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1.
The stoichiometry, stability constants and solution structure of the complexes formed in the reaction of copper(II) with N-terminal fragments of human and mouse beta-amyloid peptide, 1-6, 1-9, 1-10 have been determined by potentiometric, UV/VIS, CD and EPR spectroscopic methods. The fragments 1-9 and 1-10 form complexes with the same coordination modes as the fragments 1-6. The coordination of the metal ion for human and mouse fragments starts from the N-terminal Asp residue which stabilizes significantly the 1N complex as a result of chelation through the beta-carboxylate group. In a wide pH range of 4-10, the imidazole nitrogen of His(6) is coordinated to form a macrochelate. Results show that, in the pH range 5-9 the human fragments form the complex with different coordination mode compared to that of the mouse fragments. The low pK(1)(amide) values (approximately 5) obtained for the mouse fragments may suggest the coordination of the amide nitrogen of His(6) while in case of the human fragments the coordination of the amide nitrogen of Ala(2) is suggested. The replacement of glycine by the arginine residue in the fifth position of the beta-amyloid peptide sequence changes the coordination modes of a peptide to metal ion in the physiological pH range. In a wide pH (including physiological) range the mouse fragments of beta-amyloid peptide are much more effective in Cu(II) binding than the human fragments.  相似文献   

2.
The synthesis of four tetrapeptides, L-Phe-L-Pro-Gly-Gly, Gly-L-Pro-L-Phe-Gly, Gly-L-Pro-D-Phe-Gly, and Gly-L-Pro-Gly-L-Phe is described. The hydrogen ion and copper(II) complex formation constants have been measured at 25°C and I = 0.10 mol dm?3 (KNO3). Circular dichroism spectra have been recorded for copper(II)-peptide mixtures as a function of pH. The potentiometric and Spectrophotometric studies have been combined to ascertain the complex species over a broad pH range. The results obtained support the earlier suggestion on the specific role of a proline residue as a “break-point” in copper complex formation with peptides: the insertion of a proline residue into the second position of a tetrapeptide sequence leads to a novel coordination mode in Cu(II)-tetrapeptide systems.  相似文献   

3.
Shin BK  Saxena S 《Biochemistry》2008,47(35):9117-9123
We provide direct evidence that all three histidine residues in amyloid-beta 1-16 (Abeta 1-16) coordinate to Cu(II). In our approach, we generate Abeta 1-16 analogues, in each of which a selected histidine residue is isotopically enriched with (15)N. Pulsed electron spin resonance (ESR) experiments such as electron spin echo envelope modulation (ESEEM) and hyperfine sublevel correlation (HYSCORE) spectroscopy clearly show that all three histidine imidazole rings at positions 6, 13 and 14 in Abeta 1-16 bind to Cu(II). The method employed here does not require either chemical side chain modification or amino acid residue replacement, each of which is traditionally used to determine whether an amino acid residue in a protein binds to a metal ion. We find that the histidine coordination in the Abeta 1-16 peptide is independent of the Cu(II)-to-peptide ratio, which is in contrast to the Abeta 1-40 peptide. The ESR results also suggest tight binding between the histidine residues and the Cu(II) ion, which is likely the reason for the high binding affinity of the Abeta peptide for Cu(II).  相似文献   

