首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 470 毫秒
1.
Variants of bovine somatotropin have been engineered to contain synthetic metal-binding sites consisting of two solvent-exposed histidines separated by a single turn of an alpha-helix (His-X3-His variants). The affinities of these proteins for Cu(II) were characterized by measuring their partition coefficients in an aqueous two-phase polymer system. The partition coefficients were used to generate binding constants for formation of a complex between the engineered metal-binding site and Cu(II) chelated to an iminodiacetic acid derivative of polyethylene glycol. For three His-X3-His variants described here, these constants range from 2 x 10(4) to 1.6 x 10(6) M-1. The metal affinity of a His-X3-His site depends on the rigidity of the helix into which the site is engineered. The affinities of the His-X3-His sites for Cu(II) are large enough to dramatically increase not only the partitioning of these proteins in aqueous two-phase systems, but also their retention times on a metal-affinity chromatography column. Both these features can greatly facilitate the purification of engineered proteins. Criteria for choosing positions for incorporating metal-binding sites are discussed.  相似文献   

2.
Five peptides containing (His-X2)-His or (His-X3)-His motifs have been designed and synthesized to coordinate Cu(II). Structural information was obtained by various spectroscopic techniques and was used as constraint to search for local conformational energy minima by molecular mechanics. Thermodynamic stability constants of the Cu(II) chelates was obtained by 19F-NMR. The synthesized Cu(II)-peptide chelates were tested as catalysts of some important red-ox processes occuring in biological systems, in particular oxidation of ascorbate and dismutation of superoxide ion. The catalytic efficiency of the five chelates was much lower than that of ascorbate oxidase. On the contrary, two of them showed kinetic constants for superoxide dismutation about one order of magnitude lower than that of the enzyme Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase. In both cases, the catalytic properties were dependent on the peptide sequence. The relationships between structure and activity are discussed to find the structural parameters crucial for catalytic activity that can be modulated by appropriate design and synthesis of the peptides.  相似文献   

3.
Cytochrome caa3 from Bacillus subtilis is a member of the heme-copper oxidase family of integral membrane enzymes that includes mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase. Subunit II of cytochrome caa3 has an extra 100 amino acids at its C-terminus, relative to its mitochondrial counterpart, and this extension encodes a heme C binding domain. Cytochrome caa3 has many of the properties of the complex formed between mitochondrial cytochrome c and mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase. To examine more closely the interaction between cytochrome c and the oxidase we have cloned and expressed the Cu(A)-cytochrome c portion of subunit II from the cytochrome caa3 complex of B. subtilis. We are able to express about 2000 nmol, equivalent to 65 mg, of the Cu(A)-cytochrome c protein per litre of Escherichia coli culture. About 500 nmol is correctly targeted to the periplasmic space and we purify 50% of that by a combination of affinity chromatography and ammonium sulfate fractionation. The cytochrome c containing sub-domain is well-folded with a stable environment around the heme C center, as its mid-point potential and rates of reduction are indistinguishable from values for the cytochrome c domain of the holo-enzyme. However, the Cu(A) site lacks copper leading to an inherent instability in this sub-domain. Expression of B. subtilis cytochrome c, as exemplified by the Cu(A)-cytochrome c protein, can be achieved in E. coli, and we conclude that the cytochrome c and Cu(A) sub-domains behave independently despite their close physical and functional association.  相似文献   

