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1.
In 2HJ(NN)-COSY experiments, which correlate protons with donor/acceptor nitrogens across Nd...HNa bonds, the receptor nitrogen needs to be assigned in order to unambiguously identify the hydrogen bond. For many situations this is a non-trivial task which is further complicated by poor dispersion of (Na,Nd) resonances. To address these problems, we present pulse sequences to obtain direct, internucleotide correlations between protons in uniformly 13C/15N labeled nucleic acids containing Nd...HNa hydrogen bonds. Specifically, the pulse sequence H2(N1N3)H3 correlates H2(A,omega1):H3(U,omega2) protons across Watson-CrickA-U and mismatched G.A base pairs, the sequences H5(N3N1)H1/H6(N3N1)H1 correlate H5(C,omega1)/H6(C,omega1):H1(G,omega2) protons across Watson-Crick G-C base pairs, and the H2(N2N7)H8 sequence correlates NH2(G,A,C;omega1):H8(G,A;omega2) protons across G.G, A.A, sheared G.A and other mismatch pairs. These 1H-1H connectivities circumvent the need for independent assignment of the donor/acceptor nitrogen and related degeneracy issues associated with poorly dispersed nitrogen resonances. The methodology is demonstrated on uniformly 13C/15N labeled samples of (a) an RNA regulatory element involving the HIV-1 TAR RNA fragment, (b) a multi-stranded DNA architecture involving a G.(C-A) triad-containing G-quadruplex and (c) a peptide-RNA complex involving an evolved peptide bound to the HIV-1 Rev response element (RRE) RNA fragment.  相似文献   

2.
Heteronuclear 2-D and 3-D magic-angle spinning NMR dipolar correlation spectroscopy was applied to determine solid-state (1)H shifts for aggregated bacteriochlorophyll c (BChl c) in uniformly (13)C-enriched light harvesting chlorosomes of the green photosynthetic bacterium Chlorobium tepidum. A complete assignment of 29 different observable resonances of the 61 protons of the aggregated BChl c in the intact chlorosomes is obtained. Aggregation shifts relative to monomeric BChl c in solution are detected for protons attached to rings I, II, and III/V and to their side chains. The 2(1)-H(3), 3(2)-H(3), and 3(1)-H resonances are shifted upfield by -2.2, -1, and -3.3 ppm, respectively, relative to monomeric BChl c in solution. Although the resonances are inhomogeneously broadened and reveal considerable global structural heterogeneity, the 5-CH and the 7-Me responses are doubled, which provides evidence for the existence of at least two relatively well-defined structurally different arrangements. Ab initio quantum chemical modeling studies were performed to refine a model for the self-assembled BChl c with two different types of BChl stacks. The BChl in the stacks can adopt either anti- or syn-configuration of the coordinative bond, where anti and syn designate the relative orientation of the Mg-OH bond relative to the direction of the 17-17(1) bond. The analogy between aggregation shifts for BChl c in the chlorosome and for self-assembled chlorophyll a/H(2)O is explored, and a bilayer model for the tubular supra-structure of sheets of BChl c is proposed, from a homology modeling approach.  相似文献   

3.
The peptide resonances of the 1H and 15N nuclear magnetic resonance spectra of ferrocytochrome c2 from Rhodobacter capsulatus are sequentially assigned by a combination of 2D 1H-1H and 1H-15N spectroscopy, the latter performed on 15N-enriched protein. Short-range nuclear Overhauser effect (NOE) data show alpha-helices from residues 3-17, 55-65, 69-88, and 103-115. Within the latter two alpha-helices, there are three single 3(10) turns, 70-72, 76-78, and 107-109. In addition alpha H-NHi+1 and alpha H-NHi+2 NOEs indicate that the N-terminal helix (3-17) is distorted. Compared to horse or tuna cytochrome c and cytochrome c2 of Rhodospirillium rubrum, there is a 6-residue insertion at residues 23-29 in R. capsulatus cytochrome c2. The NOE data show that this insertion forms a loop, probably an omega loop. 1H-15N heteronuclear multiple quantum correlation experiments are used to follow NH exchange over a period of 40 h. As the 2D spectra are acquired in short time periods (30 min), rates for intermediate exchanging protons can be measured. Comparison of the NH exchange data for the N-terminal helix of cytochrome c2 of R. capsulatus with the highly homologous horse heart cytochrome c [Wand, A. J., Roder, H., & Englander, S. W. (1986) Biochemistry 25, 1107-1114] shows that this helix is less stable in cytochrome c2.  相似文献   