4.
D W Kupke  J W Fox 《Biochemistry》1989,28(10):4409-4415
The solution expansion accompanying coordination of lanthanide ions to synthetic peptide analogues of a metal-binding loop in calmodulin was determined by a density method. This study was designed to further test the hypothesis that the nonlinear expansions observed upon sequential addition of Ca2+ to intracellular calcium-binding proteins reflect principally upon the coordination event at specific binding sequences. Three peptides of 13 residues each were synthesized as analogues of binding loop II in mammalian calmodulin: Peptide I was the native analogue; peptide II contained an aspartyl in place of an asparaginyl residue at position 5 from the N-terminus; for peptide III, the aspartyl residue in position 3 of the native analogue was interchanged with the asparaginyl residue in position 5. Thus, the number of charged-oxygen donor atoms for coordination was the same in I and in III, but the latter peptide could permit two pairs of acidic groups to converge toward the metal ion as in some loops of these proteins. The observed expansions with different lanthanide ions to the same peptide varied appreciably, suggesting dissimilar structures [Gariépy et al. (1983) Biochemistry 22, 1765-1772]; coordination to the simpler tetracarboxylate sequestrants, on the other hand, generated an expansion profile approximately as expected from the properties of the lanthanide series. The largest expansions were generated with peptide II (having the additional acidic group) for all lanthanides tested.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
The study on the binding ability of tested ligands have shown that insertion of two dehydro-amino acid residues into peptide sequences makes them more effective in metal ion binding than ligands with one dehydro-amino acid residue. The ligand with two Z(Delta)Phe residue form more stable complexes than his analogues with one Z(Delta)Phe residue. Interesting is this that position of Z(Delta)Phe residue in peptide chain have impact on Cu(II)-complexes formation.  相似文献   

6.
Cobalt(II) amicyanin was prepared by replacing the copper of the type I copper protein amicyanin from Paracoccus denitrificans with cobalt. The structure of the protein and the metal center have been characterized by X-ray crystallography and paramagnetic NMR spectroscopy. The crystal structure indicates that Met98, which provides an axial sulfur ligand in native amicyanin, is no longer bound to the metal in cobalt(II) amicyanin and that a water molecule is recruited from solvent to form the fourth metal ligand. This results in a tetrahedral coordination geometry for the cobalt ion. NMR studies in solution also indicate that the side chain of the methionine residue interacts less strongly with the metal in P. denitrificans amicyanin than in Paracoccus versutus amicyanin. The cobalt(II) amicyanin crystal structure is different from that of cobalt-substituted azurin in which the carbonyl of a glycine residue provides this equivalent ligand. In cobalt(II) amicyanin that residue is a proline, for which the oxygen is structurally inaccessible, so that the water occupies the position held by the glycine carbonyl in cobalt(II) azurin. Such a metal coordination involving water has not previously been reported for a native or metal-substituted type I copper protein.  相似文献   

7.
Copper(II) complexes of the 1-17 (MDVFMKGLSKAKEGVVA-NH(2)), 1-28 (MDVFMKGLSKAKEGVVAAAEKTKQGVAE-NH(2)), 1-39 (MDVFMKGLSKAKEGVVAAAEKTKQGVAEAPGKTKEGVLY-NH(2)) and 1-39 (A30P) fragments of alpha-synuclein were studied by potentiometric, UV-Vis (UV-visible), CD (circular dichroism) and EPR (electron paramagnetic resonance) spectroscopic methods to determine the stoichiometry, stability constants and coordination modes of the complexes formed. The beta-carboxylate group of Asp residue in second position of the peptide chain coordinates strongly to Cu(II) ion over the pH range 4-9.5 to give unusually stable 2N complex with {NH(2), N(-), beta-COO(-), H(2)O} coordination mode. At pH above 7 the results suggest the formation of 2N, 3N, 4N complexes (in equatorial plane) and the involvement of the lateral NH(2) group of Lys residue in the axial coordination of Cu(II) ion. In CD spectra sigma (epsilon-NH(2)-Lys)-->Cu(II) charge transfer transition is observed. Addition of the 18-28 and 18-39 fragments to the 1-17 peptide does not change the coordination mode and the 1-39 fragment forms the Cu(II) complexes with higher stabilities compared to those of the 1-17, 1-28 and 1-39(A30P) fragments of alpha-synuclein.  相似文献   

