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1.
Chloride binding to alkaline phosphatase. 113Cd and 35Cl NMR   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Chloride binding to alkaline phosphatase from Escherichia coli has been monitored by 35Cl NMR for the native zinc enzyme and by 113Cd NMR for two Cd(II)-substituted species, phosphorylated Cd(II)6 alkaline phosphatase and unphosphorylated Cd(II)2 alkaline phosphatase. Of the three metal binding sites per enzyme monomer, A, B, and C, only the NMR signal of 113Cd(II) at the A sites shows sensitivity to the presence of Cl-, suggesting that Cl- coordination occurs at the A site metal ion. From the differences in the chemical shift changes produced in the A site 113Cd resonance for the covalent (E-P) form of the enzyme versus the noncovalent (E . P) form of the enzyme, it is concluded that the A site metal ion can assume a five-coordinate form. The E-P form of the enzyme has three histidyl nitrogens as ligands from the protein to the A site metal ion plus either two water molecules or two Cl- ions as additional monodentate ligands. In the E . P form, there is a phosphate oxygen as a monodentate ligand and either a water molecule or a Cl- ion as the additional monodentate ligand. The shifts of the 113Cd NMR signals of the unphosphorylated Cd(II)2 enzyme induced by Cl- are very similar to those induced in the E-P derivative of the same enzyme, supporting the conclusion that the phosphoseryl residue is not directly coordinated to any of the metal ions. Specific broadening of the 35Cl resonance from bulk Cl- is induced by Zn(II)4 alkaline phosphatase, while Zn(II)2 alkaline phosphatase is even more effective, suggesting an influence by occupancy of the B site on the interaction of monodentate ligands at the A site. A reduction in this quadrupolar broadening is observed upon phosphate binding at pH values where E . P is formed, but not at pH values where E-P is the major species, confirming a specific interaction of Cl- at the A site, the site to which phosphate is bound in E . P, but not in E-P. For the zinc enzyme, a significant decrease in phosphate binding affinity can be shown to occur at pH 8 where one monomer has a higher affinity than the other.  相似文献   

2.
113Cd nuclear magnetic resonance of Cd(II) alkaline phosphatases   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
113Cd NMR spectra of 113Cd(II)-substituted Escherichia coli alkaline phosphatase have been recorded over a range of pH values, levels of metal site occupancy, and states of phosphorylation. Under all conditions resonances attributable to cadmium specifically bound at one or more of the three pairs of metal-binding sites (A, B, and C sites) are detected. By following changes in both the 113Cd and 31P NMR spectra of 113Cd(II)2 alkaline phosphatase during and after phosphorylation, it has been possible to assign the cadmium resonance that occurs between 140 and 170 ppm to Cd(II) bound to the A or catalytic site of the enzyme and the resonance occurring between 51 and 76 ppm to Cd(II) bound to B site, which from x-ray data is located 3.9 A from the A site. The kinetics of phosphorylation show that cadmium migration from the A site of one subunit to the B site of the second subunit follows and is a consequence of phosphate binding, thus precluding the migration as a sufficient explanation for half-of-the-sites reactivity. Rather, there is evidence for subunit-subunit interaction rendering the phosphate binding sites inequivalent. Although one metal ion, at A site, is sufficient for phosphate binding and phosphorylation, the presence of a second metal ion at B site greatly enhances the rate of phosphorylation. In the absence of phosphate, occupation of the lower affinity B and C sites produces exchange broadening of the cadmium resonances. Phosphorylation abolishes this exchange modulation. Magnesium at high concentration broadens the resonances to the point of undetectability. The chemical shift of 113Cd(II) in both A and B sites (but not C site) is different depending on the state of the bound phosphate (whether covalently or noncovalently bound) and gives separate resonances for each form. Care must be taken in attributing the initial distribution of cadmium or phosphate in the reconstituted enzyme to that of the equilibrium species in samples reconstituted from apoenzyme. Both 113Cd NMR and 31P NMR show that some conformational changes consequent to metal ion or phosphate binding require several days before the final equilibrium species is formed.  相似文献   

