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1.
The genetic addition of hexahistidine (H(6)) tags is widely used to isolate recombinant proteins by immobilized metal-affinity chromatography (IMAC). Addition of a tyrosine residue to H(6) tags enabled proteins to be covalently cross-linked under mild conditions in a manner similar to the natural, site-specific cross-linking of tyrosines into dityrosine. A series of seven hexahistidine tags with tyrosines placed in various positions (H(6)Y tags) were added to the amino terminus of the I28 immunoglobulin domain of the human cardiac titin. The H(6)Y-tagged I28 dimerized in the presence of excess Ni(2+) with a K(D) of 200 microM. Treatment of Ni(2+)-dimerized H(6)Y-I28 with an oxidant, monoperoxyphthalic acid (MMPP) or sodium sulfite, resulted in covalent protein multimerization through chelated Ni(2+)-catalyzed cross-linking of the Y residues engineered into the H(6) tag. The protein oligomerization was observed by sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS PAGE). The presence of dityrosine in the cross-linked proteins was confirmed by fluorescence emission at 410 nm. Proteins lacking the Y residue in the H(6) tag treated with the same oxidative conditions did not cross-link or exhibit dityrosine fluorescence, despite the presence of an endogenous Y residue. The method may have potential uses in other protein conjugation applications such as protein labeling and interfacial immobilization of proteins on artificial surfaces.  相似文献   

2.
Juvenile hormone (JH) controls insect development, metamorphosis and reproduction. In insect hemolymph a significant proportion of JH is bound to juvenile hormone binding protein (JHBP), which serves as a carrier supplying the hormone to the target tissues. To shed some light on JHBP passage within insect tissues, the interaction of this carrier with other proteins from Galleria mellonella (Lepidoptera) was investigated. Our studies revealed the presence of JHBP within the tracheal epithelium and fat body cells in both the membrane and cytoplasmic sections. We found that the interaction between JHBP and membrane proteins occurs with saturation kinetics and is specific and reversible. ATP synthase was indicated as a JHBP membrane binding protein based upon SPR-BIA and MS analysis. It was found that in G. mellonella fat body, this enzyme is present in mitochondrial fraction, plasma membranes and cytosol as well. In the model system containing bovine F1 ATP synthase and JHBP, the interaction between these two components occurs with Kd = 0.86 nM. In hemolymph we detected JHBP binding to apolipophorin, arylphorin and hexamerin. These results provide the first demonstration of the physical interaction of JHBP with membrane and hemolymph proteins which can be involved in JHBP molecule traffic.  相似文献   

3.
The juvenile hormone binding protein (JHBP) from Galleria mellonella hemolymph is a glycoprotein composed of 225 amino acid residues. It contains four Cys residues forming two disulfide bridges. In this study, the topography of the disulfide bonds as well as the site of glycan attachment in the JHBP molecule from G. mellonella was determined, using electrospray mass spectrometry. The MS analysis was performed on tryptic digests of JHBP. Our results show that the disulfide bridges link Cys10 and Cys17, and Cys151 and Cys195. Of the two potential N-glycosylation sites in JHBP, Asn4, and Asn94, only Asn94 is glycosylated. This site of glycosylation is also found in the fully biologically active recombinant JHBP expressed in the yeast Pichia pastoris.  相似文献   

