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1.
The signal transduction protein P(II) from the cyanobacterium Synechococcus elongatus strain PCC 7942 forms a complex with the key enzyme of arginine biosynthesis, N-acetyl-l-glutamate kinase (NAGK). Here we report the effect of complex formation on the catalytic properties of NAGK. Although pH and ion dependence are not affected, the catalytic efficiency of NAGK is strongly enhanced by binding of P(II), with K(m) decreasing by a factor of 10 and V(max) increasing 4-fold. In addition, arginine feedback inhibition of NAGK is strongly decreased in the presence of P(II), resulting in a tight control of NAGK activity under physiological conditions by P(II). Analysis of the NAGK-P(II) complex suggests that one P(II) trimer binds to one NAGK hexamer with a K(d) of approximately 3 nm. Complex formation is strongly affected by ATP and ADP. ADP is a strong inhibitor of complex formation, whereas ATP inhibits complex formation only in the absence of divalent cations or in the presence of Mg(2+) ions, together with increased 2-oxoglutarate concentrations. Ca(2+) is able to antagonize the negative effect of ATP and 2-oxoglutarate. ADP and ATP exert their adverse effect on NAGK-P(II) complex formation through binding to the P(II) protein.  相似文献   

2.
Kinetic regularities of the reaction of Ca2+-independent Mg2+-dependent enzymatic hydrolysis of ATP catalyzed by the so-called "basal" Mg2+-ATPase localized in the plasmatic membrane of the uterus smooth-muscle cells have been studied using the methods of kinetic analysis performed under the equilibrium conditions. The analysis was based on the study of the concentration dependence of initial velocity of nucleoside triphosphate hydrolysis in EGTA-containing medium under the change of general concentrations of ATP [ATP]o and Mg2+[Mg2+]o in conditions of their equimolar ratio ([ATP]o/ [Mg2+]o)= 1; here the ratio between the concentrations of free reagents ([ATP4-]o/[Mg2+]o) was equal to 1.25. The obtained concentration dependence was interpreted in terms of two practically possible alternative mechanisms of Mg2+-dependent ATP-hydrolase enzymatic reaction. Mechanism I. Two separate independent centres of Mg ions and ATP binding by the enzymatic protein are supposed to exist, while Mg2+-dependent ATP-hydrolase enzymatic reaction proceeds independent of the equilibrium reaction of Mg ions chelatization of muscleside triphosphate. Mechanism II. The existence of the only centre of the chelate complex Mg2+ATP2- binding is postulated on the enzymatic protein; this process is also realized independent of the binding of Mg2+ and ATP-hydralase reaction catalized by it.  相似文献   

3.
Bowen LM  Muller G  Riehl JP  Dupureur CM 《Biochemistry》2004,43(48):15286-15295
Type II restriction enzymes are homodimeric systems that bind four to eight base pair palindromic recognition sequences of DNA and catalyze metal ion-dependent phosphodiester cleavage. While Mg(II) is required for cleavage in these enzymes, in some systems Ca(II) promotes avid substrate binding and sequence discrimination. These properties make them useful model systems for understanding the roles of alkaline earth metal ions in nucleic acid processing. We have previously shown that two Ca(II) ions stimulate DNA binding by PvuII endonuclease and that the trivalent lanthanide ions Tb(III) and Eu(III) support subnanomolar DNA binding in this system. Here we capitalize on this behavior, employing a unique combination of luminescence spectroscopy and DNA binding assays to characterize Ln(III) binding behavior by this enzyme. Upon excitation of tyrosine residues, the emissions of both Tb(III) and Eu(III) are enhanced severalfold. This enhancement is reduced by the addition of a large excess of Ca(II), indicating that these ions bind in the active site. Poor enhancements and affinities in the presence of the active site variant E68A indicate that Glu68 is an important Ln(III) ligand, similar to that observed with Ca(II), Mg(II), and Mn(II). At low micromolar Eu(III) concentrations in the presence of enzyme (10-20 microM), Eu(III) excitation (7)F(0) --> (5)D(0) spectra yield one dominant peak at 579.2 nm. A second, smaller peak at 579.4 nm is apparent at high Eu(III) concentrations (150 microM). Titration data for both Tb(III) and Eu(III) fit well to a two-site model featuring a strong site (K(d) = 1-3 microM) and a much weaker site (K(d) approximately 100-200 microM). Experiments with the E68A variant indicate that the Glu68 side chain is not required for the binding of this second Ln(III) equivalent; however, the dramatic increase in DNA binding affinity around 100 microM Ln(III) for the wild-type enzyme and metal-enhanced substrate affinity for E68A are consistent with functional relevance for this weaker site. This discrimination of sites should make it possible to use lanthanide substitution and lanthanide spectroscopy to probe individual metal ion binding sites, thus adding an important tool to the study of restriction enzyme structure and function.  相似文献   

