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1.
Binding of Cu(2+) by 1-carboxymethylhistidine-119-ribonuclease was investigated by using diligand metal ion buffers. A single Cu(2+)-binding site was found over the Cu(2+) concentration range studied. The binding constants for this site were 8.33x10(5) (+/-2%)m(-1) and 1.57x10(4) (+/-6%)m(-1) at pH7.0 and 6.1 respectively. An estimate of the pH-independent Cu(2+)-binding constant suggests that the most avid Cu(2+)-binding site has disappeared after carboxymethylation. This is consistent with an earlier report that binding of Cu(2+) at the most avid site is associated with the loss of enzymic activity.  相似文献   

2.
A debilitating complication of long-term hemodialysis is the deposition of beta-2-microglobulin (beta2m) as amyloid plaques in the joint space. We have recently shown that Cu(2+) can be a contributing, if not causal, factor at concentrations encountered during dialysis therapy. The basis for this effect is destabilization and incorporation of beta2m into amyloid fibers upon binding of Cu(2+). In this work, we demonstrate that while beta2m binds Cu(2+) specifically in the native state, it is binding of Cu(2+) by non-native states of beta2m which is responsible for destabilization. Mutagenesis of potential coordinating groups for Cu(2+) shows that native state binding of Cu(2+) is mediated by residues and structures that are different than those which bind in non-native states. An increased affinity for copper by non-native states compared to that of the native state gives rise to overall destabilization. Using mass spectrometry, NMR, and fluorescence techniques, we show that native state binding is localized to H31 and W60 and is highly specific for Cu(2+) over Zn(2+) and Ni(2+). Binding of Cu(2+) in non-native states of beta2m is mediated by residues H13, H51, and H84, but not H31. Although denatured beta2m has characteristics of a globally unfolded state, it nevertheless demonstrates the following strong specificity of binding: Cu(2+) > Zn(2+) > Ni(2+). This requires the existence of a well-defined structure in the unfolded state of this protein. As Cu(2+) effects are reported in many other amyloidoses, e.g., PrP, alpha-synuclein, and Abeta, our results may be extended to the emerging field of divalent ion-associated amyloidosis.  相似文献   

3.
The effect of Zn(2+) or Cu(2+) ions on Mn-depleted photosystem II (PS II) has been investigated using EPR spectroscopy. In Zn(2+)-treated and Cu(2+)-treated PS II, chemical reduction with sodium dithionite gives rise to a signal attributed to the plastosemiquinone, Q(A)(*)(-), the usual interaction with the non-heme iron being lost. The signal was identified by Q-band EPR spectroscopy which partially resolves the typical g-anisotropy of the semiquinone anion radical. Illumination at 200 K of the unreduced samples gives rise to a single organic free radical in Cu(2+)-treated PS II, and this is assigned to a monomeric chlorophyll cation radical, Chl a(*)(+), based on its (1)H-ENDOR spectrum. The Zn(2+)-treated PS II under the same conditions gives rise to two radical signals present in equal amounts and attributed to the Chl a(*)(+) and the Q(A)(*)(-) formed by light-induced charge separation. When the Cu(2+)-treated PS II is reduced by sodium ascorbate, at >/=77 K electron donation eliminates the donor-side radical leaving the Q(A)(*)(-) EPR signal. The data are explained as follows: (1) Cu(2+) and Zn(2+) have similar effects on PS II (although higher concentrations of Zn(2+) are required) causing the displacement of the non-heme Fe(2+). (2) In both cases chlorophyll is the electron donor at 200 K. It is proposed that the lack of a light-induced Q(A)(*)(-) signal in the unreduced Cu(2+)-treated sample is due to Cu(2+) acting as an electron acceptor from Q(A)(*)(-) at low temperature, forming the Cu(+) state and leaving the electron donor radical Chl a(*)(+) detectable by EPR. (3) The Cu(2+) in PS II is chemically reducible by ascorbate prior to illumination, and the metal can therefore no longer act as an electron acceptor; thus Q(A)(*)(-) is generated by illumination in such samples. (4) With dithionite, both the Cu(2+) and the quinone are reduced resulting in the presence of Q(A)(*)(-) in the dark. The suggested high redox potential of Cu(2+) when in the Fe(2+) site in PS II is in contrast to the situation in the bacterial reaction center where it has been shown in earlier work that the Cu(2+) is unreduced by dithionite. It cannot be ruled out however that Q(A)-Cu(2+) is formed and a magnetic interaction is responsible for the lack of the Q(A)(-) signal when no exogenous reductant is present. With this alternative possibility, the effects of reductants would be explained as the loss of Cu(2+) (due to formation of Cu(+)) leading to loss of the Cu(2+) from the Fe(2+) site due to the binding equilibrium. The quite different binding and redox behavior of the metal in the iron site in PS II compared to that of the bacterial reaction center is presumably a further reflection of the differences in the coordination of the iron in the two systems.  相似文献   