4.
A juvenile-hormone-binding protein (JHBP) has been isolated from Galleria mellonella hemolymph by gel filtration, phosphocellulose chromatography, and by chromatofocusing. The isolated protein is homogeneous as judged by column chromatography and gel electrophoresis in the presence and absence of denaturing agent. It has a relative molecular mass of 32,000, Stokes radius 2.4 nm, sedimentation coefficient of 2.3 S, molar absorption coefficient at 280 nm epsilon = 2.34 X 10(4) M-1 cm-1, and is composed of a single polypeptide chain. Chromatofocusing analysis (pI 8.6) and isoelectric focusing (pI 8.1) indicate that the JHBP is an alkaline protein. Its amino acid composition and fluorescence absorption spectra indicate that the protein does not contain tryptophan residues. The protein exhibits one class of binding sites for juvenile hormone (JH), 0.8 per molecule, with the following dissociation constants: JH I, 8.5 X 10(-8) M; JH II, 7.2 X 10(-8) M; JH III, 47 X 10(-8) M. The JHBP binds (10R, 11S)-JH II enantiomer with 2.3-times higher affinity then (10S, 11R)-JH II enantiomer. The pH optimum of binding is 7.0.  相似文献   

5.
The hemolymph juvenile hormone binding protein (JHBP) from Galleria mellonella contains two disulphide bridges/molecule and no free Cys residues. An alignment of primary structures of other Lepidopteran JHBPs indicates that Cys residues, equivalent to Cys10,17,151,195 in G. mellonella JHBP, maybe involved in -S-S- bridge formation.  相似文献   

6.
Juvenile hormone (JH) regulates insect development. JH present in the hemolymph is bound to a specific glycoprotein, juvenile hormone binding protein (JHBP), which serves as a carrier to deploy the hormone to target tissues. In this report structural changes of JHBP from Galleria mellonella induced by guanidine hydrochloride have been investigated by a combination of size-exclusion chromatography, protein activity measurements, and spectroscopic methods. Molecules of JHBP change their conformation from a native state via two unstable intermediates to a denatured state. The first intermediate appears in a compact state, because it slightly changes its molecular size and preserves most of the JHBP secondary structure of the native state. Although the second intermediate also preserves a substantial part of the secondary structure, it undergoes a change into a noncompact state changing its Stokes radius from approximately 30 to 39 A. Refolding experiments showed that JHBP molecules recover their full protein structure, as judged from the CD spectrum, fluorescence experiments, and JH binding activity measurements. The free energy of unfolding in the absence of the denaturant, DeltaG(D-N), is calculated to be 4.1 kcal mol(-1).  相似文献   

7.
Recent studies from this laboratory have demonstrated that human manganese superoxide dismutase (MnSOD) is a target for tyrosine nitration in several chronic inflammatory diseases including chronic organ rejection, arthritis, and tumorigenesis. Furthermore, we demonstrated that peroxynitrite (ONOO-) is the only known biological oxidant competent to inactivate enzymatic activity, nitrate critical tyrosine residues, and induce dityrosine formation in MnSOD. To elucidate the differential contributions of tyrosine nitration and oxidation during enzymatic inactivation, we now compare ONOO- treatment of native recombinant human MnSOD (WT-MnSOD) and a mutant, Y34F-MnSOD, in which tyrosine 34 (the residue most susceptible to ONOO--mediated nitration) was mutated to phenylalanine. Both WT-MnSOD (IC50 = 65 microM, 15 microM MnSOD) and Y34F-MnSOD (IC50 = 55 microM, 15 microM Y34F) displayed similar dose-dependent sensitivity to ONOO--mediated inactivation. Compared to WT-MnSOD, the Y34F-MnSOD mutant demonstrated significantly less efficient tyrosine nitration and enhanced formation of dityrosine following treatment with ONOO-. Collectively, these results suggest that complete inactivation of MnSOD by ONOO- can occur independent of the active site tyrosine residue and includes not only nitration of critical tyrosine residues but also tyrosine oxidation and subsequent formation of dityrosine.  相似文献   

