125I-IFN gamma binding. Substitution of proline, a helix-destabilizing amino acid, for leucine (residue 8) of a predicted amphipathic alpha-helix (residues 3-12), IFN gamma (1-39) [Pro]8, resulted in a substantial reduction in the helical content of the peptide, supporting the presence of helical structure in this region. However, destabilization of the helix did not reduce the competitive ability of the peptide. A peptide lacking eight C-terminal residues, IFN gamma (1-31), did not block 125I-IFN gamma binding and had no detectable alpha-helical structure, suggesting a requirement of the predicted second alpha-helix (residues 20-34) for receptor interaction and helix stabilization. Substitution of phenylalanine for tyrosine at position 14, IFN gamma (1-39) [Phe]14, a central location of a predicted omega-loop structure, did not affect the secondary structure associated with the region yet resulted in a 30-fold increase in receptor competition.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
The principal receptor-binding domain (Ser(17)-Val(31)) of parathyroid hormone (PTH) is predicted to form an amphiphilic alpha-helix and to interact primarily with the N-terminal extracellular domain (N domain) of the PTH receptor (PTHR). We explored these hypotheses by introducing a variety of substitutions in region 17-31 of PTH-(1-31) and assessing, via competition assays, their effects on binding to the wild-type PTHR and to PTHR-delNt, which lacks most of the N domain. Substitutions at Arg(20) reduced affinity for the intact PTHR by 200-fold or more, but altered affinity for PTHR-delNt by 4-fold or less. Similar effects were observed for Glu substitutions at Trp(23), Leu(24), and Leu(28), which together form the hydrophobic face of the predicted amphiphilic alpha-helix. Glu substitutions at Arg(25), Lys(26), and Lys(27) (which forms the hydrophilic face of the helix) caused 4-10-fold reductions in affinity for both receptors. Thus, the side chains of Arg(20), together with those composing the hydrophobic face of the ligand's putative amphiphilic alpha-helix, contribute strongly to PTHR-binding affinity by interacting specifically with the N domain of the receptor. The side chains projecting from the opposite helical face contribute weakly to binding affinity by different mechanisms, possibly involving interactions with the extracellular loop/transmembrane domain region of the receptor. The data help define the roles that side chains in the binding domain of PTH play in the PTH-PTHR interaction process and provide new clues for understanding the overall topology of the bimolecular complex.  相似文献   

9.
Rad51D, one of five Rad51 paralogs, is required for homologous recombination and disruption of Holliday junctions with bloom syndrome protein (BLM) in vertebrates. The N-terminal domain of Rad51D is highly conserved in eukaryotic Rad51D orthologs and is essential for protein-protein interaction with XRCC2, but nothing is known about its individual structure or function. In this study, we determined the solution structure of the human Rad51D N-terminal domain (residues 1-83), which consists of four short helices flanked by long N- and C-terminal tails. Interestingly, the position of the N-terminal tail (residues 1-13) is fixed within the domain structure via several hydrophobic interactions between Leu4 and Thr27, Leu4 and Val28, and Val6 and Ile17. We show that the domain preferentially binds to ssDNA versus dsDNA and does not bind to a mobile Holliday junction by electrophoretic mobility shift assay. NMR titration and dynamics studies showed that human Rad51D-N interacts with ssDNA by positively charged and hydrophobic residues on its surface. The results suggest that the N-terminal domain of Rad51D is required for the ssDNA-specific binding function of human Rad51D and that the conserved N-terminal domains of other Rad51 paralogs may have distinguishable functions from each other in homologous recombination.  相似文献   

