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1.
Hamza MA  Engel PC 《FEBS letters》2008,582(13):1816-1820
Clostridial glutamate dehydrogenase mutants with the 5 Trp residues in turn replaced by Phe showed the importance of Trp 64 and 449 in cooperativity with glutamate at pH 9. These mutants are examined here for their behaviour with NAD+ at pH 7.0 and 9.0. The wild-type enzyme displays negative NAD+ cooperativity at both pH values. At pH 7.0 W243F gives Michaelis-Menten kinetics, and the same behaviour is shown by W243F and also W310F at pH 9.0, but not by W64F or W449F. W243 and W310 are apparently much more important than W64 and W449 for the coenzyme negative cooperativity, implying that different conformational transitions are involved in cooperativity with the coenzyme and with glutamate.  相似文献   

2.
The glycoprotein (G) of vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) is responsible for binding of virus to cells and for mediating virus entry following endocytosis by inducing fusion of the viral envelope with the endosomal membrane. The fusion peptide of G is internal (residues 116 to 137) and exhibits characteristics similar to those of other internal fusion peptides, but recent studies have implicated the region adjacent to the transmembrane domain as also being important for G-mediated membrane fusion. Sequence alignment of the membrane-proximal region of G from several different vesiculoviruses revealed that this domain is highly conserved, suggesting that it is important for G function. Mutational analysis was used to show that this region is not essential for G protein oligomerization, transport to the cell surface, or incorporation into virus particles but that it is essential for acid-induced membrane fusion activity and for virus infectivity. Deletion of the 13 membrane-proximal amino acids (N449 to W461) dramatically reduced cell-cell fusion activity and reduced virus infectivity approximately 100-fold, but mutation of conserved aromatic residues (W457, F458, and W461) either singly or together had only modest effects on cell-cell fusion activity; recombinant virus encoding these mutants replicated as efficiently as wild-type (WT) VSV. Insertion of heterologous sequences in the juxtamembrane region completely abolished membrane fusion activity and virus infectivity, as did deletion of residues F440 to N449. The insertion mutants showed some changes in pH-dependent conformational changes and in virus binding, which could partially explain the defects in membrane fusion activity, but all the other mutants were similar to WT G with respect to conformational changes and virus binding. These data support the hypothesis that the membrane-proximal domain contributes to G-mediated membrane fusion activity, yet the conserved aromatic residues are not essential for membrane fusion or virus infectivity.  相似文献   

3.
Actin contains four tryptophan residues, W79, W86, W340, and W356, all located in subdomain 1 of the protein. Replacement of each of these residues with either tyrosine (W79Y and W356Y) or phenylalanine (W86F and W340F) generated viable proteins in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, which, when purified, allowed the analysis of the contribution of these residues to the overall tryptophan fluorescence of actin. The sum of the relative contributions of these tryptophans was found to account for the intrinsic fluorescence of wild-type actin, indicating that energy transfer between the tryptophans is not the main determinant of their quantum yield, and that these mutations induce little conformational change to the protein. This was borne out by virtually identical polymerization rates and similar myosin interactions of each of the mutants and the wild-type actin. In addition, these mutants allowed the dissection of the microenvironment of each tryptophan as actin undergoes conformational changes upon metal cation exchange and polymerization. Based on the relative tryptophan contributions determined from single mutants, a triple mutant of yeast actin (W79) was generated that showed small intrinsic fluorescence and should be useful for studies of actin interactions with actin-binding proteins.  相似文献   

