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1.
Synthesis of a radioactive photoactivable heterobifunctional reagent, N-oxysuccinimide ester of 2-[14C]glycyl carboxy-9-diazofluorene is described. This reagent on photolysis gives rise to a reactive carbene which rapidly inserts into solvents like methanol. The probe can be easily linked to aldolase which on photolysis gives rise to aldolase dimer, trimer and tetramer depending on the density of linked probe. This probe has also been linked to concanavalin A. The radioactive concanavalin A so obtained was incubated with erythrocyte ghosts and photolysed. The membrane protein analysis by gel electrophoresis indicated that concanavalin A has been covalently crosslinked to band 3.  相似文献   

2.
Rat brain hexokinase (ATP:D-hexose-6-phosphotransferase; EC 2.7.1.1) was derivatized with sulfosuccinimidyl-2-(m-azido-o-nitrobenzamido)ethyl-1,3'-dithiopro pionate (SAND), a photosensitive and cleavable crosslinking agent. The catalytic activity and mitochondrial binding properties of the enzyme were only marginally affected by reaction with SAND. When the derivatized enzyme was bound to liver mitochondria, photolysis resulted in extensive formation of a single crosslinked species with estimated molecular mass 460 kDa. This was determined to contain only hexokinase and thus represents a tetramer of the 116 kDa (apparent molecular mass in gel system used) monomeric enzyme. Although small amounts of tetramer were detected after photolysis of relatively high concentrations of derivatized enzyme in free solution, tetramer formation was greatly enhanced when the enzyme was bound to mitochondria. No evidence of dimeric or trimeric structures was seen even when only a small fraction of the available binding sites on the mitochondrial membrane were occupied. It is thus concluded that tetramer formation is closely linked with binding of the enzyme to the outer mitochondrial membrane and, more specifically, to the pore structure through which metabolites traverse this membrane. It is speculated that a tetrameric structure surrounding the mitochondrial pores may facilitate interactions between the hexokinase reaction and oxidative phosphorylation, mediated by the adenine nucleotides which are common intermediates in these reactions.  相似文献   

3.
We report the construction of subunit interface mutants of rabbit muscle aldolase A with altered quaternary structure. A mutation has been described that causes nonspherocytic hemolytic anemia and produces a thermolabile aldolase (Kishi H et al., 1987, Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 84:8623-8627). The disease arises from substitution of Gly for Asp-128, a residue at the subunit interface of human aldolase A. To elucidate the role of this residue in the highly homologous rabbit aldolase A, site-directed mutagenesis is used to replace Asp-128 with Gly, Ala, Asn, Gln, or Val. Rabbit aldolase D128G purified from Escherichia coli is found to be similar to human D128G by kinetic analysis, CD, and thermal inactivation assays. All of the mutant rabbit aldolases are similar to the wild-type rabbit enzyme in secondary structure and kinetic properties. In contrast, whereas the wild-type enzyme is a tetramer, chemical crosslinking and gel filtration indicate that a new dimeric species exists for the mutants. In sedimentation velocity experiments, the mutant enzymes as mixtures of dimer and tetramer at 4 degrees C. Sedimentation at 20 degrees C shows that the mutant enzymes are > 99.5% dimeric and, in the presence of substrate, that the dimeric species is active. Differential scanning calorimetry demonstrates that Tm values of the mutant enzymes are decreased by 12 degrees C compared to wild-type enzyme. The results indicate that Asp-128 is important for interface stability and suggest that 1 role of the quaternary structure of aldolase is to provide thermostability.  相似文献   