4.
SCO (synthesis of cytochrome c oxidase) proteins are involved in the assembly of the respiratory chain enzyme cytochrome c oxidase acting to assist in the assembly of the Cu(A) center contained within subunit II of the oxidase complex. The Cu(A) center receives electrons from the reductive substrate ferrocytochrome c, and passes them on to the cytochrome a center. Cytochrome a feeds electrons to the oxygen reaction site composed of cytochrome a(3) and Cu(B). Cu(A) consists of two copper ions positioned within bonding distance and ligated by two histidine side chains, one methionine, a backbone carbonyl and two bridging cysteine residues. The complex structure and redox capacity of Cu(A) present a potential assembly challenge. SCO proteins are members of the thioredoxin family which led to the early suggestion of a disulfide exchange function for SCO in Cu(A) assembly, whereas the copper binding capacity of the Bacillus subtilis version of SCO (i.e., BsSCO) suggests a direct role for SCO proteins in copper transfer. We have characterized redox and copper exchange properties of apo- and metalated-BsSCO. The release of copper (II) from its complex with BsSCO is best achieved by reducing it to Cu(I). We propose a mechanism involving both disulfide and copper exchange between BsSCO and the apo-Cu(A) site. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Biogenesis/Assembly of Respiratory Enzyme Complexes.  相似文献   

5.
The EPR study of cytochrome c in which FE(III) ion is replaced with Cu(II) shows that there are two types of monomer (a: 4 less than pH less than 6, and b: 6 less than pH less than 11.5) and two types of dimer (A: pH less than 4 and B: pH less than 11.5) formed depending upon the pH value of the solution. Computer simulation of the EPR spectra of the dimers indicates that the structure of the dimer A has a larger lateral shift than in the dimer B. It is also shown that in monomer a, the imidazole nitrogen of 18-His is not bound to Cu(II), while it is bound in the monomer b. In the undeca- and octapeptide of Cu(II)-cytochrome c, polymers are formed in acidic solutions. As the pH is raised, depolymerization proceeds to yield the monomer and the dimer. The structure of the dimer in both peptides is found to be similar to that of the dimer B of Cu(II)-cytochrome c. In the monomer of the peptides, neither the imidazole of 18-His nor the imidazole added in excess is bound to Cu(II) in the entire pH range. It is also concluded that the dimerization in Cu(II)-porphyrins interferes with the apical coordination of basic ligand, or vice versa.  相似文献   

6.
A relatively recent method developed to determine the molecular weights of intact peptides and proteins, matrix-assisted UV laser desorption time-of-flight mass spectrometry (LDTOF-MS), has been evaluated as a new means to investigate the metal ion-binding properties of model synthetic peptides. A contiguous sequence of 25 residues on the surface of the 74 kDa human plasma metal-binding transport protein histidine-rich glycoprotein (HRG) has been identified as a bioactive metal-binding domain. The peptide, (GHHPH)5G, was synthesized and evaluated by LDTOF-MS before and after the addition of Cu(II) in solution with 2,5-dihydroxybenzoic acid as the matrix. In the absence of added Cu(II), the major protonated molecular ion (M + H)+ was observed to have a mass equal to its calculated mass (2904.0 Da). In the presence of Cu(II), however, five additional peaks were observed at mass increments of approximately 63.9 Da. The maximum Cu(II)-binding capacity observed for the 26-residue peptide (5 g-atoms/mol) suggested that up to 1 Cu(II) may be bound per 5-residue internal repeat unit (GHHPH) within this peptide; several other monovalent and divalent metal cations were not bound under identical conditions of analysis. The Cu(II)-binding stoichiometry was verified by spectrophotometric titration and by frontal analyses of the immobilized peptide with a solution of Cu(II) ions. These results demonstrate the ability to verify directly the solution-phase binding capacity of metal-binding peptides by LDTOF-MS.  相似文献   

7.
ADR1a, a zinc finger peptide, exists in two folded conformations   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
R X Xu  S J Horvath  R E Klevit 《Biochemistry》1991,30(14):3365-3371
  相似文献   