4.
Bowen LM  Dupureur CM 《Biochemistry》2003,42(43):12643-12653
Restriction enzymes are important model systems for understanding the mechanistic contributions of metal ions to nuclease activity. These systems are unique in that they combine distinct functions which have been shown to depend on metal ions: high-affinity DNA binding, sequence-specific recognition of DNA, and Mg(II)-dependent phosphodiester cleavage. While Ca(II) and Mn(II) are commonly used to promote DNA binding and cleavage, respectively, the metal ion properties that are critical to the support of these functions are not clear. To address this question, we assessed the abilities of a series of metal ions to promote DNA binding, sequence specificity, and cleavage in the representative PvuII endonuclease. Among the metal ions tested [Ca(II), Sr(II), Ba(II), Eu(III), Tb(III), Cd(II), Mn(II), Co(II), and Zn(II)], only Mn(II) and Co(II) were similar enough to Mg(II) to support detectable cleavage activity. Interestingly, cofactor requirements for the support of DNA binding are much more permissive; the survey of DNA binding cofactors indicated that Cd(II) and the heavier and larger alkaline earth metal ions Sr(II) and Ba(II) were effective cofactors, stimulating DNA binding affinity 20-200-fold. Impressively, the trivalent lanthanides Tb(III) and Eu(III) promoted DNA binding as efficiently as Ca(II), corresponding to an increase in affinity over 1000-fold higher than that observed under metal-free conditions. The trend for DNA binding affinity supported by these ions suggests that ionic radius and charge are not critical to the promotion of DNA binding. To examine the role of metal ions in sequence discrimination, we determined specificity factors [K(a)(specific)/K(a)(nonspecific)] in the presence of Cd(II), Ba(II), and Tb(III). Most interestingly, all of these ions compromised sequence specificity to some degree compared to Ca(II), by either increased affinity for a noncognate sequence, decreased affinity for the cognate sequence, or both. These results suggest that while amino acid-base contacts are important for specificity, the properties of metal ion cofactors at the catalytic site are also critical for sequence discrimination. This insight is invaluable to our efforts to understand and subsequently design sequence-specific nucleases.  相似文献   

5.
We have investigated the action of the chemotherapeutic agent Fe(II)-bleomycin on yeast tRNA(Phe), an RNA of known three-dimensional structure. In the absence of Mg2+ ions, the RNA is cleaved preferentially at two major positions, A31 and G53, both of which are located at the terminal base pairs of hairpin loops, and coincide with the location of tight Mg2+ binding sites. A fragment of the tRNA (residues 47-76) containing the T stem-loop is also cleaved specifically at G53. Cleavage of both the intact tRNA and the tRNA fragment is abolished in the presence of physiological concentrations of Mg2+ (> 0.5 mM). Since Fe(II) is not displaced from bleomycin under these conditions, we infer that tight binding of Mg2+ to tRNA excludes productive interactions between Fe(II)-bleomycin and the RNA. These results also show that loss of cleavage is not due to Mg(2+)-dependent formation of tertiary interactions between the D and T loops. In contrast, cleavage of synthetic DNA analogs of the anticodon and T stem-loops is not detectably inhibited by Mg2+, even at concentrations as high as 50 mM. In addition, the site specificities observed in cleavage of RNA and DNA differ significantly. From these results, and from similar findings with other representative RNA molecules, we suggest that the cleavage of RNA by Fe(II)-bleomycin is unlikely to be important for its therapeutic action.  相似文献   

6.
The cellular regulation of DNA replication is governed in part by the availability of essential metal ions. A continuous supply of Mg(II) ions is necessary for the efficient and faithful replication of parental strands during S-phase as well as during the repair of DNA damage. A metal ion such as Ni(II) may interfere with the replication process by binding to sites on proteins at which essential ions normally bind. Binding at these sites by a toxic metal ion may produce inappropriate responses from the replication proteins and thus alter the normal balance in one or more of the microsteps comprising DNA synthesis. We have studied the effect of Ni(II) on DNA replication in a reconstituted in vitro system using a HeLa cell extract as a source of polymerase activity on a template of activated calf thymus DNA. Ni(II) has an initial stimulatory effect that is followed by an overall inhibition of the incorporation of DNA precursors. These results suggest that Ni(II), similar to Mg(II) may have more than one binding site, but that the binding of Ni(II) to replication proteins may significantly alter the timing of events in DNA synthesis.  相似文献   

