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1.
The interaction of the cupric ion with phytic acid as a function of pH has been studied by potentiometric and thermal titration and by the determination of ligand binding. As has been found for the reaction of zinc and calcium cations with phytate, the presence of the Cu(II) ion results in a displacement of the titration curves to more acid values. Evaluation of the parameters that describe such changes in ionization behavior by curve-fit analysis showed that as the Cu(II):phytate mol ratio was increased from one to eight, the pK' values of the ionizable group sets of phytic acid (ranging from 1.59 to 9.79) were consolidated into just two sets with curve-fit (CP) values ca. 1.5 and 3.7. Marked pH hysteresis effects are seen in such systems because of the pronounced acid strength of the Cu(II):aqua ion and the Cu(II) ligand aqua ion complex. The combined heat of binding and precipitation (plus solvation changes, etc.) of Cu(II) to phytate is endothermic (21.8–22.2 kcal mol−1). This is similar in magnitude to that reported for the binding of either Zn(II) or Ca(II) to phytate. In the titration of Cu(NO3)2 with KOH, presumably to form Cu(OH)2, ΔH° was exothermic (−12.5 kcal mol−1). From measurements of free Cu(II) cation concentration in the presence of phytate the binding reaction was found to be stoichiometric with 6 mols Cu(II) bound at pH 6. Binding occurs within the pH range 2–6. An apparent necessary requirement for binding is the availability of the oxo dianion structure formed from the second dissociation step of a phosphoryl group. Curve-fit analysis of the binding data as a function of pH showed that a group or group set with CP value ca. 4 governs the binding reaction(s) at all mol ratios of Cu(II) to phytate examined. It is suggested that the binding of cupric ions to phytate may occur to the equatorial rather than the axial configuration as suggested for Ca(II) binding. A space-filling molecular model to illustrate this has been constructed. Soluble Cu(II):phytate complexes are formed within the pH range from 2 to ca. 3.4. This is supported by the results of difference absorption spectrometry.  相似文献   

2.
3.
The interactions of phytic acid with Cu(II) and Zn(II) ions were examined as functions of metal ion concentrations and pH. Cu(II) ion-selective potentiometric and electron spin resonance (ESR) experiments provide strong evidence for the binding of Cu(II) ions to the phytic acid molecule at low pH (2.4–3.4) values. The relative stabilities of the copper and zinc phytates at low pH values were found to be very similar. For systems with metal ion:phytic acid molar ratios of 1:1–4:1 and 5:1–6:1 and pH values in the 3.4–5.9 and 3.4–5.0 ranges, respectively, Zn(II) ions were found to form complexes with phytic acid that were more stable than those of Cu(II) ions with phytic acid. The phytic acid molecule, however, was found to accommodate Cu(II) ions more readily than Zn(II) ions. For example, in systems containing equal amounts of Cu(II) and Zn(II) ions, 2 Zn(II) ions and 2, 3, 4, or 4.5 Cu(II) ions were found per phytic acid molecule depending upon metal ion:phytic acid molar ratios in the systems and pH. Total metal ion:phytic acid molar ratios and pH affected resultant metal ion solubilities and were factors influencing the effects of Zn(II) and Cu(II) ions on the binding of each other by phytic acid. Zn(II) and Cu(II) ions were observed to potentiate the binding of each other by phytic acid in some systems and compete with each other for phytate binding sites in others.  相似文献   

4.
In vitro interactions among phytic acid (PA), Cu(II) ions, and Ca(II) ions were examined as functions of PA:Cu(II):Ca(II) molar ratios and pH. Ca(II) ions competed with Cu(II) ions for binding by the soluble phytate species for PA:Cu(II) molar ratios ranging from 10:1 to 1:6 and pH values in the 2.4-5.9 range. At pH values where precipitation occurred, Ca(II) ions potentiated Cu(II) ion binding by the precipitated phytate species for PA:Cu(II) molar ratios of 10:1 to 1:3. At lower PA:Cu(II) molar ratios, Ca(II) ions competed with Cu(II) ions for binding by the precipitated phytate species. Compositions of the precipitated copper-calcium phytates are reported.  相似文献   

5.
A differential pH and thermal titrimeter has been used to determine the ionization constants of EDTA and EGTA as well as their calcium complexes. The intrinsic heat of binding is a constant for the pH range 2-11.5 for both substances and is found to be -5.4 kcal mol for EDTA and -7.9 kcal mol-1 for EGTA. The binding constants evaluated by fitting to the potentiometric curves and expressed as the log are 10.25 and 11.0, respectively. These values compare reasonably well to those reported in the literature. We have proposed that the binding of calcium occurs even at acid pH based on the pH drop observed at pH 2 when calcium is added, the reversibility of the thermal and the potentiometric curves, the lack of hysteresis upon rapid titration, the constancy of the intrinsic heat of binding and fitting of the entire potentiometric curves using the appropriate binding constants.  相似文献   

