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1.
Li SJ 《Biopolymers》2006,81(2):74-80
Metal binding to lysozyme has received wide interest. In particular, it is interesting that Ni2+, Mn2+, Co2+, and Yb3+ chloride salts induce an increase in the solubility of the tetragonal form in crystals of hen egg white lysozyme at high salt concentration, but that Mg2+ and Ca2+ chloride salts do not. To investigate the interactions of the di- and trivalent metal ions with the active site of lysozyme and compare the effects of the di- and trivalent metal ions on molecular conformation of lysozyme based on the structural analysis, the crystal structures of hen egg white lysozyme grown at pH 4.6, in the presence of 0.5 M MgCl2, CaCl2, NiCl2, MnCl2, CoCl2, and YbCl3, have been determined by X-ray crystallography at 1.58 A resolution. The crystals grown in these salts have an identical space group, P4(3)2(1)2. The molecules show no conformational changes, irrespective of the salts used. Ni2+ and Co2+ binding to the Odelta atom of Asp52 in the active site at 1.98 and 2.02 A, respectively, and Yb3+ binding to both the Odelta atom of Asp52 and the Odelta1 atom of Asn46 at 2.25 A have been identified. The binding sites of Mn2+, Mg2+, and Ca2+ have not been found from different Fourier electron density maps. The Ni2+ and Co2+ ions bind to the Odelta atom of Asp52 at almost the same position, while the Yb3+ ion takes a different position from the Ni2+ and Co2+ ions. On the other hand, the anion Cl-, interacting with the Oeta atom of Tyr23 at a site of about 2.90 A, has also been determined for each crystal.  相似文献   

2.
The distance separating the high-affinity binding sites of actin for a divalent metal ion and nucleotide was evaluated by using high-resolution proton NMR and EPR spectroscopy. Replacement of the Ca2+ or Mg2+ bound to the high-affinity divalent cation site of G-actin by trivalent lanthanide ions such as La3+, EU3+, or Gd3+ results in an increase in the mobility of the bound ATP as observed in the NMR spectra of G-actin monomers. Little difference was observed between the spectra obtained in the presence of the diamagnetic La3+ control and the paramagnetic ions Eu3+ and Gd3+ which respectively shift and broaden the proton resonances of amino acids in the vicinity of the binding site. Analysis of the NMR spectra indicates that the metal and nucleotide binding sites are separated by a distance of at least 16 A. In the past, the metal and ATP have been widely assumed to bind as a complex. Further verification that the two sites on actin are physically separated was obtained by using an ATP analogue with a nitroxide spin-label bound at the 6' position of the purine ring. An estimate of the distance was made between the site containing the ATP analogue and the paramagnetic ion, Mn2+, bound to the cation binding site. These EPR experiments were not affected by the state of polymerization of the actin. The data obtained by using this technique support the conclusion stated above, namely, that the cation and nucleotide sites on either G- or F-actin are well separated.  相似文献   

3.
Metal ions, such as Ca2+ and Mn2+, are necessary for the generation of cofactor activity following reconstitution of factor VIII from its isolated light chain (LC) and heavy chain (HC). Titration of EDTA-treated factor VIII with Mn2+ showed saturable binding with high affinity (K(d) = 5.7 +/- 2.1 microM) as detected using a factor Xa generation assay. No significant competition between Ca2+ and Mn2+ for factor VIII binding (K(i) = 4.6 mM) was observed as measured by equilibrium dialysis using 20 microM Ca2+ and 8 microM factor VIII in the presence of 0-1 mM Mn2+. The intersubunit affinity measured by fluorescence energy transfer of an acrylodan-labeled LC (fluorescence donor) and fluorescein-labeled HC (fluorescence acceptor) in the presence of 20 mM Mn2+ (K(d) = 53.0 +/- 17.1 nM) was not significantly different from the affinity value previously obtained in the absence of metal ion (K(d) = 53.8 +/- 14.2 nM). The sensitization of phosphorescence of Tb3+ bound to factor VIII subunits was utilized to detect Mn2+ binding to the subunits. Mn2+ inhibited the phosphorescence of Tb3+ bound to HC and LC, as well as the HC-derived A1 and A2 subunits with a relatively wide range of estimated inhibition constant values (K(i) values = 169-1147 microM), whereas Ca2+ showed no effect on Tb3+ phosphorescence. These results suggest that factor VIII cofactor activity can be generated by Mn2+ binding to site(s) on factor VIII that are different from the high-affinity Ca2+ binding site. However, like Ca2+, Mn2+ did not alter the affinity for HC and LC association. Thus, Mn2+appears to generate factor VIII cofactor activity by a similar mechanism as observed for Ca2+following its association at nonidentical sites on the protein.  相似文献   