4.
A new chemical crosslinking reagent, 1-[N-(2-hydroxy-5-azidobenzoyl) -2-aminoethyl]-4-(N-hydroxysuccinimidyl)-succinate, or HAHS, has been developed. It is synthesized in three steps and stored as an unlabeled precursor, and then iodinated immediately before use. The reagent has a succinimide ester at one end so that it can be covalently attached to a purified protein, and a radioiodinated phenyl azide group at the other end, so that upon photolysis it can form crosslinks to nearby molecules. The 16-A connecting region contains an ester group which is very stable at neutral pH before photolysis, but which hydrolyzes in about 1 min in base, and hydrolyzes spontaneously after photolysis. Thus, photolysis and cleavage of the ester result in transfer of the radiolabel from the initial protein to its neighbors. When 125I-HAHS-protein A was incubated with IgG, photolyzed, and cleaved, 27% of the label was transferred to the IgG heavy chain. This transfer was abolished by an excess of unlabeled protein A, and was quenched by low concentrations of DTT. Much lower amounts of label were transferred to noninteracting proteins. When 125I-HAHS-spectrin was bound to spectrin-depleted red blood cell membranes, photolyzed, and cleaved, label was transferred only to ankyrin and to band 3. This transfer was blocked by excess unlabeled spectrin and was greatly diminished by conditions which prevent binding of spectrin.  相似文献   

5.
Properties of newly synthesized crosslinking reagents (ACM) and their applications to proteins are studied (ACM is the abbreviation for a series of photoactivable and heterobifunctional crosslinking thiol reagents, each of which has two reactive groups, maleimide and azide). These reagents bind specifically to the sulfhydryl residues of proteins in the first reaction step. Upon photoactivation, the azide group of the coumarin ring reacts with side or main chains of the proteins, and thus intra- or intermolecular crosslinking can be elicited. In addition, the coumarin moiety of the reagents becomes highly fluorescent after photolysis. Therefore, the crosslinking products can be detected by fluorometry with high sensitivity in the pattern of sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Reaction of ACM with rabbit muscle aldolase led to extensive crosslinking between subunits of the enzyme and maximally 25% of the total subunits were found to be crosslinked to the dimer.  相似文献   

6.
The sulfosuccinimidyl active ester of 3-(3-carbethoxy-4-diazo-5-oxo-2-pyrrolin-1-yl)propanoic acid (DIAZOPY-SE) has been synthesized for use as a photoaffinity labeling reagent. This compound was obtained from commercial chemicals by a four-step synthesis requiring no complex procedures or special apparatus. The active ester efficiently derivatizes protein amino groups with the chromophore 3-carbethoxy-4-diazo-5-oxo-2-pyrroline (DIAZOPY, epsilon 8800 M-1 cm-1 at lambda max 330 nm), which on irradiation yielded products expected from formation of a reactive carbene intermediate. Brief irradiation of DIAZOPY in 2-propanol using wavelengths greater than 300 nm for photolysis yielded mainly an isopropyl ether resulting from insertion of the carbene into the O-H bond of the alcohol. Formed concurrently and to a somewhat lesser extent was an isopropyl ester, resulting from a ring-contracting Wolff rearrangement of the carbene and subsequent reaction with isopropanol. Analogous products were produced by photolysis in 2-propanol of DIAZOPY-PA (for DIAZOPY propanoic acid), the carboxylic acid precursor of DIAZOPY-SE. Facile protein derivatization by DIAZOPY-SE was demonstrated using actin and sheep IgG. Actin labeled with DIAZOPY-SE and irradiated while in the F-actin (reversibly polymerized) form was crosslinked to yield a covalently-linked dimer, illustrating the potential of the reagent in photoaffinity applications. Advantages of DIAZOPY-SE as a photoaffinity labeling reagent include ease of synthesis, chemical and photostability, efficient photolysis at wavelengths greater than 300 nm, and a capacity for crosslinking by carbene insertion processes.  相似文献   

7.
Fructose diphosphate aldolase has been purified to homogeneity from human cardiac tissue. Physicochemical studies show that the enzyme is a tetramer of molecular weight 160 000 and possesses properties common to other Class I aldolases. Catalytic studies, together with amino acid analysis and tryptic peptide fingerprints, suggest that the enzyme is a typical Type A, muscle aldolase. Contrary to earlier reports, no other form of aldolase could be identified in adult human heart.  相似文献   

