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1.
Reaction of acetaldehyde with hemoglobin   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Acetaldehyde reacted with hemoglobin at neutral pH and 37 degrees C to form adducts that were stable to dialysis and that were not reduced by sodium borohydride. Hemoglobin tetramers having 2, 3, and probably 4 molar eq of bound aldehyde were isolated by cation exchange chromatography. The sites of attachment of the aldehyde were the free amino groups of the N-terminal valine residues of the alpha and beta chains of hemoglobin. Derivatization of the beta chains caused a greater increase in the acidity of the hemoglobin than did derivatization of the alpha chains. Derivatization of the beta chains was also preferred over that of the alpha chains. Acetaldehyde derivatives of the N-terminal octapeptide of hemoglobin S (beta sT-1 peptide), Val-Gly-Gly, and tetraglycine were formed readily, contained 1 M eq of acetaldehyde/mol of peptide, and were not reduced by sodium borohydride. In contrast, Ala-Pro-Gly failed to form a 1:1 adduct with acetaldehyde. 13C NMR analysis of the peptide adducts formed with [1,2-13C]acetaldehyde indicated that tetrahedral diastereomeric derivatives were produced. The 13C chemical shifts of the adducts formed between hemoglobin and [1,2-13C]acetaldehyde were identical to those of the peptide adducts although resonances from the individual diastereomeric adducts at each hemoglobin site could not be resolved. The results cited above as well as other evidence indicate that acetaldehyde reacts with the amino termini of hemoglobin to form stable cyclic imidazolidinone derivatives. An exchange of acetaldehyde residues between peptides was also documented.  相似文献   

2.
R E Klevit  D E Wemmer  B R Reid 《Biochemistry》1986,25(11):3296-3303
High-resolution NMR techniques have been used to examine the structural and dynamical features of the interaction between distamycin A and the self-complementary DNA dodecamer duplex d-(CGCGAATTCGCG)2. The proton resonances of d(CGCGAATTCGCG)2 have been completely assigned by previous two-dimensional NMR studies [Hare, D. R., Wemmer, D. E., Chou, S. H., Drobny, G., & Reid, B. R. (1983) J. Mol. Biol. 171, 319-336]. Addition of the asymmetric drug molecule to the symmetric dodecamer leads to the formation of an asymmetric complex as evidenced by a doubling of DNA resonances over much of the spectrum. In two-dimensional exchange experiments, strong cross-peaks were observed between uncomplexed DNA and drug-bound DNA resonances, permitting direct assignment of many drug-bound DNA resonances from previously assigned free DNA resonances. Weaker exchange cross-peaks between formerly symmetry related DNA resonances indicate that the drug molecule flips head-to-tail on one duplex with half the frequency at which it leaves the DNA molecule completely. In experiments performed in H2O, nuclear Overhauser effects (NOEs) were observed from each drug amide proton to an adenine C2H and a pyrrole H3 ring proton. In two-dimensional nuclear Overhauser experiments performed on D2O solutions, strong intermolecular NOEs were observed between each of the three pyrrole H3 resonances of the drug and an adenine C2H resonance, with weaker NOEs observed between the drug H3 resonances and C1'H resonances. The combined NOE data allow us to position the distamycin A unambiguously on the DNA dodecamer, with the drug spanning the central AATT segment in the minor groove.  相似文献   

3.
M Ikura  O Minowa  K Hikichi 《Biochemistry》1985,24(16):4264-4269
The C-terminal half-fragment (residues 78-148) of scallop testis calmodulin was investigated by 500-MHz two-dimensional proton NMR in order to clarify the structure and the structural change accompanying Ca2+ binding. The sequential resonance assignment to individual amino acid residues was made in part (27 out of 71 residues) by a combination of correlated spectroscopy and nuclear Overhauser effect spectroscopy of a 90% H2O solution. In the Ca2+-bound state, resonances of backbone amide protons of Gly-98, Gly-134, Ile-100, Asn-137, and Val-136 appear at extremely low fields. These findings suggest that amide protons of these residues are hydrogen bonded. In the Ca2+-free state, the amide resonances of Ile-100 and Gly-134 disappear into the crowded normal shift region. This observation indicates that two hydrogen bonds of Ile-100 and Gly-134 are destroyed (or weakened) as Ca2+ ions are removed from two Ca2+-binding sites. Chemical shifts of amide and alpha-protons of residues located in the Ca2+-binding loop of domain III are similar to those of domain IV. These results suggest that the conformations of the two loops are very similar. The present results can be interpreted in terms of a structure predicted by Kretsinger [Kretsinger, R.H. (1980) Ann. N.Y. Acad. Sci. 356, 14].  相似文献   