3.
Methods have been developed for the addition of different metal ion species to the three distinct pairs of metal sites (A, B, and C) found in the dimer of apoalkaline phosphatase. This allows the preparation of hybrid alkaline phosphatases in which A and B sites of each monomer contain two different species of metal ion or the A and B sites of one monomer contain the same species of metal ion, while the adjacent monomer contains a second species. The following hybrids have been characterized in detail: (Zn(II)ACd(II)B)2 alkaline phosphatase, (Zn(II)AMg(II)B)2 alkaline phosphatase, (Cd(II)AZn(II)B)2 alkaline phosphatase, and (Zn(II)AZn(II]B)(Cd(II)ACd(II)B) alkaline phosphatase. 31P and, where appropriate, 113Cd NMR have been used to monitor the behavior of the covalent (E-P) and noncovalent (E X P) phosphointermediates and of the A and B metal ions. From the pH dependencies of the E-P in equilibrium E X P in equilibrium E + Pi equilibria, it is clear that A site metal is the dominant influence in dephosphorylation of E-P and may have a coordinated water molecule, which ionizes to ZnOH- at a low pH providing the nucleophile for dephosphorylation. A site metal also serves to coordinate phosphate in the E X P complex. B site metal has a much smaller effect on dephosphorylation rates, although it does dramatically alter the Pi dissociation rate, which is the rate-limiting step for the native enzyme at alkaline pH, and is probably important in neutralizing the charge on the phosphoseryl residue, thus potentiating the nucleophilic attack of the OH- bound at A site. Phosphate dissociation is slowed markedly by replacement of B site zinc by cadmium. There is clear evidence for long range effects of subunit-subunit interactions, since metal ion and phosphate binding at one active center alters the environments of A and B site metal ions and phosphoserine at the other active site.  相似文献   

4.
Alkaline phosphatase. 31P NMR probes of the mechanism   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
31P NMR signals from substrates and products of alkaline phosphatase have been adapted to measure the rates and product ratios for the hydrolysis and phosphotransferase reactions from pH 6 to 10. Below pH 8, glycerol is a poorer acceptor than H2O (glycerol phosphates:Pi = 0.5). Tris is a more effective acceptor below pH 8, showing a maximum acceptor efficiency at pH 8 (Tris phosphate:Pi = 2). Phosphotransferase efficiencies are in the order expected for the pKaS of the alcohol groups, Tris less than glycerol Cl, C3 less than glycerol C2. Tris and glycerol induce chemical shifts in 113Cd(II) present at the A site but not the B or C sites of the metal triad present at each active center of Cd(II)6 alkaline phosphatase, suggesting that the alcoxides of the acceptors coordinate the A site metal and become the nucleophiles attacking the phosphoseryl residue (E-P) in the second step of the mechanism. The interaction is through the oxygen of Tris. The transferase activity of the amino alcohol shows a bell-shaped pH dependency. Aliphatic alcohol acceptors show small increases in acceptor activity between pH 6 and 8, with 5-fold increases from pH 8 to 10 (at pH 10, glycerol phosphates:Pi = 2.5). 31P NMR inversion transfer has been used to measure the koff for Pi dissociation from the noncovalent enzyme complex (E . P). For the Zn(II)4 alkaline phosphatase koff is essentially pH independent at approximately 35 s-1. For Cd(II) or Mg(II) at the B site in place of Zn(II), koff less than or equal to 1 s-1 X Cl-ion, which appears to coordinate the A site metal ion, enhances koff, suggesting that both Cl- and HPO2-4 can coordinate the A site metal ion in a 5-coordinate intermediate. pH control of the alkaline phosphatase mechanism appears to reside in the stability of E-P and not the dissociation of E . P, compatible with the hypothesis that the activity-linked pKa is that of a H2O molecule coordinated to the A site metal, which in the hydroxide form becomes the nucleophile attacking the phosphoseryl group (E-P).  相似文献   

5.
The formation of two metal-thiolate clusters in rabbit liver metallothionein 2 (MT) has been examined by 113Cd NMR spectroscopy at pH 7.2 and 8.6. The chemical shifts of the 113Cd resonances developing in the course of apoMT titration with 113Cd(II) ions have been compared with those of fully metal occupied 113Cd7-MT. At pH 7.2 and at low metal occupancy (less than 4), a cooperative formation of the four-metal cluster (cluster A) occurs. Further addition of 113Cd(II) ions generates all the resonances of the three-metal cluster (cluster B) in succession, suggesting cooperative metal binding to this cluster also. In contrast, similar studies at pH 8.6, at low metal occupancy (less than 4), reveal a broad NMR signal centered at 688 ppm. This observation indicates that an entirely different protein structure exists. When exactly 4 equiv of 113Cd(II) are bound to apoMT, the 113Cd NMR spectrum changes to the characteristic spectrum of cluster A. Further addition of 113Cd(II) ions again leads to the cooperative formation of cluster B. These results stress the determining role of the cluster A domain on the overall protein fold. The observed pH dependence of the cluster formation in MT can be rationalized by the different degree of deprotonation of the cysteine residues (pKa approximately 8.9), i.e., by the difference in the Gibbs free energy required to bind Cd(II) ions to the thiolate ligands at both pH values.  相似文献   

