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1.
Baker CH  Tomlinson SR  García AE  Harman JG 《Biochemistry》2001,40(41):12329-12338
We investigated the characteristics of CRP having amino acid substitutions at position 99. Analysis of amino acid residue proximity to cAMP in molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of the CRP:(cAMP)(2) complex [García, A. E., and Harman, J. G. (1996) Protein Sci. 5, 62-71] showed repositioning of tyrosine 99 (Y99) to interact with the equatorial exocyclic oxygen atom of cAMP. To test the role of Y99 in cAMP-mediated CRP activation, Y99 was substituted with alanine (A) or phenylalanine (F). Cells that contained the WT or mutant forms of CRP induced beta-galactosidase in the presence of cAMP. Purified WT, Y99A, and Y99F CRP showed only a 3- to 4-fold difference in cAMP affinity. There were no apparent differences between the three forms of CRP in cAMP binding cooperativity, in CRP:(cAMP)(1) complex binding to lacP DNA, in the formation of CRP:cAMP:RNAP complexes at lacP, or in CRP efficacy in mediating lacP activity in vitro. The apo-form of Y99A CRP was more sensitive to protease than the apo-form of either WT CRP or Y99F CRP. Whereas the WT or Y99F CRP:(cAMP)(1) complexes were cleaved by protease at hinge-region peptide bonds, the Y99A CRP:(cAMP)(1) complex was cleaved at peptide bonds located at the subunit interface. The rates of subunit exchange for Y99A CRP, both in the apo-form and in a 1:1 complex with cAMP, were significantly greater than that measured for WT CRP. The results of this study show that tyrosine 99 contributes significant structural stability to the CRP dimer, specifically in stabilizing subunit association.  相似文献   

2.
Tomlinson SR  Tutar Y  Harman JG 《Biochemistry》2003,42(13):3759-3765
A cyclic nucleotide-binding pocket of the CRP dimer is composed of amino acid residues contributed by both subunits. Leucine (L) 124 of one subunit packs against the adenine ring of cAMP bound to the opposing subunit. We have undertaken a study designed to evaluate the role of L124 in CRP allostery. Wild-type (WT) apo-CRP is a 47 kDa protease-resistant dimer composed of identical subunits that exhibits a biphasic isotherm in cAMP titration studies. The WT CRP-cAMP complex is a protease-sensitive dimer degraded by protease to a dimer core that ranges between 26.5 and 30.5 kDa. Substitution of L124 with isoleucine (I), valine (V), cysteine (C), or alanine (A) generated a series of CRP variants that exhibited unique differences in apo-CRP resistance to protease, the mass of the core fragments generated in protease digestion reactions, cAMP-mediated allostery, and CRP-cAMP complex functionality. Differences in the affinity of the position 124 CRP variants for cAMP were observed. The binding constants that drive the formation of the WT and L124I CRP-cAMP complexes deviated by not more than a factor of 1.5. In contrast, the L124V, L124A, and L124C forms of CRP exhibited both a decreased K(cAMP1)(app) and an increased K(cAMP2)(app) to produce 2.4-, 55-, and 204-fold reductions, respectively, in the difference between these two parameters compared to that observed for WT CRP. The data indicate that the van der Waals volume and/or the hyrophobicity of the L124 side chain are important determinants of CRP cAMP binding properties and affect, either directly or indirectly, cAMP-mediated conformation changes in CRP.  相似文献   

3.
The cAMP receptor protein (CRP) of Escherichia coli undergoes a conformational change in response to cAMP binding that allows it to bind specific DNA sequences. Using an in vivo screening method following the simultaneous randomization of the codons at positions 127 and 128 (two C-helix residues of the protein interacting with cAMP), we have isolated a series of novel constitutively active CRP variants. Sequence analysis showed that this group of variants commonly possesses leucine or methionine at position 127 with a beta-branched amino acid at position 128. One specific variant, T127L/S128I CRP, showed extremely high cAMP-independent DNA binding affinity comparable with that of cAMP-bound wild-type CRP. Further biochemical analysis of this variant and others revealed that Leu(127) and Ile(128) have different roles in stabilizing the active conformation of CRP in the absence of cAMP. Leu(127) contributes to an improved leucine zipper at the dimer interface, leading to an altered intersubunit interaction in the C-helix region. In contrast, Ile(128) stabilizes the proper position of the beta4/beta5 loop by functionally communicating with Leu(61). By analogy, the results suggest two direct local effects of cAMP binding in the course of activating wild-type CRP: (i) C-helix repositioning through direct interaction with Thr(127) and Ser(128) and (ii) the concomitant reorientation of the beta4/beta5 loop. Finally, we also report that elevated expression of T127L/S128I CRP markedly perturbed E. coli growth even in the absence of cAMP, which suggests why comparably active variants have not been described previously.  相似文献   