4.
Interaction between Gd3+ and Tb3+ ions and Ca2+,Mg2+-ATPase of sarcoplasmic reticulum was studied. Three classes of lanthanide-ion binding sites with different affinities were distinguished. Binding of Gd3+ to the site with the highest affinity seemed to occur at less than 10(-6)M free Gd3+ and resulted in severe inhibition of ATPase activity. The reaction rates of both E-P formation and decomposition in the forward direction were inhibited in parallel with this binding, whereas ADP-dependent decay of E-P in the backward direction was not. At these Gd3+ concentrations, Ca2+-binding to the transport site was not inhibited. Binding of Gd3+ and Tb3+ to the Ca2+-transport site did occur, but more than 10(-5)M free Gd3+ or Tb3+ was required for effective competition with Ca2+ for that site. Gd3+ bound to the transport site in place of Ca2+ did not activate the E-P intermediate formation. Addition of 10(-1)M Tb3+ to a suspension of sarcoplasmic reticulum membranes resulted in marked enhancement of Tb3+ fluorescence, which is due to an energy transfer from aromatic amino acid residues of ATPase to Tb3+ ions bound to the low affinity site of the enzyme. Gd3+ and Mn2+ competed with Tb3+ for that site, but Ca2+, Zn2+, and Cd2+ did not.  相似文献   

5.
Gd3+ binding sites on the purified Ca(2+)-ATPase of sarcoplasmic reticulum were characterized at 2 and 6 degrees C and pH 7.0 under conditions in which 45Ca2+ and 54Mn2+ specifically labeled the calcium transport site and the catalytic site of the enzyme, respectively. We detected several classes of Gd3+ binding sites that affected enzyme function: (a) Gd3+ exchanged with 54Mn2+ of the 54MnATP complex bound at the catalytic site. This permitted slow phosphorylation of the enzyme when two Ca2+ ions were bound at the transport site. The Gd3+ ion bound at the catalytic site inhibited decomposition of the ADP-sensitive phosphoenzyme. (b) High-affinity binding of Gd3+ to site(s) distinct from both the transport site and the catalytic site inhibited the decomposition of the ADP-sensitive phosphoenzyme. (c) Gd3+ enhanced 4-nitro-2,1,3-benzoxadiazole (NBD) fluorescence in NBD-modified enzyme by probably binding to the Mg2+ site that is distinct from both the transport site and the catalytic site. (d) Gd3+ inhibited high-affinity binding of 45Ca2+ to the transport site not by directly competing with Ca2+ for the transport site but by occupying site(s) other than the transport site. This conclusion was based mainly on the result of kinetic analysis of displacement of the enzyme-bound 45Ca2+ ions by Gd3+ and vice versa, and the inability of Gd3+ to phosphorylate the enzyme under conditions in which GdATP served as a substrate. These results strongly suggest that Ln3+ ions cannot be used as probes to structurally and functionally characterize the calcium transport site on the Ca(2+)-ATPase.  相似文献   