8.
A contributing factor to the pathology of Alzheimer's disease is the generation of reactive oxygen species, most probably a consequence of the beta-amyloid (Abeta) peptide coordinating copper ions. Experimental and theoretical results indicate that His13 and His14 are the two most firmly established ligands in the coordination sphere of Cu(II) bound to Abeta. Abeta1-42 is known to reduce Cu(II) to Cu(I). The Abeta-Cu(II) complex has been shown to catalytically generate H(2)O(2) from reducing agents and O(2). Cu(II) in the presence of Abeta has been reported to have a formal reduction potential of +0.72-0.77 V (vs. the standard hydrogen electrode). Quantum chemical calculations using the B3LYP hybrid density functional method with the 6-31G(d) basis set were performed to model the reduction of previously studied Cu(II) complexes representing the His13-His14 portion of Abeta (Raffa et al. in J. Biol. Inorg. Chem. 10:887-902, 2005). The effects of solvation were accommodated using the CPCM method. The most stable complex between Cu(I) and the model compound, 3-(5-imidazolyl)propionylhistamine (1) involves tricoordinated Cu(I) in a distorted-T geometry, with the Npi of both imidazoles as well as the oxygen of the backbone carbonyl bound to copper. This model would be the most likely representation of a Cu(I) binding site for a His-His peptide in aqueous solution. A variety of possible redox processes are discussed.  相似文献   

9.
J P Laussac  B Sarkar 《Biochemistry》1984,23(12):2832-2838
As a basis for understanding the role of albumin in the transport of metal ions, detailed investigations have been carried out to elucidate the structure of Ni(II)- and Cu(II)-binding site of the peptide residue corresponding to the NH2-terminal peptide fragment 1-24 of human serum albumin by 1H and 13C NMR spectroscopy. These studies have been conducted in aqueous medium at different pH values and at different ligand/metal ratios. The results show the following: (i) Diamagnetic Ni(II) complex and paramagnetic Cu(II) complex are in slow exchange NMR time scale. (ii) Titration results of Ni(II)-bound form of peptide 1-24 show the presence of a 1:1 complex in the wide pH range (6.0-11.0), and the same stoichiometry is proposed for Cu(II) as well. (iii) Analysis of the spectra suggests that both Ni(II) and Cu(II) have one specific binding site at the NH2-terminal tripeptide segment (Asp-Ala-His...) involving the Asp alpha-NH2, His N(1) imidazole, two deprotonated peptide nitrogens (Ala NH and His NH), and the Asp COO- group. (iv) Complexation of Ni(II) and Cu(II) causes conformational change near the metal-binding site of the polypeptide chain, but there is no other binding group involved besides those in the first three residues.  相似文献   

10.
Hirudin variants were constructed to exhibit an increased metal-binding affinity in an attempt to apply a metal-affinity partitioning process in a primary separation step for purification of hirudin. The hirudin variants were genetically engineered to contain additional surface-accessible histidines and produced by recombinant Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The partitioning behavior of these variants was compared with that of the wild type with a single surface-accessible histidine at position 51. Upon the addition of a small amount of Cu(II)IDA-PEG (Cu(II)iminodiacetic acid-polyethylene glycol) ligand to PEG/dextran two-phase systems, the hirudin variants with two or three surface-accessible histidines were more selectively partitioned into the PEG-rich phase than the wild type. Integrating protein engineering to metal-affinity partitioning offers the potential for general application of this technique to facilitate protein isolation, but the genetically engineered protein variants should be carefully constructed in a manner to minimize reduction of native protein activity.  相似文献   

11.
A site-directed mutant of spinach plastocyanin, Pc(Tyr83-His), has been modified by covalent attachment of a photoactive [Ru(bpy)2(im)]2+ complex to the His83 residue. The residue is surface exposed and located about 10–12?Å from the copper ion at the entrance of a proposed natural electron transfer pathway from cytochrome f. Electron transfer within the Ru-Pc complex has been studied with time-resolved optical spectroscopy using two different approaches. In the first, the fully reduced [Cu(I), Ru(II)] protein was photoexcited and subsequently oxidized by an external quencher, forming the [Cu(I), Ru(III)] protein. This was followed by an electron transfer from reduced Cu(I) to Ru(III). In the second method, the initially oxidized Cu(II) ion acted as an internal quencher for excited Ru(II) and the photoinduced reduction of the Cu(II) ion was followed by a thermal recombination with the Ru(III) ion. The reoxidation of the Cu ion, which has an estimated driving force of 0.56?eV, occured with a rate constant k et?=?(9.5±1.0)×106?s–1, observed with both methods. The results suggest a strong electronic coupling (H DA>0.3?cm–1) along the Ru-His(83)-Cys(84)-Cu pathway.  相似文献   

