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1.
G H Reed  T S Leyh 《Biochemistry》1980,19(24):5472-5480
The complete coordination scheme for Mn(II) in transition-state-analogue complexes with creatine kinase has been determined by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy. Perturbations in the EPR spectra for Mn(II) due to superhyperfine coupling to 17O of selectively labeled ligands have been used to identify oxygen ligands in the first coordination sphere of the metal ion. The results show that in the complex of enzyme-MnADP-formate-creatine, Mn(II) is bound to oxygen ligands from both the alpha- and beta-phosphate groups of ADP, to an oxygen from the carboxylate group of formate, and to three water molecules. In the complex with thiocyanate replacing formate as the stabilizing anion, previous infrared experiments [Reed, G. H., Barlow, C. H., & Burns, R. A., Jr. (1978) J. Biol. Chem. 253, 4153-4158] indicated that the nitrogen from thiocyanate was bound to the Mn(II). The magnitudes of the 17O superphyperfine coupling constants from the O- ligands of the ADP phosphate groups and from the formate carboxylate are approximately equal and are larger than that for the water ligands. The symmetry of the zero-field-splitting tensor for Mn(II) indicates that the oxygens from the alpha- and beta-phosphate groups of ADP and the ligand donor atom from the anion occupy mutually cis positions in the octahedral coordination geometry. Water proton relaxation time measurements show that the three water molecules which are bound to Mn(II) are not in free exchange with the bulk solvent. Hence, an enclosed structure at the active site is indicated. The results suggest that for creatine kinase the activating metal ion is bound to all three phosphate groups in the transition state of the reaction.  相似文献   

2.
J M Moore  G H Reed 《Biochemistry》1985,24(20):5328-5333
The structure of the MnIIADP complex at the active site of 3-phosphoglycerate kinase from yeast has been investigated by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy. Inhomogeneous broadening in the EPR signals for Mn(II) resulting from unresolved superhyperfine coupling to 17O regiospecifically incorporated into ADP shows that Mn(II) is coordinated to the alpha- and beta-phosphate groups of ADP at the active site of the enzyme. The EPR pattern for the enzyme-MnIIADP complex is characteristic of a predominantly axially symmetric zero-field splitting tensor. The symmetry and magnitude of the zero-field splitting interaction suggest that there is an additional negatively charged oxygen ligand in the coordination sphere of Mn(II). EPR measurements for solutions of the enzyme-MnIIADP complex in 17O-enriched water indicate that there are also two or three water molecules in the coordination sphere of the metal ion. EPR data for complexes with the two epimers of [alpha-17O]ADP have been used to determine the stereochemical configuration of the MnIIADP complex at the active site. EPR spectra for Mn(II) in the enzymic complex with (Rp)-[alpha-17O]ADP show an inhomogeneous broadening due to superhyperfine coupling with 17O whereas spectra for (Sp)-[alpha-17O]ADP complexes are indistinguishable from those for matched samples with unlabeled ADP. These results show that 3-phosphoglycerate kinase selectivity binds the alpha configuration of the alpha, beta chelate of MnIIADP. Addition of 3-phosphoglycerate to form the dead-end complex (enzyme-MnIIADP-3-phosphoglycerate) does not alter the EPR spectrum, but addition of vanadate to this complex causes marked changes in the spectral parameters.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
The coordination sphere of Mn(II) in the complex with GDP and elongation factor Tu from Escherichia coli has been probed by EPR spectroscopy with 17O-labeled ligands. Inhomogeneous broadening in the EPR signals for Mn(II) due to unresolved superhyperfine coupling to the 17O nucleus was used to identify directly bound oxygen ligands. Results with GDP selectively enriched with 17O either in the alpha-phosphate or in the beta-phosphate revealed that GDP was a beta-monodentate ligand for Mn(II) in the complex with the protein. Results with 17O-enriched water showed that two water molecules are coordinated to the Mn(II). The EPR spectrum for the complex is characteristic of octahedral coordination for Mn(II). Hence, three ligands from the protein are required to complete the sextet of ligands.  相似文献   