6.
A Sadhu  J A Magnuson 《Biochemistry》1989,28(8):3197-3204
The stoichiometry of Mn2+ binding to concanavalin A was found to be influenced by temperature, pH, and the presence or absence of saccharide. Demetalized concanavalin A binds one Mn2+ (S1 site) at 5 degrees C, pH 6.5, and two Mn2+ at 25 degrees C (S1 and S2 sites). The association constants for Mn2+ are 6.2 x 10(5) and 3.7 x 10(4) M-1 for the S1 and S2 sites, respectively, at 25 degrees C. Concanavalin A with one Mn2+ bound per monomer remains in an open conformation and exhibits a relatively high water proton relaxation rate. Concanavalin A with two Mn2+ ions remains in a closed conformation characterized by a lower relaxation rate. The rate of binding of the second Mn2+ to concanavalin A as determined by ESR and the rate of conversion of open form to closed form (folding over) as determined by proton relaxation rate measurements gave an identical rate constant of 80.0 +/- 5.8 M-1 h-1 at 17 degrees C. Ca2+, Sr2+, and high levels of methyl alpha-D-mannopyranoside also induce folding of concanavalin A. Ca2+ is not catalytic but stoichiometric in causing the folding. Mn2+ in the S1 site can be displaced by Ni2+, Co2+, and Zn2+, and Mn2+ in the S2 site can be displaced by Ca2+ and Sr2+. Concanavalin A with Ni2+, Co2+, Zn2+, or Mn2+ in the S1 site and Ca2+ or Sr2+ in the S2 site has a higher affinity for methylumbelliferyl alpha-D-mannopyranoside than Ni-Mn-, Co-Mn-, Zn-Mn-, and Cd-Cd-concanavalin A.  相似文献   

7.
Metal interactions with beef heart mitochondrial ATPase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Atomic absorption and electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy were used to study the metal binding sites of beef heart mitochondrial ATPase (F1). Quantitative and qualitative properties of these sites are described. Two different separation techniques were able to distinguish two very tight sites from one tight (easily exchangeable) metal binding site on F1. Of these sites, two are specific for magnesium while one can be substituted with Mn2+, Co2+, or Zn2+. When MgAMP-PNP was incubated with F1, a fourth metal was bound to the enzyme. The carboxyl group modified by dicyclohexylcarbodiimide is shown not to be involved in binding of any of the tightly bound metals. Qualitative properties of the metal binding sites using the Mn2+-enzyme complex as a probe were ascertained using EPR at pH 6.8 and 8.0. CrATP and Mn2+ appear to bind to different metal sites on F1. The possible role of the metals in regulation of catalysis, and their relation to nucleotide binding is discussed.  相似文献   

8.
Free ion concentration of some divalent heavy metal ions such as Mn2+, Co2+, Ni2+, Cd2+ and Zn2+ in the synaptosomal suspension was measured to determine binding with synaptosomes isolated from rat brain cortex. A dual wavelength spectrophotometer was utilized to monitor the absorbance changes of murexide raised by stepwise addition of these ions (as chloride salts). Such titration experiments of the synaptosomal suspension revealed that a part of the added divalent cation such as Mn2+, Co2+ or Ni2+ was almost instantaneously bound to synaptosomes in isotonic NaCl media. Our previous study (Kamino, Uyesaka & Inouye, J. Membrane Biol. 17:13, 1974) demonstrated that raised external K+ resulted in a specific noncompetitive inhibition of synaptosomal Ca-binding. Just like the Ca-binding, Mn-, Co- or Ni-binding was almost completely depressed by high external K+ or ruthenium red when the free concentration of the cations was 10 mum or less, while at higher concentrations the binding was not affected. The present results indicate that tested divalent cations bind with both "Ca-binding sites" and "non-Ca-binding sites" of synaptosomal membrane, the nature of the binding sites of both being quite different: the former is sensitive to high external K+ and to ruthenium red but the latter is not.  相似文献   