7.
Magnesium is essential for the catalysis reaction of Escherichia coli primase, the enzyme synthesizing primer RNA chains for initiation of DNA replication. To map the Mg(2+) binding site in the catalytic center of primase, we have employed the iron cleavage method in which the native bound Mg(2+) ions were replaced with Fe(2+) ions and the protein was then cleaved in the vicinity of the metal binding site by adding DTT which generated free hydroxyl radicals from the bound iron. Three Fe(2+) cleavages were generated at sites designated I, II, and III. Adding Mg(2+) or Mn(2+) ions to the reaction strongly inhibited Fe(2+) cleavage; however, adding Ca(2+) or Ba(2+) ions had much less effect. Mapping by chemical cleavage and subsequent site-directed mutagensis demonstrated that three acidic residues, Asp345 and Asp347 of a conserved DPD sequence and Asp269 of a conserved EGYMD sequence, were the amino acid residues that chelated Mg(2+) ions in the catalytic center of primase. Cleavage data suggested that binding to D345 is significantly stronger than to D347 and somewhat stronger than to D269.  相似文献   

8.
R P Hertzberg  P B Dervan 《Biochemistry》1984,23(17):3934-3945
The synthesis of methidiumpropyl-EDTA (MPE) is described. The binding affinities of MPE, MPE.Ni(II), and MPE.Mg(II) to calf thymus DNA are 2.4 X 10(4) M-1, 1.5 X 10(5) M-1, and 1.2 X 10(5) M-1, respectively, in 50 mM NaCl, pH 7.4. The binding site size is two base pairs. MPE.Mg(II) unwinds PM2 DNA 11 +/- 3 degrees per bound molecule. MPE.Fe(II) in the presence of O2 efficiently cleaves DNA and with low sequence specificity. Reducing agents significantly enhance the efficiency of the cleavage reaction in the order sodium ascorbate greater than dithiothreitol greater than NADPH. At concentrations of 0.1-0.01 microM in MPE.Fe(II) and 10 microM in DNA base pairs, optimum ascorbate and dithiothreitol concentrations for DNA cleavage are 1-5 mM. Efficient cleavage of DNA (10 microM in base pairs) with MPE.Fe(II) (0.1-0.01 microM) occurs over a pH range of 7-10 with the optimum at 7.4 (Tris-HCl buffer). The optimum cleavage time is 3.5 h (22 degrees C). DNA cleavage is efficient in a Na+ ion concentration range of 5 mM to 1 M, with the optimum at 5 mM NaCl. The number of single-strand scissions on supercoiled DNA per MPE.Fe(II) under optimum conditions is 1.4. Metals such as Co(II), Mg(II), Ni(II), and Zn(II) inhibit strand scission by MPE. The released products from DNA cleavage by MPE.Fe(II) are the four nucleotide bases. The DNA termini at the cleavage site are 5'-phosphate and roughly equal proportions of 3'-phosphate and 3'-(phosphoglycolic acid). The products are consistent with the oxidative degradation of the deoxyribose ring of the DNA backbone, most likely by hydroxy radical.  相似文献   

9.
Eukaryotic DNA topoisomerase II is a dimeric nuclear enzyme essential for DNA metabolism and chromosome dynamics. It changes the topology of DNA by coupling binding and hydrolysis of two ATP molecules to the transport of one DNA duplex through a temporary break introduced in another. During this process the structurally and functionally complex enzyme passes through a cascade of conformational changes, which requires intra- and intersubunit communication. To study the importance of ATP binding and hydrolysis in relation to DNA strand transfer, we have purified and characterized a human topoisomerase II alpha heterodimer with only one ATP binding site. The heterodimer was able to relax supercoiled DNA, although less efficiently than the wild type enzyme. It furthermore possessed a functional N-terminal clamp and was sensitive to ICRF-187. This demonstrates that human topoisomerase II alpha can pass through all the conformations required for DNA strand passage and enzyme resetting with binding and hydrolysis of only one ATP. However, the heterodimer lacked the normal stimulatory effect of DNA on ATP binding and hydrolysis as well as the stimulatory effect of ATP on DNA cleavage. The results can be explained in a model, where efficient catalysis requires an extensive communication between the second ATP and the DNA segment to be cleaved.  相似文献   