6.
Differential scanning calorimetry of Cd(II) alkaline phosphatases   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Differential scanning calorimetry has been employed to monitor structural alterations induced in the dimeric enzyme alkaline phosphatase on binding of Cd(II) (to the metal-free apoenzyme) and phosphate (Pi) (to the Cd(II) enzyme). Cd(II) addition to the apoenzyme at pH 6.5 results in an increased transition temperature, suggesting a stabilizing effect of the bound metal ion. Two distinct structural forms of the protein are detected as discrete calorimetric transitions (Tm = 69-84 degrees C; 87-94 degrees C, respectively). Distribution of the enzyme between these forms is found to depend on the exogenous Cd(II) concentration and the protocol of Cd(II) addition. These results indicate that conversion between the conformational forms is a slow process which appears to require specific levels of metal ion site occupancy. These studies, in which the exogenous Cd(II) concentration was varied from 10(-5) M to 10(-3) M suggest a structural basis for previously observed hysteretic phenomena observed on Cd(II) binding to the enzyme. Even at a minimum stoichiometry of Cd(II) (2 eq/mol of dimer) a single equivalent of Pi is sufficient to accelerate assumption of a stabilized form of the protein (Tm = 90 degrees C). This is followed by a slow structural change paralleling the time course of formation of the functional 2 Cd(II) phosphoryl enzyme which displays two calorimetric transitions (Tm = 65 degrees C, 88 degrees C). The low temperature transition does not appear if Pi is initially present at millimolar concentrations and is abolished on addition of Pi at concentrations in excess of 0.1 mM. These observations suggest the presence of a second, distinct Pi binding site on the 2 Cd(II) phosphoryl enzyme. This is supported by the changes observed in the 31P NMR chemical shift of Pi added to comparable enzyme samples. These data, including assessment of the effect of the presence of Mg(II), are discussed in terms of the mechanism of metal ion association to the enzyme and rearrangement of bound metal ions induced by Pi binding.  相似文献   

7.
The 1H (500-MHz), 113Cd (44-MHz), and 31P (81-MHz) NMR spectra of the bovine gamma-carboxyglutamate- (Gla-) containing protein osteocalcin and its Ca(II) and Cd(II) complexes in solution have been obtained. The 1H NMR spectrum of the native protein shows narrow resonances and a highly resolved multiplet structure suggesting rotational freedom of the side chains. In comparison to the simulated 1H NMR spectrum of a random polypeptide chain of the same amino acid composition, there is moderate chemical shift dispersion, indicating some conformational restraints to be present. Ca(II) binding broadens all 1H resonances, so severely at four Ca(II) ions per molecule that few structural conclusions can be made. Cd(II) substituted for Ca(II) has the same effect, and 113Cd NMR shows the Cd(II) to be in intermediate chemical exchange on the chemical shift time scale. Estimates of the chemical exchange rates required for 1H and 113Cd line broadening suggest a range of Kd values for the metal ion complexes from 10(-6) M to as high as 10(-3) M depending on the number of metal ions bound. Alternatively, 1H line broadening could be explained by relatively slow conformational fluxes in the protein induced by labile metal ion binding to one or more sites. Cd(II) when used to form a cadmium-phosphate mineral analogous to hydroxylapatite results in a crystal lattice that removes osteocalcin from solution just as effectively as hydroxylapatite. 113Cd(II) exchange at the binding sites of osteocalcin in solution is slowed dramatically by the addition of HPO4(2-). 31P NMR shows the interaction of phosphate with the protein to require the metal ion.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
The rate constants which characterize the formation and breakdown of the noncovalent (E.P) and covalent (E-P) enzyme-phosphate intermediates on the alkaline phosphatase reaction pathway are known to be sensitive to the nature of the metal ion bound to the enzyme. 31P NMR saturation transfer has been demonstrated to provide a simple and sensitive method for measuring the metal ion dependence of these rates under equilibrium conditions. When the native Zn2+ was replaced by Cd2+, the 31P NMR spectrum at high pH revealed a new resonance at 12.6 ppm which has been assigned to the noncovalent enzyme.phosphate complex. Reconstituting the enzyme with enriched 113Cd2+ caused this unusually downfield-shifted resonance to appear as a doublet due to 113Cd-31P spin coupling (2J31P-O-113Cd = 30 Hz). This result provides the first unequivocal evidence for direct metal-phosphate interaction in alkaline phosphatase.  相似文献   