4.
To elucidate the roles of tryptophan residues in the structure, stability, and function of Escherichia coli dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR), its five tryptophan residues were replaced by site-directed mutagenesis with leucine, phenylalanine or valine (W22F, W22L, W30L, W47L, W74F, W74L, W133F, and W133V). Far-ultraviolet circular dichroism (CD) spectra of these mutants reveal that exciton coupling between Trp47 and Trp74 strongly affects the peptide CD of wild-type DHFR, and that Trp133 also contributes appreciably. No additivity was observed in the contributions of individual tryptophan residues to the fluorescence spectrum of wild-type DHFR, Trp74 having a dominant effect. These single-tryptophan mutations induce large changes in the free energy of urea unfolding, which showed values of 1.79-7.14 kcal/mol, compared with the value for wild-type DHFR of 6.08 kcal/mol. Analysis of CD and fluorescence spectra suggests that thermal unfolding involves an intermediate with the native-like secondary structure, the disrupted Trp47-Trp74 exciton coupling, and the solvent-exposed Trp30 and Trp47 side chains. All the mutants except W22L (13%) retain more than 50% of the enzyme activity of wild-type DHFR. These results demonstrate that the five tryptophan residues of DHFR play important roles in its structure and stability but do not crucially affect its enzymatic function.  相似文献   

5.
6.
The structural flexibility and thermostability of glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) from Clostridium symbiosum were examined by limited proteolysis using three proteinases with different specificities, trypsin, chymotrypsin, and endoproteinase Glu-C. Clostridial GDH resisted proteolysis by any of these enzymes at 25 degrees C. Above 30 degrees C, however, GDH became cleavable by chymotrypsin, apparently at a single site. SDS-PAGE indicated the formation of one large fragment with a molecular mass of approximately 44 kDa and one small one of <10 kDa. Proteolysis was accompanied by the loss of enzyme activity, which outran peptide cleavage, suggesting a cooperative conformational change. Proteolysis was prevented by either of the substrates 2-oxoglutarate or l-glutamate but not by the coenzymes NAD(+) or NADH. Circular dichroism spectroscopy indicated that the protective effects of these ligands resulted from fixation of flexible regions of the native structure of the enzyme. Size-exclusion chromatography and SDS-PAGE studies of chymotrypsin-treated GDH showed that the enzyme retained its hexameric structure and all of its proteolytic fragments. However, circular dichroism spectroscopy and analytical ultracentrifugation showed global conformational changes affecting the overall compactness of the protein structure. Chymotrypsin-catalyzed cleavage also diminished the thermostability of GDH and the cooperativity of the transition between its native and denatured states. N-terminal amino acid sequencing and mass spectrometry showed that heat-induced sensitivity to chymotrypsin emerged in the loop formed by residues 390-393 that lies between helices alpha(15) and alpha(16) in the folded structure of the enzyme.  相似文献   

7.
The crystal structure of the cyano-met form of Mt-trHbO revealed two unusual distal residues Y(CD1) and W(G8) forming a hydrogen-bond network with the heme-bound ligand [Milani, M., et al. (2003) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 100, 5766-5771]. W(G8) is an invariant residue in group II and group III trHbs and has no counterpart in other globins. A previous study reported that changing Y(CD1) for a Phe causes a significant increase in the O2 combination rate, but almost no change in the O2 dissociation rate [Ouellet, H., et al. (2003) Biochemistry 42, 5764-5774]. Here we investigated the role of the W(G8) in ligand binding by using resonance Raman spectroscopy, stopped-flow spectrophotometry, and X-ray crystallography. For this purpose, W(G8) was changed, by site-directed mutagenesis, to a Phe in both the wild-type protein and the mutant Y(CD1)F to create the single mutant W(G8)F and the double mutant Y(CD1)F/W(G8)F, respectively. Resonance Raman results suggest that W(G8) interacts with the heme-bound O2 and CO, as evidenced by the increase of the Fe-O2 stretching mode from 559 to 564 cm-1 and by the lower frequency of the Fe-CO stretching modes (514 and 497 cm-1) compared to that of the wild-type protein. Mutation of W(G8) to Phe indicates that this residue controls ligand binding, as evidenced by a dramatic increase of the combination rates of both O2 and CO. Also, the rate of O2 dissociation showed a 90-1000-fold increase in the W(G8)F and Y(CD1)F/W(G8)F mutants, that is in sharp contrast with the values obtained for the other distal mutants Y(B10)F and Y(CD1)F [Ouellet, H., et al. (2003) Biochemistry 42, 5764-5774]. Taken together, these data indicate a pivotal role for the W(G8) residue in O2 binding and stabilization.  相似文献   