4.
The stereochemical configurations of the Mn(II) complexes with the resolved epimers of adenosine 5'-O-(1-thiodiphosphate) (ADP alpha S), bound at the active site of creatine kinase, have been determined in order to assess the relative strengths of enzymic stereoselectivity versus Lewis acid/base preferences in metal-ligand binding. Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) data have been obtained for Mn(II) in anion-stabilized, dead-end (transition-state analogue) complexes, in ternary enzyme-MnIIADP alpha S complexes, and in the central complexes of the equilibrium mixture. The modes of coordination of Mn(II) at P alpha in the nitrate-stabilized, dead-end complexes with each epimer of ADP alpha S were ascertained by EPR measurements with (Rp)-[alpha-17O]ADP alpha S and (Sp)-[alpha-17O]ADP alpha S. The EPR spectrum for the complex with (Rp)-[alpha-17O]ADP alpha S showed inhomogeneous broadening due to unresolved superhyperfine coupling from coordinated 17O at P alpha. By contrast, the EPR spectrum for Mn(II) in complex with (Sp)-[alpha-17O]ADP alpha S is indistinguishable from that obtained for a matched sample with unlabeled (Sp)-ADP alpha S. A reduction in the magnitude of the 55Mn hyperfine coupling constant in the spectrum for the complex containing (Sp)-ADP alpha S is indicative of Mn(II)-thio coordination at P alpha.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
Electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy and water proton relaxation rate (PRR) measurements were used to characterize a complex formed at the myosin subfragment 1 (S1) ATPase site with stoichiometric amounts of Mn(II) and ADP. In the absence of nucleotide, Mn(II) binding at the active site is very weak, although two other classes of sites for Mn(II) on subfragment 1 were identified which are not directly involved in the ATPase reaction. A high affinity Mn(II) site (termed L-site with KL = 3 muM) is associated with a region of the molecule which is susceptible to proteolysis (probably the LC2 light chain subunit) since its stoichiometry depends on the conditions employed for the preparation of subfragment 1 during the papain treatment of myosin. In addition there are a number of weak sites for Mn(II) (termed N-sites) probably associated with anionic groups on the surface of the molecule. In order to study the properties of Mn(II) and ADP bound at the active site by magnetic resonance techniques, subfragment 1 preparations virtually free of the L-site were used, since such an ancillary site competes for the available Mn(II). MnADP binds to subfragment 1 with an apparent dissociation constant, KT, of about 4 muM at 25 degrees. The resultant complex, S1-MnADP, has a low PRR enhancement factor (1.7 at 24.3 MHZ), and its frequency (magnetic field) dependence indicates that this is because there are no readily exchangeable water molecules within the first coordination sphere of Mn(II. Relaxation of the bulk solvent is mediated by protons bound transiently within the outer spheres (4 to 7 A) of the Mn(II). A nitroxide spin label attached to the reactive thiol group of subfragment 1 enhances the solvent PRR, and this property is sensitive to the binding of MgADP to the active site. However, no dipolar spin-spin interaction was detected between the nitroxide group and Mn(II) in the S1-MnADP complex, indicating that the metal ion and thiol group are well separated.  相似文献   

6.
Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy has been used to determine the hydration numbers of Mn(II) in complexes with GDP and three forms of ras p21. EPR signals of Mn(II) in the GDP complex with viral-Harvey p21pRAS1 (Arg 12, Thr 59), p21EC (Gly 12, Thr 59), and p21EJ (Val 12, Thr 59) have narrow line-widths that permit ready observation of inhomogeneous broadening from unresolved superhyperfine coupling with the nuclear spin of 17O of directly coordinated oxygen ligands. Quantitative analysis of the lineshapes for the samples in H2 17O-enriched water indicates that four water ligands coordinate to the metal ion in the GDP complexes with all three proteins. The four solvent ligands, together with an oxygen from the beta-phosphate group of GDP, leave space for only one ligand from the protein. An X-ray diffraction-derived model for the MgII beta-gamma-imidoguanosine-5'-triphosphate complex with p21 shows coordination of Mg(II) to the beta- and gamma-phosphate groups of the nucleotide as well as to the hydroxyl groups of Thr 35 and Ser 17 (Pai, E.F., Kabusch, W., Krengel, U., Holmes, K. H., John, J., and Wittinghofer, A., 1989, Nature (London) 341, 209-214). Thus, upon conversion of the nucleotide from a triphosphate to a diphosphate, solvent replaces both the gamma-phosphate of the nucleotide and one of the protein ligands. The EPR results are consistent with a recent X-ray crystallographic model for the p21-MgIIGDP complex (Milburn, M. V., Tong, L., DeVos, A. M., Brunger, A., Yamaizumi, Z., Nishimura, S., and Kim, S.-H., 1990, Science 247, 939-945). EPR spectra of complexes with the three forms of ras p21 differ with respect to the intrinsic linewidths of the EPR signals. These subtle differences in linewidth appear to originate from slight differences in local disorder near the metal-nucleotide binding site.  相似文献   

