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1.
A study of the three histidine residues of bovine alpha-lactalbumin has been made using proton magnetic resonance (PMR) spectroscopy in order to obtain information on their environments in the protein and thereby to test in part the previously proposed structure. PMR titration curves are obtained for the H-4 resonances using difference spectroscopy and for the H-2 resonances and the 1-H-2-H exchange rates of the H-2 protons have been measured. The assignment of resonances to particular histidine residues is achieved by utilising their selective reaction with iodoacetate in conjunction with a PMR study of the carboxymethylation of alpha-N-acetyl-L-histidine. The H-2 and H-4 resonances labelled 1, 2 and 3 starting from the downfield end of the spectrum are assigned to histidine residues 107, 68 and 32 respectively. Their apparent pK values at low ionic strength and 20 degrees C are 5.78, 6.49 and 6.51 respectively. The experimental results on two histidine residues are consistent with the predictions of the proposed structure, which indicate that histidine-68 is an external residue and histidine-32 is partially buried and in the vicinity of aromatic residues. The experimental data on histidine 107 can also be rationalised with less certainty in terms of the proposed structure, which indicates a partially buried residue that may be involved in hydrogen bonding.  相似文献   

2.
The ionization constants of 3 of the histidine residues of ribonuclease A have beenobtained at 5 temperatures from the nuclear magnetic resonance titration curves of the imidazole C2 proton resonances. Thermodynamic parameters derived from the ionization constants indicate that histidine residues 105 and 119 are fairly well exposed to solvent, while histidine residue 12 is in a somewhat more restricted environment. Measurements of the low pH inflection present in the titration curve of histidine-12 yield a large negative entropy value, indicating that the group givine rise to this inflection is also buried.  相似文献   

3.
The histidine C-2 proton NMR titration curves of ribonuclease S-peptide (residues 1 to 20) and S-protein (residues 21 to 124) are reported. Although S-protein contains 3 histidine residues, four discrete resonances are observed to titrate. One of these arises from the equivalent histidine residues of unfolded S-protein. The variation in area of the four resonances indicate that there is a reversible pH-dependent equilibrium between the folded and unfolded forms of S-protein, with some unfolded material being present at most pH values. Two of the resonances of the folded S-protein can be assigned to 2 of the histidine residues, 48 and 105, from the close similarity of their titration curves to those in ribonuclease. These similarities indicate a homology of portions of the folded conformation of S-protein to that of ribonuclease in solution. These results indicate that the complete amino acid sequence is not required to produce a folded conformation similar to the native globular protein, and they appear to eliminate the possibility that proteins fold from their NH2 terminus during protein synthesis. The low pH inflection present in the titration curve assigned to histidine residue 48 in ribonuclease is absent from this curve in S-protein. This is consistent with our previous conclusion that this inflection arises from the interaction of histidine 48 with aspartic acid residue 14, which is also absent in S-protein. The third titrating resonance of native S-protein is assigned to the remaining histidine residue at position 119. The properties of this resonance are not identical with either of the titration curves of the active site histidine residues 12 and 119 of ribonuclease. The resonance assigned to histidine 119 is the only one significantly affected on the addition of sodium phosphate to S-protein, indicating that some degree of phosphate binding occurs. In both the absence and presence of phosphate this curve also lacks the low pH inflection observed in the histidine 119 NMR titration curve in ribonuclease. This difference presumably arise from a conformational between ribonuclease and the folded S-protein involving a carboxyl group.  相似文献   

4.
J L Markley 《Biochemistry》1975,14(16):3546-3554
The deuterium exchange kinetics of the C(2) protons of the four histidine residues of native bovine pancreatic ribonuclease A have been followed at pH 6.5 and 8.0 by proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy (1H NMR). Comparison of the order of exchange of the histidine peaks with tritium exchange rates into individual histidine residues [Ohe, M., Matsuo, H., Sakiyama, F., and Narita, K. (1974), J. Biochem. (Tokyo) 75, 1197] supports the previous assignment of histidine NMR peaks H(1) and H(4) to histidine-105 and histidine-48 but requires reassignment of peaks H(2) and H(3) to histidine-119 and histidine-12, respectively. Ribonuclease A samples having differentially deuterated histidines have been used to verify the existence of crossover points in the histidine proton magnetic resonance titration curves and to observe the discontinuous titration curve of histidine-48. Proton magnetic resonance peaks have been assigned to the C(4) protons of the four histidine residues of ribonuclease A on the basis of their unit proton areas and by matching their titration shifts with the more readily visible C(2)-H peaks of the histidines. The pK' values derived from the C(4)-H data agree, within experimental limits, with those derived from C(2)-H data. The C(4)-H peaks were assigned to histidine-12, -48, -105, and -119 of ribonuclease A on the basis of their pH dependence, pK' values, shifts of their pK' values in the presence of inhibitor cytidine 3'-phosphate, and by comparison with the assignments of the histidine C(2)-H peaks above.  相似文献   