10.
11.
We describe a novel N-terminal alpha-helix local motif that involves three hydrophobic residues and a Pro residue (Pro-box motif). Database analysis shows that when Pro is the N-cap of an alpha-helix the distribution of amino acids in adjacent positions changes dramatically with respect to the average distribution in an alpha-helix, but not when Pro is at position N1. N-cap Pro residues are usually associated to Ile and Leu, at position N', Val at position N3 and a hydrophobic residue (h) at position N4. The side chain of the N-cap Pro packs against Val, while the hydrophobic residues at positions N' and N4 make favorable interactions. To analyze the role of this putative motif (sequence fingerprint hPXXhh), we have synthesized a series of peptides and analyzed them by circular dichroism (CD) and NMR. We find that this motif is formed in peptides, and that the accompanying hydrophobic interactions contribute up to 1.2 kcal/mol to helix stability. The fact that some of the residues in this fingerprint are not good N-cap and helix formers results in a small overall stabilization of the alpha-helix with respect to other peptides having Gly as the N-cap and Ala at N3 and N4. This suggests that the Pro-box motif will not specially contribute to protein stability but to the specificity of its fold. In fact, 80% of the sequences that contain the fingerprint sequence in the protein database are adopting the described structural motif, and in none of them is the helix extended to place Pro at the more favorable N1 position.  相似文献   

12.
The tertiary structure of apolipoprotein (apo) A-I and the contributions of structural domains to the properties of the protein molecule are not well defined. We used a series of engineered human and mouse apoA-I molecules in a range of physical-biochemical measurements to address this issue. Circular dichroism measurements of alpha-helix thermal unfolding and fluorescence spectroscopy measurements of 8-anilino-1-napthalenesulfonic acid binding indicate that removal of the C-terminal 54 amino acid residues from human and mouse apoA-I has similar effects; the molecules are only slightly destabilized, and there is a decrease in hydrophobic surface exposure. These results are consistent with both human and mouse apoA-I adopting a two-domain tertiary structure, comprising an N-terminal antiparallel helix bundle domain and a separate less ordered C-terminal domain. Mouse apoA-I is significantly less resistant than human apoA-I to thermal and chemical denaturation; the midpoint of thermal unfolding of mouse apoA-I at 45 degrees C is 15 degrees C lower and the midpoint of guanidine hydrochloride denaturation (D1/2) occurs at 0.5 M as compared to 1.0 M for human apoA-I. These differences reflect the overall greater stability of the helix bundle formed by residues 1-189 in human apoA-I. Measurements of the heats of binding to egg phosphatidylcholine (PC) small unilamellar vesicles and the kinetics of solubilization of dimyristoyl PC multilamellar vesicles indicate that the more stable human helix bundle interacts poorly with lipids as compared to the equivalent mouse N-terminal domain. The C-terminal domain of human apoA-I is much more hydrophobic than that of mouse apoA-I; in the lipid-free state the human C-terminal domain (residues 190-243) is partially alpha-helical and undergoes cooperative unfolding (D1/2 = 0.3 M) whereas the isolated mouse C-terminal domain (residues 187-240) is disordered in dilute solution. The human C-terminal domain binds to lipid surfaces much more avidly than the equivalent mouse domain. Human and mouse apoA-I have very different tertiary structure domain contributions for achieving functionality. It is clear that the stability of the N-terminal helix bundle, and the hydrophobicity and alpha-helix content of the C-terminal domain, are critical factors in determining the overall properties of the apoA-I molecule.  相似文献   

13.
Alyteserin-1c (GLKEIFKAGLGSLVKGIAAHVAS.NH(2)), first isolated from skin secretions of the midwife toad Alytes obstetricans, shows selective growth-inhibitory activity against Gram-negative bacteria. The structures of alyteserin-1c and its more potent and less haemolytic analogue [E4K]alyteserin-1c were investigated in various solution and membrane mimicking environments by proton NMR spectroscopy and molecular modelling. In aqueous solution, the peptide displays a lack of secondary structure but, in a 2,2,2-trifluoroethanol (TFE-d(3))-H(2)O solvent mixture, the structure is characterised by an extended alpha helix between residues Leu(2) and Val(21). Solution structural studies in the membrane mimicking environments, sodium dodecyl sulphate (SDS), dodecylphosphocholine (DPC), and 1,2-dihexanoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphatidylcholine (DHPC) micelles, indicate that these peptides display an alpha helical structure between residues Lys(3) and Val(21). Positional studies of the peptides in SDS, DPC and DHPC media show that the N-terminal and central residues lie inside the micelle while C-terminal residues beyond Ala(19) do not interact with the micelles.  相似文献   