7.
J L Kofron  D E Ash  G H Reed 《Biochemistry》1988,27(13):4781-4787
Electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy has been used to investigate the structure of the complex of manganous ion with the phosphorylated form of pyruvate,phosphate dikinase (Ep) and the inhibitor oxalate. Oxalate, an analogue of the enolate of pyruvate, is competitive with respect to pyruvate in binding to the phosphorylated form of the enzyme [Michaels, G., Milner, Y., & Reed, G.H. (1975) Biochemistry 14, 3213-3219]. Superhyperfine coupling between the unpaired electrons of Mn(II) and ligands specifically labeled with 17O has been used to identify oxygen ligands to Mn(II) in the complex with oxalate and the phosphorylated form of the enzyme. Oxalate binds at the active site as a bidentate chelate with Mn(II). An oxygen from the 3'-N-phosphohistidyl residue of the protein is in the coordination sphere of Mn(II), and at least two water molecules are also bound to Mn(II) in the complex. Oxalate also binds directly to Mn(II) in a complex with nonphosphorylated enzyme. The structure for the Ep-Mn(II)-oxalate complex implies that simultaneous coordination of a phospho group and of the attacking nucleophile to the divalent cation is likely an important factor in catalysis of this phospho-transfer reaction.  相似文献   

8.
Analysis of titration data of EF-Tu-GDP with Mn(II) where free and bound Mn(II) were determined by proton relaxation rate of water (PRR) yields one tight Mn(II) binding site and a value of 2 muM for the dissociation constant of Mn(II) from the EF-Tu-MnGDP complex, K'A. The dissociation constant of manganese nucleotide from the ternary EF-Tu-MnGDP complex, K2, 0.2 muM, was derived from the known value of Ks, the dissociation constant for the binary EF-Tu-GDP complex, and the titration data of the ternary complex with excess GDP as titrant. The apparent number, n, of rapidly exchanging water ligands coordinated to bound Mn(II) in the ternary complex EF-Tu-MnGDP is estimated from the frequency dependence of the PRR of the complex to be approximately 1. The value of n and the values of PRR enhancements, epsilont = 4.3 for EF-Tu-MnGDP at 21 degrees, 24.3 MHZ and epsilont = 4.1 for the ternary GTP complex, are unusually low for protein-Mn-nucleotide complexes. The antibiotic X5108 which induces GTPase activity in EF-Tu-MgGTP was shown to bind stoichiometrically to EF-Tu-MnGDP and thereby change the PRR enhancement of the complex from 4.3 to 7.4. The characteristic broad lines in the EPR spectra of Mn(II) nucleotides are strikingly narrowed upon binding of Mn(II) nucleotides to EF-Tu. The long electron spin relaxation times inferred from the EPR spectra indicate a limited access of solvent water to the first coordination sphere of Mn(II) in its EF-Tu-nucleotide complexes. The frequency dependence of the PRR indicates that the electron spin relaxation time, T1e, is the dominant process modulating the Mn(II)-H2O interaction of the EF-Tu-MnGDP complex and consequently determines the correlation time. The value of T1e, estimated from the PRR experiments to be 2.5 ns at 21 degrees, is consistent with the lower limit of T1e obtained from the line widths of the EPR spectrum of the complex. Upon binding of a stoichiometric quantity of the antibiotic X5108, the EPR spectrum of EF-Tu-MnGDP is severely broadened indicating greater access of solvent water to the manganese coordination sphere, i.e. an opening of the nucleotide binding site as already suggested by the increased PRR enhancement.  相似文献   