8.
The GGGTHSQW sequence in the amyloidogenic part of the prion protein is a potential binding site for Cu(II). We have previously studied the binding of copper to the shorter GGGTH peptide and showed that it is highly pH dependent (Hureau et al. in J. Biol. Inorg. Chem. 11:735–744, 2006). Two predominant complexes could be characterized at pH 6.7 and 9.0 with equatorial binding modes of 3N1O and 4N for the metal ion, respectively. In this work, we have further investigated the coordination of Cu(II) to the GGGTH peptide as well as the longer GGGTHSQW peptide in order to identify the oxygen donor ligand at neutral pH and to study the proximity and redox activity of the tryptophan residue of the latter. The results for both peptides show that, at pH 6.7, Cu(II) is coordinated by a carbonyl peptide backbone. At higher pH values, the carbonyl ligand dissociates and the coordination changes to a 4N binding mode, inducing a structural rearrangement that brings the GGGTHSQW peptide’s tryptophan residue into the vicinity of the copper ion, thus affecting their respective redox properties.  相似文献   

9.
The interaction of Cu(II) ion with small peptides has been an interesting subject to clarify the role of copper in detail. As various Cu(II)-oligopeptide complexes can also be good models for the active centers of metalloenzymes, complexes of tripeptide and tetrapeptides are frequently investigated instead of the complexes of large peptides. The histidine side-chains of various metalloproteins frequently take part in the copper(II) coordination. Accordingly, we studied the coordination of Cu(II) to the N and C terminal protected tripeptide ligands L(A) (Ac-HisGlyHis-NHMe), L(B) (Ac-HisAlaHis-NHMe) and L(C) (Ac-HisAibHis-NHMe) in aqueous solution potentiometrially in order to determine the effect of C(alpha) methyl groups at middle residue acid on the ligation of the backbone NH and also on histidine's N(im) of coordination. Species distribution curves indicates that in acidic pH, all three peptides behave as bidentate ligands and a macrochelate forms on the metal coordination with the two histidine imidazolyl N. This coordination remains unaffected with the +I effect of increasing CH(3) groups at C(alpha) of middle residue. In the pH range 4-8, the tridentate coordination from the peptide is seen in ligand L(A) and L(B) while it is absent in L(C) due to +I effect of two C(alpha) methyl groups at middle residue as they makes N-terminal NH deprotonation difficult in this pH range and it takes place along with C terminal NH and only 4N coordinated species formed at higher pH. These 4N (N(im), N(-), N(-), N(im)) coordinated species are formed by all the three ligands at higher pH values.  相似文献   

10.
The formation of Cu(II)-bleomycin complexes as a function of pH has been studied using circular dichroism, absorption, electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy, and potentiometric titration. Our data support the following points: the formation of Cu(II)-bleomycin complexes occurs in a three-step process: a first complex (I) is formed at pH 1.2, which most probably involves the pyrimidine nitrogen, the secondary amine nitrogen, and two water molecules as the four in-plane ligands of copper. A second complex (II) is formed at pH 2.5, through the further coordination of the peptide nitrogen of histidine residue, and histidine imidazole nitrogen giving rise to the release of two protons. The fixation, in apical position, of the alpha-amino nitrogen of beta-aminoalanine occurs in a last step through the release of one additional proton. A value of 2.7 has been obtained for the pK of formation of this third complex, which is the species present at physiological pH. In the Cu(II)-depbleomycin system only one complex (II') has been detected.  相似文献   

11.
We previously reported the IZ-3adH peptide, which formed a triple-stranded coiled-coil after binding Ni(II), Cu(II), or Zn(II). In this paper, we report the peptide, IZ-3aH, having a new metal binding specificity. The IZ-3aH peptide was found to bind Cu(II) and Zn(II) and form a triple-stranded coiled-coil. However, it did not bind Ni(II). Metal ion titrations monitored by circular dichroism revealed that the dissociation constants, K(d) were 9 microm for Zn(II) and 10 microm for Cu(II). The bound Cu(II) ion has a planar tetragonal geometry, where the coordination positions are three nitrogens of the His residues and one H(2)O.  相似文献   