8.
Juvenile hormone (JH) is essential for multiple physiological processes: it controls larval development, metamorphosis and adult reproduction. In insect hemolymph more than 99 % of JH is bound to juvenile hormone binding protein (JHBP), which protects JH from degradation by nonspecific hydrolases and serves as a carrier to supply the hormone to the target tissues. In Galleria mellonella hemolymph, JHBP is found in a complex with lipid-binding high molecular weight proteins (HMWP) and this interaction is enhanced in the presence of JH. In this report, we present studies on the interaction of JHBP with low molecular weight proteins (LMWP) in the hemolymph. Using ligand blotting we found that JHBP interacts with a protein of about 44 kDa. To identify the protein that preferentially binds JHBP, a LMWP fraction was applied to a Sepharose-bound JHBP and, after washing, the column was eluted with free JHBP acting as a specific competitor or with carbonic anhydrase as a negative control. The eluted proteins were separated by SDS/PAGE and analyzed by mass spectrometry. Isocitrate dehydrogenase was identified as a component of the supramolecular complex of JHBP with hemolymph proteins.  相似文献   

9.
Using pure tyrosine and phosphotyrosine we have recently shown that phosphotyrosine is unable to form peroxidase catalyzed dimers (1989, FEBS Lett. 255, 395-397). In the present report, the effect of phosphotyrosine residues within a protein structure on dityrosine formation was studied using casein as a model protein. Dephosphorylation of casein resulted in a dose and time dependent increased synthesis of dityrosines following treatment with peroxidase/H2O2. The extent of crosslink formation was inversely related to the amount of phosphorylated tyrosine residues as quantitated by immunoblotting. Thus, phosphorylation of tyrosine residues could play a regulatory role in protein-crosslinking where dityrosine bonds are involved.  相似文献   

10.
A micro-scale method for separation and measurement of dityrosine in human cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) is described utilizing liquid-liquid extraction and ion-paired, reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography with fluorimetric detection. A mobile phase containing 1-heptanesulfonic acid linearly increased in methanol from 0 to 100% over 30 min allows the resolution of dityrosine from other fluorescent compounds with excitation at 285 nm and emission at 410 nm. As little as 0.15 ml CSF sample can be utilized with a detection limit of 60 pg dityrosine on the column. This method facilitates the use of CSF dityrosine as a measure of free radical mediated protein damage in the central nervous system.  相似文献   

11.
It has been previously suggested that juvenile hormone binding protein(s) (JHBP) belongs to a new class of proteins. In the search for other protein(s) that may contain structural motifs similar to those found in JHBP, hemolymph from Galleria mellonella (Lepidoptera) was chromatographed over a Sephadex G-200 column and resulting fractions were subjected to SDS-PAGE, transferred onto nitrocellulose membrane and scanned with a monoclonal antibody, mAb 104, against hemolymph JHBP. Two proteins yielded a positive reaction with mAb 104, one corresponding to JHBP and the second corresponding to a transferrin, as judged from N-terminal amino acid sequencing staining. Transferrin was purified to about 80% homogeneity using a two-step procedure including Sephadex G-200 gel filtration and HPLC MonoQ column chromatography. Panning of a random peptide display library and analysis with immobilized synthetic peptides were applied for finding a common epitope present in JHBP and the transferrin molecule. The postulated epitope motif recognized by mAb 104 in the JHBP sequence is RDTKAVN, and is localized at position 82-88.  相似文献   

12.
In the hemolymph of Melanoplus sanguinipes, a high molecular weight juvenile hormone binding protein (JHBP) was identified by photoaffinity labelling and found to have a Mr of 480,000. The JHBP, purified using native gel electrophoresis followed by electroelution, has an equilibrium dissociation constant for JH III of 2.1 nM and preferentially binds JH III over JH I. Antibody raised against JHBP recognized only the 480,000 band. Under denaturing conditions the native JHBP gave a single band with a Mr 78,000. The antibody against native JHBP recognized only the 78,000 protein in SDS-treated hemolymph samples, indicating that JHBP is a hexamer in this species. The concentration of JHBP fluctuates in both the sexes during nymphal and adult development in parallel with total protein content of hemolymph. © 1995 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