9.
Measurements of the relaxation rate of water protons (PRR) have been used to study the interaction of yeast phosphoglycerate kinase with the manganous complexes of a number of nucleotides. The results indicate that phosphoglycerate kinase belongs to the same class of enzymes as creatine kinase, adenylate kinase, formyltetrahydrofolate synthetase, and arginine kinase, with maximal binding of metal ion to tne enzyme in the presence of the nucleotide substrate. However, an analysis of titration curves for a number of nucleoside diphosphates (ADP, IDP, GDP) showed that there is a substantial synergism in binding of the metal ion and nucleotide to the enzyme in the ternary complex. The metal-substrate binds to the enzyme approximately two orders of magnitude more tightly than the free nucleotide; Other evidence for an atypical binding scheme for Mn(II)-nucleoside diphosphates was obtained by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) studies; the EPR spectrum for the bound Mn(II) in the enzyme-MnADP complex differed substantially from those obtained for other kinases. An identical EPR spectrum is observed with the MnADP complex with the rabbit muscle enzyme as with the yeast enzyme. In contrast, the dissociation constant for the enzyme-MnATP complex is approximately fourfold lower than that for enzyme-ATP, and there are no substantial changes in the electron paramagnetic resonance spectrum of MnATP2- when the complex is bound to phosphoglycerate kinase. A small but significant change in the PRR of water is observed on addition of 3-phosphoglycerate (but not 2-phosphoglycerate) to the MnADP-enzyme complex. However, addition of 3-phosphoglycerate to enzyme-MnADP did not influence the EPR spectrum of the enzyme-bound Mn(II).  相似文献   

10.
The water-oxidizing complex (WOC) within photosystem II (PSII) can be reconstituted with synthetic manganese complexes by a process called photoactivation; however, the key factors affecting the efficiency of synthetic manganese complexes in reconstitution of electron transport and oxygen evolution activity in manganese-depleted PSII remain unclear. In the present study, four complexes with different manganese coordination environments were used to reconstitute the WOC, and an interesting relationship was found between the coordination environment of the manganese atom in the complexes and their efficiency in restoring electron transport and oxygen evolution. If Mn(II) is coordinated to nitrogen atoms within the ligand, it can restore significant rates of electron transport and oxygen evolution; however, if the manganese atom is coordinated only to oxygen atoms instead of nitrogen atoms, it has no capability to restore electron transport and oxygen evolution. So, our results demonstrate that the capability of manganese complexes to reconstitute the WOC is mainly determined by the coordination between nitrogen atoms from ligands and the manganese atom. It is suggested from our results that the ligation between the nitrogen atom and the manganese atom within the manganese complex facilitates the photoligation of the manganese atom to histidyl residues on the apo-protein in manganese-depleted PSII during photoactivation.  相似文献   

11.
Cytochrome c oxidase (cytochrome aa3) from Paracoccus denitrificans contains a tightly bound manganese(II) ion, which responds to reduction of the enzyme by a change in its EPR signal (Seelig et al. (1981) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 636, 162-167). In this paper, the nature of this phenomenon is studied and the bound manganese is used as a reporter group to monitor a redox-linked conformational change in the protein. A reductive titration of the cyanide-inhibited enzyme shows that the change in the manganese EPR signal is associated with reduction of CuA. The change appears to reflect a rearrangement in the rhombic octahedral coordination environment of the central Mn2+ atom and is indicative of a redox-linked conformational transition in the enzyme. The manganese is likely to reside at the interface of subunits I and II, near the periplasmic side of the membrane. One of its ligands may be provided by the transmembrane segment X of subunit I, which has been suggested to contribute ligands to cytochrome a and CuB as well. Another manganese ligand is a water oxygen, as indicated by broadening of the manganese EPR signal in the presence of H2(17)O.  相似文献   