12.
CueO is a multicopper oxidase (MCO) that is involved in the homeostasis of Cu in Escherichia coli and is the sole cuprous oxidase to have ever been found. Differing from other MCOs, the substrate-binding site of CueO is deeply buried under a methionine-rich helical region including alpha-helices 5, 6, and 7 that interfere with the access of organic substrates. We deleted the region Pro357-His406 and replaced it with a Gly-Gly linker. The crystal structures of a truncated mutant in the presence and in the absence of excess Cu(II) indicated that the scaffold of the CueO molecule and metal-binding sites were reserved in comparison with those of CueO. In addition, the high thermostability of the protein molecule and its spectroscopic and magnetic properties due to four Cu centers were also conserved after truncation. As for functions, the cuprous oxidase activity of the mutant was reduced to ca 10% that of recombinant CueO owing to the decrease in the affinity of the labile Cu site for Cu(I) ions, although activities for laccase substrates such as 2,2'-azino-bis(3-ethylbenzothiazoline-6-sulfonic acid), p-phenylenediamine, and 2,6-dimethoxyphenol increased due to changes in the access of these organic substrates to the type I Cu site. The present engineering of CueO indicates that the methionine-rich alpha-helices function as a barrier to the access of bulky organic substrates, which provides CueO with specificity as a cuprous oxidase.  相似文献   

13.
The de novo design of a rubredoxin-like Fe site.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
A redox center similar to that of rubredoxin was designed into the 56 amino acid immunoglobulin binding B1 domain of Streptococcals protein G. The redox center in rubredoxin contains an iron ion tetrahedrally coordinated by four cysteine residues, [Fe(S-Cys)4](-1),(-2). The design criteria for the target site included taking backbone movements into account, tetrahedral metal-binding, and maintaining the structure and stability of the wild-type protein. The optical absorption spectrum of the Co(II) complex of the metal-binding variant is characteristic of tetrahedral chelation by four cysteine residues. Circular dichroism and nuclear magnetic resonance measurements reveal that the metal-free and Cd(II)-bound forms of the variant are folded correctly and are stable. The Fe(III) complex of the metal-binding mutant reproduces the optical and the electron paramagnetic resonance spectra of oxidized rubredoxin. This demonstrates that the engineered protein chelates Fe(III) in a tetrahedral array, and the resulting center is similar to that of oxidized rubredoxin.  相似文献   

14.
The cytochrome o complex is the predominant terminal oxidase in the aerobic respiratory chain of Escherichia coli when the bacteria are grown under conditions of high aeration. The oxidase is a ubiquinol oxidase and reduces molecular oxygen to water. Electron transport through the enzyme is coupled to the generation of a protonmotive force. The purified cytochrome o complex contains four or five subunits, two protoheme IX (heme b) prosthetic groups, plus at least one Cu. The subunits are all encoded by the cyo operon. Sequence comparisons show that the cytochrome o complex is closely related to the aa3-type cytochrome c oxidase family. Gene fusions have been used to define the topology of each of the gene products. Subunits I, II, III and IV are proposed to have 15, 2, 5 and 3 transmembrane spans, respectively. The fifth gene product (cyoE) encodes a protein with 7 membrane spanning segments, and this may also be a subunit of this enzyme. Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy has been used to monitor CO bound in the active site where oxygen is reduced. These data provide definitive proof that the cytochrome o complex has a heme-copper binuclear center, similar to that present in the aa3-type cytochrome c oxidases. Site-directed mutagenesis is being utilized to define which amino acids are ligands to the heme iron and copper prosthetic groups.  相似文献   