9.
The uptake of cobalt(II) ions by apoalkaline phosphatase at pH 8 (the pH optimum for activity) has been investigated by the combined use of electronic and 1H NMR spectroscopies. The presence of fast-relaxing high spin cobalt(II) ions in the active site cavity of the protein induces sizable isotropic shifts of the 1H NMR signals of metal-coordinated protein residues, allowing us to propose a metal uptake pattern by the various metal binding sites both in the presence and in the absence of magnesium ions. In the absence of magnesium the active site is not organized in specific metal binding sites. The first equivalent of cobalt(II) ions per dimer binds in an essentially unspecific and possibly fluxional fashion, giving rise to a six-coordinated chromophore. The second and third equivalents induce the formation of increasing amounts of metal ions pairs, cooperatively arranged into the A and B sites of the same subunit with a five- and six-coordinated geometry, respectively. The fourth and fifth equivalents induce the formation of fully blocked A-B pairs in both subunits. Magnesium shows the property of organizing the metal binding sites, probably through coordination to the C sites. Electronic and 1H NMR titration with Co2+ ions show that the initial amount of fluxional cobalt is smaller than in the absence of magnesium and that A-B pairs are more readily formed. Titration of fully metalated Co4Mg2alkaline phosphatase samples with phosphate confirms binding of only one phosphate per dimer.  相似文献   

10.
13C NMR spectra are presented for the calcium binding protein parvalbumin (pI 4.25) from carp muscle in several different metal bound forms: with Ca2+ in both the CD and EF calcium binding sites, with Cd2+ in both sites, with 113Cd2+ in both sites, and with 113Cd2+ in the CD site and Lu3+ in the EF site. The different metals differentially shift the 13C NMR resonances of the protein ligands involved in chelation of the metal ion. In addition, direct 13C-113Cd spin-spin coupling is observed which allows the assignment of protein carbonyl and carboxyl 13C NMR resonances to ligands directly interacting with the metal ions in the CD and EF binding sites. The displacement of 113Cd2+ from the EF site by Lu3+ further allows these resonances to be assigned to the CD or EF site. The occupancy of the two sites in the two cadmium species and in the mixed Cd2+/Lu3+ species is verified by 113Cd NMR. The resolution in these 113Cd NMR spectra is sufficient to demonstrate direct interaction between the two metal binding sites.  相似文献   

11.
113Cd nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy has been used to investigate the metal binding sites of cadmium-substituted copper, zinc-containing superoxide dismutase from baker's yeast. NMR signals were obtained for 113Cd(II) at the Cu site as well as for 113Cd(II) at the Zn site. The two subunits in the dimeric enzyme were found to have identical coordination properties towards 113Cd(II) at the Zn site when no copper is coordinated at the Cu site, and when Cu(I) or Cd(II) is coordinated, were found to be very small indicating that 113Cd(II) must be bound to the same number and type of ligands in both cases. Furthermore, the spectra show that the rate of exchange of protein-bound 113Cd(II) and free 113Cd2+ is slow on the NMR time scale also at the Cu site. The present study suggests an explanation for the discrepancy in the literature regarding 113Cd-NMR investigations of bovine superoxide dismutase.  相似文献   