4.
K H Mayo 《Biochemistry》1985,24(14):3783-3794
When H2O-exchanged, lyophilized mouse epidermal growth factor (mEGF) is dissolved in deuterium oxide at low pH (i.e., below approximately 6.0), 13 well-resolved, amide proton resonances are observed in the downfield region of an NMR spectrum (500 MHz). Under the conditions of these experiments, the lifetimes of these amide protons in exchange for deuterons of the deuterium oxide solvent suggest that these amide protons are hydrogen-bonded, backbone amide protons. Several of these amide proton resonances show splittings (i.e., JNH alpha-CH) of approximately 8-10 Hz, indicating that their associated amide protons are in some type of beta-structure. Selective nuclear Overhauser effect (NOE) experiments performed on all amide proton resonances strongly suggest that all 13 of these backbone amide protons are part of a single-tiered beta-sheet structural domain in mEGF. Correlation of 2D NMR correlated spectroscopy data, identifying scaler coupled protons, with NOE data, identifying protons close to the irradiated amide protons, allows tentative assignment of some resonances in the NOE difference spectra to specific amino acid residues. These data allow a partial structural model of the tiered beta-sheet domain in mEGF to be postulated.  相似文献   

5.
Bovine, porcine and sheep adrenodoxin, and the trypsin-resistant form of bovine adrenodoxin have been studied by one- and two-dimensional 1H-NMR spectroscopy. Assignment of the resonances for all the aromatic amino acids with resolved aromatic resonances have been made by correlating NMR spectra with the amino acid sequences from various species. Slowly exchanging amide protons and downfield shifted alpha-protons of His10 and Phe11 suggest possible involvement in beta-sheet structure. The effects on the assigned resonances due to the specific spin-label with a nitroxide radical at Cys95 have been analyzed on a two-dimensional 1H-NMR spectrum. The present results provide evidence for a structural similarity with a model for the structure of adrenodoxin based on a sequence alignment with that of Spirulina platensis ferredoxin, for which X-ray crystallographic data is available. epsilon-Methyl groups of Met120 and Met122 have been assigned by comparing 1H-NMR spectra of adrenodoxin with those of the trypsin-resistant form of adrenodoxin which is specifically cleaved at Arg115. epsilon-Methyl groups of Met120 and Met122 have an exceptionally long longitudinal relaxation time compared with those of valyl and leucyl methyl groups, suggesting that the COOH-terminal peptide spanning over 13 amino acids rotates rather freely in the solvent.  相似文献   

6.
The covalent binding of [14C]acetaldehyde to purified beef brain tubulin was characterized. As we have found for several other proteins, tubulin bound acetaldehyde to form both stable and unstable adducts. Unstable adducts (Schiff bases) were stabilized, and rendered detectable, by treating incubated reaction mixtures with the reducing agent sodium borohydride. In short-term incubations, the majority of the adducts formed were unstable, but the percentage of total adducts that were stable gradually increased with time. Stable adduct formation was greatly increased by the inclusion of sodium cyanoborohydride in reaction mixtures (reductive ethylation). When reaction mixtures were submitted to sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis to separate the alpha- and beta-chains of the heterodimeric tubulin molecule, the alpha-chain of free tubulin, but not intact microtubules, was the preferential site of stable adduct formation under both reductive and nonreductive conditions. Denaturation studies showed that the native tubulin conformation was necessary for the alpha-chain to show enhanced reactivity toward acetaldehyde. Competition binding studies showed that alpha-tubulin could effectively compete with beta-tubulin and bovine serum albumin for a limited amount of acetaldehyde. Unstable acetaldehyde adducts with free tubulin or microtubules did not exhibit alpha-chain selectivity. Analysis of reaction mixtures indicates that lysine residues are the major group of the protein participating in adduct formation. These data indicate that the alpha-chain of free tubulin is the preferential site of stable acetaldehyde-tubulin adduct formation. Further, these data raise the possibility that alpha-tubulin may be a selective target for acetaldehyde adduct formation in cellular systems.  相似文献   