10.
Conlan LH  Dupureur CM 《Biochemistry》2002,41(50):14848-14855
Restriction enzymes serve as important model systems for understanding the role of metal ions in phosphodiester hydrolysis. To this end, a number of laboratories have reported dramatic differences between the metal ion-dependent and metal ion-independent DNA binding behaviors of these systems. In an effort to illuminate the underlying mechanistic details which give rise to these differences, we have quantitatively dissected these equilibrium behaviors into component association and dissociation rates for the representative PvuII endonuclease and use these data to assess the stoichiometry of metal ion involvement in the binding process. The dependence of PvuII cognate DNA on Ca(II) concentration binding appears to be cooperative, exhibiting half-saturation at 0.6 mM metal ion and yielding an n(H) of 3.5 +/- 0.2 per enzyme homodimer. Using both nitrocellulose filter binding and fluorescence assays, we observe that the cognate DNA dissociation rate (k(-)(1) or k(off)) is very slow (10(-)(3) s(-)(1)) and exhibits a shallow dependence on metal ion concentration. DNA trap cleavage experiments with Mg(II) confirm the general irreversibility of DNA binding relative to cleavage, even at low metal ion concentrations. More dramatically, the association rate (k(1) or k(on)) also appears to be cooperative, increasing more than 100-fold between 0.2 and 10 mM Ca(II), with an optimum value of 2.7 x 10(7) M(-)(1) s (-)(1). Hill analysis of the metal ion dependence of k(on) indicates an n(H) of 3.6 +/- 0.2 per enzyme dimer. This value is consistent with the involvement in DNA association of two metal ions per subunit active site, a result which lends new strength to arguments for two-metal ion mechanisms in restriction enzymes.  相似文献   

11.
DNA binding and uptake by nuclei isolated from soybean (Glycine max L. Merr.) protoplasts were investigated using radioactive homogeneous DNA prepared from soybean cells. DNA binding to nuclei was found to decrease drastically with increased incubation time. Total uptake and acid-precipitable uptake reached a maximum after 20 minutes of incubation. Optimum DNA binding and uptake occurred at pH 6 and the process was enhanced by increasing the incubation temperature to 40 C. Salmonella typhimurium DNA and poly ([dA-dT]-[dA-dT]) competitively inhibited DNA binding whereas calf thymus DNA was less competitive; however, Micrococcus lysodeikticus DNA stimulated DNA binding and tobacco mosaic virus RNA had no effect. DNA binding and uptake was enhanced by addition of Mg ions, Ca ions, poly-l-lysine, and ATP. Increasing amounts of EDTA appeared to decrease DNA binding. Pronase strongly inhibited DNA binding and uptake.  相似文献   

12.
In this work a confocal Raman microspectrometer is used to investigate the influence of Na(+) and Mg(2+) ions on the DNA structural changes induced by low pH. Measurements are carried out on calf thymus DNA at neutral pH (7) and pH 3 in the presence of low and high concentrations of Na(+) and Mg(2+) ions, respectively. It is found that low concentrations of Na(+) ions do not protect DNA against binding of H(+). High concentrations of monovalent ions can prevent protonation of the DNA double helix. Our Raman spectra show that low concentrations of Mg(2+) ions partly protect DNA against protonation of cytosine (line at 1262 cm(-1)) but do not protect adenine and guanine N(7) against binding of H(+) (characteristic lines at 1304 and 1488 cm(-1), respectively). High concentrations of Mg(2+) can prevent protonation of cytosine and protonation of adenine (disruption of AT pairs). By analyzing the line at 1488 cm(-1), which obtains most of its intensity from a guanine vibration, high magnesium salt protect the N(7) of guanine against protonation. A high salt concentration can prevent protonation of guanine, cytosine, and adenine in DNA. Higher salt concentrations cause less DNA protonation than lower salt concentrations. Magnesium ions are found to be more effective in protecting DNA against binding of H(+) as compared with calcium ions presented in a previous study. Divalent metal cations (Mg(2+), Ca(2+)) are more effective in protecting DNA against protonation than monovalent ions (Na(+)).  相似文献   