4.
We recently reported that, depending on its concentration, urate is either a pro- or an antioxidant in Cu(2+)-induced low-density lipoprotein (LDL) oxidation. We also previously demonstrated an antioxidant synergy between urate and some flavonoids in the Cu(2+)-induced oxidation of diluted serum. As a result, the effect of the flavonoid quercetin on the Cu(2+)-induced oxidation of isolated LDL has been studied either in the presence or absence of urate. We demonstrate that, like urate, quercetin alone, at low concentration, exhibits a pro-oxidant activity. The pro-oxidant behavior depends on the Cu(2+) concentration but it is not observed at high Cu(2+) concentration. When compared with urate, the switch between the pro- and the antioxidant activities occurs at much lower quercetin concentrations. As for urate, the pro-oxidant character of quercetin is related to its ability to reduce Cu(2+) with the formation of semioxidized quercetin and Cu(+) with an expected yield larger than that obtained with urate owing to a more favorable redox potential. It is also shown that the pro-oxidant activity of urate can be inhibited by quercetin. An electron transfer between quercetin and semioxidized urate leading to the repair of urate could account for this observation as suggested by recently published pulse radiolysis data. It is anticipated that the interactions between quercetin-Cu(2+)-LDL and urate, which are tightly controlled by their respective concentration, determine the balance between the pro- and antioxidant behaviors. Moreover, as already observed with other antioxidants, it is demonstrated that quercetin alone behaves as a pro-oxidant towards preoxidized LDL.  相似文献   

5.
Metal ion binding to human hemopexin   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Binding of divalent metal ions to human hemopexin (Hx) purified by a new protocol has been characterized by metal ion affinity chromatography and potentiometric titration in the presence and absence of bound protoheme IX. ApoHx was retained by variously charged metal affinity chelate resins in the following order: Ni(2+) > Cu(2+) > Co(2+) > Zn(2+) > Mn(2+). The Hx-heme complex exhibited similar behavior except the order of retention of the complex on Zn(2+)- and Co(2+)-charged columns was reversed. One-dimensional (1)H NMR of apoHx in the presence of Ni(2+) implicates at least two His residues and possibly an Asp, Glu, or Met residue in Ni(2+) binding. Potentiometric titrations establish that apoHx possesses more than two metal ion binding sites and that the capacity and/or affinity for metal ion binding is diminished when heme binds. For most metal ions that have been studied, potentiometric data did not fit to binding isotherms that assume one or two independent binding sites. For Mn(2+), however, these data were consistent with a high-affinity site [K(A) = (15 +/- 3) x 10(6) M(-)(1)] and a low-affinity site (K(A) 相似文献   

6.
The ligand ODHIP (3,4-dihydroxyl-imidazo[4,5-f][1,10]phenanthroline) and its cobalt(III) complex [Co(bpy)(2)(ODHIP)](3+) were synthesized and characterized. Binding of this complex with calf thymus DNA has been investigated by spectroscopic methods and viscosity. The experimental results indicated that the complex bound to DNA by intercalation. In Tris buffer, the complex could emit relatively weak luminescence. After binding to DNA, the notable enhancement was observed. However, when the Cu(2+) was further added, the luminescence decreased gradually and disappeared after the equimolar concentrations of Cu(2+) was added, which exhibited the "off-on-off" properties of molecular light switch.  相似文献   