7.
J A Barden  B E Kemp 《Biochemistry》1987,26(5):1471-1478
The amino acid residues 114-118 in actin were found to be implicated strongly in the binding of nucleotide, and as would be expected for such an important binding site, they are located in a completely conserved region of the actin sequence. A 19-residue peptide with the actin sequence 106-124 was synthesized in order to span the putative triphosphate binding site. Proton NMR spectra of the actin peptide 114-118 in the presence and absence of ATP indicated that Arg-116 and Lys-118 are particularly involved in binding ATP. A strong binding of ATP to the peptide 106-124 also was measured. Tripolyphosphate bound to the peptide 106-124 somewhat more weakly than ATP. Binding involved residues 115-118 and 121-124, indicating the presence of a reverse turn between these segments. Proton resonances were assigned by using two-dimensional double quantum correlated spectroscopy, one-dimensional spin decoupling techniques, one-dimensional nuclear Overhauser enhancement difference spectroscopy, and pH titration. The alpha CH resonances of Ala-3 and Asn-6 are markedly shifted downfield with respect to values in small unstructured peptides due to their close proximity to the side chains of Pro-4 and Pro-7, respectively. Several other resonances display chemical shifts which are indicative of a structured environment. Assignment of the amide proton resonances in H2O and measurements of the coupling constant 3JHNCH and the chemical shifts of the amide protons reveal that much of the synthetic peptide, particularly the backbone, exhibits a highly structured environment and represents a good model for the triphosphate binding site in actin.  相似文献   

8.
The exchangeable amide protons of hyaluronic acid (HA) oligosaccharides and a higher-molecular-weight segment dissolved in H2O at pH 2.5 or 5.5 were examined by H NMR spectroscopy at 250 MHz. The HA segment preparation showed a single amide resonance, near the chemical shift for the amide proton of the monosaccharide 2-acetamido-2-deoxy-beta-D-glucopyranose (beta-GlcNAc). Smaller HA oligosaccharides showed two or three separate amide proton resonances, corresponding in relative peak area to interior or end GlcNAc residues. The interior GlcNAc amide resonance occurred at the same chemical shift as the single resonance of the HA segment. For the end GlcNAc residues, linkage to D-glucuronopyranose (GlcUA) through C1 resulted in an upfield shift relative to the beta-anomer of GlcNAc, whereas linkage through C3 resulted in a downfield shift relative to the corresponding anomer of GlcNAc. These chemical-shift perturbations appeared to be approximately offsetting in the case of linkage at both positions. The amide proton vicinal coupling constant (ca. 9 Hz) was found to be essentially independent of chain length, residue position, or solution pH. These data favor a nearly perpendicular orientation for the acetamido group with respect to the sugar ring, little affected by linkage of GlcNAc to GlcUA. No evidence for the existence of a stable hydrogen bond linking the amide proton with the carboxyl(ate) oxygen of the adjacent uronic acid residue was found. The amide proton resonances for chondroitin, chondroitin 4-sulfate, and dermatan sulfate were compared to that of HA. The chemical shifts of these resonances deviated no more than 0.1 ppm from that of HA. A small dependence on the identity of the adjacent uronic acid residue was noted, based on the observation of two resonances for dermatan sulfate.  相似文献   