12.
T Pan  L P Freedman  J E Coleman 《Biochemistry》1990,29(39):9218-9225
The DNA binding domain of the mammalian glucocorticoid hormone receptor (GR) contains nine highly conserved cysteine residues, a conservation shared by the superfamily of steroid and thyroid hormone receptors. A fragment [150 amino acids (AA) in length] consisting of GR residues 407-556, containing within it the entire DNA binding domain (residues 440-525), has been overexpressed and purified from Escherichia coli previously. This fragment has been shown to contain 2.3 +/- 0.2 mol of Zn(II) per mole of protein [Freedman, L. P., Luisi, B. F., Korszun, Z. R., Basavappa, R., Sigler, P. B., & Yamamoto, K. R. (1988) Nature 334, 543]. Zn(II) [or Cd(II) substitution] has been shown to be essential for specific DNA binding. 113Cd NMR of a cloned construct containing the minimal DNA binding domain of 86 AA residues [denoted GR(440-525)] with 113Cd(II) substituted for Zn(II) identifies 2 Cd(II) binding sites by the presence of 2 113Cd NMR signals each of which integrates to 1 113Cd nucleus. The chemical shifts of these two sites, 704 and 710 ppm, suggest that each 113Cd(II) is coordinated to four isolated -S- ligands. Shared -S- ligands connecting the two 113Cd(II) ions do not appear to be present, since their T1s differ by 10-fold, 0.2 and 2.0 s, respectively. Addition of a third 113Cd(II) or Zn(II) to 113Cd2GR(440-525) results in occupancy of a third site, which introduces exchange modulation of the two original 113Cd NMR signals causing them to disappear. Addition of EDTA to the protein restores the original two signals.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
The 113Cd NMR spectra of plastocyanin (Spinacea), stellacyanin (Rhus vernicifera), and two azurins (Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Alcaligenes faecalis) have been measured after introducing Cd(II) into the blue copper-binding sites. Relative to Cd(C1O4)2 the chemical shifts are 432, 380, 372, and 379 ppm, respectively, all of which are found to be reasonable values for binding sites containing a cysteine thiolate ligand. The 113Cd resonances of the cadmium derivatives of stellacyanin and the azurins are so near the same that the proteins must present very similar metal-binding sites. In contrast the plastocyanin derivative resonates about 50 ppm further downfield which may signal a change in coordination number. The spin lattice relaxation times of the 113Cd resonances are of the order of 0.1 s, and a major portion of the relaxation apparently occurs through the chemical shift anisotropy mechanism. At 13 degrees C the 113Cd resonance of Psuedomonas azurin shifts slightly downfield with increasing pH. This is explained by a small change in the environment about cadmium which occurs as a result of the conformational change that attends the titration of His-35.  相似文献   

14.
Rabbit 113Cd7-metallothionein-2a (MT) contains two metal-thiolate clusters of three (cluster B) and four (cluster A) metal ions. The 113Cd-n.m.r. spectrum of 113Cd6-MT, isolated from 113Cd7-MT upon treatment with EDTA, is similar to that of 113Cd7-MT, but the cluster B resonances are lower in intensity, suggesting its co-operative metal depletion. (Zn1,113Cd6)-MT, formed upon addition of the Zn(II) ions to 113Cd6-MT, shows 113Cd-n.m.r. features characteristic of cluster B populations containing both Cd(II) and Zn(II) ions. The overall intensity gain of the mixed cluster B resonances per Cd as to those in 113Cd6- and 113Cd7-MT suggests a stabilization effect of the bound Zn(II) ions upon the previously established intramolecular 113Cd exchange within this cluster.  相似文献   