4.
Extensive 1H and 15H NMR investigations of the nucleotide moieties capable of hydrogen bonding to ribonuclease A were carried out in order to gain more detailed information on the specificity of nucleotide-enzyme interaction. The 1H investigations focussed on those protons presumed to be involved in hydrogen bonding between the various nucleotides and the enzyme. In particular these were the imino protons of the uridine nucleotides and the amino protons of the cytidine nucleotides. The technique of 15N-1H double quantum filtering was applied for observation of the resonances of the latter in the nucleotide-enzyme complex. The downfield shift observed for the imino proton resonance of the uridine nucleotides was indicative of hydrogen bond formation to the enzyme. 15N NMR spectra of the free nucleotides and the nucleotide-enzyme complexes were also acquired to examine the possibility of hydrogen bond formation at the N3 site of both pyrimidine bases and the amino group of the cytidine nucleotides. The downfield shift observed for the 15N3 resonance of the uridine nucleotides and the upfield shift observed for the corresponding resonance of the cytidine nucleotides was evidence that the N3 moiety acts as hydrogen donor or hydrogen acceptor in the nucleotide-enzyme complex. The effect of complex formation on the 15N1 resonance of the respective bases was also studied. Both 1H and 15N NMR results indicated subtle differences between the complexes of the 2' and 3' nucleotides. The extent of hydrogen bonding as well as the arrangement of the nucleotide base at the active site of the enzyme varies in dependence on the position of the phosphate group. It is established that hydrogen bonding, though not the main binding force between the nucleotides and the enzyme, is certainly a major factor of RNase A specificity for pyrimidine nucleotides.  相似文献   

5.
Uniformly 15N-enriched ribonuclease T1 (RNase T1) was obtained from Escherichia coli by recombinant techniques. Heteronuclear 1H, 15N-shift correlation spectra were recorded utilizing proton detection. Direct 1H, 15N connectivities were established applying the heteronuclear multiple-quantum coherence technique. Additional 1H, 1H-TOCSY or 1H, 1H-NOESY transfer steps allowed for sequential assignments. Nitrogen atoms without directly bonded protons were detected by means of the heteronuclear multiple-bond correlation experiment. Signals emerging from 15NH and 15NH2 groups were distinguished by heteronuclear triple-quantum filtering methods. 119 nitrogen resonances out of the expected 127 were assigned unambiguously; in addition, previously obtained proton assignments were extended. Preliminary 1H, 15N NMR investigation were performed on the RNase-T1-3'GMP inhibitor complex. Results were interpreted with respect to nucleotide binding.  相似文献   

6.
The proton resonances of the heme, the axial ligands, and other hyperfine-shifted resonances in the 1H nuclear magnetic resonance spectrum of horse ferricytochrome c have been investigated by means of one- and two-dimensional nuclear Overhauser and magnetization transfer methods. Conditions for saturation transfer experiments in mixtures of ferro- and ferricytochrome c were optimized for the cross assignment of corresponding resonances in the two oxidation states. New resonance assignments were obtained for the methine protons of both thioether bridges, the beta and gamma meso protons, the propionate six heme substituent, the N pi H of His-18, and the Tyr-67 OH. In addition, several recently reported assignments were confirmed. All of the resolved hyperfine-shifted resonances in the spectrum of ferricytochrome c are now identified. The Fermi contact shifts experienced by the heme and ligand protons are discussed.  相似文献   