12.
The classical tachykinins, substance P, neurokinin A and neurokinin B are predominantly found in the nervous system where they act as neurotransmitters and neuromodulators. Significantly reduced levels of these peptides were observed in neurodegenerative diseases and it may be suggested that this reduction may also result from the copper(II)-catalyzed oxidation. The studies of the interaction of copper(II) with neurokinin A and the copper(II)-catalyzed oxidation were performed. Copper(II) complexes of the neurokinin A (His-Lys-Thr-Asp-Ser-Phe-Val-Gly-Leu-Met-NH2) and acetyl-neurokinin A (Ac-His-Lys-Thr-Asp-Ser-Phe-Val-Gly-Leu-Met-NH2) were studied by potentiometric, UV-Vis (UV-visible), CD (circular dichroism) and EPR spectroscopic methods to determine the stoichiometry, stability constants and coordination modes in the complexes formed. The histidine residue in first position of the peptide chain of neurokinin A coordinates strongly to Cu(II) ion with histamine-like {NH2, NIm} coordination mode. With increasing of pH, the formation of a dimeric complex Cu2H2L2 was found but this dimeric species does not prevent the deprotonation and coordination of the amide nitrogens. In the Ac-neurokinin A case copper(II) coordination starts from the imidazole nitrogen of the His; afterwards three deprotonated amide nitrogens are progressively involved in copper coordination. To elucidate the products of the copper(II)-catalyzed oxidation of the neurokinin A and Ac-neurokinin A, liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) method and Cu(II)/hydrogen peroxide as a model oxidizing system were employed.Oxidation target for both studied peptides is the histidine residue coordinated to the metal ions. Both peptides contain Met and His residues and are very susceptible on the copper(II)-catalyzed oxidation.  相似文献   

13.
Unlike human serum albumin (HSA), dog serum albumin (DSA) does not possess the characteristics of the specific first binding site for Cu(II). In DSA, the important histidine residue in the third position, responsible for the Cu(II)-binding specificity in HSA, is replaced by a tyrosine residue. In order to study the influence of the tyrosine residue in the third position of DSA, a simple model of the NH2-terminal native sequence tripeptide of DSA, glycylglycyl-L-tyrosine-N-methylamide (GGTNMA) was synthesized and its Cu(II)-binding properties studied by analytical potentiometry, spectrophotometry, CD, and NMR spectroscopy. The species analysis indicated the existence of five mono-complexes at different protonation states: MHA, MA, MH-1A, MH-2A, MH-3A, and only one bis-complex MH-2A-2. The complexing ability of GGTNMA to Cu(II) was found to be weaker than that of the Cu(II) binding peptide models of HSA. The visible absorption spectra of Cu(II)-GGTNMA complexes are similar to those observed in the case of DSA-Cu(II) complexes. The weaker binding and the spectral properties of Cu(II)-GGTNMA complexes are consistent with less specific Cu(II)-binding properties of the peptide of this sequence similar to what was noted with DSA. CD results are in excellent agreement with species analysis and visible spectra where it is clearly evident that Cu(II) binds to GGTNMA starting from the alpha-NH2 group and step by step to deprotonated amide nitrogens as the pH is raised. The absence of any charge transfer band around 400 nm strongly indicates that Cu(II) does not bind to the phenolate group. Furthermore, NMR results are consistent with the noninvolvement of the tyrosine residue of GGTNMA in Cu(II) complexation. Thus, it is clear that the low Cu(II)-binding affinity of DSA is due to the genetic substitution of tyrosine for histidine at the NH2-terminal region of the protein.  相似文献   

