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1.
Pheromone-binding proteins (PBPs), located in the sensillum lymph of pheromone-responsive antennal hairs, are thought to transport the hydrophobic pheromones to the chemosensory membranes of olfactory neurons. It is currently unclear what role PBPs may play in the recognition and discrimination of species-specific pheromones. We have investigated the binding properties and specificity of PBPs from Mamestra brassicae (MbraPBP1), Antheraea polyphemus (ApolPBP1), Bombyx mori (BmorPBP), and a hexa-mutant of MbraPBP1 (Mbra1-M6), mutated at residues of the internal cavity to mimic that of BmorPBP, using the fluorescence probe 1-aminoanthracene (AMA). AMA binds to MbraPBP1 and ApolPBP1, however, no binding was observed with either BmorPBP or Mbra1-M6. The latter result indicates that relatively limited modifications to the PBP cavity actually interfere with AMA binding, suggesting that AMA binds in the internal cavity. Several pheromones are able to displace AMA from the MbraPBP1- and ApolPBP1-binding sites, without, however, any evidence of specificity for their physiologically relevant pheromones. Moreover, some fatty acids are also able to compete with AMA binding. These findings bring into doubt the currently held belief that all PBPs are specifically tuned to distinct pheromonal compounds.  相似文献   

2.
Tail-anchored (TA) proteins represent a unique class of membrane proteins that contain a single C-terminal transmembrane helix. The post-translational insertion of the yeast TA proteins into the ER membrane requires the Golgi ER trafficking (GET) complex which contains Get1, Get2 and Get3. Get3 is an ATPase that recognizes and binds the C-terminal transmembrane domain (TMD) of the TA proteins. We have determined the crystal structures of Get3 from two yeast species, S. cerevisiae and D. hansenii, respectively. These high resolution crystal structures show that Get3 contains a nucleotide-binding domain and a “finger” domain for binding the TA protein TMD. A large hydrophobic groove on the finger domain of S. cerevisiae Get3 structure might represent the binding site for TMD of TA proteins. A hydrophobic helix from a symmetry-related Get3 molecule sits in the TMD-binding groove and mimics the TA binding scenario. Interestingly, the crystal structures of the Get3 dimers from S. cerevisiae and D. hansenii exhibit distinct conformations. The S. cerevisiae Get3 dimer structure does not contain nucleotides and maintains an “open” conformation, while the D. hansenii Get3 dimer structure binds ADP and stays in a “closed” conformation. We propose that the conformational changes to switch the Get3 between the open and closed conformations may facilitate the membrane insertions for TA proteins.  相似文献   

3.
Fatty acid (FA) transfer proteins extract FA from membranes and sequester them to facilitate their movement through the cytosol. Detailed structural information is available for these soluble protein–FA complexes, but the structure of the protein conformation responsible for FA exchange at the membrane is unknown. Staphylococcus aureus FakB1 is a prototypical bacterial FA transfer protein that binds palmitate within a narrow, buried tunnel. Here, we define the conformational change from a “closed” FakB1 state to an “open” state that associates with the membrane and provides a path for entry and egress of the FA. Using NMR spectroscopy, we identified a conformationally flexible dynamic region in FakB1, and X-ray crystallography of FakB1 mutants captured the conformation of the open state. In addition, molecular dynamics simulations show that the new amphipathic α-helix formed in the open state inserts below the phosphate plane of the bilayer to create a diffusion channel for the hydrophobic FA tail to access the hydrocarbon core and place the carboxyl group at the phosphate layer. The membrane binding and catalytic properties of site-directed mutants were consistent with the proposed membrane docked structure predicted by our molecular dynamics simulations. Finally, the structure of the bilayer-associated conformation of FakB1 has local similarities with mammalian FA binding proteins and provides a conceptual framework for how these proteins interact with the membrane to create a diffusion channel from the FA location in the bilayer to the protein interior.  相似文献   