13.
Juvenile hormones (JHs) control a diversity of crucial life events in insects. In Lepidoptera which major agricultural pests belong to, JH signaling is critically controlled by a species-specific high-affinity, low molecular weight JH-binding protein (JHBP) in hemolymph, which transports JH from the site of its synthesis to target tissues. Hence, JHBP is expected to be an excellent target for the development of novel specific insect growth regulators (IGRs) and insecticides. A better understanding of the structural biology of JHBP should pave the way for the structure-based drug design of such compounds. Here, we report the crystal structure of the silkworm Bombyx mori JHBP in complex with two molecules of 2-methyl-2,4-pentanediol (MPD), one molecule (MPD1) bound in the JH-binding pocket while the other (MPD2) in a second cavity. Detailed comparison with the apo-JHBP and JHBP-JH II complex structures previously reported by us led to a number of intriguing findings. First, the JH-binding pocket changes its size in a ligand-dependent manner due to flexibility of the gate α1 helix. Second, MPD1 mimics interactions of the epoxide moiety of JH previously observed in the JHBP-JH complex, and MPD can compete with JH in binding to the JH-binding pocket. We also confirmed that methoprene, which has an MPD-like structure, inhibits the complex formation between JHBP and JH while the unepoxydated JH III (methyl farnesoate) does not. These findings may open the door to the development of novel IGRs targeted against JHBP. Third, binding of MPD to the second cavity of JHBP induces significant conformational changes accompanied with a cavity expansion. This finding, together with MPD2-JHBP interaction mechanism identified in the JHBP-MPD complex, should provide important guidance in the search for the natural ligand of the second cavity.  相似文献   

14.
The juvenile hormones (JHs) regulate a diverse array of insect developmental and reproductive processes. One molecular target of JH action is its transporter, hemolymph JH binding protein (hJHBP); in the larva of the tobacco hornworm, Manduca sexta, low doses of JH can immediately increase hJHBP gene expression. Less explored are the effects of JH on embryological development, where early hormonal treatment has been shown to affect embryonic development and pupation. This study examines the egg form of JHBP and its gene expression during embryogenesis of M. sexta, as well as the phenotypic effect JH treatment has on embryos and on JHBP gene expression. We here demonstrate that the preponderance of JHBP found in the egg is maternally derived and that the embryonic gene and protein appear identical to those found in the larva. Expression of the JHBP gene begins in both the embryo itself and extra-embryonic tissues 15 h after fertilization, long before emergence of a functional fat body and circulatory system. Topical application of low JH doses to early embryos resulted in larval abnormalities while high doses of the hormone induced embryonic mortality. These effects are not mediated through regulation of the JHBP gene, since embryonic expression appears invariant in response to JH challenge. The toxicity of JH is tightly correlated with the concentration of unbound hormone.  相似文献   

15.
《Insect Biochemistry》1988,18(7):661-666
Hemolymph juvenile hormone-binding protein (JHBP) is synthesized and secreted from fat body in the adult female cockroach, Leucophaea maderae. The data in this paper suggest it is initially secreted from the fat body as a larger peptide whereas data in the accompanying paper demonstrate that JHBP is apolipophorin I. Using media from cultures of fat body maintained in vitro, a JH-binding component was found that is JH III saturable, has a KD of 1.5 × 10−8 M, binds JH III > JH II > JH I, and has a sedimentation value of 6.5S on high salt sucrose gradients. Each of these properties is identical to those of the JHBP extracted from the hemolymph. To identify the protein that bound JH, media proteins were photoaffinity labeled with 10-[10,11-3H]epoxyfarnesyl diazoacetate ([3H]EFDA). The results revealed that two media proteins bound [3H]EFDA in the absence of JH III, but not in the presence of 100-fold excess JH III. The molecular weights of the two media peptides were estimated by SDS-PAGE to be 275,000 and 220,000.To determine if the JHBP found in media of fat body cultures was due to hemolymph contamination of fat body, incorporation of [3H]leucine into newly synthesized and secreted fat body proteins during a 48 h culture period was monitored. During the culture period, linear increases in the concentrations of radiolabeled 275 and 220 kD JHBP were observed. Monoclonal antibodies specific for the 220 kD hemolymph JHBP were found to recognize both the 275 and 220 kD JHBPs in the media.To investigate the possibility that the 275 kD protein is a precursor to the 220 kD protein and that components of the hemolymph process or modify the precursor, hemolymph was introduced into fat body cultures and relative concentrations of the 275 and 220 kD media JHBPs were determined. Addition of hemolymph to these organ cultures resulted in an increase in the concentration of radiolabeled 220 kD JHBP and a proportional decrease in the concentration of radiolabeled 275 kD JHBP, suggesting that the 275 kD protein is a precursor to the 220 kD hemolymph JHBP. The mechanism of processing or modification remains undetermined.  相似文献   