14.
A study of the effect of the tetrazole moiety, a cis-amide bond surrogate, on the Cu(II) coordinating properties of oligopeptides is reported. Insertion of the tetrazole moiety Psi[CN(4)] into the peptide sequence of [D-Ala(2)]deltorphin I changes considerably the coordination ability of the peptide. Potentiometric and spectroscopic results show that if the tetrazole moiety is in a suitable position in the peptide chain, i.e. it follows the second residue, a stable CuL species involving 3N coordination is formed in the physiological pH range. The tetrazole Psi[CN(4)] ring provides one of these nitrogens. The data indicate that Cu(II) ions are strongly trapped inside a bent peptide backbone. The peptide conformation changes achieved by Cu(II) coordination may be essential for the binding of tetrazole deltorphins at opiate receptors.  相似文献   

15.
Results are reported from potentiometric and spectroscopic (UV-Vis, CD, and ESR) studies of the protonation constants and Cu2+ complex stability constants of pituitary adenylate cyclase activating polypeptide fragments (HSDGI-NH2, TDSYS-NH2, RKQMAVKKYLAAVL-NH2). With HSDGI-NH2, the formation of a dimeric complex Cu2H-2L2 was found in the pH range 5-8, in which the coordination of copper(II) is glycylglycine-like, while the fourth coordination site is occupied by the imidazole N3 nitrogen atom, forming a bridge between two copper(II) ions. The formation of dimeric species does not prevent the deprotonation and coordination of the amide nitrogen, and in pH above 8 the CuH-2L complex is formed. Aspartic acid in the third position of peptide sequence stabilizes the CuH-2L species and prevents the coordination of a fourth nitrogen donor. Aspartic acid residue in the second position of TDSYS-NH2 stabilizes the CuL (2N) complex but does not prevent deprotonation and binding of the second and third peptide nitrogens to give 3N and 4N complexes at higher pH. The tetradecapeptide amide forms with copper(II) ions unusually stable 3N and 4N complexes compared to pentaalanine amide.  相似文献   

16.
Prion protein (PrP) misfolding is one of the pivotal issues in understanding the rudiments of neurodegenerative disorders. The conformational change of mammalian cellular PrP to scrapie PrP is caused by an unknown agent, but there is reasonable evidence supporting the key role of copper ions in this process. The structure of the avian PrP was found to be very similar to the mammalian protein, although there is only 30% homology in the secondary structure. This work shows that copper ions are very effectively bound by hexarepeat fragments of chicken prion protein, although not as effectively as it was found in the case of mammalian protein. By means of potentiometric and spectroscopic techniques (nuclear magnetic resonance, circular dichroism, UV-vis, and electronic paramagnetic resonance), it was shown that Cu(II) ions coordinate to the chicken PrP hexapeptide domain in physiological pH via imidazole nitrogen donors of His residue(s). The binding pattern changes the structure of peptide involved, indicating a possible impact of Cu(II) ions in the biology and pathology of nonmammalian PrP, which could be similar to that found for mammalian PrP. The present study shows that, similar to the human prion octapeptide repeats, chicken prion hexapeptide repeats might bind copper ions in two different ways, depending on the number of repeats and metal/ligand molar ratio: (i) an intra-repeat coordination mode in which copper ion is chelated by His imidazole and deprotonated amide nitrogen in monomeric peptide and (ii) an inter-repeat coordination mode in which a polymeric peptide ligand (dimer and trimer) forms polyimidazole complexes that are very stable at physiological pH. Two proline residues inserted into the hexapeptide unit have a critical impact on the metal-binding ability.  相似文献   

17.
Cu (II) — poly (L-arginine) (PLA) complexes have been studied using potentiometric titrations, optical absorption and circular dichroism spectra. Three different complexes have been observed. The first one (complex I) is formed up to pH 8 and results from the coordination of two guanidinium groups to the metal ion. The second and third complexes (complexes IIA and IIB) are formed between pH 8 and 11, in different proportions which are dependent on PLA: Cu molar ratio. In these two complexes two guanidinium groups and two peptide nitrogens participate as ligands around the copper ion.  相似文献   