8.
We analyzed antigen-binding residues from the variable domains of anti-CD4 antibody 13B8.2 using the Spot method of parallel peptide synthesis. Sixteen amino acids, defined as Spot critical residues (SCR), were identified on the basis of a 50% decrease in CD4 binding to alanine analogs of reactive peptides. Recombinant Fab 13B8.2 mutants were constructed with alanine residues in place of each of the 16 SCR, expressed in the baculovirus cell system, and purified. CD measurements indicated that the mutated proteins were conformationally intact, with a beta-sheet secondary structure similar to that of wild-type Fab. Compared with the CD4-binding capacity of wild-type Fab 13B8.2, 11 light (Y32-L, W35-L, Y36-L, H91-L, and Y92-L) and heavy chain (H35-H, R38-H, W52-H, R53-H, F100K-H, and W103-H) Fab single mutants showed a decrease in CD4 recognition as demonstrated by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, BIAcore, and flow cytometry analyses. The five remaining Fab mutants showed antigen-binding properties similar to those of wild-type Fab. Recombinant Fab mutants that showed decreased CD4 binding also lost their capacity to inhibit human immunodeficiency virus promoter activation and the antigen-presenting ability that wild-type Fab displays. Molecular modeling of the 13B8.2 antibody paratope indicated that most of these critical residues are appropriately positioned inside the putative CD4-binding pocket, whereas the five SCR that were not confirmed by mutagenesis show an unfavorable positioning. Taken together, these results indicate that most of the residues defined by the Spot method as critical matched with important residues defined by mutagenesis in the whole protein context. The identification of critical residues for CD4 binding in the paratope of anti-CD4 recombinant Fab 13B8.2 provides the opportunity for the generation of improved anti-CD4 molecules with more efficient pharmacological properties.  相似文献   

9.
Solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (SSNMR) spectroscopy is used for the first time to examine the relative substrate-binding affinities of mutant forms of the Escherichia coli sugar transporter GalP in membrane preparations. The SSNMR method of (13)C cross-polarization magic-angle spinning (CP-MAS) is applied to five site-specific mutants (W56F, W239F, R316W, T336Y and W434F), which have a range of different sugar-transport activities compared to the wild-type protein. It is shown that binding of the substrate D-glucose can be detected independently of sugar transport activity using SSNMR, and that the NMR peak intensities for uniformly (13)C-labelled glucose are consistent with wild-type GalP and the mutants having different affinities for the substrate. The W239F and W434F mutants showed binding affinities similar to that of the wild-type protein, whereas the affinity of glucose-binding to the W56F mutant was reduced. The R316W mutant showed no detectable binding; this position corresponds to the second basic residue in the highly conserved (R/K)XGR(R/K) motif in the major facilitator superfamily of transport proteins and to a mutation in human GLUT1 found in individuals with GLUT1-deficiency syndrome. The T336Y mutant also showed no detectable binding; this mutation is likely to have perturbed helix structure or packing to an extent that conformational changes in the protein are hindered. The effects of the mutations on substrate-binding are discussed with reference to the putative positions of the residues in a 3D homology model of GalP based on the X-ray crystal structure of the E. coli glycerol-3-phosphate transporter GlpT.  相似文献   