8.
The reactivity of thiol groups and the subunit structure of aldolase   总被引:7,自引:6,他引:1  
1. Seven unique carboxymethylcysteine-containing peptides have been isolated from tryptic digests of rabbit muscle aldolase carboxymethylated with iodo[2-(14)C]acetic acid in 8m-urea. These peptides have been characterized by amino acid and end-group analysis and their location within the cyanogen bromide cleavage fragments of the enzyme has been determined. 2. Reaction of native aldolase with 5,5'-dithiobis-(2-nitrobenzoic acid), iodoacetamide and N-ethylmaleimide showed that a total of three cysteine residues per subunit of mol.wt. 40000 were reactive towards these reagents, and that the modification of these residues was accompanied by loss in enzymic activity. Chemical analysis of the modified enzymes demonstrated that the same three thiol groups are involved in the reaction with all these reagents but that the observed reactivity of a given thiol group varies with the reagent used. 3. One reactive thiol group per subunit could be protected when the modification of the enzyme was carried out in the presence of substrate, fructose 1,6-diphosphate, under which conditions enzymic activity was retained. This thiol group has been identified chemically and is possibly at or near the active site. Limiting the exposure of the native enzyme to iodoacetamide also served to restrict alkylation to two thiol groups and left the enzymic activity unimpaired. The thiol group left unmodified is the same as that protected by substrate during more rigorous alkylation, although it is now more reactive towards 5,5'-dithiobis-(2-nitrobenzoic acid) than in the native enzyme. 4. Conversely, prolonged incubation of the enzyme with fructose 1,6-diphosphate, which was subsequently removed by dialysis, caused an irreversible fall in enzymic activity and in thiol group reactivity measured with 5,5'-dithiobis-(2-nitrobenzoic acid). 5. It is concluded that the aldolase tetramer contains at least 28 cysteine residues. Each subunit appears to be identical with respect to number, location and reactivity of thiol groups.  相似文献   

9.
The cytoplasmic domain of band 3, the main intrinsic protein of the erythrocyte membrane, possesses binding sites for a variety of other proteins of the membrane and the cytoplasm, including the glycolytic enzymes glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) and aldolase. We have studied the stoichiometry of the complexes of human band 3 protein and GAPDH and the competition by aldolase for the binding sites. In addition, we have tried to verify the existence of mixed band 3/GAPDH/aldolase complexes, which could represent the nucleus of a putative glycolytic multienzyme complex on the erythrocyte membrane. The technique applied was analytical ultracentrifugation, in particular sedimentation equilibrium analysis, on mixtures of detergent-solubilized band 3 and dye-labelled GAPDH, in part of the experiments supplemented by aldolase. The results obtained were analogous to those reported for the binding of hemoglobin, aldolase and band 4.1 to band 3: (1) the predominant or even sole band 3 oligomer forming the binding site is the tetramer. (2) The band 3 tetramer can bind up to four tetramers of GAPDH. (3) The band 3/GAPDH complexes are unstable. (4) Artificially stabilized band 3 dimers also represent GAPDH binding sites. In addition it was found that aldolase competes with GAPDH for binding to the band 3 tetramer, and that ternary complexes of band 3 tetramers, GAPDH and aldolase do exist.  相似文献   

10.
A study has been carried out on the association of aldolase with the human erythrocyte membrane. It has been shown that the conditions employed during hypotonic hemolysis affect the amount of aldolase that remains bound to the cell membrane. Thus, the in vivo nature of this binding cannot be ascertained by this technique. Therefore, a method has been developed in which aldolase is crosslinked with glutaraldehyde to the inner surface of the membrane in intact red blood cells. Under the specified conditions, over 90% of the intracellular aldolase can be crosslinked to the membrane with less than 10% of the hemoglobin becoming bound. These results suggest that the localization of aldolase in situ is on or near the inner surface of the membrane. The amount of aldolase bound to the membrane following crosslinking can be decreased by preincubating the cells with cytoskeletal agents such as cytochalasin B, colchicine, and vinblastine sulfate. The in vitro binding of aldolase to the purified spectrin-actin and F-actin complexes was studied. Aldolase bound both complexes very tightly (KD ? 10?9m) and this binding could be inhibited by cytochalasin B, but not by colchicine. A competition binding study was carried out to determine if the binding of aldolase to F-actin involved specific interactions. Neither bovine serum albumin nor cytochrome c significantly inhibited the binding of aldolase to F-actin when each was present at equimolar concentrations with aldolase. However, glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase inhibited aldolase binding to F-actin and when present at equimolar concentrations with aldolase completely blocked the association. The association of aldolase and other glycolytic enzymes with the erythrocyte membrane is discussed and it is postulated that aldolase could be localized in vivo on the inner surface of the membrane by attachment to actin or a spectrin-actin complex.  相似文献   