13.
Mutational analysis has previously indicated that D83 and E98 residues are essential for DNA cleavage activity and presumably chelate a Mg2+ ion at the active site of MunI restriction enzyme. In the absence of metal ions, protonation of an ionizable residue with a pKa > 7.0, most likely one of the active site carboxylates, controls the DNA binding specificity of MunI [Lagunavicius, A., Grazulis, S., Balciunaite, E., Vainius, D., and Siksnys, V. (1997) Biochemistry 36, 11093-11099.]. Thus, competition between H+ and Mg2+ binding at the active site of MunI presumably plays an important role in catalysis/binding. In the present study we have identified elementary steps and intermediates in the reaction pathway of plasmid DNA cleavage by MunI and elucidated the effect of pH and Mg2+ ions on the individual steps of the DNA cleavage reaction. The kinetic analysis indicated that the multiple-turnover rate of plasmid cleavage by MunI is limited by product release throughout the pH range 6.0-9.3. Quenched-flow experiments revealed that open circle DNA is an obligatory intermediate in the reaction pathway. Under optimal reaction conditions, open circle DNA remains bound to the MunI; however it is released into the solution at low [MgCl2]. Rate constants for the phoshodiester bond hydrolysis of the first (k1) and second (k2) strand of plasmid DNA at pH 7.0 and 10 mM MgCl2 more than 100-fold exceed the kcat value which is limited by product dissociation. The analysis of the pH and [Mg2+] dependences of k1 and k2 revealed that both H+ and Mg2+ ions compete for the binding to the same residue at the active site of MunI. Thus, the decreased rate of phosphodiester hydrolysis by MunI at pH < 7.0 may be due to the reduction of affinity for the Mg2+ binding at the active site. Kinetic analysis of DNA cleavage by MunI yielded estimates for the association-dissociation rate constants of enzyme-substrate complex and demonstrated the decreased stability of the MunI-DNA complex at pH values above 8.0.  相似文献   

14.
DNA topoisomerase II regulates the three-dimensional organisation of DNA and is the principal target of many important anticancer and antimicrobial agents. These drugs usually act on the DNA cleavage/religation steps of the catalytic cycle resulting in accumulation of covalent DNA-topoisomerase II complexes. We have studied the different steps of the catalytic cycle as a function of salt concentration, which is a classical way to evaluate the biochemical properties of proteins. The results show that the catalytic activity of topoisomerase II follows a bell-shaped curve with optimum between 100 and 225 mM KCl. No straight-forward correlation exists between DNA binding and catalytic activity. The highest levels of drug-induced covalent DNA-topoisomerase II complexes are observed between 100 and 150 mM KCl. Remarkably, at salt concentrations between 150 mM and 225 mM KCl, topoisomerase II is converted into a drug-resistant form with greatly reduced levels of drug-induced DNA-topoisomerase II complexes. This is due to efficient religation rather than to absence of DNA cleavage as witnessed by relaxation of the supercoiled DNA substrate. In the absence of DNA, ATP hydrolysis is strongest at low salt concentrations. Unexpectedly, the addition of DNA stimulates ATP hydrolysis at 100 and 150 mM KCl, but has little or no effect below 100 mM KCl in spite of strong non-covalent DNA binding at these salt concentrations. Therefore, DNA-stimulated ATP hydrolysis appears to be associated with covalent rather than non-covalent binding of DNA to topoisomerase II. Taken together, the results suggest that it is the DNA cleavage/religation steps that are most closely associated with the catalytic activities of topoisomerase II providing a unifying theme for the biological and pharmacological modulation of this enzyme.  相似文献   

15.
16.
To test the role of a secondary metal ion in a two metal ion metallonuclease mechanism, some groups have introduced a nonsupportive metal ion [usually Ca(II)] in cleavage reactions. Stimulation of Mg(II)- or Mn(II)-supported activity has been taken as evidence that the second metal ion is regulatory. However, this activity has yet to be dissected to determine what processes and species contribute to this observation. Here, we test global kinetic analysis as an approach to this problem. Taking advantage of the various binding and cleavage constants established for PvuII endonuclease, we apply cleavage data obtained under a range of Mg(II) and Ca(II) concentrations to a number of kinetic models which specify A and B sites for both metal ions and various active species. The data are best fit and simulated with models which feature Ca(II) being held more strongly in the B (or secondary) site. This mixed metal enzyme species is the only one which forms appreciably and exhibits a cleavage rate constant similar to that observed when there is only one Mg(II) per active site (approximately 0.01 s?1). Thus, in the case of PvuII endonuclease, Ca(II) does not stimulate cleavage. However, a simulated increase in activity at moderate Ca(II) concentrations can be rationalized with a cleavage rate constant for the mixed species similar to that when two Mg(II) ions are present in the active site. This provides an important insight into the underlying basis for the Ca(II)-stimulated activity observed for some metallonucleases that is not accessible by any other means.  相似文献   