10.
Previously human cytochrome P450 3A4 was efficiently and specifically photolabeled by the photoaffinity ligand lapachenole. One of the modification sites was identified as cysteine 98 in the B-C loop region of the protein [B. Wen, C.E. Doneanu, C.A. Gartner, A.G. Roberts, W.M. Atkins, S.D. Nelson, Biochemistry 44 (2005) 1833-1845]. Loss of CO binding capacity and subsequent decrease of catalytic activity were observed in the labeled CYP3A4, which suggested that aromatic substitution on residue 98 triggered a critical conformational change and subsequent loss of enzyme activity. To test this hypothesis, C98A, C98S, C98F, and C98W mutants were generated by site-directed mutagenesis and expressed functionally as oligohistidine-tagged proteins. Unlike the mono-adduction observed in the wild-type protein, simultaneous multiple adductions occurred when C98F and C98W were photolabeled under the same conditions as the wild-type enzyme, indicating a substantial conformational change in these two mutants compared with the wild-type protein. Kinetic analysis revealed that the C98W mutant had a drastic 16-fold decrease in catalytic efficiency (V(max)/K(m)) for 1'-OH midazolam formation, and about an 8-fold decrease in catalytic efficiency (V(max)/K(m)) for 4-OH midazolam formation, while the C98A and C98S mutants retained the same enzyme activity as the wild-type enzyme. Photolabeling of C98A and C98S with lapachenole resulted in monoadduction of only Cys-468, in contrast to the labeling of Cys-98 in wild-type CYP3A4, demonstrating the marked selectivity of this photoaffinity ligand for cysteine residues. The slight increases in the midazolam binding constants (K(s)) in these mutants suggested negligible perturbation of the heme environment. Further activity studies using different P450:reductase ratios suggested that the affinity of P450 to reductase was significantly decreased in the C98W mutant, but not in the C98A and C98S mutants. In addition, the C98W mutant exhibited a 41% decrease in the maximum electron flow rate between P450 and reductase as measured by reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate consumption at a saturating reductase concentration. In conclusion, our data strongly suggest that cysteine 98 in the B-C loop region significantly contributes to conformational integrity and catalytic activity of CYP3A4, and that this residue or residues nearby might be involved in an interaction with P450 reductase.  相似文献   

11.
Site-directed mutants of the phylogenetically conserved phenylalanine residue F393 were constructed in flavocytochrome P450 BM3 from Bacillus megaterium. The high degree of conservation of this residue in the P450 superfamily and its proximity to the heme (and its ligand Cys400) infers an essential role in P450 activity. Extensive kinetic and thermodynamic characterization of mutant enzymes F393A, F393H, and F393Y highlighted significant differences from wild-type P450 BM3. All enzymes expressed to high levels and contained their full complement of heme. While the reduction and subsequent treatment of the mutant P450s with carbon monoxide led to the formation of the characteristic P450 spectra in all cases, the absolute position of the Soret absorption varied across the series WT/F393Y (449 nm), F393H (445 nm), and F393A (444 nm). Steady-state turnover rates with both laurate and arachidonate showed the trend WT > F393Y > F393H > F393A. Conversely, the trend in the pre-steady-state flavin-to-heme electron transfer was the reverse of the steady-state scenario, with rates varying F393A > F393H > F393Y approximately wild-type. These data are consistent with the more positive substrate-free [-312 mV (F393A), -332 mV (F393H)] and substrate-bound [-151 mV (F393A), -176 mV (F393H)] reduction potentials of F393A and F393H heme domains, favoring the stabilization of the ferrous-form in the mutant P450s relative to wild-type. Elevation of the heme iron reduction potential in the F393A and F393H mutants facilitates faster electron transfer to the heme. This results in a decrease in the driving force for oxygen reduction by the ferrous heme iron, so explaining lower overall turnover of the mutant P450s. We postulate that the nature of the residue at position 393 is important in controlling the delicate equilibrium observed in P450s, whereby a tradeoff is established between the rate of heme reduction and the rate at which the ferrous heme can bind and, subsequently, reduce molecular oxygen.  相似文献   