5.
The titration curves of the histidine residues of porcine lutropin and its isolated alpha and beta subunits have been determined by following the pH-dependence of the imidazole C-2 proton resonances. The isolated alpha subunit contains a buried histidine, whose C-2 proton does not exchange with solvent, and which has the unusually low pK of 3.3. In the native hormone all the histidine residues have relatively normal pK values (between 5.7 and 6.2). The four histidine C-2 proton resonances have been assigned to specific residues in the amino-acid sequence, by means of deuterium and tritium exchange experiments on the alpha subunit and its des(92-96) derivative. The histidine with a pK of 3.3 is identified as His-alpha87. The effects of pH on tyrosine and methyl proton resonances show that the titration of His-87 in the isolated alpha subunit is accompanied by a significant conformational change which involves loosening of the protein structure but which is not a normal unfolding transition. The role of conformational changes in the generation of biological activity by subunit association in the glycoprotein hormones is discussed.  相似文献   

6.
The isolated activation segment (asA) from pig pancreatic procarboxypeptidase A was studied by 1H-n.m.r. spectroscopy over a wide range of solution conditions. Isolated asA shows many characteristics of compactly folded globular proteins, such as the observation of perturbed positions for resonances from methyl groups, alpha-carbon atoms, histidine residues and the tyrosine residue. The single tyrosine residue (Tyr-70) exhibits a very high pKa, and both histidine and tyrosine residues show slow chemical modification (deuteration and iodination). In contrast, asA shows rapid NH exchange. Analysis of the spectra by pH titration and nuclear Overhauser effects revealed several residue interactions. Quantitative analysis of deuterium and tritium exchange allowed the assignment of the histidine C-2-H resonances to their respective residues in the sequence. His-66, the closest to the sites of proteolytic attack in the proenzyme, is shown to be the most accessible to solvent in procarboxypeptidase A. It was also shown that asA is thermally very stable ['melting' temperature (Tm) 88 degrees C] and requires a high urea concentration for denaturation (6.25 M, at pH 7.5). Evidence is presented for some degree of conformational flexibility in the premelting range, a feature that could be ascribed to the preponderance of helical secondary structure and to the lack of disulphide bridges. The free solution structure of asA is probably unchanged when it binds to carboxypeptidase A.  相似文献   

7.
One of the four titrating histidine ring C-2 proton resonances of bovine pancreatic ribonuclease has been assigned to histidine residue 12. This was accomplished by a direct comparison of the rate of tritium incorporation into position C-2 of histidine 12 of S-peptide (residues 1 to 20) derived from ribonuclease S, with the rates of deuterium exchange of the four histidine C-2 proton resonances of ribonuclease S under the same experimental conditions. The same assignment was obtained by a comparison of the NMR titration curves of ribonuclease S, the noncovalent complex of S-peptide and S-protein (residues 21 to 124) with the results for the recombined complex in which position C-2 of histidine 12 was fully deuterated. The second active site histidine resonance was assigned to histidine residue 119 by consideration of the NMR titration results fro carboxymethylated histidines and 1-carboxymethylhistidine 119 ribonuclease. This assignment is a reversal of that originally reported, and has important implications for the interpretation of NMR titration data of ribonuclease.  相似文献   

8.
The 170MHZ 1 H n.m.r. spectra of the Cu(II)/Zn(II), Cu(I)/Zn(II) and apo- forms of human erythrocyte superoxide dismutase (EC 1.15.1.1) are reported. Resonances are assigned to the C-2 and C-4 protons of histidine residues in the active site, and it is suggested that five or six histidine residues serve as ligands to the metal ions in each subunit of the enzyme. The remaining assigned resonances are associated with histidine-41, N-terminal N-acetyl group, histidine- 108 and cysteine- 109. A comparison of the n.m.r. spectra of human and bovine superoxide dismutases suggests significant structural homology.  相似文献   