11.
A protein encoded by sulD, one of four genes in a previously cloned folate biosynthetic operon of Streptococcus pneumoniae, had been shown to harbor 6-hydroxymethyl-7,8-dihydropterin pyrophosphokinase activity. This SulD protein was purified and shown now to harbor also dihydroneopterin aldolase activity. The bifunctional protein therefore catalyzes two successive steps in folate biosynthesis. The aldolase activity can be ascribed to the N-terminal domain of the SulD polypeptide, and the pyrophosphokinase activity can be ascribed to the C-terminal domain. Homologs of the dihydroneopterin aldolase domain were identified in other species, in one of which the domain was encoded as a separate polypeptide. The native SulD protein is a trimer or tetramer of a 31-kDa subunit, and it dissociated reversibly after purification. Dihydroneopterin aldolase activity required the multimeric protein, whereas pyrophosphokinase was expressed by the monomeric form. With purified SulD, the amount of 6-hydroxymethyl-7,8-dihydropterin product formed by the aldolase was proportional to the fourth power of the enzyme concentration, as expected for a reversibly dissociating tetramer. By identifying the gene encoding dihydroneopterin aldolase, this work extends our understanding of the molecular basis of the folate biosynthetic system common to many organisms.  相似文献   

12.
Fructose diphosphate aldolase has been purified to homogeneity from Mycobacterium smegmatis. Physicochemical studies showed that the enzyme is a tetramer of molecular weight 158,000. Mycobacterium smegmatis aldolase, though a bacterial enzyme, possesses properties similar to other class I aldolases. Inactivation of the enzyme by sodium borohydride in presence of dihydroxyacetone phosphate suggested the formation of a Schiff-base intermediate.  相似文献   

13.
Previous Brownian dynamics (BD) simulations identified specific basic residues on fructose-1,6-bisphophate aldolase (aldolase) (I. V. Ouporov et al., Biophysical Journal, 1999, Vol. 76, pp. 17-27) and glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) (I. V. Ouporov et al., Journal of Molecular Recognition, 2001, Vol. 14, pp. 29-41) involved in binding F-actin, and suggested that the quaternary structure of the enzymes may be important. Herein, BD simulations of F-actin binding by enzyme dimers or peptides matching particular sequences of the enzyme and the intact enzyme triose phosphate isomerase (TIM) are compared. BD confirms the experimental observation that TIM has little affinity for F-actin. For aldolase, the critical residues identified by BD are found in surface grooves, formed by subunits A/D and B/C, where they face like residues of the neighboring subunit enhancing their electrostatic potentials. BD simulations between F-actin and aldolase A/D dimers give results similar to the native tetramer. Aldolase A/B dimers form complexes involving residues that are buried in the native structure and are energetically weaker; these results support the importance of quaternary structure for aldolase. GAPDH, however, placed the critical residues on the corners of the tetramer so there is no enhancement of the electrostatic potential between the subunits. Simulations using GAPDH dimers composed of either S/H or G/H subunits show reduced binding energetics compared to the tetramer, but for both dimers, the sets of residues involved in binding are similar to those found for the native tetramer. BD simulations using either aldolase or GAPDH peptides that bind F-actin experimentally show complex formation. The GAPDH peptide bound to the same F-actin domain as did the intact tetramer; however, unlike the tetramer, the aldolase peptide lacked specificity for binding a single F-actin domain.  相似文献   