18.
The conformational and binding properties towards Cu(II) and Ni(II) ions of Gly-Gly-His derivatives of poly(l-lysine) have been investigated mainly using circular dichroism (c.d.) spectroscopy. These derivatized polymers can be considered macromolecular analogues of the Cu(II) and Ni(II) binding site of human serum albumin. It has been shown that modification up to 53% of the ε-amino groups of lysine side chains by covalent binding of the tripeptide unit Gly-Gly-His does not induce appreciable alteration of the α-helix forming tendency of the polylysine backbone. The derivatized polymers exhibit strong affinity towards Cu(II) and Ni(II) ions. At neutral pH, complexes are formed in which each tripeptide chelating unit is linked to one metal ion. The spectral characteristics in the visible absorption region are consistent with a square planar geometry of the complexes, with deprotonated peptide groups and one imidazole nitrogen in the coordination sphere of the ion. C.d. measurements in the far u.v. indicate that complex formation in the side chains causes an increase of ordered structure of the peptide backbone at neutral pH. This fact is interpreted in terms of a reduced electrostatic repulsion among side chains due to charge neutralization in the tripeptide units linked to metal ions.  相似文献   

19.
Y G Gao  M Sriram    A H Wang 《Nucleic acids research》1993,21(17):4093-4101
Metal ion coordination to nucleic acids is not only required for charge neutralization, it is also essential for the biological function of nucleic acids. The structural impact of different metal ion coordinations of DNA helices is an open question. We carried out X-ray diffraction analyses of the interactions of the two transition metal ions Co(II) and Cu(II) and an alkaline earth metal ion Ba(II), with DNA of different conformations. In crystals, Co(II) ion binds exclusively at the N7 position of guanine bases by direct coordination. The coordination geometry around Co(II) is octahedral, although some sites have an incomplete hydration shell. The averaged Co-N7 bond distance is 2.3 A. The averaged Co-N7-C8 angle is 121 degrees, significantly smaller than the value of 128 degrees if the Co-N7 vector were to bisect the C5-N7-C8 bond angle. Model building of Co(II) binding to guanine N7 in B-DNA indicates that the coordinated waters in the axial positions would have a van der Waals clash with the neighboring base on the 5' side. In contrast, the major groove of A-DNA does not have enough room to accommodate the entire hydration shell. This suggests that Co(II) binding to either B-DNA or A-DNA may induce significant conformational changes. The Z-DNA structure of Cu(II)-soaked CGCGTG crystal revealed that the Cu(II) ion is bis-coordinated to N7 position of G10 and #G12 (# denotes a symmetry-related position) bases with a trigonal bipyramid geometry, suggesting a possible N7-Cu-N7 crosslinking mechanism. A similar bis-coordination to two guanines has also been seen in the interaction of Cu(II) in m5CGUAm5CG Z-DNA crystal and of Ba(II) with two other Z-DNA crystals.  相似文献   

20.
The results are reported of a spectroscopic and potentiometric study of the copper(II) and nickel(II) complexes of the thyrotropin releasing factor (L-pyroglutamyl-L-histidyl-L-prolinamide, TRF) and some of its di- and tripeptide analogues Spectroscopic techniques used include absorption, circular dichroism and electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy TRF and pyroglutamyl-histidine behave similarly. At low pH the metal ions coordinate to the imidazole nitrogen and then cause the ionization of the amide protons of both the peptide linkage and the pyroglutamic acid with equal ease. Hence the concentration of MH?1 L species is always very low. The C-terminal proline amide residue plays an insignificant role in the complex formation Replacement of pyroglutamic acid with picolinic acid in the hormone molecule causes a major change in the structures of its complexes. The dipeptide analogue, Pic-His. forms dimeric species with Cu(II) that are not found in Cu(II) Pyr-His orCu(II) TRF solutions The introduction of tyrosine residue in the TRF sequence in place of histidine can, in some cases, lead to the direct involvement of proline amide in the binding of metal ions, e.g. , Ni(II) Pyr-Tyr-Pro-NH2  相似文献   

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