15.
The cupredoxin fold, a Greek key beta-barrel, is a common structural motif in a family of small blue copper proteins and a subdomain in many multicopper oxidases. Here we show that a cupredoxin domain is present in subunit II of cytochrome c and quinol oxidase complexes. In the former complex this subunit is thought to bind a copper centre called CuA which is missing from the latter complex. We have expressed the C-terminal fragment of the membrane-bound CyoA subunit of the Escherichia coli cytochrome o quinol oxidase as a water-soluble protein. Two mutants have been designed into the CyoA fragment. The optical spectrum shows that one mutant is similar to blue copper proteins. The second mutant has an optical spectrum and redox potential like the purple copper site in nitrous oxide reductase (N2OR). This site is closely related to CuA, which is the copper centre typical of cytochrome c oxidase. The electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectra of both this mutant and the entire cytochrome o complex, into which the CuA site has been introduced, are similar to the EPR spectra of the native CuA site in cytochrome oxidase. These results give the first experimental evidence that CuA is bound to the subunit II of cytochrome c oxidase and open a new way to study this peculiar copper site.  相似文献   

16.
The SCO protein from the aerobic bacterium Bacillus subtilis (BsSCO) is involved in the assembly of the cytochrome c oxidase complex, and specifically with the Cu(A) center. BsSCO has been proposed to play various roles in Cu(A) assembly including, the direct delivery of copper ions to the Cu(A) site, and/or maintaining the appropriate redox state of the cysteine ligands during formation of Cu(A). BsSCO binds copper in both Cu(II) and Cu(I) redox states, but has a million-fold higher affinity for Cu(II). As a prerequisite to kinetic studies, we measured equilibrium stability of oxidized, reduced and Cu(II)-bound BsSCO by chemical and thermal induced denaturation. Oxidized and reduced apo-BsSCO exhibit two-state behavior in both chemical- and thermal-induced unfolding. However, the Cu(II) complex of BsSCO is stable in up to nine molar urea. Thermal or guanidinium-induced unfolding of BsSCO-Cu(II) ensues only as the Cu(II) species is lost. The effect of copper (II) on the folding of BsSCO is complicated by a rapid redox reaction between copper and reduced, denatured BsSCO. When denatured apo-BsSCO is refolded in the presence of copper (II) some of the population is recovered as the BsSCO-Cu(II) complex and some is oxidized indicating that refolding and oxidation are competing processes. The proposed functional roles for BsSCO in vivo require that its cysteine residues are reduced and the presence of copper during folding may be detrimental to BsSCO attaining its functional state.  相似文献   

17.
A new rhombic EPR signal was recently discovered in the partially reduced type 2 copper-depleted Rhus vernicifera laccase (Reinhammar, B. (1983) J. Inorg. Biochem., in press). The signal originates from one of the type 3 Cu(II) ions that becomes EPR-detectable as a result of the selective reduction of the other copper ion in the exchange-coupled Cu(II)-Cu(II) pair. The 14N and 1H and 63,65Cu electron nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) of this uncoupled Cu(II) now have been collected and represent the first ENDOR measurements of a type 3 copper site. The data indicate that the copper is coordinated by at least three nitrogenous ligands, at least one of which is an imidazole. H/D exchange suggests a nearby H2O or OH-, perhaps as a fourth ligand. A similar EPR signal is seen for CuB of reduced cytochrome c oxidase under turnover conditions. The 14N ENDOR, and, therefore, the structure, of this site corresponds extremely closely to that of the laccase type 3 (Cu(II).  相似文献   