7.
The pressure-induced changes in 15N enriched HPr from Staphylococcus carnosus were investigated by two-dimensional (2D) heteronuclear NMR spectroscopy at pressures ranging from atmospheric pressure up to 200 MPa. The NMR experiments allowed the simultaneous observation of the backbone and side-chain amide protons and nitrogens. Most of the resonances shift downfield with increasing pressure indicating generalized pressure-induced conformational changes. The average pressure-induced shifts for amide protons and nitrogens are 0.285 ppm GPa(-1) at 278 K and 2.20 ppm GPa(-1), respectively. At 298 K the corresponding values are 0.275 and 2.41 ppm GPa(-1). Proton and nitrogen pressure coefficients show a significant but rather small correlation (0.31) if determined for all amide resonances. When restricting the analysis to amide groups in the beta-pleated sheet, the correlation between these coefficients is with 0.59 significantly higher. As already described for other proteins, the amide proton pressure coefficients are strongly correlated to the corresponding hydrogen bond distances, and thus are indicators for the pressure-induced changes of the hydrogen bond lengths. The nitrogen shift changes appear to sense other physical phenomena such as changes of the local backbone conformation as well. Interpretation of the pressure-induced shifts in terms of structural changes in the HPr protein suggests the following picture: the four-stranded beta-pleated sheet of HPr protein is the least compressible part of the structure showing only small pressure effects. The two long helices a and c show intermediary effects that could be explained by a higher compressibility and a concomitant bending of the helices. The largest pressure coefficients are found in the active center region around His15 and in the regulatory helix b which includes the phosphorylation site Ser46 for the HPr kinase. This suggests that this part of the structure occurs in a number of different structural states whose equilibrium populations are shifted by pressure. In contrast to the surrounding residues of the active center loop that show large pressure effects, Ile14 has a very small proton and nitrogen pressure coefficient. It could represent some kind of anchoring point of the active center loop that holds it in the right place in space, whereas other parts of the loop adapt themselves to changing external conditions.  相似文献   

8.
The NMR titration curves of proton chemical shifts were observed for the C2 protons of histidine residues in intact bovine pancreatic RNAase A (EC 3.1.27.5) and carboxyalkylated RNAase A. By comparing the methyl region of NMR spectra, the 250-340 nm region of circular dichoic spectra, and the NMR titration curves of tyrosine ring protons among intact and modified RNAase A, it was ascertained that the carboxyalkylation of histidine residues at position 12 or 119 did not make any appreciable conformational changes to RNAase A. With the pK values determined for intact and modified RNAase A, the microscopic pK values and molar ratios of tautomers were estimated for His-12 and His-119 by means of the procedure described in the preceding paper. The estimated microscopic pK values of tautomers were 6.2 for the N1-H tautomer of His-12, more than 8 for the N3-H tautomer of His-12, 7.0 for the N1-H tautomer of His-119, and 6.4 for the N3-H tautomer of His-119, respectively. These values were interpreted in terms of the microscopic environments surrounding the histidine residues. The microscopic structure estimated in the present study was discussed, comparing it with those from X-ray crystallography and hydrogen-tritium (or hydrogen-deuterium) exchange technique.  相似文献   

9.
Shao W  Im SC  Zuiderweg ER  Waskell L 《Biochemistry》2003,42(50):14774-14784
The interaction between bovine cytochrome b(5) (cyt b(5)) and horse heart cytochrome c (cyt c) is investigated by NMR spectroscopy. Chemical shifts of cyt b(5) backbone resonances and side chain methyl resonances were monitored as a function of cyt c concentration. The shifts are small but saturatable and indicate that the binding of cyt b(5) with cyt c is in fast exchange. An equilibrium association constant of (6 +/- 3) x 10(4) M(-1) was obtained with a lower limit of 180 s(-1) for the dissociation rate of the complex. To resolve considerable ambiguities in the interpretation of the chemical shift mapping, (15)N relaxation experiments and cross-saturation experiments were used as alternative methods to map the cyt b(5)-cyt c binding interface. Results from the three experiments combined demonstrate that the conserved negatively charged region of cyt b(5) surrounding the solvent-exposed heme edge is involved in the interaction with cyt c. These data support the models proposed by Salemme and Mauk [(1976) J. Mol. Biol. 102, 563-568; (1993) Biochemistry 32, 6613-6623].  相似文献   