12.
Electron spin echo envelope modulation (ESEEM) spectroscopy has been applied to the determination of the number of water molecules coordinated to the metal in the binary complex of staphylococcal nuclease with Mn2+, to the ternary enzyme-Mn2+-3',5'-pdTp complex, and to ternary complexes of a number of mutant enzymes in which metal-binding ligands have been individually altered. Quantitation of coordinated water is based on ESEEM spectral comparisons of Mn2+-EDTA and Mn2+-DTPA, which differ by a single inner sphere water, and with Mn2+-(H2O)6. It was found that Mn2+ in the ternary complex of the wild-type enzyme has a single additional coordinated water, as compared to Mn2+ in the binary complex, confirming earlier findings based on T1 measurements of bound water [Serpersu, E. H., Shortle, D. L., & Mildvan, A. S. (1987) Biochemistry 26, 1289-1300]. Ternary complexes of the mutant proteins D40E, D40G, and D21Y have the same number of water ligands as the ternary complex of the wild-type enzyme, while the D21E mutant has one less water ligand. In order to maintain octahedral coordination geometry, these findings require two additional ligands to Mn2+ from the protein in the binary complex of the wild-type enzyme, probably Glu 43 and Asp 19, and one additional ligand from the protein in the ternary D40G and D21E complexes. Other ESEEM studies of ternary Mn2+ complexes of wild-type, D21E, and D21Y mutants indicate the coordination by Mn2+ of a phosphate of 3',5'-pdTp, as demonstrated by a 31P contact interaction of 3.9 +/- 0.3 MHz. Magnetic interaction of Mn2+ with 31P could not be demonstrated with the D40G and D40E mutants, suggesting that metal-phosphate distances are greater in these mutants than in the wild-type protein. In a parallel NMR study of the paramagnetic effects of enzyme-bound Co2+ (which occupies the Mn2+ site on the enzyme) on the T1 of 31P from enzyme-bound 3',5'-pdTp and 5'-TMP, it was found that metal to 5'-phosphate distances are 0.9-1.6 A shorter in ternary complexes of the wild-type enzyme and of the D21E mutant than in ternary complexes of the D40G mutant. In all cases, the 5'-phosphate of pdTp is in the inner coordination sphere of Co2+ and the 3'-phosphate is predominantly in the second coordination sphere.  相似文献   

13.
31P nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) measurements (at 121.5 MHz and 5 degrees C) were made on complexes of 3-phosphoglycerate kinase with ADP and 3-P-glycerate. Addition of Mg(II) to E.ADP shifts the alpha-P signal downfield by 3.8 ppm such that the alpha-P signal superimposes that for beta-P(E.MgADP). Such a shift is atypical among the Mg(II)-nucleotide complexes with other ATP-utilizing enzymes. This shift allowed the determination that enzyme bound ADP is saturated with Mg(II) for [Mg(II)]/[ADP] = 3.0--similar to that reported for ATP complexes with this enzyme (B.D. Ray and B.D. Nageswara Rao, Biochemistry 27, 5574 (1988]. This parallel behavior suggests that ADP binds at two sites on the enzyme as does ATP with disparate Mg(II) affinities. 31P relaxation times in E.MnADP.vanadate.3-P-glycerate and E.CoADP.vanadate.3-P-glycerate complexes indicate that these are long-lived, tightly bound complexes. 31P chemical shift measurements on diamagnetic complexes (with Mg(II] revealed three signals in the 2-5 ppm region (attributable to 3-P-glycerate) only upon addition of all the components necessary to form the E.MgADP.vanadate.3-P-glycerate complex. Subsequent sequestration of Mg(II) from the complex with excess EDTA reversed the Mg(II) induced effects on the ADP signals but did not cause coalescence of the three signals seen in the 2-5 ppm region. Addition of excess sulfate to dissociate these complexes from the enzyme resulted in a single resonance of 3-P-glycerate. The use of arsenate in place of vanadate yielded very similar results. These results suggest that, in the presence of MgADP, vanadate or arsenate, and 3-P-glycerate, the enzyme catalyzed the formation of multiple structurally distinguishable complexes that are stable on the enzyme and labile off the enzyme.  相似文献   