9.
The fast internal dynamics of human ubiquitin have been studied by the analysis of 15N relaxation of backbone amide nitrogens. The amide 15N resonances have been assigned by use of heteronuclear multiple-quantum spectroscopy. Spin lattice relaxation times at 60.8 and 30.4 MHz and the steady-state nuclear Overhauser effect at 60.8 MHz have been determined for 67 amide 15N sites in the protein using two-dimensional spectroscopy. These data have been analyzed in terms of the model free treatment of Lipari and Szabo [Lipari, G., & Szabo, A. (1982) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 104, 4546-4559]. The global motion of the protein is shown to be isotropic and is characterized by a correlation time of 4.1 ns rad-1. The generalized order parameters (S2) of backbone amide N-H vectors in the globular region of the protein range from 0.5 to 0.95. No apparent correlation between secondary structure and generalized order parameters is observed. There is, however, a strong correlation between the magnitude of the generalized order parameters of a given N-H vector and the presence of hydrogen bonding of the amide hydrogen or its peptide bond associated carbonyl. Using a chemical shift tensor breadth of 160 ppm, the N-H vectors of peptide linkages participating in one or more hydrogen bonds to the main chain show an average generalized order parameter of 0.80 (SD 0.06), while those amide NH of peptide linkages free of hydrogen-bonding interactions with the main chain show an average order parameter of 0.69 (SD 0.06).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
11.
The nonapeptide less than Glu-Ala-Lys-Ser-Gln-Gly-Gly-Ser-Asn (formerly called serum thymic factor) is a factor produced by the thymic epithelium, which needs a zinc ion to express its immunoregulatory properties. We report here on 1H and 13C NMR investigation of the conformational properties of the free peptide in aqueous medium and in dimethyl sulfoxide-d6 solution by a combination of homo- and heteronuclear one- and two-dimensional experiments. The various resonances have been assigned in a straightforward manner on the basis of 1H,1H COSY spectroscopy for the recognition of the proton spin systems; two-dimensional NOESY spectra with the correlation peaks across amide bonds and for the amino acid sequence assignment; amide bonds and for the amino acid sequence assignment; 13C,1H COSY experiments using selective polarization transfer from 1H- to 13C-nucleus via the 13C,1H long-range couplings for the attribution of the carboxyl and carbonyl groups; and 13C,1H COSY experiments with selective polarization transfer via the 13C,1H direct couplings for the assignment of all the aliphatic carbons. Other experiments such as pH-dependent chemical shifts, combined use of multiple and selective proton-decoupled 1H and 13C NMR spectra, the temperature and the concentration dependence of the proton shifts of the amide resonances, the solvent dependences of peptide carbonyl carbon resonances, and comparison of the spectra with three different analogues were performed. In aqueous solution, the data are compatible with the assumption of a highly mobile dynamic equilibrium among different conformations, whereas in dimethyl sulfoxide-d6, a more rigid structure is found involving three internal hydrogen bonds. These observations provide an insight into the conformational tendencies of this peptidic hormone in two different media.  相似文献   

12.
Three glycoprotein N-glycans, namely, a disialylated diantennary carbohydrate chain linked to Asn, a monosialylated, fucosylated diantennary glycopeptide with bisecting N-acetylglucosamine, and a tetrasialylated, fucosylated tetra-antennary oligosaccharide, have been investigated by two-dimensional NOE and HOHAHA spectroscopy in 1H2O as solvent. The amide protons of all N-acetylglucosamine and sialic acid residues could readily be assigned. The large chemical-shift dispersion of the amide resonances of the N-acetylglucosamine residues, allowed the unambiguous assignment of every N-acetyl methyl signal, via strong NOEs. Subspectra could be obtained of all N-acetylglucosamine residues in HOHAHA spectra. These results have as main implication that several biologically important large glycans will now [corrected] become amenable for conformational studies by multidimensional NMR in 1H2O solution.  相似文献   

13.
Two-dimensional proton NMR experiments have been used to sequentially assign resonances to all of the peptide backbone protons of turkey ovomucoid third domain (OMTKY3) except those of the N-terminal alpha-amino group whose signal was not resolved owing to exchange with the solvent. Assignments also have been made for more than 80% of the side-chain protons. Two-dimensional chemical shift correlated spectroscopy (COSY), relayed coherence transfer spectroscopy (RELAY), and two-dimensional homonuclear Hartmann-Hahn spectroscopy (HOHAHA) were used to identify the spin systems of almost half of the residues prior to sequential assignment. Assignments were based on two-dimensional nuclear Overhauser enhancements observed between adjacent residues. The secondary structure of OMTKY3 in solution was determined from additional assigned NOESY cross-peaks; it closely resembles the secondary structure determined by single-crystal X-ray diffraction of OMTKY3 in complex with Streptomyces griseus proteinase B [Fujinaga, M., Read, R.J., Sielecki, A., Ardelt, W., Laskowski, M., Jr., & James, M.N.G. (1982) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 79, 4868-4872]. The NMR data provide evidence for three slowly exchanging amide protons that were not identified as hydrogen-bond donors in the crystal structure.  相似文献   