9.
The environments of the aromatic residues (and of the single arginine residue) of azurin from Pseudomonas aeruginosa are investigated by means of natural-abundance 13C Fourier transform NMR spectroscopy. In the case of the diamagnetic Cu(I) azurin, all 17 nonprotonated aromatic carbons (and Czota of Arg-79) yield narrow resonances. Furthermore, a single-carbon amide carbonyl resonance with an unusual chemical shift (peak chi) is observed. The pH dependence of chemical shifts is used to identify the resonances of Cgamma of titrating histidines, and of Cgamma and Czota of the two tyrosines. The resonances of Cgamma and Cdelta2 of the single tryptophan residue (and Czota of Arg-79) are also identified. The pKa values of the two tyrosines are different from each other and higher than typical values of "solvent-exposed" tyrosine residues. Two of the four histidine residues do not titrate (in the pH range 4 to 11). The resonance of Cgamma of one histidine exhibits a pH titration with fast proton exchange behavior and a pKa of 7.5 +/- 0.2. The direction of the titration shift indicates that the imidazole form of this histidine is the Ndelta1-H tautomer. The Cgamma resonance of the other titrating histidine exhibits slow exchange behavior with a pKa of about 7. The imidazole form of this histidine is the Nepsilon2-H tautomer. When going to the paramagnetic Cu(II) protein, only 11 of the 19 carbons mentioned above yield resonances that are narrow enough to be detected. Also, some of the observed resonances exhibit significant paramagnetic broadening. A comparison of spectra of fully reduced azurin, mixtures of reduced and oxidized azurin, and fully oxidized azurin yields the following information. (i) Peak chi arises from an amide group that probably is coordinated to the copper. (ii) The two nontitrating histidine residues are probably copper ligands, with Ndelta1 coordinated to the metal. (iii) The side chains of Arg-79 and the two tyrosine residues are not coordinated to the copper, and Trp-48 is probably not a ligand either. (iv) The gamma carbons of Trp-48, the tyrosine with the lower pKa, the titrating histidine with slow exchange behavior, and three or four of the six phenylalanine residues are sufficiently close to the copper to undergo significant paramagnetic broadening in the spectrum of oxidized azurin.  相似文献   

10.
In order to obtain a better understanding of the neutral-to-base (N-B) transition of human serum albumin, we performed acid/base titration experiments and 500-MHz 1H NMR experiments on albumin and on a large peptic (residues 1-387) and large tryptic (residues 198-585) fragment of albumin. The acid/base titration experiments revealed that Ca2+ ions induce a downward pK shift of several histidine residues of the peptic (P46) fragment and of albumin. By contrast, Ca2+ has very little influence on the pK of histidine residues of the tryptic (T45) fragment. In albumin, the pH-dependent His C-2 proton resonances, observed with 1H NMR experiments, have been allotted the numbers 1-17. It proved possible to locate these resonances in the P46 and the T45 fragments. A correspondence was found between the number of histidines detected by the acid/base titration and by the 1H NMR experiments. The results of the experiments lead us to conclude that in domain 1 at least the histidines corresponding to the His C-2 proton resonances 1-5 play a dominant role in the N-B transition. The Cu2+-binding histidine residue 3 (resonance 8) of the albumin molecule is not involved in the N-B transition. In addition, we were able to assign His C-2 proton resonance 9 to histidine 464 of the albumin molecule. The role of the N-B transition in the transport and cellular uptake mechanisms of endogenous and exogenous compounds is discussed.  相似文献   

11.
NMR titration curves are reported for the 4 histidine residues of ribonuclease A in sodium acetate and for ribonuclease S in sodium acetate, phosphate, and sulfate solutions. Evidence is presented that the imidazole side chain of histidine residue 48 undergoes a conformational change, probably also involving the carboxyl side chain of aspartic acid residue 14. This group is considered to be responsible for the low pH inflection with pKa 4.2 present in the NMR titration curve of the C-2 proton resonance of histidine 48. The NMR titration curves of the active site histidine residues 12 and 119 also exhibit inflections at low pH values, although there is no carboxyl group within 9 A of the imidazole side chain of histidine residue 12 in the structure of ribonuclease S determined by x-ray crystallography (Wyckoff, H. W., Tsernoglou, D., Hanson, A. W. Knox, J. R., Lee, B., and Richards, F. M. (1970) J. Biol. Chem. 245, 305-328). Curve fitting was carried out on 11 sets of NMR titration data using a model in which the 3 histidine residues 12, 119, and 48 are assumed to be affected by a common carboxyl group. The results obtained indicate that such a model with fewer parameters gives as good a representation of the data as the model in which each histidine residue is assumed to interact separately with a different carboxyl group. Therefore, it is concluded that the ionization of aspartic acid residue 14 is indirectly experienced by the active site histidine residues through the conformational change at histidine 48. A model assuming mutual interaction of the active site histidine residues does not account for the low pH inflections in these curves.  相似文献   