9.
Sphingomyelinase (SMase) from Bacillus cereus (Bc-SMase) hydrolyzes sphingomyelin to phosphocholine and ceramide in a divalent metal ion-dependent manner. Bc-SMase is a homologue of mammalian neutral SMase (nSMase) and mimics the actions of the endogenous mammalian nSMase in causing differentiation, development, aging, and apoptosis. Thus Bc-SMase may be a good model for the poorly characterized mammalian nSMase. The metal ion activation of sphingomyelinase activity of Bc-SMase was in the order Co2+ > or = Mn2+ > or = Mg2+ > Ca2+ > or = Sr2+. The first crystal structures of Bc-SMase bound to Co2+, Mg2+, or Ca2+ were determined. The water-bridged double divalent metal ions at the center of the cleft in both the Co2+- and Mg2+-bound forms were concluded to be the catalytic architecture required for sphingomyelinase activity. In contrast, the architecture of Ca2+ binding at the site showed only one binding site. A further single metal-binding site exists at one side edge of the cleft. Based on the highly conserved nature of the residues of the binding sites, the crystal structure of Bc-SMase with bound Mg2+ or Co2+ may provide a common structural framework applicable to phosphohydrolases belonging to the DNase I-like folding superfamily. In addition, the structural features and site-directed mutagenesis suggest that the specific beta-hairpin with the aromatic amino acid residues participates in binding to the membrane-bound sphingomyelin substrate.  相似文献   

10.
Poly(A)-specific ribonuclease (PARN) is a highly poly(A)-specific 3'-exoribonuclease that efficiently degrades mRNA poly(A) tails. PARN belongs to the DEDD family of nucleases, and four conserved residues are essential for PARN activity, i.e. Asp-28, Glu-30, Asp-292, and Asp-382. Here we have investigated how catalytically important divalent metal ions are coordinated in the active site of PARN. Each of the conserved amino acid residues was substituted with cysteines, and it was found that all four mutants were inactive in the presence of Mg2+. However, in the presence of Mn2+, Zn2+, Co2+, or Cd2+, PARN activity was rescued from the PARN(D28C), PARN(D292C), and PARN(D382C) variants, suggesting that these three amino acids interact with catalytically essential metal ions. It was found that the shortest sufficient substrate for PARN activity was adenosine trinucleotide (A3) in the presence of Mg2+ or Cd2+. Interestingly, adenosine dinucleotide (A) was efficiently hydrolyzed in the presence of Mn2+, Zn2+, or Co2+, suggesting that the substrate length requirement for PARN can be modulated by the identity of the divalent metal ion. Finally, introduction of phosphorothioate modifications into the A substrate demonstrated that the scissile bond non-bridging phosphate oxygen in the pro-R position plays an important role during cleavage, most likely by coordinating a catalytically important divalent metal ion. Based on our data we discuss binding and coordination of divalent metal ions in the active site of PARN.  相似文献   

11.
Calcineurin, a calmodulin-regulated phosphatase, is composed of two distinct subunits (A and B) and requires certain metal ions for activity. The binding of the two most potent activators, Ni2+ and Mn2+, to calcineurin and its subunits has been studied. Incubation of the protein with 63Ni2+ (or 54Mn2+) followed by gel filtration to separate free and protein-bound ions indicated that calcineurin could maximally bind 2 mol/mol of Ni2+ or Mn2+. While isolated A subunit also bound 2 mol/mol of Ni2+, no Mn2+ binding was demonstrated for either isolated A or B subunit. When bindings were monitored by nitrocellulose filter assay, only 1 mol/mol bound Ni2+ or Mn2+ was detected, suggesting that the two Ni2+ (or Mn2+) binding sites had different relative affinities and that only metal ions bound at the higher affinity sites were detected by the filter assay. Preincubation of calcineurin with Mn2+ (or Ni2+) decreased the filter assay-measured Ni2+ (or Mn2+) binding by only 30%. Preincubation of the protein with Zn2+ decreased the filter assay-measured Ni2+ or Mn2+ binding by 90 or 17%, respectively. The results suggest that the higher affinity sites are a Ni2+-specific site and a distinct Mn2+-specific site. Preincubation of calcineurin with Mn2+ (or Ni2+) decreased the gel filtration-determined Ni2+ (or Mn2+) binding from 2 to 1 mol/mol suggesting that calcineurin also contains a site which binds either metal ion. The time course of Ni2+ (or Mn2+) binding was correlated with that of the enzyme activation, and the extent of deactivation of the Ni2+-activated calcineurin by EDTA or by incubation with Ca2+ and calmodulin (Pallen, C. J., and Wang, J. H. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 6134-6141) was correlated with the release of the bound ions, thus suggesting that the bound ion is directly responsible for enzyme activation.  相似文献   