10.
Histidine C-2 proton resonances in rhesus monkey carbonic anhydrase B (carbonate hydro-lyase, EC 4.2.1.1) and bovine carbonic anhydrase were investigated using 270-MHz proton magnetic resonance. The results suggest that there are extensive three-dimensional homologies between the human B and rhesus B enzymes and between the human C and bovine enzymes. Resonances from solvent exchangeable protons have been observed in the 11-16 ppm range in the NMR spectra of human carbonic anhydrases B and C and bovine carbonic anhydrase. Up to five of these are sensitive to changes of pH and the presence of inhibitors. Three of these resonances are assigned to NH protons of the metal coordinated imidazole groups. These results are discussed in relation to various models for the catalytic mechanism of carbonic anhydrase.  相似文献   

11.
Resonances of the water exchangeable iminoprotons of the tertiary structure of yeast tRNAPhe were studied by experiments involving Nuclear Overhauser Effects (NOE's). Direct NOE evidence is presented for the assignment of all resonances of iminoprotons participating in tertiary basepairing (except that of G19C56 which was assigned by an elimination procedure). The present results in conjunction with our previous assignment of secondary iminoprotons constitute for the first time a complete spectral assignment of all iminoprotons participating in basepairing in yeast tRNAPhe. In addition we have been able to assign the non(internally) hydrogen bonded N1 proton of psi 55 as well as the N3 proton of this residue, which is one of the two iminoprotons hydrogen bonded to a phosphate group according to X-ray results. No evidence could be obtained for the existence in solution of the other iminoproton-phosphate interaction: that between U33 N3H and P36 located in the anticodon loop. Remarkable is the assignment of a resonance at 12.4 - 12.5 ppm to the iminoproton of the tertiary basepair T54m1A58. The resonance positions obtained for the iminoprotons of G18 (9.8 ppm) and m2(2)G26 (10.4 ppm) are surprisingly far upfield considering that these protons are involved in hydrogen bonds according to X-ray diffraction results. As far as reported by changes in chemical shifts of iminoproton resonances the main structural event induced by Mg++ ions takes place near the tertiary interactions U8A14 and G22m7G46.  相似文献   

12.
Ferricytochromes c from three species (horse, tuna, yeast) display sensitivity to variations in solution ionic strength or pH that is manifested in significant changes in the proton NMR spectra of these proteins. Irradiation of the heme 3-CH3 resonances in the proton NMR spectra of tuna, horse and yeast iso-1 ferricytochromes c is shown to give NOE connectivities to the phenyl ring protons of Phe82 as well as to the beta-CH2 protons of this residue. This method was used to probe selectively the Phe82 spin systems of the three cytochromes c under a variety of solution conditions. This phenylalanine residue has previously been shown to be invariant in all mitochondrial cytochromes c, located near the exposed heme edge in proximity to the heme 3-CH3, and may function as a mediator in electron transfer reactions [Louie, G. V., Pielak, G. J., Smith, M. & Brayer, G. D. (1988) Biochemistry 27, 7870-7876]. Ferricytochromes c from all three species undergo a small but specific structural rearrangement in the environment around the heme 3-CH3 group upon changing the solution conditions from low to high ionic strength. This structural change involves a decrease in the distance between the Phe82 beta-CH2 group and the heme 3-CH3 substituent. In addition, studies of the effect of pH on the 1H-NMR spectrum of yeast iso-1 ferricytochrome c show that the heme 3-CH3 proton resonance exhibits a pH-dependent shift with an apparent pK in the range of 6.0-7.0. The chemical shift change of the yeast iso-1 ferricytochrome c heme 3-CH3 resonance is not accompanied by an increase in the linewidth as previously described for horse ferricytochrome c [Burns, P. D. & La Mar, G. N. (1981) J. Biol. Chem. 256, 4934-4939]. These spectral changes are interpreted as arising from an ionization of His33 near the C-terminus. In general, the larger spectral changes observed for the resonances in the vicinity of the heme 3-CH3 group in yeast iso-1 ferricytochrome c with changes in solution conditions, relative to the tuna and horse proteins, suggest that the region around Phe82 is more open and that movement of the Phe82 residue is less constrained in yeast ferricytochrome c. Finally, it is demonstrated here that both the heme 8-CH3 and the 7 alpha-CH resonances of yeast ferricytochrome c titrate with p2H and exhibit apparent pK values of approximately 7.0. The titrating group responsible for these spectral changes is proposed to be His39.  相似文献   