12.
The two adjacent active site histidine residues of bovine pancreatic ribonuclease A (histidine-12 and -119) yield proton magnetic resonance titration curves having Hill coefficients significantly less than unity (0.7 and 0.8, respectively). Three models postulating interactions with other titrating groups in the molecule have been used to approximate these anomalous experimental titration curves. Very good agreement with the data was obtained with models postulating mutual electrostatic interaction between histidine-12 and -119. The additional low pH perturbation of the chemical shift of the C(2)-H peak (but not the C(4)-H peak) of histidine-12 is attributed to a local conformational change with a pHmid of about 3.5.  相似文献   

13.
220-MHz NMR was used to observe the titration behavior of the 5 histidine residues in porcine pancreatic ribonuclease (ribonucleate pyrimidine-nucleotido-2'-transferase (cyclizing), EC 3.1.4.22) and a derivative prepared by removal of 80% of the attached carbohydrate from this glycoprotein. Resonances due to histidine C-2 protons were observed over the full pH range for 3 of the residues; such resonances for the remaining 2 histidine residues broadened out as the pH was increased. Resonances due to histidine C-4 protons were also observed for 2 of the residues. The titration curves for both proteins were identical within experimental error. Resonances were assigned by comparison with histidine NMR titrations in ribonucleases from other species. Histidine 105, immediately adjacent to the site of attachment of a heterosaccharide side chain, has a C-2 proton chemical shift and pK that are insensitive to the large alteration in the bulk of the carbohydrate side chain. The chemical shifts of the C-2 proton of histidine 48 and of the C-4 proton of histidine 80, histidine residues that are close to one another and to another heterosaccharide side chain, show a similar insensitivity. The observations are direct evidence in support of the thesis that the heterosaccharides in porcine ribonuclease project away from the surface of the protein into the solution environment.  相似文献   

14.
Titration curves of the histidine residues in lutropin, thyrotropin, follitropin and chorionic gonadotropin have been assigned using imidazole C-2 proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectra and their estimated pK values determined. Spectra of reassociated hormone preparations, in which one or the other of their two subunits (alpha or beta) have had their accessible histidines exchanged with deuterium, permitted assignment of C-2 resonance to specific residues. Similar titration curves were found for residues which are conserved from one hormone to another. However, these conserved histidines do not have identical pK values, indicating that differences in the conformation or microenvironment around these residues occur in these hormones. Changes in some pK values also occur as a function of subunit association. The most dramatic change seen in all cases is the exposure to solvent of histidine alpha-83; in isolated alpha subunits this residue is unavailable for titration over a wide pH range. This change appears to be a general consequence of the association of the two subunits in any of these hormones. The data show that all histidines in the intact hormones are accessible to the environment, including those proposed to be in domains involved in subunit-subunit interaction.  相似文献   

15.
The mammalian-type cytochrome c of the basidiomycete Ustilago sphaerogena contains in a single polypeptide chain of 107 residues, two histidine residues located at positions 18 and 33, and one methionine residue situated at position 80 (Bitar et al., 1972). The reaction of Ustilago ferricytochrome c with bromoacetate at neutral pH resulted in the modification of histidine-33, but not of histidine-18 or of the invariant methionine residue. The activities of Ustilago cytochrome c with mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase and with NADH-cytochrome c reductase were unaltered by the modification. The equilibrium constants for the formation of low-spin complexes of the ferrihaem octapeptide of horse cytochrome c (residues 14-21, including the haem bound covalently to cysteines 14 and 17) with imidazole, N(2)-acetylhistidine and monocarboxymethyl derivatives of N(2)-acetylhistidine were determined spectrophotometrically. Alkylation of the imidazole side-chain group of N(2)-acetylhistidine resulted in a marked decrease in its ability to form low-spin ferrihaem complexes. These results indicate that in Ustilago ferricytochrome c in solution histidine-33 is not involved in the central co-ordination complex. Since side-chain groups of residues other than histidine and methionine do not appear to be involved in the central complexes of other mammalian-type cytochromes c (Hettinger & Harbury, 1964, 1965; Myer & Harbury, 1965) it is likely that in Ustilago ferricytochrome c in solution at neutral pH, the side-chain groups of histidine-18 and methionine-80 are involved in the central co-ordination complex. The latter is stable over the pH range 2.6-8.4.  相似文献   