12.
Fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase requires divalent cations (Mg2+, Mn2+, or Zn2+) for catalysis, but a diverse set of monovalent cations (K+, Tl+, Rb+, or NH(4)(+)) will further enhance enzyme activity. Here, the interaction of Tl+ with fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase is explored under conditions that support catalysis. On the basis of initial velocity kinetics, Tl+ enhances catalysis by 20% with a K(a) of 1.3 mm and a Hill coefficient near unity. Crystal structures of enzyme complexes with Mg2+, Tl+, and reaction products, in which the concentration of Tl+ is 1 mm or less, reveal Mg2+ at metal sites 1, 2, and 3 of the active site, but little or no bound Tl+. Intermediate concentrations of Tl+ (5-20 mm) displace Mg2+ from site 3 and the 1-OH group of fructose 6-phosphate from in-line geometry with respect to bound orthophosphate. Loop 52-72 appears in a new conformational state, differing from its engaged conformation by disorder in residues 61-69. Tl+ does not bind to metal sites 1 or 2 in the presence of Mg2+, but does bind to four other sites with partial occupancy. Two of four Tl+ sites probably represent alternative binding sites for the site 3 catalytic Mg2+, whereas the other sites could play roles in monovalent cation activation.  相似文献   

13.
The lanthanide ions Lu3+ (diamagnetic) and Gd3+ (paramagnetic broadening probe) were used to displace Ca2+ from the high-affinity cation binding site on G-actin. The effects of these higher-affinity ions on the proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectrum of actin were recorded. The aliphatic proton envelope in the Gd-actin sample exhibited a complex array of changes due to the proximity of Gd to several aliphatic residues. No such changes were observed in the diamagnetic Lu-actin control spectrum. By contrast, the aromatic proton envelope remained largely unaffected in both Gd-actin and Lu-actin samples. However, the adenosine moiety on the actin-bound ATP became increasingly mobilized without the triphosphate chain being released from the ATP binding site. Maximum adenosine mobilization occurred with approximately 1 mol of lanthanide ion bound per mol of actin. The absence of changes in the aromatic proton envelope suggests that the high-affinity cation binding site is in a region well removed from the adenosine moiety of bound ATP as well as any aromatic side-chains. The separation of the ATP and cation sites was further explored using the fluorescent ATP analogues FTP and epsilon-ATP. Tb3+ bound to the high-affinity cation site was found to be separated by 16 A from the FTP chromophore bound to the nucleotide binding site on actin. Since this distance is greater than can be accommodated on a model of the Tb-ATP complex, we conclude that the sites are physically separate. This conclusion was further reinforced by experiments involving the quenching of epsilon-ATP fluorescence by Mn2+.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
Conyers GB  Wu G  Bessman MJ  Mildvan AS 《Biochemistry》2000,39(9):2347-2354