13.
R Timkovich  M S Cork 《Biochemistry》1982,21(21):5119-5123
Proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectra of ferricytochrome cd1 from the denitrifying bacterium Pseudomonas aeruginosa have been obtained. The normal 0-10-ppm chemical shift range shows many overlapping and nonresolvable peaks, as would be expected for a dimeric protein of molecular weight approximately 120,000. In the downfield region between 10 and 50 ppm, and in the upfield region between 0 and -20 ppm, resolvable resonances corresponding to a small number of protons are observed. The temperature and pH behavior of these resonances have been examined. For some of the resolved resonances, the pH behavior of chemical shifts and intensities indicates that the oxidized form of the enzyme undergoes a structural transition with a pK of 5.8 +/- 0.3. On the basis of several lines of evidence, some assignments are proposed in which resolvable resonances are assigned as originating from either the heme c or the heme d1 prosthetic groups of the enzyme.  相似文献   

14.
Active fragments of the heat-stable enterotoxin ST I of Escherichia coli were chemically synthesized with the sequence Cys-Cys-Glu-Leu-Cys-Cys-Asn-Pro-Ala-Cys-Thr-Gly-Cys-(Tyr) and studied by proton (1H NMR) and carbon-13 (13C NMR) nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy as a function of pH and temperature. All of the nonexchangeable protons in the 1H NMR spectrum were assigned. Although all amide protons were present at temperatures below 25 degrees C and and pH values below 6, some of the resonances are broad and could not be assigned. The temperature dependence of these broad resonances indicates a change in conformation that is localized in the N-terminus. Other amide protons disappear at higher temperatures owing to chemical exchange with the solvent. Sufficient resonance assignments can be made at high and low temperatures to permit structural conclusions to be made. The chemical shifts of the alpha-carbon protons indicate the presence of substantial structure, which was further defined with the observed pattern of nuclear Overhauser enhancements (NOEs), coupling constants, and exchange rates. The NMR data identify a turn from Ala-14 to Cys-18. A second likely turn is centered around the proline residue. An interresidue NOE between the alpha-carbon protons of Asn-12 and Gly-17 indicates that the molecule folds back on itself. The NMR information is sufficient to define the structure of the C-terminal region of ST I. Manual model building then indicated that one arrangement of the three disulfides is particularly compatible with the NMR data and van der Waals constraints. A model incorporating the disulfide arrangement proposed by Houghten and his co-workers [Houghten, R.A., Ostresh, J.M., & Klipstein, F.A. (1984) Eur. J. Biochem. 145, 157-162] and the NMR constraints was derived with the programs PROTO [Frayman, F. (1985) Ph.D. Thesis, Northwestern University] and NOEMOT [Lane, A.N., Lefévre, J.-F., & Jardetsky, O. (1986) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 867, 45-56].  相似文献   