14.
Site-directed mutagenesis of two sets of three periodic leucine residues which appear at every seventh position in the C-terminal region of human interleukin-6 (IL-6) was performed. Both receptor-binding and immunoglobulin (Ig)-induction activities of a triple mutant Leu168,175,182-->Val were only 1% compared with those of wild-type IL-6. However, the mutant Leu152,159,166-->Val had 13% receptor-binding and 2% Ig-induction activities of those of wild-type IL-6. In order to obtain more direct information on the receptor-binding region, we prepared two synthetic peptides. A significant binding activity was observed for the peptide Leu168-Met185, but not for the peptide Leu152-Arg169. These results indicate that leucine residues in the C-terminal region, especially Leu168, Leu175, and Leu182, play an important role in the receptor-binding and Ig-induction activities.  相似文献   

15.
The actin binding site of thymosin beta 4 mapped by mutational analysis.   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
We characterized in detail the actin binding site of the small actin-sequestering protein thymosin beta 4 (T beta 4) using chemically synthesized full-length T beta 4 variants. The N-terminal part (residues 1-16) and a hexapeptide motif (residues 17-22) form separate structural entities. In both, we identified charged and hydrophobic residues that participate in the actin interaction using chemical cross-linking, complex formation in native gels and actin-sequestering experiments. Quantitative data on the activity of the variants and circular dichroism experiments allow to present a model in which the N-terminal part needs to adopt an alpha-helix for actin binding and interacts through a patch of hydrophobic residues (6M-I-F12) on one side of this helix. Also, electrostatic contacts between actin and lysine residues 18, in the motif, and 14, in the N-terminal alpha-helix, appear important for binding. The residues critical for contacting actin are conserved throughout the beta-thymosin family and in addition to this we identify a similar pattern in the C-terminal headpiece of villin and dematin.  相似文献   

16.
The dodecapepetide sequence R-L-C-R-I-V-V-I-R-V-C-R with a disulfide bridge between the cysteine residues found in bovine neutrophils was synthesized by solid-phase procedures. Its antimicrobial activity against oral microorganisms such as Actinobacillus actinomycetemcomitans, Porphyromonas gingivalis, Streptococcus mutans, and Streptococcus gordonii was examined, and its structural features were examined by CD and determined by two-dimensional (2D) nmr. The strains P. gingivalis (W50 and 381), A. actinomycetemcomitans (Y4 and 67), S. gordonii (DL1), and S. mutans (GS5) are found to be highly sensitive to this peptide at 2-2.5 microM concentrations, suggesting that the dodecapeptide is a potent antibiotic for oral pathogens. The weak negative n-sigma* band observed at approximately 265-270 nm in the CD spectra of this peptide provides evidence for the presence of a disulfide bridge. The negative n-pi* band at approximately 200 nm and the positive pi-pi* band at 185 nm suggest a folded structure for this peptide. The negative n-pi* shifts from 200 to 206 nm with an increase in intensity in dipalmitoylphosphotidylcholine vesicles, suggesting that the peptide might associate to form higher order aggregates in lipid medium. The assignment of backbone and side-chain proton resonances has been accomplished by the combined analysis of 2D total correlated and nuclear Overhauser effect spectroscopy. The temperature dependence of amide NH chemical shifts and (1)H-(2)H exchange effect on amide NH resonances indicate the involvement of amide NH groups of Cys3, Ile5, Ile8, Val10, and Arg12 in intramolecular hydrogen bonding. The coupling constant (J(NH-C(alpha)H)) values, the set of medium-, short-, and long-range nuclear Overhauser effects, and the results of restrained structure calculation using the distance geometry algorithm for nmr applications provide evidence for a folded, loop-like structure with a type I (III) beta-turn involving Ile5, Val6, Val7, and Ile8, and two antiparallel beta-strands involving the N-terminal Arg1, Leu2, Cys3, and Val4 and the C-terminal Arg9, Val10, Cys11, and Arg12 residues. The structure of the dodecapeptide mimics the amphiphilic structure of large 30-35 residue defensins and the peptide appears to exhibit similar antimicrobial potency.  相似文献   