15.
Gene 32 protein (g32P), the single-stranded DNA binding protein from bacteriophage T4, contains 1 mol of Zn(II)/mol of protein. This intrinsic zinc is retained within the DNA-binding core fragment, g32P-(A+B) (residues 22-253), obtained by limited proteolysis of the intact protein. Ultraviolet circular dichroism provides evidence that Zn(II) binding causes significant changes in the conformation of the peptide chain coupled with alterations in the microenvironments of tryptophan and tyrosine side chains. NMR spectroscopy of the 113Cd(II) derivative of g32P-(A+B) at both 44.4 and 110.9 MHz shows a single 113Cd resonance, delta 637, a chemical shift consistent with coordination to three of the four sulfhydryl groups in the protein. In vitro mutagenesis of Cys166 to Ser166 creates a mutant g32P that still contains 1 Zn(II)/molecule. This mutant protein when substituted with 113Cd(II) shows a 113Cd signal with a delta and a line width the same as those observed for the wild-type protein. Thus, the S-ligands to the metal ion appear to be contributed by Cys77, Cys87, and Cys90. Relaxation data suggest that chemical shift anisotropy is the dominant, but not exclusive, mechanism of relaxation of the 113Cd nucleus in g32P, since a dipolar modulation from ligand protons is observed at 44.4 MHz but not at 110.9 MHz. Complexation of core 113Cd g32P with d(pA)6 or Co(II) g32P with poly(dT) shows only minor perturbation of the NMR signal or d-d electronic transitions, respectively, suggesting that the metal ion in g32P does not add a ligand from the bound DNA.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
113Cd and 31P NMR have been used to investigate the interactions of inhibitors with the metal ion of bovine carboxypeptidase A, using 113Cd as a replacement for the native zinc atom. In the absence of inhibitor and over the pH range 6-9, no 113Cd resonance is visible at room temperature. Upon lowering the temperature to 270 K, however, a broad resonance can be seen at 120 ppm. These results are discussed in terms of possible sources for this resonance modulation. Binding of low molecular weight inhibitors containing potential metal-coordinating moieties results in the appearance of a sharp 113Cd resonance. These inhibitors all bind to the metal ion, a fact which is reflected in the chemical shift of the cadmium resonance and, for L-phenylalanine phosphoramidate phenyl ester, by two-bond 113Cd-31P spin-spin coupling of 30 Hz in the 31P resonance of the bound inhibitor. For inhibitors that coordinate to the metal ion via oxygen, the 113Cd chemical shift is in the range 127-137 ppm, whereas for sulfur coordination there is a downfield shift of approximately 210 ppm. The complexes of 113Cd-substituted carboxypeptidase A with the D and L isomers of thiolactic acid are distinguished by a difference of 11 ppm in the chemical shift of their cadmium resonances. The enzyme complex formed with the macromolecular inhibitor from potatoes, which fills the S1 and S2 subsites, shows one or possibly two closely spaced broad 113Cd resonances. Both the chemical shift and the line width of the 113Cd resonances of the [113Cd]carboxypeptidase-inhibitor complexes give valuable structural and dynamic information about the enzyme active site.  相似文献   

17.
P Palumaa  E A Mackay  M Vasák 《Biochemistry》1992,31(7):2181-2186
The effect of free Cd(II) ions on monomeric Cd7-metallothionein-2 (MT) from rabbit liver has been studied. Slow, concentration-dependent dimerization of this protein was observed by gel filtration chromatographic studies. The dimeric MT form, isolated by gel filtration, contains approximately two additional and more weakly bound Cd(II) ions per monomer. The incubation of MT dimers with complexing agents EDTA and 2-mercaptoethanol leads to the dissociation of dimers to monomers. The results of circular dichroism (CD) and electronic absorption studies indicate that the slow dimerization process is preceded by an initial rapid Cd-induced rearrangement of the monomeric Cd7-MT structure. The 113Cd NMR spectrum of the MT dimer revealed only four 113Cd resonances at chemical shift positions similar to those observed for the Cd4 cluster of the well-characterized monomeric 113Cd7-MT. This result suggests that on dimer formation major structural changes occur in the original three-metal cluster domain of Cd7-MT.  相似文献   

18.
The lentil (LcH) and pea (PSA) lectins, which are members of the class of D-glucose/D-mannose binding lectins, are Ca2+ X Mn2+ metalloproteins that require the metal ions for their saccharide binding and biological activities. We have prepared a variety of Cd2+ derivatives of PSA and LcH, with Cd2+ in either the transition metal (S1) or calcium (S2) sites, or in both. Thus, Cd2+ X Zn2+, Cd2+ X Mn2+, and Ca2+ X Cd2+ derivatives were prepared, in addition to the Cd2+ X Cd2+ derivatives which we have recently reported. This is the first report of stable mixed metal Cd2+ complexes of lectins. The physical and saccharide binding properties of the Cd2+ derivatives of both lectins were characterized by a variety of physiochemical techniques and found to be the same as those of the corresponding native proteins. 113Cd NMR spectra of mono- and disubstituted 113Cd2+ complexes of LcH and PSA were recorded and compared with 113Cd NMR data for concanavalin A (ConA) (Palmer, A.R., Bailey, D.B., Behnke, W.D., Cardin, A.D., Yang, P.P., and Ellis, P.D. (1980) Biochemistry 19, 5063-5070). The data for the PSA and LcH derivatives were found to be very similar, indicating close homology of their metal ion binding sites. 113Cd resonances at 44.6 ppm and -129.4 ppm for 113Cd2+ X 113Cd2+ X LcH, and at 46.6 and -130.4 for the corresponding PSA derivative, are chemical shifts very similar to those observed for 113Cd2+ X 113Cd2+ X ConA. Assignment of the resonances to the transition metal (S1) and calcium (S2) sites were unambiguous since the Ca2+ X 113Cd2+ and 113Cd2+ X Zn2+ derivatives of both lectins showed single resonances characteristic of the S1 and S2 sites, respectively. The results indicate that, unlike ConA, 113Cd2+ binds tightly to PSA and LcH. Binding of monosaccharide to both lectins induce small (2 ppm) upfield shifts in their S2 113Cd resonances, in contrast to the larger shift (8 ppm) observed in ConA. The 113Cd2+ X Mn2+ complexes of PSA and LcH fail to show a 113Cd resonance characteristic of these derivatives, which provides evidence for the close proximity of the metal ions in the two proteins. The present findings indicate that the coordinating ligand atoms to the metal ions at the S1 and S2 sites in LcH, PSA, and ConA are the same.  相似文献   