4.
Glutamate decarboxylase (GadB) from Escherichia coli is a hexameric, pyridoxal 5′-phosphate-dependent enzyme catalyzing CO2 release from the α-carboxyl group of l-glutamate to yield γ-aminobutyrate. GadB exhibits an acidic pH optimum and undergoes a spectroscopically detectable and strongly cooperative pH-dependent conformational change involving at least six protons. Crystallographic studies showed that at mildly alkaline pH GadB is inactive because all active sites are locked by the C termini and that the 340 nm absorbance is an aldamine formed by the pyridoxal 5′-phosphate-Lys276 Schiff base with the distal nitrogen of His465, the penultimate residue in the GadB sequence. Herein we show that His465 has a massive influence on the equilibrium between active and inactive forms, the former being favored when this residue is absent. His465 contributes with n ≈ 2.5 to the overall cooperativity of the system. The residual cooperativity (n ≈ 3) is associated with the conformational changes still occurring at the N-terminal ends regardless of the mutation. His465, dispensable for the cooperativity that affects enzyme activity, is essential to include the conformational change of the N termini into the cooperativity of the whole system. In the absence of His465, a 330-nm absorbing species appears, with fluorescence emission spectra more complex than model compounds and consisting of two maxima at 390 and 510 nm. Because His465 mutants are active at pH well above 5.7, they appear to be suitable for biotechnological applications.  相似文献   

5.
von Willebrand factor (VWF) is a multimeric plasma protein that mediates platelet adhesion to sites of vascular injury. The hemostatic function of VWF depends upon the formation of disulfide-linked multimers, which requires the VWF propeptide (D1D2 domains) and adjacent D′D3 domains. VWF multimer assembly occurs in the trans-Golgi at pH ∼6.2 but not at pH 7.4, which suggests that protonation of one or more His residues (pKa ∼6.0) mediates the pH dependence of multimerization. Alignment of 30 vertebrate VWF sequences identified 13 highly conserved His residues in the D1D2D′D3 domains, and His-to-Ala mutagenesis identified His395 and His460 in the D2 domain as critical for VWF multimerization. Replacement of His395 with Lys or Arg prevented multimer assembly, suggesting that reversible protonation of this His residue is essential. In contrast, replacement of His460 with Lys or Arg preserved normal multimer assembly, whereas Leu, Met, and Gln did not, indicating that the function of His460 depends primarily upon the presence of a positive charge. These results suggest that pH sensing by evolutionarily conserved His residues facilitates the assembly and packaging of VWF multimers upon arrival in the trans-Golgi.  相似文献   

6.
7.
The pathogen Bacillus anthracis uses the Sortase A (SrtA) enzyme to anchor proteins to its cell wall envelope during vegetative growth. To gain insight into the mechanism of protein attachment to the cell wall in B. anthracis we investigated the structure, backbone dynamics, and function of SrtA. The NMR structure of SrtA has been determined with a backbone coordinate precision of 0.40 ± 0.07 Å. SrtA possesses several novel features not previously observed in sortase enzymes including the presence of a structurally ordered amino terminus positioned within the active site and in contact with catalytically essential histidine residue (His126). We propose that this appendage, in combination with a unique flexible active site loop, mediates the recognition of lipid II, the second substrate to which proteins are attached during the anchoring reaction. pKa measurements indicate that His126 is uncharged at physiological pH compatible with the enzyme operating through a “reverse protonation” mechanism. Interestingly, NMR relaxation measurements and the results of a model building study suggest that SrtA recognizes the LPXTG sorting signal through a lock-in-key mechanism in contrast to the prototypical SrtA enzyme from Staphylococcus aureus.  相似文献   