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A deletion of the C-terminal part of the alpha-subunit of RNA polymerase is known to affect differently promoters activated by CRP depending on the location of the CRP binding site at the promoter. When the CRP binding site is located at -61.5, as at lacP1 (a type I promoter), activation is strongly impaired while it is not significantly affected at galP1 where CRP binds 41.5 bp upstream of the start of the message (type II promoter). We have investigated the differences in the architecture of the corresponding open complexes by comparing the positioning of holoenzymes reconstituted respectively with native or with truncated alpha-subunits (containing the first 235 or 256 residues of a) at two 'up' promoter mutants of the lacP1 and galP1 promoters (respectively lacUV5 and gal9A16C). First, the affinity of wild-type RNA polymerase for both promoters is increased by the presence of CRP and cAMP. By contrast, holoenzymes reconstituted with truncated alpha-subunits, show cooperative binding at the galP1 promoter only. Second, footprinting data confirm these observations and indicate that the truncated holoenzymes are unable to recognize regions of the promoter upstream from position -40. The absence of contacts between the truncated enzymes and CRP at the lacP1 promoter can explain the deficiency in activation. At the galP1 promoter, where the CRP site is closer to the initiation site, protein-protein contacts can still occur with the truncated polymerases, showing that the C-terminal part of the alpha-subunit is not involved in activation.  相似文献   

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Tomlinson SR  Tutar Y  Harman JG 《Biochemistry》2006,45(45):13438-13446
We investigated the characteristics of 13 CRP variants having cysteine substituted at positions 113, 115, 116, 117, 118, 120, 122, 124, 126, 127, 129, 130, or 131, positions that span the length of the CRP C alpha-helix. Under reducing conditions, the WT and all Cys-substituted forms of CRP migrated as 23.5 kDa CRP monomer species on SDS-PAGE gels. In the absence of a reductant, 9 of 13 Cys-substituted forms of CRP including the L113C, S117C, M120C, L124C, V126C, T127C, E129C, K130C, and V131C CRP contained protein that migrated as 47 kDa CRP dimer species on SDS-PAGE gels. CNBr digestion of the protein preparations followed by MALDI-TOF MS analysis of the peptide fragments showed these 47 kDa species to be CRP dimers that originated from disulfide bonds formed between positional-pair C alpha-helix Cys residues. The ratio of monomer CRP and disulfide cross-linked CRP within a Cys-substituted CRP preparation was found to be independent of cAMP for Cys-substituted CRP preparations denatured and renatured in the presence of various cAMP concentrations. This finding suggests that there is no large-scale concerted motion (i.e., scissoring) of the CRP subunits in response to cAMP binding. In addition, we have identified three amino acid residues located along the CRP C alpha-helix that play a role in facilitating the conformation transition of the CRP hinge from that characteristic of apo-CRP to that characteristic of the CRP.cAMP complex.  相似文献   

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The cyclic 3', 5' adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) binding pocket of the cAMP receptor protein (CRP) of Escherichia coli was mutagenized to substitute cysteine or glycine for serine 83; cysteine, glycine, isoleucine, or serine for threonine 127; and threonine or alanine for serine 128. Cells that expressed the binding pocket residue-substituted forms of CRP were characterized by measurements of beta-galactosidase activity. Purified wild-type and mutant CRP preparations were characterized by measurement of cAMP binding activity and by their capacity to support lacP activation in vitro. CRP structure was assessed by measurement of sensitivity to protease and DTNB-mediated subunit crosslinking. The results of this study show that cAMP interactions with serine 83, threonine 127 and serine 128 contribute to CRP activation and have little effect on cAMP binding. Amino acid substitutions that introduce hydrophobic amino acid side chain constituents at either position 127 or 128 decrease CRP discrimination of cAMP and cGMP. Finally, cAMP-induced CRP structural change(s) that occur in or near the CRP hinge region result from cAMP interaction with threonine 127; substitution of threonine 127 by cysteine, glycine, isoleucine, or serine produced forms of CRP that contained, independently of cAMP binding, structural changes similar to those of the wild-type CRP:cAMP complex.  相似文献   