6.
Using an isoperibolic titration microcalorimeter, the ionization characteristics and associated heat changes of phytic acid (myo-inositol hexaphosphate) and phytic acid in the presence of varying Zn(II) concentrations have been examined over the pH range 2.5–11 at 25°C in 0.2 M KCl. In the absence of Zn(II), ca. 7 of the 12 ionizable protons in phytic acid are titrated in this pH range with ionization heats varying from ca. 2 to −3 kcal-mol-1. At Zn(II): phytate mol ratios of 4:1 and greater, the dissociation of all protons and complex formation of phytate with Zn(II) occurs below pH 6. From the difference titration curves of phytic acid plus Zn(II) versus Zn(II) alone, ca. 3.5 mol Zn(II) bind per mol phytate. Since Zn(II):phytate complexes are insoluble, the observed heat changes contain contributions not only from heats of precipitation but also from binding, ionization, neutralization, and hydration effects. From the heat change for the titration of (a) phytic acid, pH 2.6–10.4; (b) phytic acid + Zn(II), pH 2.6–6.1; and (c) Zn(II), pH 2.6–6.1 at Zn(II): phytate ratios of 4 to 10, the value of 24.7 ± 0.5 kcal mol−1 phytate has been obtained for the binding of 3.5 mols Zn(II). This figure also includes the heat of precipitation of the complex. In pH-drop experiments, with the initial pH at 8.65, the value of 23.9 kcal mol-1 was obtained for ΔH°. Hysteresis effects are prevalent in these reaction solutions. Time-dependent changes in pH occur with a change in pH. For the phytate-Zn(II) reactions, the time-course curves are biphasic and fit a rate equation for two simultaneous first order reactions. Hysteresis effects seen in the titration of Zn(II) fit simple first-order kinetics. These effects most probably arise from the ejection of a proton from the aqua ion or aqua ion ligand complex(es).  相似文献   

7.
Structural changes of troponin C on calcium binding were studied by hydrogen ion titration, circular dichroism, and fluorescence measurements. The potentiometric titration curves in the carboxyl region are shifted towards lower pH with calcium binding. The intrinsic pK of the carboxyl groups at the calcium binding sites decreases by 0.8 pK unit on calcium binding; on the other hand, magnesium ions have little effect on the intrinsic pK of the carboxyl groups. The intrinsic pK of the imidazole group is not affected by calcium binding. The value of w, an electrostatic interaction factor, is identical for calcium-free and calcium-bound troponin C and is about half of the value calculated assuming a compact sphere. The results of difference titration on the calcium binding indicate that the pH of troponin C solution increases on addition of CaCl2 up to 2 mol of Ca2+ per mol of troponin C and then decreases on further addition of CaCl2. The pH increase is depressed in the presence of MgCl2, in the low pH region, or at high ionic strength. The pH increase is also observed on addition of MgCl2. The ellipticity at 222 nm was measured under the same conditions as the difference titration measurements, and the relation between the pH change and the conformational change of troponin C on calcium binding is discussed based on the results obtained. The number of calcium binding sites and the binding constants estimated by analysis of these difference titration curves were in agreement with the results of Potter and Gergely (22). No magnesium binding site was observed. The tyrosine fluorescence measurements indicated that the binding site near tyrosine-109 is one of the high affinity sites.  相似文献   

8.
The heats of complex formation of Cu(II) with phytic acid to form soluble complexes in the absence of precipitation at acid pH have been measured. The reaction was examined over a wide range of mol ratios of Cu(II):phytate. In all cases the heats of reaction were endothermic. Measurements of the uncombined copper by use of a copper electrode allowed calculation of the combined copper and hence the enthalpies. These latter values varied to some extent, depending upon the Cu(II):phytate ratio and the pH region where the reaction was examined. Factors which could contribute to the variation in the enthalpy terms include changes in the heats of ionization and possible structural changes with Cu(II) bound.  相似文献   