14.
The non-exchangeable proton resonances of the hexadeoxynucleoside pentakisphosphates d(m5C-G)3 and d(br5C-G)3 in the B form as well as in the Z form were assigned by means of two-dimensional correlated spectroscopy and two-dimensional nuclear Overhauser enhancement spectroscopy. The complete proton NMR spectrum of the B form of the methylated compound was assigned in a pure 2H2O solution as well as in a 2H2O/C2H3O2H mixed solvent, containing 5 mM MgCl2. In the latter solvent the B form occurs in slow equilibrium (on the NMR time scale) with the Z form, the resonances of which also were fully assigned. The proton resonances of the B and Z forms of the brominated fragment were assigned in a 2H2O/C2H3O2H solution containing 5 mM MgCl2. A new and general method is described for the sequential assignment of the non-exchangeable proton resonances of oligonucleotides in the Z form.  相似文献   

15.
H Torigoe  I Shimada  A Saito  M Sato  Y Arata 《Biochemistry》1990,29(37):8787-8793
The recombinant B domain (FB) of staphylococcal protein A, which specifically binds to the Fc portion of immunoglobulin G (IgG), has been investigated with the use of two-dimensional proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. All backbone and side-chain proton resonances of FB (60 amino acid residues), except the amide proton resonance of Ala2, were assigned by the sequential assignment procedures by using double-quantum-filtered correlated spectroscopy (DQF-COSY), homonuclear Hartmann-Hahn spectroscopy (HOHAHA), and nuclear Overhauser enhancement spectroscopy (NOESY). On the basis of the NOESY data, three helical regions, Glu9-His19, Glu25-Asp37, and Ser42-Ala55, were identified in the free FB in solution. Existence of two of the three helical regions, Glu9-His19 and Glu25-Asp37, in consistent with the X-ray crystallographic structure of the Fc-bound FB [Deisenhofer, J. (1981) Biochemistry 20, 2361-2370]. By contrast, in the Fc-bound FB as revealed by the X-ray analysis, the Ser42-Glu48 segment is extended and no structural information has been available in the Ala49-Ala55 segment. We suggest that a significant conformation change is induced in the C-terminal region of FB when it is bound to the Fc portion of IgG.  相似文献   

16.
A 17-residue disulfide-bridged peptide (PAK 128–144) corresponding to the C-terminus of Pseudomonas aeruginosa pilin strain K has been studied by one- and two-dimensional nmr techniques. This synthetic immunogen has been found to exist as two distinct conformations in solution, which have been demonstrated to arise as a result of the isomerization of the I138-P139 amide bond. The two isomers occur in the ratio of 3 : 1 trans to cis at 5°C. Sequential assignments for both forms have been accomplished through the use of nuclear Overhauser enhancement spectroscopy (NOESY) spectra and most side-chain resonances have been assigned using a combination of correlated spectroscopy, total correlated spectroscopy, and NOESY spectra. The presence of the cis isomer, which is considerably more predominant in the oxidized peptide, was confirmed by the observation of the characteristic NOEs between P139 and the preceding residue. Further corroboration was given by the disappearance of the cis resonances in the spectrum of the P139A analogue of PAK 128–144. From observation of the differences in the chemical shifts and amide proton temperature coefficients of the two isomers, it is apparent that the two forms differ markedly in their solution conformation. The biological implications of the isomerization are discussed. © 1994 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