7.
The formation of advanced glycation endproducts (AGEs) from glucose in vitro requires both oxygen and a transition metal ion, usually copper. These elements combine to produce reactive oxygen species (ROS) which degrade glucose to AGE-forming compounds. We measured the ability of Cu(2+) to accelerate ROS formation, and the effect of added lens proteins on these reactions. Increasing levels of Cu(2+) accelerated the formation of superoxide anion with glucose and fructosyl-lysine, but the addition of 2.0 mg/ml calf lens proteins completely blocked superoxide formation up to 100 microM of added Cu(2+). Lens proteins, however, had no effect on superoxide generated by the hypoxanthine/xanthine oxidase system. The oxidation of ascorbic acid was increased 170-fold by the addition of 10 microM Cu(2+), but was also completely prevented by added lens proteins. Hydroxyl radical formation, as measured by the conversion of benzoate to salicylate, was increased to 30 nmoles/ml after 18 h by the addition of 100 microM Cu(2+) and 2.5 mM H2O2. This increase was also blocked by the addition of lens proteins. However, hydroxyl radical formation, as estimated by the crosslinking and fragmentation of lens proteins, was observed in the presence of 100 microM Cu(2+), likely at the sites of Cu(2+) binding. Since the ratio of lens proteins to Cu(2+) in human lens is at least 1000-fold higher than those used here, the data argue that Cu(2+) in the lens would be tightly bound to protein, preventing ROS-mediated AGE formation from glucose in vivo.  相似文献   

8.
Cod parvalbumin, a calcium-binding protein, possesses a specific Zn2+ (or Cu2+) binding site per molecule. This work employed fluorescence energy transfer techniques to measure the distance between the Zn2+ (Cu2+) site and the stronger Ca(2+)-binding site in parvalbumin. Specifically, the distance between Tb3+ bound at the Ca2+ site and Co2+ bound to the Zn2+ (Cu2+) binding site was 10.3 +/- 0.9 A. Lastly, the effects of Cu2+ on the physico-chemical properties of parvalbumin were studied by measuring the accessibility of protein thiol groups to 5,5'-dithio bis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) and by its affinity for the fluorescent probe 4,4'-bis[1-(phenylamino)-8-naphthalene sulfonic acid] dipotassium salt. The thiol group accessibility decreased and the affinity to the fluorescent probe increased upon complexation of Cu2+ to the protein. It appears that the binding of Cu2+ converts parvalbumin to an apo-like state.  相似文献   

9.
Escherichia coli glutamine synthetase (GS) is a dodecameric assembly of identical subunits arranged as two back-to-back hexagonal rings. In the presence of divalent metal ions, the dodecamers "stack" along their six-fold axis of symmetry to yield elongated tubes. This self-assembly process provides a useful model for probing metal-dependent protein-protein interactions. However, no direct spectroscopic or structural data have confirmed the identity of the ligands to the shared metal ions in "stacked" GS. Here, 9-GHz Cu(2+) EPR studies have been used to probe the ligand structure and stoichiometry of the metal binding sites. The wild type protein, with N-terminal sequence (His-4)-X(3)-(Met-8)-X(3)-(His-12), exhibits a classic Cu(2+)-nitrogen spectrum, with g = 2.06 G, g = 2.24 G, and A = 19.3 x 10(-3) cm(-1). No superhyperfine structure is observed. The H4C mutant affords a spectrum that is the combination of two spectra at all stages of saturation. One of the overlapping spectra is nearly identical to the spectrum of wild type, and is due to His ligation. The second spectrum observed yields g = 2.28 and A = 17.1 x 10(-3) cm(-1). The linewidth and tensor values of the second component have been assigned to Cu(2+)-S ligation. In contrast, the H12C mutant exhibits an EPR spectrum at low Cu(2+) occupancy that is very similar to the second set of spectral features observed for H4C, and which is assigned to Cu(2+)-S ligation. No Cu(2+)-His ligation is apparent until the Cu(2+)/N-terminal helices ratio is >1.0. At saturation, the g = 2.00-2.06 region of the spectrum is essentially a mirror image of the spectrum obtained with H4C, and is due to overlapping Cu(2+)-N and Cu(2+)-S EPR spectra. The M8L and M8C mutants were also studied, in order to probe the role of position 8 in the N-terminal helix. Spectral parameters of these mutants are nearly identical to each other and to the wild type spectrum at saturating Cu(2+), suggesting that Met-8 does not act as a direct metal ligand. Together, the results provide the first direct evidence for a binuclear metal ion site between each N-terminal helix pair at the GS-GS interface, with both His-4 and His-12 providing metal ligands.  相似文献   