9.
gamma-Carboxyglutamic acid (Gla) is believed to bind Ca [II] ions and Mg [II] ions in prothrombin and other coagulation proteins. Binding constants for H+, Ca [II] ions, and Mg [II] ions to Gla-containing peptides are determined using pH and ion selective electrode titrations. The binding constants for peptides containing a single Gla residue are similar to the constants for malonic acid. Peptides containing two Gla residues in sequence (di-Gla peptides) bind Ca [II] ions and Mg [II] ions more strongly. KMgL for the di-Gla peptides is similar to the site-binding constant for Ca [II] ions in denatured BF1. These di-Gla peptides may be useful analogs for metal binding by the disordered Gla domain in BF1.  相似文献   

10.
Phytases hydrolyze phytic acid to less phosphorylated myo-inositol derivatives and inorganic phosphate. A thermostable phytase is of great value in applications for improving phosphate and metal ion availability in animal feed, and thereby reducing phosphate pollution to the environment. Here, we report a new folding architecture of a six-bladed propeller for phosphatase activity revealed by the 2.1 A crystal structures of a novel, thermostable phytase determined in both the partially and fully Ca2+-loaded states. Binding of two calcium ions to high-affinity calcium binding sites results in a dramatic increase in thermostability (by as much as approximately 30 degrees C in melting temperature) by joining loop segments remote in the amino acid sequence. Binding of three additional calcium ions to low-affinity calcium binding sites at the top of the molecule turns on the catalytic activity of the enzyme by converting the highly negatively charged cleft into a favorable environment for the binding of phytate.  相似文献   

11.
On the basis of the known interaction of phytic acid to form soluble or insoluble complexes with cations, the effect of this naturally occurring polydentate ligand on carboxypeptidase A, a zinc-containing metalloenzyme, and its Co(II)-substituted derivative, has been studied. Under conditions of rigorous exclusion of adventitious metal ions, phytate showed no inhibitory effect. However, the addition of Cu(II) ions to form soluble phytate-Cu(II) complexes at pH 7.2 and 25 degrees C caused more than a 95% decrease in activity. The Cd(II) ion was nearly as effective but other ions showed only a small or no effect. In the absence of phytate, incubation of the enzyme with Cu(II) or Cd(II) at the same concentration produced only about a 25% reduction in activity. The decrease in activity followed first-order kinetics, and the rate constant was the same (1.2 x 10(-4) sec-1) as seen upon incubation with EDTA. However, in contrast to that observed upon incubation of the enzyme with phytate and Cu(II), exposure to EDTA produced a complete loss in activity which could be regained by addition of Zn(II) to the assay solution. In the former case, not only was there residual activity left after incubation at pH 7.2 for 24 hrs at 25 degrees C, but the initial activity could not be regained under similar assay treatment. An increase in either the Cu(II) or phytate concentration while the other was kept constant, yielded saturation curves with maximal effect at 3 x 10(-5) M for Cu(II) and at 5 x 10(-5) M for phytate (enzyme at ca. 10(-6) M). At these ratios, all of the cupric ions are completely bound to phytate as determined by ion-selective potentiometry. A preparative scale reaction of phytate and Cu(II) with carboxypeptidase A (kcat 8460 min-1; K'M 0.23 mM with CBZ-glycyl-glycyl-L-phenylalanine as substrate at pH 7.5, 25 degrees C) gave a product isolated in 95% yield but with lower activity (kcat 198 min-1; K'M 0.25 mM). A Cu(II)-carboxypeptidase preparation had similar kinetic parameters (kcat 207 min-1; K'M 0.34 mM). This near identity of constants suggested that a metal exchange reaction had occurred, i.e., incubation of Zn(II)-carboxypeptidase with a phytate-Cu(II) complex resulted in not only the removal of the zinc ion from the active site but also the sequential and rapid incorporation of a cupric ion into the apoenzyme so formed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
The GGGTH sequence has been proposed to be the minimal sequence involved in the binding of a fifth Cu(II) ion in addition to the octarepeat region of the prion protein (PrP) which binds four Cu(II) ions. Coordination of Cu(II) by the N- and C-protected Ac-GGGTH-NH(2) pentapeptide (P(5)) was investigated by using potentiometric titration, electrospray ionization mass spectrometry, UV-vis spectroscopy, electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy and cyclic voltammetry experiments. Four different Cu(II) complexes were identified and characterized as a function of pH. The Cu(II) binding mode switches from NO(3) to N(4) for pH values ranging from 6.0 to 10.0. Quasi-reversible reduction of the [Cu(II)(P(5))H(-2)] complex formed at pH 6.7 occurs at E (1/2)=0.04 V versus Ag/AgCl, whereas reversible oxidation of the [Cu(II)(P(5))H(-3)](-) complex formed at pH 10.0 occurs at E (1/2)=0.66 V versus Ag/AgCl. Comparison of our EPR data with those of the rSHaPrP(90-231) (Burns et al. in Biochemistry 42:6794-6803, 2003) strongly suggests an N(3)O binding mode at physiological pH for the fifth Cu(II) site in the protein.  相似文献   