19.
The structure of alkaline phosphatase from Escherichia coli has been determined to 2.8 A resolution. The multiple isomorphous replacement electron density map of the dimer at 3.4 A was substantially improved by molecular symmetry averaging and solvent flattening. From these maps, polypeptide chains of the dimer were built using the published amino acid sequence. Stereochemically restrained least-squares refinement of this model against native data, starting with 3.4 A data and extending in steps to 2.8 A resolution, proceeded to a final overall crystallographic R factor of 0.256. Alkaline phosphatase-phosphomonoester hydrolase (EC 3.1.3.1) is a metalloenzyme that forms an isologous dimer with two reactive centers 32 A apart. The topology of the polypeptide fold of the subunit is of the alpha/beta class of proteins. Despite the similarities in the overall alpha/beta fold with other proteins, alkaline phosphatase does not have a characteristic binding cleft formed at the carboxyl end of the parallel sheet, but rather an active pocket that contains a cluster of three functional metal sites located off the plane of the central ten-stranded sheet. This active pocket is located near the carboxyl ends of four strands and the amino end of the antiparallel strand, between the plane of the sheet and two helices on the same side. Alkaline phosphatase is a non-specific phosphomonoesterase that hydrolyzes small phosphomonoesters as well as the phosphate termini of DNA. The accessibility calculations based on the refined co-ordinates of the enzyme show that the active pocket barely accommodates inorganic phosphate. Thus, the alcoholic or phenolic portion of the substrate would have to be exposed on the surface of the enzyme. Two metal sites, M1 and M2, 3.9 A apart, are occupied by zinc. The third site, M3, 5 A from site M2 and 7 A from site M1, is occupied by magnesium or, in the absence of magnesium, by zinc. As with other zinc-containing enzymes, histidine residues are ligands to zinc site M1 (three) and to zinc site M2 (one). Ligand assignment and metal preference indicate that the crystallographically found metal sites M1, M2 and M3 correspond to the spectroscopically deduced metal sites A, B and C, respectively. Arsenate, a product analog and enzyme inhibitor, binds between Ser102 and zinc sites M1 and M2. The position of the guanidinium group of Arg 166 is within hydrogen-bonding distance from the arsenate site.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
The liquid-state 113Cd NMR data of carboxypeptidase A in the presence and absence of inhibitors obtained by Gettins (Gettins, P. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 15513-15518) are analyzed in terms of whether the inhibitors displace water from Cd2+ upon binding to the protein. This question is addressed by applying the single crystal data and the methods introduced by Honkonen and Ellis (Honkonen, R. S., and Ellis, P. D. (1984) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 106, 5488-5497). Calculations based upon these data demonstrate that displacement of water by a carboxyl group should lead to significant shielding of a 113Cd resonance by approximately 100 ppm. Since the observed 113Cd chemical shifts for carboxypeptidase A are modest and deshielding (12-17 ppm), it is argued that the chemical shifts imply that water is not displaced from the Cd2+ center upon binding of inhibitors to carboxypeptidase A. Rather, the Cd2+ ion increases its coordination number from five to six upon binding of the inhibitor.  相似文献   

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