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Shi Y  Wang S  Schwarz FP 《Biochemistry》2000,39(24):7300-7308
The allosteric activation of the T127-->L mutant of 3',5'-cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) receptor protein (CRP) by cAMP changes from an exothermic, independent two-site binding mechanism at pH 7.0 to an endothermic, interacting two-site binding mechanism at pH 5.2, similar to that observed for CRP at pH 7.0 and 5.2. Since the T127-->L mutation at the subunit interface of the CRP dimer creates a more perfect leucine-zipper motif, it is believed to increase the intersubunit association and the stability of the CRP, as is observed by the higher thermal stability of the T127L mutant relative to that of CRP in differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) measurements. The DSC scans also exhibit a single thermal denaturation transition for CRP and a S128A mutant from pH 5.2 to 7. 0, while the broader transition peak of the T127L mutant becomes resolvable into two transitions below pH < or =5.2. Circular dichroism measurements on T127L and CRP at pH 7.0 and 5.2 show changes in the tertiary structure of both proteins with the exception of the tertiary structure around the two tryptophan residues in the amino-terminal domain. Although gel electrophoresis of the proteolysis (pH 5.2) products of T127L, CRP, and their cAMP- and cGMP-ligated complexes shows the subunit band and an amino-terminal domain fragment band, the fully allosterically activated complexes of T127L and CRP show the amino-terminal domain fragment band but not the subunit band. The results are interpreted in terms of the allosteric activation of CRP by cAMP by a conformational change from an "open" to a "closed" form of CRP, which involves changes in the tertiary structure of the carboxyl-terminal domains that are partially induced by an increase in the intersubunit association in T127L. While T127L retains its intersubunit association from pH 5.2 to 7.0, changes occur in the carboxyl-terminal domain so that the endothermic, allosteric activation mechanism of CRP by cAMP is restored in T127L at pH 5.2.  相似文献   

17.
Dai J  Lin SH  Kemmis C  Chin AJ  Lee JC 《Biochemistry》2004,43(28):8901-8910
Mutagenesis of various amino acids in Escherichia coli cyclic AMP receptor protein (CRP) has been shown to modulate protein compressibility and dynamics [Gekko et al. (2004) Biochemistry 43, 3844-3852]. Cooperativity of cAMP binding to CRP and the apparent DNA binding affinity are perturbed [Lin and Lee (2002) Biochemistry 41, 11857-11867]. The aim of this study is to explore the effects of mutation on the surface chemistry of CRP and to define the consequences of these changes in affecting specific DNA sequence recognition by CRP. Furthermore, the role of the interplay between mutation and specific identity of the bound cyclic nucleotide in this DNA recognition was explored. In the current study, effects of eight site-specific mutations (K52N, D53H, S62F, T127L, G141Q, L148R, H159L, and K52N/H159L) on DNA recognition of four sequences (Class I (site PI of lac), Class II (site PI of gal), and synthetic sequences that are hybrids of Classes I and II sites) modulated by three different cyclic nucleotides (cAMP, cCMP, and cGMP) were investigated. All mutations altered the surface chemistry of CRP as evidenced by the change in elution properties of these proteins from different matrixes. While T127L, S62F, K52N, and H159L exhibited unexpected behavior under combinations of specific experimental conditions, such as the identity of bound cyclic nucleotide and DNA sequence, in general, results showed that the affinities of CRP for DNA were sequence-dependent, increasing in the order of lacgal26 < gal26 < lac26 < gallac26 for all the mutants in the presence of 200 microM cAMP. The apparent association constants significantly increased in the order of no cyclic nucleotide approximately cGMP < cCMP < cAMP for all the examined DNA sequences. Linear correlation between the DeltaG for CRP-DNA complex formation and the cooperativity energy for cAMP binding was observed with gallac26, gal26, and lacgal26; however, the slope of this linear correlation is DNA sequence dependent. Structural information was presented to rationalize the interplay between CRP sequence and cyclic nucleotides in defining the recognition of DNA sequences.  相似文献   