13.
Melanins are colloidal pigments known to have a high affinity for metal ions. In this work, the nature of the metal-binding sites are determined and the binding affinities are quantified. Initial potentiometric titrations have been performed on synthetic dihydroxyindole (DHI) melanin solutions to determine the chemical speciation of quinole/quinone subunits. Two types of acidic functionalities are assignable: catechol groups, with pK(a) between 9 and 13, and quinone imines (QI), with pK(a) of 6.3. The presence of the quinone-imine tautomer has, to our knowledge, never been assessed in polymeric melanins. Melanin solutions obtained from N-methylated DHI lack the pK(a) 6.3 buffer, consistent with its inability to form the quinone-imine tautomer. EPR spectroscopy of the DHI-melanin samples demonstrates that the semiquinone radical is in too low a concentration to contribute to the bulk binding of metals. Changes in the titration curves after addition of Cu(II) and Zn(II) ions were analyzed to obtain the binding constants and stoichiometry of the metal-melanin complexes, using the BEST7 program. UV-Vis spectra at neutral and high pH are used to identify absorbances due to Cu-bound quinone imine and catechol groups. The derived binding constants were used to determine speciation of the Cu(II) and Zn(II) ions coordinated to the quinone imine and catechol groups at various pH. The mixed complexes, Zn(QI)(Cat)(-) and Cu(QI)(Cat)(-) are shown to dominate at physiological pH.  相似文献   

14.
The isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) technique supported by potentiometric titration data was used to study the interaction of zinc ions with pH buffer substances, namely 2‐(N‐morpholino)ethanesulfonic acid (Mes), piperazine‐N,N′‐bis(2‐ethanesulfonic acid) (Pipes), and dimethylarsenic acid (Caco). The displacement ITC titration method with nitrilotriacetic acid as a strong, competitive ligand was applied to determine conditional–independent thermodynamic parameters for the binding of Zn(II) to Mes, Pipes, and Caco. Furthermore, the relationship between the proposed coordination mode of the buffers and the binding enthalpy has been discussed. Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

15.
A new low molecular weight calcium binding protein, designated 12-kDa CaBP, has been isolated from chicken gizzard using a phenyl-Sepharose affinity column followed by ion-exchange and gel filtration chromatographies. The isolated protein was homogeneous and has a molecular weight of 12,000 based on sodium dodecyl sulfate-gel electrophoresis. The amino acid composition of this protein is similar to but distinct from other known low molecular weight Ca2+ binding proteins. Ca2+ binding assays using Arsenazo III (Sigma) indicated that the protein binds 1 mol of Ca2+/mol of protein. The 12-kDa CaBP underwent a conformational change upon binding Ca2+, as revealed by uv difference spectroscopy and circular dichroism studies in the aromatic and far-ultraviolet range. Addition of Ca2+ to the 12-kDa CaBP labeled with 2-p-toluidinylnaphthalene-6-sulfonate (TNS) resulted in a sevenfold increase in fluorescence intensity, accompanied by a blue shift of the emission maximum from 463 to 445 nm. Hence, the probe in the presence of Ca2+ moves to a more nonpolar microenvironment. Like calmodulin and other related Ca2+ binding proteins, this protein also exposes a hydrophobic site upon binding calcium. Fluorescence titration with Ca2+ using TNS-labeled protein revealed the presence of a single high affinity calcium binding site (kd approximately 1 x 10(-6) M).  相似文献   

16.
The heat of precipitation has been determined for the reaction, in aqueous solution, of calcium ion with the phytate anion. The reaction is endothermic. From the value of the equilibrium constant associated with the reaction, the entropy change has been calculated. The large, positive entropy change is consistent with the view that when calcium ion reacts with the phytate anion there is a decrease in the hydrophilic character of the phytate anion. The quantitative aspects of the interaction of phytic acid with calcium provides a rational basis for the understanding of the mechanism of metal deprivation by phytic acid.  相似文献   

17.
The use of a twin-cell differential titration calorimeter is described which utilizes small volumes (1–3 ml) of modest concentrations of materials (0.001–0.01 M) and yield data of good precision. Operation is controlled by a microprocessor which regulates and controls the addition of reagents and collects and displays the data as time, temperature in volts, and the pH. Corrections for the titration of water are applied to the potentiometric data, and the thermal data are corrected for the initial temperature-time baseline, the changes in heat capacity, and the heat loss (or gain) to the external environment. Finally, the thermal signal is corrected for the heat derived from the formation of water due to the free hydrogen or hydroxyl ions present. The corrected data as pH, groups titrated adn ΔHT (kcal/mol) can then be used to obtain the parameters pK′ and ΔHi involved with the equilibria by curve-fitting the observed data.