14.
A theoretical study of aldolase tetramer stability, conducted by finite difference Poisson-Boltzmann (FDPB) and modified Tanford-Kirkwood (MTK) techniques using the atomic coordinates of human aldolase, is described. A method for calculating the interaction energy between subunits is proposed. An analysis of the contribution of different energy terms to the stability and oligomeric equilibria (monomer ⇔ dimer ⇔ tetramer) of aldolase is made. It is shown that the loss of solvation energy and electrostatic interactions at very high and low pH-s destabilise the oligomers. These energy terms are compensated over a wide pH range by the stabilization energy due to hydrophobic interactions. It is shown that the aldolase tetramer is energetically more preferable than other oligomers in the pH range from 5 to 11. Subunit-subunit interactions within the tetramer suggest one dimeric form to be the most stable of the possible sub-parts. For this reason the tetramer can be thought of as a “dimer of dimers”. A comparison between our theoretical results and available experimental data shows that the dissociation of the aldolase tetramer below pH 3–4 cooperatively leads to acid denaturation. A second dissociation is predicted to occur at high pH (>12) in addition to the well known acidic dissociation. The analysis suggests that a mutation of His20 or Arg257 to a neutral residue could decrease the pH of the acidic dissociation by approximately 1 pH unit. Received: 16 February 1998 / Revised version: 8 April 1998 / Accepted: 19 April 1998  相似文献   

15.
The results of a double isotope experiment using 3H- and 14C-labeled leucine as precursors of protein synthesis demonstrated that the aldolase C to A subunit transition which is associated with chick skeletal muscle development involves the preferential synthesis of different aldolase isoenzymes. This developmental system was used to test for subunit exchange between aldolase tetramers in vivo. In a second double isotope experiment, it was found that the 14C:3H ratios of A and C subunits derived from the same heterotetramer were essentially identical, while the isotope ratios of the same subunit type derived from different isoenzymes were considerably different. Had subunit exchange between the isoenzymes occurred, A subunits of a given heterotetramer would have been expected to have higher isotope ratios than the corresponding C subunits. Therefore, these data suggest that subunit exchange between aldolase tetramers does not occur in vivo, at least not in skeletal muscle to an appreciable extent. The results of the present study suggest that all aldolase tetramers are constructed at the time of the initial assembly of newly synthesized subunits, that is, "new" tetramers would not be generated by subunit exchange between already constructed tetramers. In addition, the present work suggests that the degradation of all four subunits of an aldolase tetramer are coupled inasmuch as the subunits would not be reincorporated into other tetramers. Thus, in contrast to some other proteins, it appears that the subunits of the aldolase tetramer turn over coordinately.  相似文献   

16.
17.
The affinity label N-bromoacetylethanolamine phosphate (BrAcNHEtOP) has been used previously at pH 6.5 to identify His-359 of rabbit muscle aldolase as an active site residue. We now find that the specificity of the reagent is pH-dependent. At pH 8.5, alkylation with 14C-labeled BrAcNHEtOP abolishes both fructose-1,6-P2 cleavage activity and transaldolase activity. The stoichiometry of incorporation, the kinetics of inactivation, and the protection against inactivation afforded by a competitive inhibitor or dihydroxyacetone phosphate are consistent with the involvement of an active site residue. A comparison of 14C profiles obtained from chromatography on the amino acid analyzer of acid hydrolysates of inactivated and protected samples reveals that inactivation results from the alkylation of lysyl residues. The major peptide in tryptic digests of the inactivated enzyme has been isolated. Based on its amino acid composition and the known sequence of aldolase, Lys-146 is the residue preferentially alkylated by the reagent. Aldolase modified at His-359 is still subject to alkylation of lysine; thus Lys-146 and His-359 are not mutually exclusive sites. However, aldolase modified at Lys-146 is not subject to alkylation of histidine. One explanation of these observations is that modification of Lys-146 abolishes the binding capacity of aldolase for substrates and substrate analogs (BrAcNHEtOP), whereas modification of his-359 does not. Consistent with this explanation is the ability of aldolase modified at His-359 to form a Schiff base with substrate and the inability of aldolase modified at Lys-146 to do so. Therefore, Lys-146 could be one of the cationic groups that functions in electrostatic binding of the substrate's phosphate groups.  相似文献   