18.
T Miura  A Hori-i  H Mototani  H Takeuchi 《Biochemistry》1999,38(35):11560-11569
The cellular form of prion protein is a precursor of the infectious isoform, which causes fatal neurodegenerative diseases through intermolecular association. One of the characteristics of the prion protein is a high affinity for Cu(II) ions. The site of Cu(II) binding is considered to be the N-terminal region, where the octapeptide sequence PHGGGWGQ repeats 4 times in tandem. We have examined the Cu(II) binding mode of the octapeptide motif and its pH dependence by Raman and absorption spectroscopy. At neutral and basic pH, the single octapeptide PHGGGWGQ forms a 1:1 complex with Cu(II) by coordinating via the imidazole N pi atom of histidine together with two deprotonated main-chain amide nitrogens in the triglycine segment. A similar 1:1 complex is formed by each octapeptide unit in (PHGGGWGQ)2 and (PHGGGWGQ)4. Under weakly acidic conditions (pH approximately 6), however, the Cu(II)-amide- linkages are broken and the metal binding site of histidine switches from N pi to N tau to share a Cu(II) ion between two histidine residues of different peptide chains. The drastic change of the Cu(II) binding mode on going from neutral to weakly acidic conditions suggests that the micro-environmental pH in the brain cell regulates the Cu(II) affinity of the prion protein, which is supposed to undergo pH changes in the pathway from the cell surface to endosomes. The intermolecular His(N tau)-Cu(II)-His(N tau) bridge may be related to the aggregation of prion protein in the pathogenic form.  相似文献   

19.
The genomes of several cyanobacteria show the existence of gene clusters encoding subunits I, II, and III of aa(3)-type cytochrome c oxidase. The enzyme occurs on both plasma and thylakoid membranes of these oxygenic phototrophic prokaryotes. Here we report the expression and purification of a truncated subunit II copper A (Cu(A)) domain (i.e. the electron entry and donor binding site) of cytochrome c oxidase from the cyanobacterium Synechocystis PCC 6803 in high yield. The water-soluble purple redox-active bimetallic center displays a relatively low standard reduction potential of 216 mV. Its absorption spectrum at pH 7 is similar to that of other soluble fragments from aa(3)-type oxidases, but the insensitivity of both absorbance and circular dichroism spectra to pH suggests that it is less exposed to the aqueous milieu compared with other Cu(A) domains. Oxidation of horse heart cytochrome c by the bimetallic center follows monophasic kinetics. At pH 7 and low ionic strength the bimolecular rate constant is (2.1 +/- 0.3) x 10(4) m-1 s(-1), and the rates decrease upon the increase of ionic strength. Sequence alignment and modeling of cyanobacterial Cu(A) domains show several peculiarities such as: (i) a large insertion located between the second transmembrane region and the putative hydrophobic cytochrome c docking site, (ii) the lack of acidic residues shown to be important in the interaction between cytochrome c and Paracoccus Cu(A) domain, and (iii) an extended C terminus similar to Escherichia coli ubiquinol oxidase.  相似文献   

20.
The oxidation of yeast cytochrome c peroxidase by hydrogen peroxide produces a unique enzyme intermediate, cytochrome c peroxidase Compound I, in which the ferric heme iron has been oxidized to an oxyferryl state, Fe(IV), and an amino acid residue has been oxidized to a radical state. The reduction of cytochrome c peroxidase Compound I by horse heart ferrocytochrome c is biphasic in the presence of excess ferrocytochrome c as cytochrome c peroxidase Compound I is reduced to the native enzyme via a second enzyme intermediate, cytochrome c peroxidase Compound II. In the first phase of the reaction, the oxyferryl heme iron in Compound I is reduced to the ferric state producing Compound II which retains the amino acid free radical. The pseudo-first order rate constant for reduction of Compound I to Compound II increases with increasing cytochrome c concentration in a hyperbolic fashion. The limiting value at infinite cytochrome c concentration, which is attributed to the intracomplex electron transfer rate from ferrocytochrome c to the heme site in Compound I, is 450 +/- 20 s-1 at pH 7.5 and 25 degrees C. Ferricytochrome c inhibits the reaction in a competitive manner. The reduction of the free radical in Compound II is complex. At low cytochrome c peroxidase concentrations, the reduction rate is 5 +/- 3 s-1, independent of the ferrocytochrome c concentration. At higher peroxidase concentrations, a term proportional to the square of the Compound II concentration is involved in the reduction of the free radical. Reduction of Compound II is not inhibited by ferricytochrome c. The rates and equilibrium constant for the interconversion of the free radical and oxyferryl forms of Compound II have also been determined.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号