The system has been applied to the ionization of EDTA and its calcium complex. The ionization constants, the heats of ionization, the stoichiometry of binding and the heat of binding have been determined and demonstrated to be in agreement with published values.  相似文献   


18.
The time-resolved kinetics of Ca2+ binding to the SR Ca-ATPase in the E1 state was investigated by Ca(2+)-concentration jump experiments. Ca2+ was released by an ultraviolet-light flash from caged calcium, and charge movements in the membrane domain of the ion pumps were detected by the fluorescent styryl dye 2BITC. The partial reaction (H3E1 <-->) E1 <--> CaE1 <--> Ca2E1 can be characterized by two time constants, tau1 and tau2, both of which are not significantly Ca(2+)-concentration-dependent and only weakly pH-dependent at pH < 7.5. Both time constants differ by a factor of approximately 50 (4.7 vs. 200 ms). The weak substrate-dependence indicates that the rate-limiting process is not related to Ca2+ migration through the access channel and ion binding to the binding sites but to conformational rearrangements preceding the ion movements. The high activation energy obtained for both processes, 42.3 kJ mol(-1) and 60.3 kJ mol(-1) at pH 7.2, support this concept. Transient binding of Ca ions to the loop L67 and a movement of the Ca-loaded loop are discussed as a mechanism that facilitates the entrance of both Ca ions into the access channel to the ion-binding sites.  相似文献   

19.
Human NEFA is an EF-hand, leucine zipper protein containing a signal sequence. To confirm the calcium binding capacity of NEFA, recombinant NEFA analogous to the mature protein and mutants with deletions in the EF-hand domain were expressed in Pichia pastoris and secreted into the culture medium at high yield. The calcium binding activity of each purified protein was measured by a modified equilibrium dialysis using the fluorescent Ca2+ indicator FURA-2 and atomic absorption spectroscopy. A stoichiometry of 2 mol Ca2+/mol NEFA was determined. The Ca2+ binding constants were resolved by intrinsic fluorescence spectroscopy. Fluorescence titration exhibited two classes of Ca2+ binding sites with Kd values of 0.08 microM and 0.2 microM. Circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy showed an increase from 30 to 43% in the amount of alpha-helix in NEFA after addition of calcium ions. Limited proteolytic digestion indicated a Ca2+ dependent conformational change accompanied by an altered accessibility to the enzyme.  相似文献   

20.
T. Tang  K. S. Rajan    N. Grecz 《Biophysical journal》1968,8(12):1458-1474
The high resistance of bacterial spores to heat has been repeatedly postulated to be due to stabilization of spore biopolymers by metal chelate compounds. Binding of calcium dipicolinic acid (Ca(II)-DPA) with spore proteins and amino acids has been discussed in the literature, but equilibrium data are generally lacking. By means of potentiometric pH titrations at 25 degrees C and an ionic strength of 1.0 (KNO(3)), the formation of Ca(II)-DPA (1:1 and 1:2) chelates and the interactions of Ca(II)-DPA chelate with a mole of each of three typical amino acids viz., cysteine, alanine, and glycine has been investigated. Analysis of the potentiometric data indicates that calcium and DPA forms 1:1 and 1:2 chelates with log K(ML1) = 4.39 +/- 0.01 and log K(ML2) = 2.25 +/- 0.01. In the presence of an equimolar amount of each of the amino acids under consideration, the Ca(II)-DPA chelate forms mixed ligand (ternary) chelate yielding the following stepwise stability constants: log K(1) = 4.17 +/- 0.01, log K(2) = 0.78 +/- 0.01 for cysteine, log K(1) = 4.06 +/- 0.01, log K(2) = 0.65 +/- 0.01 for alanine, and log K(1) = 4.30 +/- 0.02, log K(2) = 0.11 +/- 0.01 for glycine. Methods for calculating the stability constants of the mixed ligand system have been developed. On the basis of the potentiometric equilibrium data, possible structures for the various calcium chelate species are discussed. The data suggest that the differences in heat resistance of various strains of bacterial spores may conceivably be related to the differences in composition and stability of coordination complexes in the spore.  相似文献   

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