18.
When iodoacetate is added to denatured muscle aldolase undergoing renaturation, a major portion of the activity in the resulting enzyme remains in the monomeric form (of about 37,000 Mr). In the absence of iodoacetate, the renatured enzyme exists entirely as the tetramer. Iodoacetate treatment of native aldolase tetramer (Mr = 160,000) does not lead to dissociation. The stabilization of the monomer by iodoacetate treatment is presumably due to modification of a group at the intersubunit region. Active monomers of aldolase could be distinguished from native or renatured aldolase tetramer by gel-filtration and by the sensitivity of the monomer to inactivation in 2.3 m-urea.  相似文献   

19.
The present work describes the selective covalent modification of fructose bisphosphate aldolase in crude extracts of chicken breast muscle by fluorescein 5'-isothiocyanate (5'-FITC) at pH 7.0 and 35 degrees C. The modification was observed after 1 min while no other major soluble protein was labeled even after 30 min. We calculated that ca. one 5'-FITC molecule was incorporated into each aldolase tetramer after a 30 min reaction which resulted in a minimal loss of enzyme activity. The "native" structure of aldolase was required for the selective modification by 5'-FITC since high pH, high temperature, and ionic detergents either inhibited or prevented the reaction of 5'-FITC with aldolase. Certain metabolites (ATP, ADP, CTP, GTP, FBP) and erythrosin B also inhibited the 5'-FITC modification of aldolase. In contrast, F-6-P, AMP, NADH, and NAD(+) as well as free lysine and most importantly, the 6'-isomer of FITC exhibited no competition with 5'-FITC for the labeling of aldolase. Alone, the 6'-isomer of FITC did not exhibit preferential reaction when combined with aldolase. 5'-FITC-labeled and -unlabeled aldolases were not distinguished by their ability to bind to muscle myofibrils (MFs) or by their abilities to refold following reversible denaturation in urea. Structural analysis revealed that 5'-FITC-labeled a tryptic peptide corresponding to residues 112-134 in the primary structure of aldolase, a peptide that does not contain lysine, the amino acid believed to be the primary target of this reagent. Unlike chicken and rabbit muscle aldolases, chicken brain and liver aldolase isoforms along with several other aldolases derived from diverse biological sources did not exhibit this highly selective modification by 5'-FITC.  相似文献   

20.
Rabbit muscle aldolase is a homotetramer in which the subunits have a classical alpha/beta-barrel structure and Mr 39,212 Da. We have previously reported that aldolase incubated in 3 M urea has three unfolding domains distinguished by their different unfolding rates. The unfolding rates of these domains were determined from isotope patterns in the mass spectra of peptic fragments derived from aldolase incubated in 3 M urea and pulse labeled in (2)H2O. The present study extends this investigation to more thoroughly characterize the structures of these unfolding intermediates. Mass spectra of intact monomers had four envelopes of isotope peaks corresponding to four structural forms of aldolase. Analysis of the present results suggests that these structural forms consist of native aldolase and three forms that have one to three domains unfolded. The molecular masses of these four structural forms indicate that there are 107 residues in each of the three unfolding domains of aldolase. Present results also show that aldolase remains a tetramer in 4 M urea, even though hydrogen exchange and circular dichroism indicate that it has lost most of its secondary and tertiary structure. The abundances of unfolded domains, which were determined from mass spectra of either intact aldolase or its peptic fragments, were used to determine the abundances of specific, partially unfolded forms of aldolase. Kinetic modeling of the abundances of these structures suggests that these structures are formed sequentially as aldolase unfolds in urea.  相似文献   

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