14.
The paramagnetic effects of Mn(II) and Co(II) on the spin-lattice relaxation rates of 31P nuclei of ATP and ADP and of Mn(II) on the spin-lattice relaxation rate of the delta protons of arginine bound to arginine kinase from lobster tail muscle have been measured. Temperature variation of 31P relaxation rates in E.MnADP and E.MnATP yields activation energies (delta E) in the range 6-10 kcal/mol. Thus, the 31P relaxation rates in these complexes are exchange limited and cannot provide structural information. However, the relaxation rates in E.CoADP and E.CoATP exhibit frequency dependence and delta E values in the range 1-2 kcal/mol; i.e., these rates depend upon 31P-Co(II) distances. These distances were calculated to be in the range 3.2-4.5 A, appropriate for direct coordination between Co(II) and the phosphoryl groups. The paramagnetic effect of Mn(II) on the 1H spin-lattice relaxation rate of the delta protons of arginine in the E.MnADP.Arg complex was also measured at three frequencies (viz., 200, 300, and 470 MHz). These 1H experiments were performed in the presence of sufficient excess of arginine to be observable over the protein background but with MnADP exclusively in the enzyme-bound form so that the enhancement in the relaxation rates of the delta protons of arginine arises entirely from the enzyme-bound complex. Both the observed frequency dependence of these rates and the delta E less than or equal to 1.0 +/- 0.3 kcal/mol indicate that this rate depends on the 1H-Mn(II) distances.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
Two new ligands of transition metal cations based on galactose-derived scaffolds were synthesised: 1,5-anhydro-2-deoxy-3,4,6-tri-O-(2-picolyl)-D-galactitol and methyl 2-deoxy-3,4,6-tri-O-(2-picolyl)-alpha-D-galactopyranoside. These ligands permitted the isolation as single crystals of a Co(II) and a Ni(II) complex, respectively. The structures of both complexes were determined by X-ray crystallography showing a coordination sphere including sugar-bound oxygen atoms. The sugar-derived ligands were found to be in both cases in high energy conformations in the crystal structures of the complexes. These conformations contain an arrangement of sugar-bound oxygen atoms similar to those observed in polyol-metal and carbohydrate-metal complexes.  相似文献   

16.
Reconstitution of Mn-depleted photosystem II (PSII) particles was examined with synthetic trinuclear Mn complexes of newly developed tripod ligands. Rates of the electron transfer and oxygen evolution were up to 74-86 and 52-56% of those measured in native PSII. These values are higher than those for the PSII reconstituted by MnCl(2). The role of the tripod ligands during the reconstitution process was examined by (19)F NMR. Due to the high NMR sensitivity of the (19)F nucleus and the low abundance of fluorine atoms in natural PSII, it was possible to selectively observe the fluorine atoms on the tripod ligand. It was shown that the tripod ligands were released from the Mn complex after the reconstitution. We propose that the primary step in the reconstitution process is the prebinding of the Mn complex to the hydrophobic part of the PSII particle.  相似文献   

17.
《BBA》1986,850(2):324-332
The structure of the Mn complex in the oxygen-evolving system and its mechanistic relation to photosynthetic oxygen evolution are poorly understood, though many studies have established that membrane-bound Mn plays an active role. Recently established procedures for isolating oxygen-evolving subchloroplast Photosystem II (PS II) preparations and the discovery of a light-induced multiline EPR signal attributable to the S2 state of the O2-evolving complex have facilitated the preparation of samples well characterized in the S1 and S2 states. We have used extended X-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS) spectroscopy to probe the ligand environment of Mn in PS II particles from spinach, and in this report we present our results. The essential feature of the EXAFS results are that at least two Mn atoms per PS II reaction center occur as a binuclear species with a metal-metal distance of approx. 2.7 Å, with low Z atoms, N or O, at a distance of approx. 1.75 Å and at approx. 1.98 Å, which are characteristic of bridging and terminal ligands. These results agree well with those derived from whole chloroplasts that provided the first evidence for a binuclear manganese complex (Kirby, J.A., Robertson, A.S., Smith, J.P., Thompson, A.C., Cooper, S.R. and Klein, M.P. (1981) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 103, 5529–5537).  相似文献   