8.
AmpD is a cytoplasmic peptidoglycan (PG) amidase involved in bacterial cell-wall recycling and in induction of β-lactamase, a key enzyme of β-lactam antibiotic resistance. AmpD belongs to the amidase_2 family that includes zinc-dependent amidases and the peptidoglycan-recognition proteins (PGRPs), highly conserved pattern-recognition molecules of the immune system. Crystal structures of Citrobacter freundii AmpD were solved in this study for the apoenzyme, for the holoenzyme at two different pH values, and for the complex with the reaction products, providing insights into the PG recognition and the catalytic process. These structures are significantly different compared with the previously reported NMR structure for the same protein. The NMR structure does not possess an accessible active site and shows the protein in what is proposed herein as an inactive “closed” conformation. The transition of the protein from this inactive conformation to the active “open” conformation, as seen in the x-ray structures, was studied by targeted molecular dynamics simulations, which revealed large conformational rearrangements (as much as 17 Å) in four specific regions representing one-third of the entire protein. It is proposed that the large conformational change that would take the inactive NMR structure to the active x-ray structure represents an unprecedented mechanism for activation of AmpD. Analysis is presented to argue that this activation mechanism might be representative of a regulatory process for other intracellular members of the bacterial amidase_2 family of enzymes.  相似文献   

9.
The origin of the biexponential fluorescence decay of Trp in ribonuclease T1 under mildly destabilizing conditions, such as increased pH or temperature, or the presence of detergent, is still not understood. We have performed two extended replica-exchange molecular dynamics simulations to obtain a detailed representation of the native state at two protonation states corresponding to a high and low pH. At high pH, the appearance of partially unfolded states is evident. We found that this pH-induced destabilization originates from increased global repulsion as well as reduced local favorable electrostatic interactions and reduced H-bonding strength of His27, His40, and His92. At high pH, alternative tryptophan rotamers appear and are linked to a distorted environment of the tryptophan, which also acts as a separate source of ground-state heterogeneity. The total population of these alternative conformations agrees well with the amplitude of the experimentally observed secondary fluorescence lifetime.  相似文献   

10.
The NMR structure of the Antheraea polyphemus pheromone-binding protein 1 at pH 4.5, ApolPBP1A, was determined at 20 degrees C. The structure consists of six alpha-helices, which are arranged in a globular fold that encapsulates a central helix alpha7 formed by the C-terminal polypeptide segment 131-142. The 3D arrangement of these helices is anchored by the three disulfide bonds 19-54, 50-108 and 97-117, which were identified by NMR. Superposition of the ApolPBP1A structure with the structure of the homologous pheromone-binding protein of Bombyx mori at pH 4.5, BmorPBPA, yielded an rmsd of 1.7 A calculated for the backbone heavy-atoms N, Calpha and C' of residues 10-142. In contrast, the present ApolPBP1A structure is different from a recently proposed molecular model for a low-pH form of ApolPBP1 that does not contain the central helix alpha7. ApolPBP1 exhibits a pH-dependent transition between two different globular conformations in slow exchange on the NMR chemical shift timescale similar to BmorPBP, suggesting that the two proteins use the same mechanism of ligand binding and ejection. The extensive sequence homology observed for pheromone-binding proteins from moth species further implies that the previously proposed mechanism of ligand ejection involving the insertion of a C-terminal helix into the pheromone-binding site is a general feature of pheromone signaling in moths.  相似文献   

11.
The acid-base behavior of amino acids is an important subject of study due to their prominent role in enzyme catalysis, substrate binding and protein structure. Due to interactions with the protein environment, their pKas can be shifted from their solution values and, if a protein has two stable conformations, it is possible for a residue to have different “microscopic”, conformation-dependent pKa values. In those cases, interpretation of experimental measurements of the pKa is complicated by the coupling between pH, protonation state and protein conformation. We explored these issues using Nitrophorin 4 (NP4), a protein that releases NO in a pH sensitive manner. At pH 5.5 NP4 is in a closed conformation where NO is tightly bound, while at pH 7.5 Asp30 becomes deprotonated, causing the conformation to change to an open state from which NO can easily escape. Using constant pH molecular dynamics we found two distinct microscopic Asp30 pKas: 8.5 in the closed structure and 4.3 in the open structure. Using a four-state model, we then related the obtained microscopic values to the experimentally observed “apparent” pKa, obtaining a value of 6.5, in excellent agreement with experimental data. This value must be interpreted as the pH at which the closed to open population transition takes place. More generally, our results show that it is possible to relate microscopic structure dependent pKa values to experimentally observed ensemble dependent apparent pKas and that the insight gained in the relatively simple case of NP4 can be useful in several more complex cases involving a pH dependent transition, of great biochemical interest.  相似文献   