Recombinant IalA protein from Bartonella bacilliformis is a monomeric adenosine 5'-tetraphospho-5'-adenosine (Ap4A) pyrophosphatase of 170 amino acids that catalyzes the hydrolysis of Ap4A, Ap5A, and Ap6A by attack at the delta-phosphorus, with the departure of ATP as the leaving group [Cartwright et al. (1999) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 256, 474-479]. When various divalent cations were tested over a 300-fold concentration range, Mg2+, Mn2+, and Zn2+ ions were found to activate the enzyme, while Ca2+ did not. Sigmoidal activation curves were observed with Mn2+ and Mg2+ with Hill coefficients of 3.0 and 1.6 and K0.5 values of 0.9 and 5.3 mM, respectively. The substrate M2+ x Ap4A showed hyperbolic kinetics with Km values of 0.34 mM for both Mn2+ x Ap4A and Mg2+ x Ap4A. Direct Mn2+ binding studies by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and by the enhancement of the longitudinal relaxation rate of water protons revealed two Mn2+ binding sites per molecule of Ap4A pyrophosphatase with dissociation constants of 1.1 mM, comparable to the kinetically determined K0.5 value of Mn2+. The enhancement factor of the longitudinal relaxation rate of water protons due to bound Mn2+ (epsilon b) decreased with increasing site occupancy from a value of 12.9 with one site occupied to 3.3 when both are occupied, indicating site-site interaction between the two enzyme-bound Mn2+ ions. Assuming the decrease in epsilon(b) to result from cross-relaxation between the two bound Mn2+ ions yields an estimated distance of 5.9 +/- 0.4 A between them. The substrate Ap4A binds one Mn2+ (Kd = 0.43 mM) with an epsilon b value of 2.6, consistent with the molecular weight of the Mn2+ x Ap4A complex. Mg2+ binding studies, in competition with Mn2+, reveal two Mg2+ binding sites on the enzyme with Kd values of 8.6 mM and one Mg2+ binding site on Ap4A with a Kd of 3.9 mM, values that are comparable to the K0.5 for Mg2+. Hence, with both Mn2+ and Mg2+, a total of three metal binding sites were found-two on the enzyme and one on the substrate-with dissociation constants comparable to the kinetically determined K0.5 values, suggesting a role in catalysis for three bound divalent cations. Ca2+ does not activate Ap4A pyrophosphatase but inhibits the Mn2+-activated enzyme competitively with a Ki = 1.9 +/- 1.3 mM. Ca2+ binding studies, in competition with Mn2+, revealed two sites on the enzyme with dissociation constants (4.3 +/- 1.3 mM) and one on Ap4A with a dissociation constant of 2.1 mM. These values are similar to its Ki suggesting that inhibition by Ca2+ results from the complete displacement of Mn2+ from the active site. Unlike the homologous MutT pyrophosphohydrolase, which requires only one enzyme-bound divalent cation in an E x M2+ x NTP x M2+ complex for catalytic activity, Ap4A pyrophosphatase requires two enzyme-bound divalent cations that function in an active E x (M2+)2 x Ap4A x M2+ complex.  相似文献   

15.
The binding of cations by parvalbumins was studied by the proton relaxation enhancement (PRE) method using the paramagnetic probes Gd(III) and Mn(II). Gd(III) appears as a specific probe of the primary sites CD and EF with the following binding parameters: n = 2, KdGd = 0.5 x 10(-11) M and epsilon b = 2.3. The low value of epsilon b is the result of a nearly complete dehydration of the protein bound ions. Competition experiments between Gd(III) and various diamagnetic cations show the following order of affinity for the EF and CD sites: Mg2+ less than Zn2+ less than Sr2+ less than Ca2+ less than Cd2+ less than La3+ less than or equal to Gd3+. Mn 2+ is a specific probe of a secondary site with the following binding parameters: n = 1, KdMn = 0.6 x 10(-3) M and epsilon b = 17. The high value of epsilon b suggests that the protein bound Mn(II) has retained most of its hydration shell. Competition experiments between (Mn(II) and different cations show similar affinities for this site: Ca2+ less than or equal to Mg2+ less than or equal to Cd2+ less than or equal to Mn2+. This secondary site is located near the EF primary site.  相似文献   