18.
The high-affinity metal-binding site of isolated F(1)-ATPase from beef heart mitochondria was studied by high-field (HF) continuous wave electron paramagnetic resonance (CW-EPR) and pulsed EPR spectroscopy, using Mn(II) as a paramagnetic probe. The protein F(1) was fully depleted of endogenous Mg(II) and nucleotides [stripped F(1) or MF1(0,0)] and loaded with stoichiometric Mn(II) and stoichiometric or excess amounts of ADP or adenosine 5'-(beta,gamma-imido)-triphosphate (AMPPNP). Mn(II) and nucleotides were added to MF1(0,0) either subsequently or together as preformed complexes. Metal-ADP inhibition kinetics analysis was performed showing that in all samples Mn(II) enters one catalytic site on a beta subunit. From the HF-EPR spectra, the zero-field splitting (ZFS) parameters of the various samples were obtained, showing that different metal-protein coordination symmetry is induced depending on the metal nucleotide addition order and the protein/metal/nucleotide molar ratios. The electron spin-echo envelope modulation (ESEEM) technique was used to obtain information on the interaction between Mn(II) and the (31)P nuclei of the metal-coordinated nucleotide. In the case of samples containing ADP, the measured (31)P hyperfine couplings clearly indicated coordination changes related to the metal nucleotide addition order and the protein/metal/nucleotide ratios. On the contrary, the samples with AMPPNP showed very similar ESEEM patterns, despite the remarkable differences present among their HF-EPR spectra. This fact has been attributed to changes in the metal-site coordination symmetry because of ligands not involving phosphate groups. The kinetic data showed that the divalent metal always induces in the catalytic site the high-affinity conformation, while EPR experiments in frozen solutions supported the occurrence of different precatalytic states when the metal and ADP are added to the protein sequentially or together as a preformed complex. The different states evolve to the same conformation, the metal(II)-ADP inhibited form, upon induction of the trisite catalytic activity. All our spectroscopic and kinetic data point to the active role of the divalent cation in creating a competent catalytic site upon binding to MF1, in accordance with previous evidence obtained for Escherichia coli and chloroplast F(1).  相似文献   

19.
Structural, magnetic and spectroscopic data of a new trinuclear copper(II) complex with the ligand aspartame (apm) are described. [Cu(apm)2Cu(μ-N,O:O′-apm)2(H2O)Cu(apm)2(H2O)] · 5H2O crystallizes in the triclinic system, space group P1 (#1) with a = 7.3300(1) Å, b = 15.6840(1) Å, c = 21.5280(1) Å, α = 93.02(1)°, β = 93.21(1)°, γ = 92.66(1)° and Z = 1. Aspartame coordinates to Cu(II) through the carboxylate and β-amino groups. The carboxylate groups of the two central ligands act as bidentate bridges in a syn-anti conformation while the carboxylate groups of the four peripheral ligands are monodentate in a syn conformation. The central copper ion is in a distorted square pyramidal geometry with the apical position being occupied by one oxygen atom of the water molecule. The two terminal copper(II) atoms are coordinated to the ligands in the same position but their coordination sphere differs from each other due to the fact that one copper atom has a water molecule in an apical position leading to an octahedral coordination sphere while the other copper atom is exclusively coordinated to aspartame ligands forming a distorted square pyramidal coordination sphere. Thermal analysis is consistent with the X-ray structure. EPR spectra and CV curves indicate a rupture of the trinuclear framework when this complex is dissolved in ethanol or DMF, forming a mononuclear species, with a tetragonal structure.  相似文献   

20.
Copper is found incorporated into the crystal structure of cytosine monohydrate grown from aqueous solution of commercially available cytosine. Upon ionizing irradiation, the crystals exhibited the electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectra characteristic of Cu(II) complex. Planar coordination bonding to the cupric ion, having three nitrogen atoms and an oxygen as ligands, is interpreted to bridge two cytosine molecules, replacing the two cytosine-cytosine hydrogen bonds present in pure crystals. The EPR signals are much stronger for crystals grown from the solutions to which small amount of copper powder were added.  相似文献   

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