12.
B Antonny  P Chardin  M Roux  M Chabre 《Biochemistry》1991,30(34):8287-8295
We have substituted leucine 56 or tyrosine 64 of p21 ras with a tryptophan. The intrinsic fluorescence of this tryptophan was used as an internal conformational probe for time-resolved biochemical studies of the ras protein. The slow intrinsic GTPase, GDP/GTP exchange induced by the SDC25 "exchange factor", and the fast GTP hydrolysis induced by GAP were studied. Tryptophan fluorescence of mutated ras is very sensitive to magnesium binding, GDP/GTP exchange, and GTP hydrolysis (changes in tyrosine fluorescence of wild-type ras are also observed but with a lower sensitivity). Nucleotide affinities, exchange kinetics, and intrinsic GTPase rates of the mutated ras could be measured by this method and were found to be close to those of wild-type ras. The SDC25 gene product enhances GDP/GTP exchange in both mutants. In both mutants, a slow fluorescence change follows the binding of GTP gamma S; its kinetics are close to those of the intrinsic GTPase, suggesting that a slow conformational change precedes the GTPase and is the rate-limiting step, as proposed by Neal et al. (1990) (Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 87, 3562-3565). GAP interacts with both mutant ras proteins and accelerates the GTPase of (L56W)ras but not that of (Y64W)ras, suggesting a role for tyrosine 64 in GAP-induced GTP hydrolysis. However, GAP does not accelerate the slow conformational change following GTP gamma S binding in either of the mutated ras proteins. This suggests that the fast GAP-induced catalysis of GTP hydrolysis that is observed with (L56W)ras bypasses the slow conformational change associated with the intrinsic GTPase and therefore might proceed by a different mechanism.  相似文献   

13.
Bell SP  Curran PK  Choi S  Mindell JA 《Biochemistry》2006,45(22):6773-6782
Channels and transporters of the ClC family serve a variety of physiological functions. Understanding of their gating and transport mechanisms remains incomplete, with disagreement over the extent of protein conformational change involved. Using site-directed fluorescence labeling, we probe ClC-ec1, a prokaryotic ClC, for transport-related structural rearrangements. We specifically label cysteines introduced at several positions in the R helix of ClC-ec1 with AlexaFluor 488, an environment-sensitive fluorophore, and demonstrate that the labeled mutants show H+/Cl- transport activity indistinguishable from that of the wild-type protein. At each position that we examined we observe fluorescence changes upon acidification over the same pH range that is known to activate transport. The fluorescence change is also sensitive to Cl- concentration; furthermore, the Cl- and H+ dependencies are coupled as would be expected if the fluorescence change reflected a conformational change required for transport. Together, the results suggest that the changes in fluorescence report protein conformational changes underlying the transport process. Labeled transporters mutated to remove a glutamate critical to proton-coupled chloride transport retain pH-dependent fluorescence changes, suggesting that multiple residues confer pH dependence on the transport mechanism. These results have implications for models of transport and gating in ClC channels and transporters.  相似文献   

14.
To investigate the roles of site I and II invariant Glu residues 41 and 77 in the functional properties and calcium-induced structural opening of skeletal muscle troponin C (TnC) regulatory domain, we have replaced them by Ala in intact F29W TnC and in wild-type and F29W N domains (TnC residues 1-90). Reconstitution of intact E41A/F29W and E77A/F29W mutants into TnC-depleted muscle skinned fibers showed that Ca(2+)-induced tension is greatly reduced compared with the F29W control. Circular dichroism measurements of wild-type N domain as a function of pCa (= -log[Ca(2+)]) demonstrated that approximately 90% of the total change in molar ellipticity at 222 nm ([theta](222 nm)) could be assigned to site II Ca(2+) binding. With E41A, E77A, and cardiac TnC N domains this [theta](222 nm) change attributable to site II was reduced to < or =40% of that seen with wild type, consistent with their structures remaining closed in +Ca(2+). Furthermore, the Ca(2+)-induced changes in fluorescence, near UV CD, and UV difference spectra observed with intact F29W are largely abolished with E41A/F29W and E77A/F29W TnCs. Taken together, the data indicate that the major structural change in N domain, including the closed to open transition, is triggered by site II Ca(2+) binding, an interpretation relevant to the energetics of the skeletal muscle TnC and cardiac TnC systems.  相似文献   