12.
The Gene Encoding the Phosphatidylinositol Transfer Protein Is Essential for Cell Growth (Aitken, J. F., van Heusden, G. P., Temkin, M., and Dowhan, W. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 4711–4717)A Phospholipid Acts as a Chaperone in Assembly of a Membrane Transport Protein (Bogdanov, M., Sun, J., Kaback, H. R., and Dowhan, W. (1996) J. Biol. Chem. 271, 11615–11618)William Dowhan''s curiosity about the connections between phospholipids and proteins associated with them goes back as far as his days as a graduate student with Esmond Snell at the University of California, Berkeley. In these two JBC Classics, his group''s ability to manipulate biochemical and molecular genetics tools to answer fundamental questions about lipid biology shines through. “William Dowhan and his research group have made many contributions to the biochemistry of phospholipid metabolism and membrane biogenesis,” says Robert Simoni at Stanford University.Open in a separate windowBill Dowhan (right) is shown here with the late Chris Raetz (left), who was a longtime collaborator and friend, and his former postdoctoral advisor, the late Gene Kennedy, on the occasion of Kennedy''s 90th birthday in 2009 (photo courtesy of William Dowhan).The first paper, published in 1990, documented the importance of phosphatidylinositol/phosphatidylcholine transfer proteins in vivo. Dowhan''s group, which has been based at the University of Texas Medical School since 1972, used a combination of biochemistry and genetics to clone the protein''s gene. Dowhan had first heard of phospholipid transfer proteins in 1969, when he began his postdoctoral training with Eugene (Gene) Kennedy at Harvard Medical School. At his very first Kennedy lab meeting, the discussion centered around a publication that had just come out (1). The paper described “one of the first observations of proteins in the soluble phase that transferred lipids between bilayers,” recalls Dowhan. “No one could figure out what these proteins really did in vivo, but they knew the proteins had this function” of transferring lipids between membranes.As he moved through his career, Dowhan focused on cloning and characterizing genes and purifying enzymes responsible for phospholipid metabolism in Escherichia coli. Then came a sabbatical in 1983 with Gottfried (Jeff) Schatz at the Biozentrum of the University of Basel in Switzerland, that expanded Dowhan''s research directions into yeast genetics. He says the opportunity to work with Schatz “got me into the possibility of looking for this phosphatidylinositol/phosphatidylcholine transfer protein (PI-TP) in yeast, which I probably would have never done if I hadn''t taken this sabbatical.”Fresh from his sabbatical, Dowhan started tracking down the protein and its gene in vivo. “I submitted a grant at that time with some preliminary data that we had begun to purify to homogeneity the PI-TP from yeast, which had never been done before. Fortunately, we got the grant,” he says.The Dowhan group managed to purify PI-TP from yeast. “The most important part was using basic biochemistry and understanding how to purify proteins before the advent of genetically tagging proteins for affinity chromatography,” explains Dowhan.For the next step in the process of finding the gene for the protein, Dowhan and colleagues had to apply reverse genetics because the yeast genome was not available in the late 1980s. They sequenced the amino terminus of the protein, made the corresponding oligonucleotide probes, tested yeast cDNA libraries with those probes, and pulled out the gene. “We still didn''t know the role PI-TP played in cell function. But now we had the sequence of the gene and the knock-out mutant was not viable,” notes Dowhan. “So we published” the findings.At the same time, Vytas Bankaitis, now at the University of North Carolina, had been working on cloning the SEC14 gene in yeast, which is necessary for vesicular transport. “It turns out we had missed the DNA sequence,” Dowhan says. From Bankaitis'' work, it was obvious that “PI-TP was the product of the SEC14 gene. It all came together in a joint report in Nature. Now we had a function associated with the SEC14 gene, which we didn''t have before,” Dowhan explains (2). “We had a phenotype of a mutant lacking this phospholipid transfer protein, which then stopped vesicular transport.”This initial link between phospholipid metabolism and vesicular transport opened up the field to characterization of the Sec14 protein superfamily in a broad range of biological systems. These proteins contain lipid-binding domains, which sense membrane lipid composition and integrate lipid metabolism and lipid-mediated signaling with an array of cellular processes.The second JBC Classic focused on a different feature of phospholipids: their role in protein folding. Dowhan was fascinated by membrane proteins ever since he was a graduate student and had gone to the Kennedy laboratory as a postdoctoral fellow, intending to purify the membrane component expressed by the lac operon for lactose transport in E. coli. He was unsuccessful because, at that time, the necessary detergents were not available. Once the lactose permease was purified (3), Dowhan noticed in the literature that other researchers mentioned that when the protein was reconstituted in liposomes missing phosphatidylethanolamine, the protein was defective in energy-dependent uphill transport. Dowhan recalls that he wondered, “Was that an artifact of the liposome system or was that also true in vivo?”To get to the bottom of this observation, Dowhan''s group used E. coli to generate null mutants of what were considered to be absolutely essential genes for phospholipid synthesis and cell viability. They created a null mutant of the pssA gene, which encodes the committed step to the synthesis of the major phospholipid, phosphatidylethanolamine. By establishing conditions in which bacterial cells lacking phosphatidylethanolamine remained viable, the investigators were able to identify and characterize different cell phenotypes caused by the missing phospholipid both in vivo and in vitro. In collaboration with Ronald Kaback at UCLA, Dowhan''s group showed that phosphatidylethanolamine was essential for the proper folding of an epitope of lactose permease that was also necessary to support the energy-dependent uphill transport of lactose. “Studies by others have since shown a similar chaperone role for lipids in other bacteria, plants and mammalian cells,” notes Simoni.To obtain their data, the investigators developed a new technique, the Eastern-Western blot. In this method, membrane proteins were delipidated and partially denatured by SDS. The proteins underwent gel electrophoresis and then were transferred to a solid support by Western blotting. A series of individual lipids were then laid over the proteins at a 90° angle so that the investigators could see, after incubating with conformation-specific antibodies, which lipids helped which membrane proteins regain proper conformation.This technique was used to establish that phosphatidylethanolamine was necessary in a late step of folding of lactose permease, but was not necessary to maintain the final folded state. This observation suggested that lipids act as molecular chaperones in helping protein maturation. “This paper set the stage for understanding how lipids affect the topological organization of wild-type proteins in the membrane,” notes Dowhan.Dowhan and his collaborator Mikhail Bogdanov have continued using bacterial mutants in phospholipid metabolism to systematically manipulate the native membrane lipid compositions during the cell cycle. They have analyzed the transmembrane domain orientation of membrane proteins to establish the molecular basis for lipid-dependent organization of lactose permease and other secondary transporters (4).Dowhan says his work has two take-home messages. One is that “Lipids aren''t just glorified biological detergents,” he says. “They have specific roles” in the cell. The other message is in the power of numbers. Dowhan says the more techniques applied to solve a biological mystery, the more likely the mystery will be successfully solved.  相似文献   