17.
The reaction of 1,2-dibromoethane and glutathione with DNA in the presence of glutathione S-transferase results in the formation of a single major DNA adduct, which can be released by thermal hydrolysis at neutral pH and separated by octadecylsilyl and propylamino high-performance liquid chromatography. The same DNA adduct is the only major one formed in livers of rats treated with 1,2-dibromo[1,2-14C]ethane. The DNA adduct was identified as S-[2-(N7-guanyl)ethyl]glutathione: (1) The chromatographic behavior was altered by treatment with gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase or Streptomyces griseus protease. (2) The molecular ions observed in positive and negative mode fast atom bombardment mass spectrometry were those expected for the structure when either glycerol or a mixture of dithiothreitol and dithioerythritol was used as the bombardment matrix. (3) The two-dimensional 1H NMR correlated spectroscopy spectrum of the DNA adduct was compared to the spectra of glutathione, oxidized glutathione, and N7-methylguanine and found to be consistent with the assigned structure. No evidence for in vitro or in vivo opening of the guanyl imidazole ring was observed under these conditions. The structure of the adduct supports a pathway involving enzyme-catalyzed conjugation of 1,2-dibromoethane with glutathione, non-enzymatic dehydrohalogenation of the resulting half-mustard to form a cyclic episulfonium ion, and attack of the N7 nitrogen of DNA guanine on the episulfonium ion to generate this major DNA adduct, which may be related to the carcinogenicity of this chemical.  相似文献   

18.
13C-NMR spectra are obtained in aqueous solution of dinucleoside monophosphates (ApG and GpA) and of their adducts formed by the addition of the carcinogen acetylaminofluorene (AAF) to the C8 position of the guanine. The base and sugar carbons of all dimers and adducts are assigned. The task of assigning base and carbohydrate resonances was accomplished using a series of reference compounds. Significant changes in many of the carbon resonances of the adducts are observed suggesting three general conformational changes, namely: (1) chemical shift changes are noted in base carbon atom resonances as a function of temperature and adduct formation which are indicative of stacking effects; (2) large upfield shifts of the furanose C2' resonance of the guanosine-adduct indicate a shift to higher populations of the syn conformation. Other shifts of carbohydrate resonances are indicative of a change in conformation of the carbohydrate itself. (3) Large temperature effects on linewidth of several fluorine and furanose resonances indicate interconversion of various conformers in the dimer adduct.  相似文献   

19.
The reaction of trans-[Pt(NH3)2Cl2] with the sodium salt of [d(ApGpGpCpCpT)]2 in aqueous solution at 37 degrees C was monitored by reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography and UV spectroscopy. Two intermediates, most likely monofunctional adducts, were observed, which subsequently formed one predominant single-stranded product, as well as several polymeric species proposed to be interstrand cross-linked products. The single-stranded adduct was structurally characterized by 1H NMR spectroscopy. From the pH dependence of the chemical shifts, two-dimensional homonuclear chemical shift correlation (COSY) spectroscopy, and one- and two-dimensional nuclear Overhauser effect (NOESY) experiments, the platinum(II) moiety was found to be coordinated to the N7 positions of adenine(1) and guanine(3), with the intervening guanine(2) base destacked from its neighboring residues. This intrastrand 1,3 adduct induces changes in the backbone torsion angles and causes the deoxyribose ring of adenine(1) to switch from a C2'-endo to a predominantly C3'-endo conformation. The other deoxyribose rings retain B DNA type conformations. The structure of trans-[Pt(NH3)2[d(ApGpGpCpCpT)-N7-A(1),N7-G(3)]] differs from those previously reported for cis-DDP 1,2- and 1,3-intrastrand oligonucleotide adducts but is consistent with the structures of trans-DDP 1,3-intrastrand adducts of two previously reported trinucleotides.  相似文献   

20.
Application of two-dimensional nuclear Overhauser enhancement (NOE) spectroscopy to yeast tRNAPhe in H2O solution demonstrates that all imino-proton resonances, related to the secondary structure, and nearly all imino proton resonances, originating from the tertiary structure, can be assigned efficiently by this method. The results corroborate the assignments of the imino-proton resonances of this tRNA as established previously by one-dimensional NOE experiments (only the assignment of base pairs G1 X C72 and C2 X G71 should be reversed). The advantages of two-dimensional NOE spectroscopy over one-dimensional NOE spectroscopy for the assignments of imino-proton resonances and the structure elucidation of tRNA are illustrated and discussed. Furthermore, the use of non-exchangeable proton resonances as probes of the molecular structure is explored.  相似文献   

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