16.
The juvenile hormones (JHs) regulate a diverse array of insect developmental and reproductive processes. One molecular target of JH action is its transporter, hemolymph JH binding protein (hJHBP); in the larva of the tobacco hornworm, Manduca sexta, low doses of JH can immediately increase hJHBP gene expression. Less explored are the effects of JH on embryological development, where early hormonal treatment has been shown to affect embryonic development and pupation. This study examines the egg form of JHBP and its gene expression during embryogenesis of M. sexta, as well as the phenotypic effect JH treatment has on embryos and on JHBP gene expression. We here demonstrate that the preponderance of JHBP found in the egg is maternally derived and that the embryonic gene and protein appear identical to those found in the larva. Expression of the JHBP gene begins in both the embryo itself and extra-embryonic tissues 15 h after fertilization, long before emergence of a functional fat body and circulatory system. Topical application of low JH doses to early embryos resulted in larval abnormalities while high doses of the hormone induced embryonic mortality. These effects are not mediated through regulation of the JHBP gene, since embryonic expression appears invariant in response to JH challenge. The toxicity of JH is tightly correlated with the concentration of unbound hormone.  相似文献   

17.
A juvenile hormone binding protein (JHBP) has been isolated from Bombyx mori hemolymph by gel filtration, ion-exchange chromatography, chromatofocusing and hydroxyapatite column chromatography. Gel electrophoresis indicates that the isolated protein is homogeneous in the presence or absence of a denaturing agent. The JHBP in question has a relative molecular mass of 32 kDa, determined by denaturing gel electrophoresis. Chromatofocusing analysis indicated that the JHBP is an acidic protein with pI 4.9. The protein exhibits a dissociation constant of 9.0 × 10−8 M for JH I, 1.14 × 10−7 M for JH II and 3.9 × 10−7 M for JH III, and thus its affinity for JH analogues is in the order of JHI >JHII >JHIII. Its amino acid composition indicates that the protein consists of 297 residues of 18 kinds of amino acids. The sequence of the N-terminus of the polypeptide chain was determined for 34 of the first 36 residues: Asp-Gln-Asp-Ala-Leu-Leu-Lys-Pro-?-Lys-Leu-Gly-Asp-Met-Gln-Ser-Leu-Ser-Ser-Ala-Thr-Gln-Gln-Phe-Leu-Glu- Lys-Thr-Ser-Lys-Gly-Ile-Pro-?-Tyr-His-.  相似文献   