16.
Co(II)-glyoxalase I has been prepared by reactivation of apoenzyme from human erythrocytes with Co2+. The visible absorption spectrum showed maxima at 493 and 515 nm and shoulders at 465 and 615 nm. The absorption coefficients at 493 and 515 nm were 35 and 33 M-1 cm-1/cobalt ion, respectively; i.e. 70 and 66 M-1 cm-1 for the dimeric metalloprotein. The product of the enzymatic reaction, S-D-lactoylglutathione, although binding to Co(II)-glyoxalase I, had no demonstrable effect on the visible absorption spectrum, indicating binding outside the first coordination sphere of the metal. The EPR spectrum at 3.9 K was characterized by g1 approximately 6.6, g2 approximately 3.0, and g3 approximately 2.5, and eight hyperfine lines with A1 = 0.025 cm-1. Binding of the strong competitive inhibitor S-p-bromobenzylglutathione to Co(II)-glyoxalase I gave three g values: 6.3, 3.4, and 2.5, indicating a conformational change affecting the environment of the metal ion. Both optical and EPR spectra strongly suggest a high spin Co2+ with octahedral coordination in the active site of the enzyme. The similarities in kinetic properties between native Zn(II)-glyoxalase I and enzyme substituted with Mg2+, Mn2+, or Co2+ is consistent with the view that these enzyme forms have the same metal coordination in the protein.  相似文献   

17.
D T Cronce  W D Horrocks 《Biochemistry》1992,31(34):7963-7969
Excitation spectroscopy of the 7F0----5D0 transition of Eu3+ and diffusion-enhanced energy transfer are used to study metal-binding characteristics of the calcium-binding protein parvalbumin from codfish. Energy is transferred from Eu3+ ions occupying the CD- and EF-binding sites to the freely-diffusing Co(III) coordination complex energy acceptors: [Co(NH3)6]3+, [Co(NH3)5H2O]3+, [CoF(NH3)5]2+, [CoCl(NH3)5]2+, [Co(NO2)3(NH3)3], and [Co(ox)3]3-. In the absence of these inorganic energy acceptors, the excited-state lifetimes of Eu3+ bound to the CD and EF sites are indistinguishable, even in D2O; however, in the presence of the positively charged energy acceptor complexes, the Eu3+ probes in the cod parvalbumin have different excited-state lifetimes due to a greater energy-transfer site from Eu3+ in the CD site than from this ion in the EF site. The observation of distinct lifetimes for Eu3+ in the two sites allows the study of the relative binding site affinities and selectivity, using other members of the lanthanide ion series. Our results indicate that during the course of a titration of the metal-free protein, Eu3+ fills the two sites simultaneously. Eu3+ is competitively displaced by other Ln3+ ions, with the CD site showing a preference for the larger Ln3+ ions while the EF site shows little, if any, competitive selectivity across the Ln3+ ion series.  相似文献   

18.
A new spectroscopic technique is presented for obtaining infraredlike spectra of the binding sites of Ca2+ and other metals in biological macromolecules. The technique, based on the Ca(2+)-like binding properties of Gd3+, utilizes vibronic side bands (VSB) that appear in Gd3+ fluorescence. In the fluorescence spectrum of Gd3+, the separation in photon frequency between a VSB and its electronic origin at approximately 32,150 cm-1 (approximately 311 nm) is a direct measure of the vibrational frequency of a ligand coordinated to Gd3+ ion. As a consequence, the VSB are uncomplicated by molecular vibrations distant from the Gd3+ binding site. The vibrational spectra resulting from the VSB of Gd3+ coordinated to a Ca2+ binding protein, a phospholipid, and DNA are presented.  相似文献   