13.
Proinsulin exhibits a single structure, whereas insulin-like growth factors refold as two disulfide isomers in equilibrium. Native insulin-related growth factor (IGF)-I has canonical cystines (A6—A11, A7–B7, and A20—B19) maintained by IGF-binding proteins; IGF-swap has alternative pairing (A7–A11, A6—B7, and A20—B19) and impaired activity. Studies of mini-domain models suggest that residue B5 (His in insulin and Thr in IGFs) governs the ambiguity or uniqueness of disulfide pairing. Residue B5, a site of mutation in proinsulin causing neonatal diabetes, is thus of broad biophysical interest. Here, we characterize reciprocal B5 substitutions in the two proteins. In insulin, HisB5 → Thr markedly destabilizes the hormone (ΔΔGu 2.0 ± 0.2 kcal/mol), impairs chain combination, and blocks cellular secretion of proinsulin. The reciprocal IGF-I substitution ThrB5 → His (residue 4) specifies a unique structure with native 1H NMR signature. Chemical shifts and nuclear Overhauser effects are similar to those of native IGF-I. Whereas wild-type IGF-I undergoes thiol-catalyzed disulfide exchange to yield IGF-swap, HisB5-IGF-I retains canonical pairing. Chemical denaturation studies indicate that HisB5 does not significantly enhance thermodynamic stability (ΔΔGu 0.2 ± 0.2 kcal/mol), implying that the substitution favors canonical pairing by destabilizing competing folds. Whereas the activity of ThrB5-insulin is decreased 5-fold, HisB5-IGF-I exhibits 2-fold increased affinity for the IGF receptor and augmented post-receptor signaling. We propose that conservation of ThrB5 in IGF-I, rescued from structural ambiguity by IGF-binding proteins, reflects fine-tuning of signal transduction. In contrast, the conservation of HisB5 in insulin highlights its critical role in insulin biosynthesis.  相似文献   