10.
D Y Kim  W Y Song  Y Y Yang  Y Lee 《FEBS letters》2001,508(1):99-102
PDR13 in Saccharomyces cerevisiae contributes to drug resistance via sequential activation of PDR1 and PDR5. In this study, we found that a PDR13 deletion mutant was hypersensitive to Cu(2+) compared to the wild-type counterpart. The Cu(2+) tolerance mechanism mediated by Pdr13 does not seem to involve Pdr1 or Pdr5, since mutants harboring a deletion of either the PDR1 or PDR5 gene did not show elevated Cu(2+) sensitivity. Instead, we found that the PDR13 null mutant could not express CUP1 or CRS5 metallothionein at wild-type levels when subjected to high Cu(2+) stress. These results suggest that Pdr13 contributes to high Cu(2+) tolerance of S. cerevisiae, at least in part, via a mechanism involving metallothionein expression.  相似文献   

11.
A role for Cu(2+) ions in Alzheimer disease is often disputed, as it is believed that Cu(2+) ions only promote nontoxic amorphous aggregates of amyloid-β (Aβ). In contrast with currently held opinion, we show that the presence of substoichiometric levels of Cu(2+) ions in fact doubles the rate of production of amyloid fibers, accelerating both the nucleation and elongation of fiber formation. We suggest that binding of Cu(2+) ions at a physiological pH causes Aβ to approach its isoelectric point, thus inducing self-association and fiber formation. We further show that Cu(2+) ions bound to Aβ are consistently more toxic to neuronal cells than Aβ in the absence of Cu(2+) ions, whereas Cu(2+) ions in the absence of Aβ are not cytotoxic. The degree of Cu-Aβ cytotoxicity correlates with the levels of Cu(2+) ions that accelerate fiber formation. We note the effect appears to be specific for Cu(2+) ions as Zn(2+) ions inhibit the formation of fibers. An active role for Cu(2+) ions in accelerating fiber formation and promoting cell death suggests impaired copper homeostasis may be a risk factor in Alzheimer disease.  相似文献   

12.
Flash photolysis of the membrane-bound cytochrome oxidase/carbon monoxide compound in the presence of oxygen at low temperatures and in the frozen state leads to the formation of three types of intermediates functional in electron transfer in cytochrome oxidase and reduction of oxygen by cytochrome oxidase. The first category (A) does not involve electron transfer to oxygen between -125 degrees and -105 degrees, and includes oxy compounds which are spectroscopically similar for the completely reduced oxidase (Cu1+alpha3(2+)-O2) or for the ferricyanide-pretreated oxidase (Cu2+alpha3(3+)-O2). Oxygen is readily dissociated from compounds of type A. The second category (B) involves oxidation of the heme and the copper moiety of the reduced oxidase to form a peroxy compound (Cu2+alpha 3(3+)-O2=or Cu2+alpha3(2+)-O2H2) in the temperature range from -105 degrees to -60 degrees. Above -60 degrees, compounds of type B serve as effective electron acceptors from cytochromes a, c, and c1. The third category (C) is formed above -100 degrees from mixed valency states of the oxidase obtained by ferricyanide pretreatment, and may involve higher valency states of the heme iron (Cu2+alpha3(4+)-O2=). These compounds act as electron acceptors for the respiratory chain and as functional intermediates in oxygen reduction. The remarkable features of cytochrome oxidase are its highly dissociable "oxy" compound and its extremely effective electron donor reaction which converts this rapidly to tightly bound reduced oxygen and oxidized oxidase.  相似文献   