19.
Kidney alkaline phosphatase is an enzyme which requires two types of metals for maximal activity: zinc, which is essential, and magnesium, which is stimulatory. The main features of the Mg2+ stimulation have been analyzed. The stimulation is pH-dependent and is observed mainly between pH 7.5 and 10.5. Mg2+ binding to native alkaline phosphatase is characterized by a dissociation constant of 50 muM at pH 8.5,25 degrees. Binding of Zn2+ is an athermic process. Both the rate constants of association, ka, and of dissociation, kd, have low values. Typical values are 7 M(-1) at pH 8.0, 25 degrees, for ka and 4.10(-4) S(-1) at pH 8.0, 25 degrees, for kd. The on and off processes have high activation energies of 29 kcal mol (-1). Mg2+ can be replaced at its specific site by Mn2+, Co2+, Ni2+, and Zn2+. Zinc binding to the Mg2+ site inhibits the native alkaline phosphatase. Mn2+, Co2+, and Ni2+ also bind to the Mg2+ site with a stimulatory effect which is nearly identic-al with that of Mg2+, Mn2+ is the stimulatory cation which binds most tightly to the Mg2+ site; the dissociation constant of the Mn2+ kidney phosphatase complex is 2 muM at pH 8.5. The stoichiometry of Mn2+ binding has been found to be 1 eq of Mn2+ per mol of dimeric kidney phosphatase. The native enzyme displays absolute half-site reactivity for Mn2+ binding. Mg2+ binding site and the substrate binding sites are distinct sites. The Mg2+ stimulation corresponds to an allosteric effect. Mg2+ binding to its specific sites does not affect substrate recognition, it selectively affects Vmax values. Quenching of the phosphoenzyme formed under steady state conditions with [32P]AMP as a substrate as well as stopped flow analysis of the catalyzed hydrolysis of 2,4-dinitrophenyl phosphate or p-nitrophenyl phosphate have shown that the two active sites of the native and of the Mg2+-stimulated enzyme are not equivalent. Stopped flow analysis indicated that one of the two active sites was phosphorylated very rapidly whereas the other one was phosphorylated much more slowly at pH 4.2. Half of the sites were shown to be reactive at pH 8.0. Quenching experiments have shown that only one of the two sites is phosphorylated at any instant; this result was confirmed by the stopped flow observation of a burst of only 1 mol of nitrophenol per mol of dimeric phosphatase in the pre-steady state hydrolysis of p-nitrophenyl phosphate. The half-of-the-sites reactivity observed for the native and for the Mg2+-stimulated enzyme indicates that the same type of complex, the monophosphorylated complex, accumulates under steady state conditions with both types of enzymes. Mg2+ binding to the native enzyme at pH 8.0 increases considerably the dephosphorylation rate of this monophosphorylated intermediate. A possible mechanism of Mg2+ stimulation is discussed.  相似文献   

20.
L D Ward  S N Timasheff 《Biochemistry》1988,27(5):1508-1514
The high-affinity metal divalent cation Mg2+, associated with the exchangeable guanosine 5'-triphosphate (GTP) binding site (E site) on purified tubulin, has been replaced by the transition metal ion Co2+ on tubulin as well as on the tubulin-colchicine, tubulin-allocolchicine and tubulin-8-anilino-1-naphthalenesulfonic acid (tubulin-ANS) complexes. While pure native tubulin readily incorporated 0.8 atom of Co2+ per tubulin alpha-beta dimer, incorporation was reduced to 0.4 atom of Co2+ per mole of tubulin when it was complexed with colchicine, indicating that the conformational change induced in tubulin by the binding of colchicine leads to a reduced accessibility of the divalent cation binding site linked to the E site without necessarily changing the intrinsic binding constant. The fluorescence emission spectra of tubulin-bound colchicine, allocolchicine, and ANS displayed a strong overlap with the Co2+ absorption spectrum, identifying these as adequate donor-acceptor pairs. Fluorescence energy-transfer measurements were carried out between tubulin-bound colchicine (or allocolchicine) and ANS as donors and tubulin-complexed Co2+ as acceptor. It was found that the distance between the ANS and the high-affinity divalent cation binding sites is greater than 28 A, while that between the colchicine and the divalent cation binding sites is greater than 24 A.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

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