15.
To examine whether the disulfide bridge between residues 65 and 81 can be replaced by a non-native disulfide bridge in the mutant h-lysozyme C77/95A and whether the formation of such a new disulfide bridge affects the folding of the protein, cysteine scanning mutagenesis has been performed within two discontinuous segments (residues 61-67 for the mutant C65/77/95A, and 74-84 for the mutant C77/81/95A). The position of the Cys residue at 65 or 81 was continuously shifted by site-directed mutagenesis. Of the mutants, only substitution of Cys for Trp64 allowed the secretion of mutant h-lysozyme(W64C) into the medium in a sufficient amount for analysis. After the purification, the mutant enzyme was obtained as two components (W64C-A and W64C-B). The only difference between A and B was that A had a peptide bond cleaved between Ala77 and His78. A non-native disulfide bridge between residues 64-81 was found in both components. Little difference was observed in CD spectra among wild-type and mutant enzymes. It is likely that the tertiary structure of the W64C mutant might be distorted at the location, because the directions of amino acid side chains at positions of 64 and 81 are shown to be opposite to each other in wild-type h-lysozyme by X-ray crystallographic analysis.  相似文献   

16.
The replacement of Phe120 with other hydrophobic residues causes a decrease in the activity and thermal stability in ribonuclease A (RNase A). To explain this, the crystal structures of wild-type RNase A and three mutants--F120A, F120G, and F120W--were analyzed up to a 1.4 A resolution. Although the overall backbone structures of all mutant samples were nearly the same as that of wild-type RNase A, except for the C-terminal region of F120G with a high B-factor, two local conformational changes were observed at His119 in the mutants. First, His119 of the wild-type and F120W RNase A adopted an A position, whereas those of F120A and F120G adopted a B position, but the static crystallographic position did not reflect either the efficiency of transphosphorylation or the hydrolysis reaction. Second, His119 imidazole rings of all mutant enzymes were deviated from that of wild-type RNase A, and those of F120W and F120G appeared to be "inside out" compared with that of wild-type RNase A. Only approximately 1 A change in the distance between N(epsilon2) of His12 and N(delta1) of His119 causes a drastic decrease in k(cat), indicating that the active site requires the strict positioning of the catalytic residues. A good correlation between the change in total accessible surface area of the pockets on the surface of the mutant enzymes and enthalpy change in their thermal denaturation also indicates that the effects caused by the replacements are not localized but extend to remote regions of the protein molecule.  相似文献   

17.
We have used site-directed mutagenesis in combination with a battery of biophysical techniques to probe the stability and folding behavior of a small globular protein, the histidine-containing phosphocarrier protein (HPr). Specifically, the four phenylalanine residues (2, 22, 29, and 48) of the wild-type protein were individually replaced by single tryptophans, thus introducing site-specific probes for monitoring the behavior of the protein. The folding of the tryptophan mutants was investigated by NMR, DSC, CD, intrinsic fluorescence, fluorescence anisotropy, and fluorescence quenching. The heat-induced denaturation of all four mutants, and the GdnHCl-induced unfolding curves of F2W, F29W, and F48W, can be fitted adequately to a two-state model, in agreement with the observations for the wild-type protein. The GdnHCl unfolding transitions of F22W, however, showed the accumulation of an intermediate state at low concentrations of denaturant. Kinetic refolding studies of F2W, F29W, and F48W showed a major single phase, independent of the probe used (CD, fluorescence, and fluorescence anisotropy) and similar to that of the wild-type protein. In contrast, F22W showed two phases in the fluorescence experiments corresponding to the two phases previously observed in ANS binding studies of the wild-type protein [Van Nuland et al. (1998) Biochemistry 37, 622-637]. Residue 22 was found from NMR studies to be part of the binding interface on HPr for ANS. These observations indicate that the second slow phase reflects a local, rather than a global, rearrangement from a well-structured highly nativelike intermediate state to the fully folded native state that has less hydrophobic surface exposed to the solvent. The detection of the second slow phase by the use of selective labeling of different regions of the protein with fluorophores illustrates the need for an integrated approach in order to understand the intricate details of the folding reactions of even the simplest proteins.  相似文献   