17.
18.
R.DpnI consists of N-terminal catalytic and C-terminal winged helix domains that are separately specific for the Gm6ATC sequences in Dam-methylated DNA. Here we present a crystal structure of R.DpnI with oligoduplexes bound to the catalytic and winged helix domains and identify the catalytic domain residues that are involved in interactions with the substrate methyl groups. We show that these methyl groups in the Gm6ATC target sequence are positioned very close to each other. We further show that the presence of the two methyl groups requires a deviation from B-DNA conformation to avoid steric conflict. The methylation compatible DNA conformation is complementary with binding sites of both R.DpnI domains. This indirect readout of methylation adds to the specificity mediated by direct favorable interactions with the methyl groups and solvation/desolvation effects. We also present hydrogen/deuterium exchange data that support ‘crosstalk’ between the two domains in the identification of methylated DNA, which should further enhance R.DpnI methylation specificity.  相似文献   

19.
Apolipoprotein (apo) A-I is thought to undergo a conformational change during lipid association that results in the transition of random coil to alpha-helix. Using a series of deletion mutants lacking different regions along the molecule, we examined the contribution of alpha-helix formation in apoA-I to the binding to egg phosphatidylcholine (PC) small unilamellar vesicles (SUV). Binding isotherms determined by gel filtration showed that apoA-I binds to SUV with high affinity and deletions in the C-terminal region markedly decrease the affinity. Circular dichroism measurements demonstrated that binding to SUV led to an increase in alpha-helix content, but the helix content was somewhat less than in reconstituted discoidal PC.apoA-I complexes for all apoA-I variants, suggesting that the helical structure of apoA-I on SUV is different from that in discs. Isothermal titration calorimetry showed that the binding of apoA-I to SUV is accompanied by a large exothermic heat and deletions in the C-terminal regions greatly decrease the heat. Analysis of the rate of release of heat on binding, as well as the kinetics of quenching of tryptophan fluorescence by brominated PC, indicated that the opening of the N-terminal helix bundle is a rate-limiting step in apoA-I binding to the SUV surface. Significantly, the correlation of thermodynamic parameters of binding with the increase in the number of helical residues revealed that the contribution of alpha-helix formation upon lipid binding to the enthalpy and the free energy of the binding of apoA-I is -1.1 and -0.04 kcal/mol per residue, respectively. These results indicate that alpha-helix formation, especially in the C-terminal regions, provides the energetic source for high affinity binding of apoA-I to lipids.  相似文献   

20.
The recently identified natural peptide ligand, tuberoinfundibular peptide of 39 residues (TIP39) for the parathyroid hormone-2 (PTH2) receptor has been structurally characterized by high resolution NMR, circular dichroism, and computer simulations. The structural features of TIP39, determined in the presence of a zwitterionic lipid to mimic the membrane environment of the G-protein-coupled PTH2 receptor, consist of two alpha-helices, Ala(5)-Arg(21) and Leu(26)-Val(35). Although TIP39 shares limited sequence homology with parathyroid hormone (PTH), a comparison of the structural features of TIP39 and PTH illustrates a similar topological display of residues of the N-terminal helix important for PTH2 receptor activation. The C-terminal helix of TIP39 differs from that of PTH with respect to size and amphipathicity, suggesting an altered mode of binding for TIP39, consistent with the receptor chimera and ligand truncation studies presented in the accompanying paper (Hoare, S. R. J., Clark, J. A., and Usdin, T. B. (2000) J. Biol. Chem. 275, 27274-27283). The structural characterization of TIP39 also provides some insight into the lack of affinity of this novel ligand for the PTH1 receptor.  相似文献   

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