18.
This paper describes a generally applicable method for quantitative investigation of ligand-dependent binding of a regulatory protein to its target DNA at equilibrium. It is used here to analyse the coupled binding equilibria of cAMP receptor protein from Escherichia coli K12 (CRP) with DNA and the physiological effector cAMP. In principle, the DNA binding parameters of CRP dimers with either one or two ligands bound are determinable in such an approach. The change of protein fluorescence was used to measure CRP binding to its recognition sequence in the lac control region and to non-specific DNA. Furthermore, the binding of cAMP to preformed CRP-DNA complexes was independently studied by equilibrium dialysis. The data were analysed using a simple interactive model for two intrinsically identical sites and site-site interactions. The intrinsic binding constant K and the co-operativity factor alpha for binding of cAMP to free CRP depend only slightly on salt concentration between 0.01 M and 0.2 M. In contrast, the affinity of cAMP for CRP pre-bound to non-specific DNA increases with the salt concentration and the co-operativity changes from positive to negative. This results from cation rebinding to the DNA lattice upon forming the cAMP-CRP-DNA complex from cAMP and the pre-formed CRP-DNA complex. The CRP-cAMP1 complex shows almost the same affinity for specific and non-specific DNA as the CRP-cAMP2 complex, and both displace the same number of cations. It is concluded that the allosteric activation of CRP is induced upon binding of the first cAMP. These results are used to estimate the occupation of the CRP site in the lac control region in relation to the cAMP concentration in vivo. Under physiological conditions the lac promoter is activated by the CRP dimer complexed with only one cAMP. Furthermore, a model for the differential activation of various genes expressed under catabolite repression is presented and discussed.  相似文献   

19.
G S Tan  P Kelly  J Kim  R M Wartell 《Biochemistry》1991,30(20):5076-5080
The secondary structures of the cAMP receptor protein (CRP), a complex of CRP and cAMP, and a cAMP-independent receptor protein mutant (CRP*141 gln) were examined by using Raman spectroscopy. Spectra were obtained from CRP and CRP*141 gln dissolved in 0.3 M NaCl and 30 mM sodium phosphate at protein concentrations of 30-40 mg/mL. CRP and CRP.cAMP1 were compared at lower protein concentrations (10-12 mg/mL) in a solvent of 0.35 M NaCl and 20 mM sodium phosphate. Raman analysis indicates that CRP structural changes induced by one bound cAMP or by the Gly to Gln mutation at residue 141 are small. Spectra of the three CRP samples are essentially identical from 400 to 1900 cm-1. This result differs from the Raman spectroscopy study of CRP and CRP.cAMP2 cocrystals [DeGrazia et al. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 3557]. The latter work showed spectral differences between CRP and CRP.cAMP2 consistent with alterations in the protein conformation. These studies indicate that CRP and CRP.cAMP1 in solution are similar in structure and differ from CRP.cAMP2 cocrystals. Protease digestion and a DNA binding assay were also employed to characterize the wild-type and mutant proteins. CRP*141 gln exhibited the same conformational characteristics of previously reported cAMP-independent mutant proteins. It was sensitive to proteolytic attack in the absence of cAMP, or upon addition of cGMP. In the absence of cAMP, both wild-type and mutant CRPs bound noncooperatively to a 62 bp lac promoter DNA. The equilibrium constants were approximately 10(6) M-1 in 0.1 M Na+. CRP*141 gln had a 2-4-fold higher affinity for the 62 bp DNA than CRP.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis has been used to visualise and quantitate complexes between the Escherichia coli cyclic AMP receptor protein (CRP) and DNA fragments containing the promoter region of either the E. coli galactose or lactose operons. We show that, although CRP binding to the gal fragment is weaker than binding to the lac fragment, in each case, stable complexes are formed between one dimer of CRP and one molecule of DNA. We have examined the effects of a series of deletions and point mutations in the gal promoter region on CRP binding. From the position of deletions and mutations which prevent the formation of stable complexes, we deduce the location and extent of the sequence at the CRP binding site. We show that it covers approximately the same length of sequence as the binding site at the lac promoter. Unlike the lac site, the gal site contains no palindromic sequence. We discuss the importance of symmetry in the sequence at CRP binding sites and the validity of CRP binding consensus sequences which have been proposed.  相似文献   

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