14.
The barley lipid transfer protein (LTP1) adducted by an α-ketol, (9-hydroxy-10-oxo-12(Z)-octadecenoic acid) exhibits an unexpected high lipid transfer activity. The crystal structure of this oxylipin-adducted LTP1, (LTP1b) was determined at 1.8 Å resolution. The covalently bound oxylipin was partly exposed at the surface of the protein and partly buried within the hydrophobic cavity. The structure of the oxylipidated LTP1 emphasizes the unique plasticity of the hydrophobic cavity of these plant lipid-binding proteins when compared to the other members of the family. The plasticity of the hydrophobic cavity and increase of its surface hydrophobicity induced by the oxylipin account for the improvement of the lipid transfer activity of LTP1b. These observations open new perspectives to explore the different biological functions of LTPs, including their allergenic properties.  相似文献   

15.
Histidine tRNAs (tRNAHis) are unique in that they possess an extra 5′-base (G-1) not found in other tRNAs. Deletion of G-1 results in at least a 250-fold reduction in the rate of histidine charging in vitro. To better understand the role of the G-1 nucleotide in defining the structure of tRNAHis, and to correlate structure with cognate amino acid charging, NMR and molecular dynamics (MD) studies were performed on the wild-type and a ΔG-1 mutant Escherichia coli histidine tRNA acceptor stem microhelix. Using NMR-derived distance restraints, global structural characteristics are described and interpreted to rationalize experimental observations with respect to aminoacylation activity. The quality of the NMR-derived solution conformations of the wild-type and ΔG-1 histidine microhelices (micro helixHis) is assessed using a variety of MD-based computational protocols. Most of the duplex regions of the acceptor stem and the UUCG tetraloop are well defined and effectively superimposable for the wild-type and ΔG-1 mutant microhelixHis. Differences, however, are observed at the end of the helix and in the single-stranded CCCA-3′ tail. The wild-type microhelixHis structure is more well defined than the mutant and folds into a ‘stacked fold-back’ conformation. In contrast, we observe fraying of the first two base pairs and looping back of the single-stranded region in the ΔG-1 mutant resulting in a much less well defined conformation. Thus the role of the extra G-1 base of the unique G-1:C73 base pair in tRNAHis may be to prevent end-fraying and stabilize the stacked fold-back conformation of the CCCA-3′ region.  相似文献   

16.
Gelsolin is a key actin cytoskeleton-modulating protein primarily regulated by calcium and phosphoinositides. In addition, low pH has also been suggested to activate gelsolin in the absence of Ca2+ ions, although no structural insight on this pathway is available except for a reported decrement in its diffusion coefficient at low pH. We also observed ∼1.6-fold decrease in the molecular mobility of recombinant gelsolin when buffer pH was lowered from 9 to 5. Analysis of the small angle x-ray scattering data collected over the same pH range indicated that the radius of gyration and maximum linear dimension of gelsolin molecules increased from 30.3 to 34.1 Å and from 100 to 125 Å, respectively. Models generated for each dataset indicated that similar to the Ca2+-induced process, low pH also promotes unwinding of this six-domain protein but only partially. It appeared that pH is able to induce extension of the G1 domain from the rest of the five domains, whereas the Ca2+-sensitive latch between G2 and G6 domains remains closed. Interestingly, increasing the free Ca2+ level to merely ∼40 nm, the partially open pH 5 shape “sprung open” to a shape seen earlier for this protein at pH 8 and 1 mm free Ca2+. Also, pH alone could induce a shape where the g3-g4 linker of gelsolin was open when we truncated the C-tail latch from this protein. Our results provide insight into how under physiological conditions, a drop in pH can fully activate the F-actin-severing shape of gelsolin with micromolar levels of Ca2+ available.  相似文献   