15.
We have produced T4 lysozyme using a bacterial expression system which allows efficient incorporation of isotopically labeled amino acids in lysozyme. By using conditions that repress the expression of various transaminases, we have incorporated 15N-labeled amino acid into the five phenylalanine residues of the protein. The relatively large spin--spin coupling (87 +/- 3 Hz) between the 15N nucleus and the phenylalanine amide protons may then be exploited in a variety of ways to selectively observe the five phenylalanine amide proton resonances. These include a simple "echo difference" technique which displays the amide proton resonances in one dimension and a "forbidden echo" technique [Bax, A., Griffey, R. H., & Hawkins, B.L. (1983) J. Magn. Reson. 55, 301-335] which gives two-dimensional information allowing the proton and 15N chemical shifts of each amide to be determined. With these approaches, all five phenylalanine amide protons give resolved resonances. Deuterium exchange experiments demonstrate that three of the five resonances are slow to exchange (half-times of about 1 week at pH 5.5 and 4 degrees C) while the other two are rapid with complete exchange in hours or less. These observations correlate well with the secondary structure of the protein which shows three residues in alpha-helical regions and two residues in surface-exposed environments. This approach of isotopic substitution on nitrogen or carbon atoms is of general utility and should allow virtually any proton on a protein of molecular weight 20 000 or thereabout to be selectively observed.  相似文献   

16.
Hom K  Ma QF  Wolfe G  Zhang H  Storch EM  Daggett V  Basus VJ  Waskell L 《Biochemistry》2000,39(46):14025-14039
In an effort to gain greater insight into the molecular mechanism of the electron-transfer reactions of cytochrome b(5), the bovine cytochrome b(5)-horse cytochrome c complex has been investigated by high-resolution multidimensional NMR spectroscopy using (13)C, (15)N-labeled cytochrome b(5) expressed from a synthetic gene. Chemical shifts of the backbone (15)N, (1)H, and (13)C resonances for 81 of the 82 residues of [U-90% (13)C,U-90% (15)N]-ferrous cytochrome b(5) in a 1:1 complex with ferrous cytochrome c were compared with those of ferrous cytochrome b(5) in the absence of cytochrome c. A total of 51% of these residues showed small, but significant, changes in chemical shifts (the largest shifts were 0.1 ppm for the amide (1)H, 1.15 for (13)C(alpha), 1.03 ppm for the amide (15)N, and 0.15 ppm for the (1)H(alpha) resonances). Some of the residues exhibiting chemical shift changes are located in a region that has been implicated as the binding surface to cyt c [Salemme, F. R. (1976) J. Mol. Biol. 10, 563-568]. Surprisingly, many of the residues with changes are not located on this surface. Instead, they are located within and around a cleft observed to form in a molecular dynamics study of cytochrome b(5) [Storch, E. M., and Daggett, V. (1995) Biochemistry 34, 9682-9693](.) The rim of this cleft can readily accommodate cytochrome c. Molecular dynamics simulations of the Salemme and cleft complexes were performed for 2 ns and both complexes were stable.  相似文献   

17.
Glyoxalase 2 is a beta-lactamase fold-containing enzyme that appears to be involved with cellular chemical detoxification. Although the cytoplasmic isozyme has been characterized from several organisms, essentially nothing is known about the mitochondrial proteins. As a first step in understanding the structure and function of mitochondrial glyoxalase 2 enzymes, a mitochondrial isozyme (GLX2-5) from Arabidopsis thaliana was cloned, overexpressed, purified, and characterized using metal analyses, EPR and (1)H NMR spectroscopies, and x-ray crystallography. The recombinant enzyme was shown to bind 1.04 +/- 0.15 eq of iron and 1.31 +/- 0.05 eq of Zn(II) and to exhibit k(cat) and K(m) values of 129 +/- 10 s(-1) and 391 +/- 48 microm, respectively, when using S-d-lactoylglutathione as the substrate. EPR spectra revealed that recombinant GLX2-5 contains multiple metal centers, including a predominant Fe(III)Z-n(II) center and an anti-ferromagnetically coupled Fe(III)Fe(II) center. Unlike cytosolic glyoxalase 2 from A. thaliana, GLX2-5 does not appear to specifically bind manganese. (1)H NMR spectra revealed the presence of at least eight paramagnetically shifted resonances that arise from protons in close proximity to a Fe(III)Fe(II) center. Five of these resonances arose from solvent-exchangeable protons, and four of these have been assigned to NH protons on metal-bound histidines. A 1.74-A resolution crystal structure of the enzyme revealed that although GLX2-5 shares a number of structural features with human GLX2, several important differences exist. These data demonstrate that mitochondrial glyoxalase 2 can accommodate a number of different metal centers and that the predominant metal center is Fe(III)Zn(II).  相似文献   