13.
X-ray structures of bovine heart cytochrome c oxidase with bound respiratory inhibitors (O(2) analogues) have been determined at 1.8-2.05? resolution to investigate the function of the O(2) reduction site which includes two metal sites (Fe(a3)(2+) and Cu(B)(1+)). The X-ray structures of the CO- and NO-bound derivatives indicate that although there are three possible electron donors that can provide electrons to the bound O(2), located in the O(2) reduction site, the formation of the peroxide intermediate is effectively prevented to provide an O(2)-bound form as the initial intermediate. The structural change induced upon binding of CN(-) suggests a non-sequential 3-electron reduction of the bound O(2)(-) for the complete reduction without release of any reactive oxygen species. The X-ray structure of the derivative with CO bound to Cu(B)(1+) after photolysis from Fe(a3)(2+) demonstrates weak side-on binding. This suggests that Cu(B) controls the O(2) supply to Fe(a3)(2+) without electron transfer to provide sufficient time for collection of protons from the negative side of the mitochondrial membrane. The proton-pumping pathway of bovine heart cytochrome c oxidase includes a hydrogen-bond network and a water channel located in tandem between the positive and negative side of the mitochondrial membrane. Binding of a strong ligand to Fe(a3) induces a conformational change which significantly narrows the water channel and effectively blocks the back-leakage of protons from the hydrogen bond network. The proton pumping mechanism proposed by these X-ray structural analyses has been functionally confirmed by mutagenesis analyses of bovine heart cytochrome c oxidase. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Allosteric cooperativity in respiratory proteins.  相似文献   

14.
N-Terminal deletions modify the Cu2+ binding site in amyloid-beta   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Karr JW  Akintoye H  Kaupp LJ  Szalai VA 《Biochemistry》2005,44(14):5478-5487
Copper is implicated in the in vitro formation and toxicity of Alzheimer's disease amyloid plaques containing the beta-amyloid (Abeta) peptide (Bush, A. I., et al. (2003) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 100, 11934). By low temperature electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy, the importance of the N-terminus in creating the Cu(2+) binding site in native Abeta has been examined. Peptides that contain the proposed binding site for Cu(2+)-three histidines (H6, H13, and H14) and a tyrosine (Y10)-but lack one to three N-terminal amino acids, do not bind Cu(2+) in the same coordination environment as the native peptide. EPR spectra of soluble Abeta with stoichiometric amounts of Cu(2+) show type 2 Cu(2+) EPR spectra for all peptides. The ligand donor atoms to Cu(2+) are 3N1O when Cu(2+) is bound to any of the Abetapeptides (Abeta16, Abeta28, Abeta40, and Abeta42) that contain the first 16 amino acids of full-length Abeta. When a Y10F mutant of Abeta is used, the coordination environment for Cu(2+) remains 3N1O and Cu(2+) EPR spectra of this mutant are identical to the wild-type spectra. Isotopic labeling experiments show that water is not the O-atom donor to Cu(2+) in Abeta fibrils or in the Y10F mutant. Further, we find that Cu(2+) cannot be removed from Cu(2+)-containing fibrils by washing with buffer, but that Cu(2+) binds to fibrils initially assembled without Cu(2+) in the same coordination environment as in fibrils assembled with Cu(2+). Together, these results indicate (1) that the O-atom donor ligand to Cu(2+) in Abeta is not tyrosine, (2) that the native Cu(2+) binding site in Abeta is sensitive to small changes at the N-terminus, and (3) that Cu(2+) binds to Abetafibrils in a manner that permits exchange of Cu(2+) into and out of the fibrillar architecture.  相似文献   