18.
Calcofluor White is a fluorescent probe that interacts with polysaccharides and is commonly used in clinical studies. Interaction between Calcofluor White and carbohydrate residues of alpha1-acid glycoprotein (orosomucoid) was previously followed by fluorescence titration of the Trp residues of the protein. A stoichiometry of one Calcofluor for one protein has been found [J.R. Albani and Y.D. Plancke, Carbohydr. Res., 318 (1999) 193-200]. Alpha1-acid glycoprotein contains 40% carbohydrate by weight and has up to 16 sialic acid residues. Since binding of Calcofluor to alpha1-acid glycoprotein occurs mainly on the carbohydrate residues, we studied in the present work the interaction between Calcofluor and the protein by following the fluorescence change of the fluorophore. In order to establish the role of the sialic acid residues in the interaction, the experiments were performed with the sialylated and asialylated protein. Interaction of Calcofluor with sialylated alpha1-acid glycoprotein induces a red shift of the emission maximum of the fluorophore from 438 to 450 nm at saturation (one Calcofluor for one sialic acid) and an increase in the fluorescence intensity. At saturation the fluorescence intensity increase levels off. Binding of Calcofluor to asialylated acid glycoprotein does not change the position of the emission maximum of the fluorophore and induces a decrease in its fluorescence intensity. Saturation occurs when 10 molecules of Calcofluor are bound to 1 mol of alpha1-acid glycoprotein. Since the protein contains five heteropolysaccharide groups, we have 2 mol of Calcofluor for each group. Addition of free sialic acid to Calcofluor induces a continuous decrease in the fluorescence intensity of the fluorophore but does not change the position of the emission maximum. Our results confirm the presence of a defined spatial conformation of the sialic acid residues, a conformation that disappears when they are free in solution. Dynamics studies on Calcofluor White and the carbohydrate residues of alpha1-acid glycoprotein are also performed at saturating concentrations of Calcofluor using the red-edge excitation spectra and steady-state anisotropy studies. The red-edge excitation spectra experiments show an important shift (13 nm) of the fluorescence emission maximum of the probe. This reveals that emission of Calcofluor occurs before relaxation of the surrounding carbohydrate residues occurs. Emission from a non-relaxed state means that the microenvironment of bound Calcofluor is rigid, inducing in this way the rigidity of the fluorophore itself, a result confirmed by anisotropy studies.  相似文献   

19.
Malencik DA  Anderson SR 《Amino acids》2003,25(3-4):233-247
Summary. Dityrosine can be a natural component of protein structure, a product of environmental stress, or a product of in vitro protein modification. It is both a cross-link and a fluorescent probe that reports structural and functional information on the cross-linked protein molecule. Diverse reactions produce tyrosyl radicals, which in turn may couple to yield dityrosine. Identification and quantitation of dityrosine in protein hydrolysates usually employs reversed phase high pressure liquid chromatography (RP-HPLC) or gas chromatography. RP-HPLC of protein hydrolysates that have been derivatized with dabsyl chloride gives a complete amino acid analysis that includes dityrosine and 3-nitrotyrosine. Calmodulin, which contains a single pair of tyrosyl residues, undergoes both photoactivated and enzyme-catalyzed dityrosine formation. Polarization measurements, employing the intrinsic fluorescence of dityrosine, and catalytic activity determinations show how different patterns of inter- and intramolecular cross-linking affect the interactions of calmodulin with Ca2+ and enzymes.  相似文献   

20.
Dynamics studies on Calcofluor White bound to the carbohydrate residues of sialylated and asialylated alpha 1-acid glycoprotein (orosomucoid) have been performed. The interaction between the fluorophore and the protein was found to occur preferentially with the glycan residues with a dependence on their spatial conformation. In the presence of sialylated alpha 1-acid glycoprotein, excitation at the red edge of the absorption spectrum of calcofluor does not lead to a shift in the fluorescence emission maximum (440 nm) of the fluorophore. Thus, the emission of calcofluor occurs from a relaxed state. This is confirmed by anisotropy studies as a function of temperature (Perrin plot). In the presence of asialylated alpha 1-acid glycoprotein, red-edge excitation spectra show an important shift (8 nm) of the fluorescence emission maximum of the probe. This reveals that emission of calcofluor occurs before relaxation of the surrounding carbohydrate residues occurs. Emission from a non-relaxed state means that Calcofluor molecules are bound tightly to the carbohydrate residues, a result confirmed by anisotropy studies.  相似文献   

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