17.
One subtype of the pheromone binding proteins of the silkmoth Antheraea polyphemus (ApolPBP1) has been analysed exploiting the two endogenous tryptophan residues as fluorescent probe. The intrinsic fluorescence exhibited a rather narrow spectrum with a maximum at 336 nm. Site-directed mutagenesis experiments revealed that one of the tryptophan residues (Trp37) is located in a hydrophobic environment whereas Trp127 is more solvent exposed, as was predicted modeling the ApolPBP1 sequence on the proposed structure of the Bombyx mori pheromone binding protein. Monitoring the interaction of ApolPBP1 as well as its Trp mutants with the three species-specific pheromone compounds by recording the endogenous fluorescence emission revealed profound differences; whereas (E6,Z11)-hexadecadienal induced a dose-dependent quenching of the fluorescence, both (E6,Z11)-hexadecadienyl-1-acetate and (E4,Z9)-tetradecadienyl-1-acetate elicited an augmentation of the endogenous fluorescence. These data indicate that although ApolPBP1 can bind all three pheromones, there are substantial differences concerning their interaction with the protein, which may have important functional implications.  相似文献   

18.
Kandt C  Xu Z  Tieleman DP 《Biochemistry》2006,45(44):13284-13292
BtuF is the periplasmic binding protein (PBP) in the vitamin B(12) uptake system in Escherichia coli where it is associated with the ABC transporter BtuCD. When the ligand binds, PBPs generally display large conformational changes, commonly termed the Venus flytrap mechanism. BtuF belongs to a group of PBPs that, on the basis of crystal structures, does not appear to display such behavior. Using 480 ns multicopy molecular dynamics simulations of apo and holo forms of the protein, we investigate the dynamics of BtuF. We find BtuF to be more flexible than previously assumed, displaying clear opening and closing motions which are more pronounced in the apo form. The protein behavior is compatible with a PBP functional model that postulates a closed conformation for the ligand-bound state, whereas the empty form fluctuates between open and closed conformations. Elastic network normal-mode analysis suggests that all BtuF-like PBPs are capable of similar opening and closing motions. It also makes the typical Venus flytrap domain motions a likely common means of how PBP-ABC transporter interaction could occur.  相似文献   

19.
Male moths respond to conspecific female-released pheromones with remarkable sensitivity and specificity, due to highly specialized chemosensory neurons in their antennae. In Antheraea silkmoths, three types of sensory neurons have been described, each responsive to one of three pheromone components. Since also three different pheromone binding proteins (PBPs) have been identified, the antenna of Antheraea seems to provide a unique model system for detailed analyzes of the interplay between the various elements underlying pheromone reception. Efforts to identify pheromone receptors of Antheraea polyphemus have led to the identification of a candidate pheromone receptor (ApolOR1). This receptor was found predominantly expressed in male antennae, specifically in neurons located beneath pheromone-sensitive sensilla trichodea. The ApolOR1-expressing cells were found to be surrounded by supporting cells co-expressing all three ApolPBPs. The response spectrum of ApolOR1 was assessed by means of calcium imaging using HEK293-cells stably expressing the receptor. It was found that at nanomolar concentrations ApolOR1-cells responded to all three pheromones when the compounds were solubilized by DMSO and also when DMSO was substituted by one of the three PBPs. However, at picomolar concentrations, cells responded only in the presence of the subtype ApolPBP2 and the pheromone (E,Z)-6,11-hexadecadienal. These results are indicative of a specific interplay of a distinct pheromone component with an appropriate binding protein and its related receptor subtype, which may be considered as basis for the remarkable sensitivity and specificity of the pheromone detection system.  相似文献   

20.
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