17.
We investigated DNA base damage in mammalian cells exposed to exogenous iron ions in culture. Murine hybridoma cells were treated with Fe(II) ions at concentrations of 10 μM, 100 μM, and 1 mM. Chromatin was isolated from treated and control cells and analyzed by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry for DNA base damage. Ten modified DNA bases were identified in both Fe(II)-treated and control cells. The quantification of modified bases was achieved by isotope-dilution mass spectrometry. In Fe(II)-treated cells, the amounts of modified bases were increased significantly above the background levels found in control cells. Dimethyl sulfoxide at concentrations up to 1 M in the culture medium did not significantly inhibit the formation of modified DNA bases. A mathematical simulation used to evaluate the plausibility of DNA damage upon Fe(II) treatment predicted a dose-dependent response, which agreed with the experimental results. In addition, Fe(II) treatment of cells increased the cell membrane permeability and caused production of lipid peroxides. The nature of DNA base lesions suggests the involvement of the hydroxyl radical in their formation. The failure of dimethyl sulfoxide to inhibit their formation indicates a site-specific mechanism for DNA damage with involvement of DNA-bound metal ions. Fe(II) treatment of cells may increase the intracellular iron ion concentration and/or cause oxidative stress releasing metal ions from their storage sites with subsequent binding to DNA. Identified DNA base lesions may be promutagenic and play a role in pathologic processes associated with iron ions.  相似文献   

18.
M W Van Dyke  P B Dervan 《Biochemistry》1983,22(10):2373-2377
The DNA binding sites for the antitumor, antiviral, antibiotics chromomycin, mithramycin, and olivomycin on 70 base pairs of heterogeneous DNA have been determined by using the (methidiumpropyl-EDTA)iron(II) [MPE x Fe(II)] DNA cleavage inhibition pattern technique. Two DNA restriction fragments 117 and 168 base pairs in length containing the lactose operon promoter-operator region were prepared with complementary strands labeled with 32P at the 3' end. MPE x Fe(II) was allowed to partially cleave the restriction fragment preequilibrated with either chromomycin, mithramycin, or olivomycin in the presence of Mg2+. The preferred binding sites for chromomycin, mithramycin, and olivomycin in the presence of Mg2+ appear to be a minimum of 3 base pairs in size containing at least 2 contiguous dG x dC base pairs. Many binding sites are similar for the three antibiotics; chromomycin and olivomycin binding sites are nearly identical. The number of sites protected from MPE x Fe(II) cleavage increases as the concentration of drug is raised. For chromomycin/Mg2+, the preferred sites on the 70 base pairs of DNA examined are (in decreasing affinity) 3'-GGG, CGA greater than CCG, GCC greater than CGA, CCT greater than CTG-5'. The sequence 3'-CGA-5' has different affinities, indicating the importance of either flanking sequences or a nearly bound drug.  相似文献   

19.
B D Ray  B D Rao 《Biochemistry》1988,27(15):5574-5578
31P NMR measurements were made (at 121.5 MHz and 5 degrees C) on enzyme-bound substrate complexes of 3-phosphoglycerate kinase in order to address three questions pertaining to (i) the integrity of the enzyme-substrate complexes with Mg(II) in the presence of sulfate concentrations typical of those used for crystallization in X-ray studies, (ii) the relative affinities of Mg(II) to ATP bound at the two sites on the enzyme, and (iii) the pH behavior of the different phosphate groups in the enzyme complexes. 31P chemical shift and spin-spin coupling constant changes showed that at concentrations of 0.5 M and higher, sulfate ion interferes with Mg(II) chelation to ATP and ADP free in solution as well as in their enzyme-bound complexes. The effect on enzyme complexes is stronger for the E.MgATP complex than for the E.MgADP complex. Sulfate ion (50 mM) also causes a approximately 0.5 ppm upfield chemical shift of the 31P resonance of enzyme-bound 3-P-glycerate even in the absence of ATP or Mg(II). A quantitative estimate of the dispartate affinities of Mg(II) to ATP bound at the two sites on the enzyme was made on the basis of computer simulation of changes in the line shape of beta-P (ATP) resonance and of changes in 31P chemical shift of the corresponding gamma-P (ATP) in the E.ATP complex with increasing [Mg(II)]. The concentrations of the relevant species that contribute to these 31P NMR signals were computed by assuming independent binding at the two sites.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
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