18.
Abstract gamma-Aminobutyric acid type A (GABA(A)) receptors are molecular targets for alcohols. Previous work suggests that S270 and A291 residues in the transmembrane (TM) 2 and 3 domains of the GABA(A) receptor alpha subunit are components of an alcohol-binding pocket, and S270I and A291W mutants abolished ethanol potentiation. Our results showed that A295C and F296C residues in the TM3 of the GABA(A) receptor alpha1 subunit are accessible to hexylmethanethiosulfonate (HMTS) in the alcohol-bound state, but not in the resting state. Thus, the A295C and F296C sites become water-accessible as a result of alcohol-induced conformational changes. If S270 or A291 residues are sites of alcohol binding, then S270I or A291W mutations should prevent alcohol-induced conformational movements within the TM3 domain. To investigate this question, the accessibility of HMTS reagent to double mutants (A291W/A295C, A291W/F296C, S270I/A295C or S270I/F296C) in the presence of ethanol or hexanol was tested. The A291W or S270I mutations markedly reduced the accessibility of HMTS to all the double mutants in the ethanol-bound state, and to S270I/F296C, A291W/A295C and A291W/F296C double mutants in the hexanol-bound state, suggesting that the A291 or S270 residues are critical sites for alcohol binding and alcohol-induced conformational changes.  相似文献   

19.
The Escherichia coli L-leucine receptor is an aqueous protein and the first component in the distinct transport pathway for hydrophobic amino acids. L-leucine binding induces a conformational change, which enables the receptor to dock to the membrane components. To investigate the ligand-induced conformational change and binding properties of this protein, we used (19)F NMR to probe the four tryptophan residues located in the two lobes of the protein. The four tryptophan residues were labeled with 5-fluorotryptophan and assigned by site-directed mutagenesis. The (19)F NMR spectra of the partially ligand free proteins show broadened peaks which sharpen when L-leucine is bound, showing that the labeled wild-type protein and mutants are functional. The titration of L-phenylalanine into the 5-fluorotryptophan labeled wild-type protein shows the presence of closed and open conformers. Urea-induced denaturation studies support the NMR results that the wild-type protein binds L-phenylalanine in a different manner to L-leucine. Our studies showed that the tryptophan to phenylalanine mutations on structural units linked to the binding pocket produce subtle changes in the environment of Trp18 located directly in the binding cleft.  相似文献   

20.
Solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (SSNMR) spectroscopy is used for the first time to examine the relative substrate-binding affinities of mutant forms of the Escherichia coli sugar transporter GalP in membrane preparations. The SSNMR method of 13C cross-polarization magic-angle spinning (CP-MAS) is applied to five site-specific mutants (W56F, W239F, R316W, T336Y and W434F), which have a range of different sugar-transport activities compared to the wild-type protein. It is shown that binding of the substrate D-glucose can be detected independently of sugar transport activity using SSNMR, and that the NMR peak intensities for uniformly 13C-labelled glucose are consistent with wild-type GalP and the mutants having different affinities for the substrate. The W239F and W434F mutants showed binding affinities similar to that of the wild-type protein, whereas the affinity of glucose-binding to the W56F mutant was reduced. The R316W mutant showed no detectable binding; this position corresponds to the second basic residue in the highly conserved (R/K)XGR(R/K) motif in the major facilitator superfamily of transport proteins and to a mutation in human GLUT1 found in individuals with GLUT1-deficiency syndrome. The T336Y mutant also showed no detectable binding; this mutation is likely to have perturbed helix structure or packing to an extent that conformational changes in the protein are hindered. The effects of the mutations on substrate-binding are discussed with reference to the putative positions of the residues in a 3D homology model of GalP based on the X-ray crystal structure of the E. coli glycerol-3-phosphate transporter GlpT.  相似文献   

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