18.
Ferredoxin isolated from Halobacterium of the Dead Sea (HFd) was found to be stable and retain its conformation in 4–0.5 M salt solutions. Reconstitution of the denatured protein to the oxidized form in 2H2O indicated that the resonances shifted to the 8–10 ppm region, which include 18 protons, are nonexchangeable -NH protons. The C2H and C4H resonances of His-119 were assigned in both oxidized and reduced HFd. pH titration curves of these resonances yielded a pKa for this His of 6.57 ± 0.1 and 6.65 ± 0.1 in oxidized and reduced HFd, respectively. pH titration curves, T1 relaxation times, and the temperature dependence of the chemical shift were obtained for resonances between 6 and 10 ppm of oxidized HFd. In oxidized HFd a paramagnetically shifted resonance was observed at 15 ppm with 1 H intensity, and an anti-Curie temperature dependence. In reduced HFd eight resonances each with 1 H intensity were shifted downfield by 10–50 ppm and one resonance with 1 H intensity was shifted upfield to ?6.8 ppm. Four of these resonances exhibited an anti-Curie temperature dependence, two exhibited a moderate Curie dependence, and three were temperature independent.  相似文献   

19.
The differences in conformation in solution of fluorosulfonylbenzoyl nucleosides were analyzed by fluorescence and proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. The quantum yield of 5'-p-fluorosulfonylbenzoyl-1,N6-ethenoadenosine (5'-FSB epsilon A) in aqueous solution is low (? = 0.01) as compared to that of its parent nucleoside, ethenoadenosine (? = 0.54), and increases approximately 5-fold when measured in a series of solvents of decreasing dielectric constant. The quantum yield of 5'-p-sulfonylbenzoyl-1,N6-ethenoadenosine covalently bound to glutamate dehydrogenase and pyruvate kinase is also 0.01, suggesting that the analogue may exist in the same conformation when enzyme-bound as when free in solution. In D2O, the resonances of the purine ring protons on 5'-FSB epsilon A, 5'-p-fluorosulfonylbenzoyl adenosine (5'-FSBA), and 5'-p-fluorosulfonylbenzoyl guanosine (5'-FSBG) are shifted upfield by about 0.1-0.3 ppm relative to the corresponding protons of their parent nucleosides. The calculated difference in chemical shift (delta delta) decreases as the dielectric constant of the solvent decreases. The delta delta decreases with increasing temperature. These data indicate that 5'-FSB epsilon A, 5'-FSBA, and 5'-FSBG exist in aqueous solution in a conformation in which the purine ring is intramolecularly stacked with the benzoyl moiety. From the magnitude of change in delta delta for 5'-FSB epsilon A, 5'-FSBA, and 5'-FSBG as a function of solvent, it appears that the three analogues differ in their sensitivity to disruption of stacking. The solution conformation of these three fluorosulfonylbenzoyl nucleoside analogues may be an important determinant of their reaction with various enzymes and may explain differences among the analogues in their reaction with a single enzyme.  相似文献   

20.
The effects of complex formation with flavodoxin on the proton NMR spectrum of cytochrome c are to change the resonance frequencies and to increase the bandwidths of most of the low and high field heme, Met-80, and His-18 protons. These effects are, in general, more pronounced than has been reported for other cytochrome c complexes. The degree of line broadening for many heme related resonances suggests that complex formation induces changes in the cytochrome structure. These results provide the first spectroscopic evidence which corroborates the proposed model for the cytochrome c: flavodoxin complex (1-3).  相似文献   

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