15.
16.
Histidine-rich glycoprotein (HRG) binds both hemes and metal ions simultaneously with evidence for interaction between the two. This study uses resonance Raman and optical absorption spectroscopies to examine the heme environment of the 1:1 iron-mesoporphyrin.HRG complex in its oxidized, reduced and CO-bound forms in the absence and presence of copper. Significant perturbation of Fe(3+)-mesoporphyrin.HRG is induced by Cu2+ binding to the protein. Specifically, high frequency heme resonance Raman bands indicative of low-spin, six-coordinate iron before Cu2+ binding exhibit monotonic intensity shifts to bands representing high-spin, five-coordinate iron. The latter coordination is in contrast to that found in hemoglobin and myoglobin, and explains the Cu(2+)-induced decrease and broadening of the Fe(3+)-mesoporphyrin.HRG Soret band concomitant with the increase in the high-spin marker band at 620 nm. After dithionite reduction, the Fe(2+)-mesoporphyrin.HRG complex displays high frequency resonance Raman bands characteristic of low-spin heme and no iron-histidine stretch, which together suggest six-coordinate iron. Furthermore, the local heme environment of the complex is not altered by the binding of Cu1+. CO-bound Fe(2+)-mesoporphyrin.HRG exhibits bands in the high and low frequency regions similar to those of other CO-bound heme proteins except that the iron-CO stretch at 505 cm-1 is unusually broad with delta nu approximately 30 cm-1. The dynamics of CO photolysis and rebinding to Fe(2+)-mesoporphyrin.HRG are also distinctive. The net quantum yield for photolysis at 10 ns is low relative to most heme proteins, which may be attributed to very rapid geminate recombination. A similar low net quantum yield and broad iron-CO stretch have so far only been observed in a dimeric cytochrome c' from Chromatium vinosum. Furthermore, the photolytic transient of Fe(2+)-mesoporphyrin.HRG lacks bands corresponding to high-spin, five-coordinate iron as is found in hemoglobin and myoglobin under similar experimental conditions, suggesting iron hexacoordination before CO recombination. These data are consistent with a closely packed distal heme pocket that hinders ligand diffusion into the surrounding solvent.  相似文献   

17.
Previously we showed that the redox active Cu(2+) was much more effective than Cd(2+) at inducing reactive oxygen species ("ROS") formation in hepatocytes and furthermore "ROS" scavengers prevented Cu(2+)-induced hepatocyte cytotoxicity (Pourahmad and O'Brien, 2000). In the following it is shown that hepatocyte cytotoxicity induced by Cu(2+), but not Cd(2+), was preceded by lysosomal membrane damage as demonstrated by acridine orange release. Cytotoxicity, "ROS" formation, and lipid peroxidation were also readily prevented by methylamine or chloroquine (lysosomotropic agents) or 3-methyladenine (an inhibitor of autophagy). Hepatocyte lysosomal proteolysis was also activated by Cu(2+), but not Cd(2+), as tyrosine was released from the hepatocytes and was prevented by leupeptin and pepstatin (lysosomal protease inhibitors). Cu(2+)-induced cytotoxicity was also prevented by leupeptin and pepstatin. A marked increase in Cu(2+)-induced hepatocyte toxicity also occurred if the lysosomal toxins gentamicin or aurothioglucose were added at the same time as the Cu(2+). Furthermore, destabilizing lysosomal membranes beforehand by preincubating the hepatocytes with gentamicin or aurothioglucose prevented Cu(2+)-induced hepatocyte cytotoxicity. It is proposed that Cu(2+)-induced cytotoxicity involves lysosomal damage that causes the release of cytotoxic digestive enzymes as a result of lysosomal membrane damage by "ROS" generated by lysosomal Cu(2+) redox cycling.  相似文献   

18.
Dipeptidyl peptidase III (DPP III) (EC 3.4.14.4), which has a HELLGH-E (residues 450-455, 508) motif as the zinc binding site, is classified as a zinc metallopeptidase. The zinc dissociation constants of the wild type, Leu(453)-deleted, and E508D mutant of DPP III at pH 7.4 were 4.5 (+/-0.7) x 10(-13), 5.8 (+/-0.7) x 10(-12), and 3.2 (+/-0.9) x 10(-10) M, respectively. The recoveries of the enzyme activities by the addition of various metal ions to apo-DPP III were also measured, and Co(2+), Ni(2+), and Cu(2+) ions completely recovered the enzyme activities as did Zn(2+). The dissociation constants of Co(2+), Ni(2+), and Cu(2+) ions for apo-DPP III at pH 7.4 were 8.2 (+/-0.9) x 10(-13), 2.7 (+/-0.3) x 10(-12), and 1.1 (+/-0.1) x 10(-14) M, respectively. The shape of the absorption spectrum of Co(2+)-DPP III was very similar to that of Co(2+)-carboxypeptidase A or Co(2+)-thermolysin, in which the Co(2+) is bound to two histidyl nitrogens, a water molecule, and a glutamate residue. The absorption spectrum of Cu(2+)-DPP III is also very similar to that of Cu(2+)-thermolysin. The EPR spectrum and the EPR parameters of Cu(2+)-DPP III were very similar to those of Cu(2+)-thermolysin but slightly different from those of Cu(2+)-carboxypeptidase A. The five lines of the superfine structure in the perpendicular region of the EPR spectrum in Cu(2+)-DPP III suggest that nitrogen atoms should coordinate to the cupric ion in Cu(2+)-DPP III. All of these data suggest that the donor set and the coordination geometry of the metal ions in DPP III, which has the HExxxH motif as the metal binding site, are very similar to those of the metal ions in thermolysin, which has the HExxH motif.  相似文献   

19.
In this work we examined the effect of low concentrations of Cu(2+) on the opening of the mitochondrial non-specific pore. The purpose was addressed to further contribute to the knowledge of the mechanisms that regulate the open/closed cycles of the permeability transition pore. Membrane leakage was established by measuring matrix Ca(2+) efflux and mitochondrial swelling. The experimental results indicate that Cu(2+) at very low concentrations promoted the release of accumulated Ca(2+), as well as mitochondrial swelling, provided 1,10-phenanthroline has been added. Carboxyatractyloside and Cu(2+) exhibited additive effects on these parameters. After Cu(2+) titration of membrane thiols, it might be assumed that the blockage of 5.9nmol of SH/mg protein suffices to open the non-specific pore. Taking into account the reinforcing effect of carboxyatractyloside, the increasing ADP concentrations, and that N-ethylmaleimide inhibited the Cu(2+)-induced Ca(2+) efflux, it is proposed that the target site for Cu(2+) is located in the ADP/ATP carrier.  相似文献   

20.
The abnormal form of the prion protein (PrP) is believed to be responsible for the transmissible spongiform encephalopathies. A peptide encompassing residues 106-126 of human PrP (PrP106-126) is neurotoxic in vitro due its adoption of an amyloidogenic fibril structure. The Alzheimer's disease amyloid beta peptide (Abeta) also undergoes fibrillogenesis to become neurotoxic. Abeta aggregation and toxicity is highly sensitive to copper, zinc, or iron ions. We show that PrP106-126 aggregation, as assessed by turbidometry, is abolished in Chelex-100-treated buffer. ICP-MS analysis showed that the Chelex-100 treatment had reduced Cu(2+) and Zn(2+) levels approximately 3-fold. Restoring Cu(2+) and Zn(2+) to their original levels restored aggregation. Circular dichroism showed that the Chelex-100 treatment reduced the aggregated beta-sheet content of the peptide. Electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy identified a 2N1S1O coordination to the Cu(2+) atom, suggesting histidine 111 and methionine 109 or 112 are involved. Nuclear magnetic resonance confirmed Cu(2+) and Zn(2+) binding to His-111 and weaker binding to Met-112. An N-terminally acetylated PrP106-126 peptide did not bind Cu(2+), implicating the free amino group in metal binding. Mutagenesis of either His-111, Met-109, or Met-112 abolished PrP106-126 neurotoxicity and its ability to form fibrils. Therefore, Cu(2+) and/or Zn(2+) binding is critical for PrP106-126 aggregation and neurotoxicity.  相似文献   

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