16.
P Gettins  E W Wooten 《Biochemistry》1987,26(14):4403-4408
The denaturation of human and bovine antithrombin III by guanidine hydrochloride has been followed by 1H NMR spectroscopy. The same unfolding transition seen previously from circular dichroism studies [Villanueva, G. B., & Allen, N. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 14048-14053] at low denaturant concentration was detected here by discontinuous changes in the chemical shifts of the C(2) protons of two of the five histidines in human antithrombin III and of three of the six histidines in bovine antithrombin III. These two histidines in human antithrombin III are assigned to residue 1 and, more tentatively, to residue 65. Two of the three histidines similarly affected in the bovine protein appear to be homologous to residues in the human protein. This supports the proposal of similar structures for the two proteins. In the presence of heparin, the discontinuous titration behavior of these histidine resonances is shifted to higher denaturant concentration, reflecting the stabilization of the easily unfolded first domain of the protein by bound heparin. From the tentative assignment of one of these resonances to histidine-1, it is proposed that the heparin binding site of antithrombin III is located in the N-terminal region and that this region forms a separate domain from the rest of the protein. The pattern of disulfide linkages is such that this domain may well extend from residue 1 to at least residue 128. Thermal denaturation also leads to major perturbation of these two histidine resonances in human antithrombin III, though stable intermediates in the unfolding were not detected.  相似文献   

17.
The pK values of the 3 histidine residues in the common alpha subunits of bovine and equine glycoprotein hormones have been determined from titration curves generated from their C-2 proton nuclear magnetic resonances at different pH values. Assignment of resonances to specific histidines is based on a comparison between the two species, which have 1 histidine residue in different positions in their sequences, and of the bovine alpha subunit after removal of its histidine 94 by treatment with carboxypeptidases. In both species, those histidines closest to the COOH terminus titrate with near normal pK values of 6.2. The histidine residue found in the bovine subunit at position 87 titrates with an approximate pK value of 5.4. Histidine 83, adjacent to an oligosaccharide moiety in both species, does not titrate over a pH range of 4.0 to 8.0 and thus appears inaccessible to solvent. Similarly, in bovine lutropin-beta, 1 of 3 histidine residues does not titrate between pH 5.0 and 7.0. In the intact hormone, 2 "nontitratable" histidine residues are found. Changes in the characteristics of the signals, however, preclude unambiguous assignment of these two resonances to the nontitrating histidines in the isolated subunits. It appears that changes in the environment of at least some histidines occur when the subunits combine to yield intact hormone.  相似文献   

18.
The proton magnetic resonance spectrum at 300 MHz of the histidine residues in a semisynthetic derivative of bovine pancreatic ribonuclease (RNase A) has been determined. The derivative RNase 1-118 . 111-124 was prepared by enzymically removing six residues from the COOH terminus of the protein (positions 119-124) and then complementing the inactive RNase 1-118 with a chemically synthesized peptide containing the COOH-terminal 14 residues of ribonuclease (RNase 111-124) [Lin, M.C., Gutte, B., Moore, S., & Merrifield, R.B. (1970) J. Biol. Chem. 245, 5169-5170]. Comparison of the line positions of the C(2)-1H resonances of these residues and of their pH dependence with those reported by other workers has allowed assignment of the resonances to individual residues, as well as the determination of individual pK values for histidine-12, histidine-105, and histidine-119. The assignment of histidine-119 was confirmed by the use of a selectively deuterated derivative. The titration behavior of all four histidine residues is indistinguishable from that observed by others for bovine pancreatic ribonuclease A. Partial dissociation of the noncovalent semisynthetic complex was evident at 30 degrees C, pH 4.0, 0.3 M NaCl; pertinent spectra were analyzed to provide an estimate of the association constant between the component chains under these conditions of 1.9 X 10(3) M-1.  相似文献   

19.
A proton nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) study at 100 and 300 MHz of neurotoxin II from the venom of Middle-Asian cobra Naja naja oxiana has been performed in 2H2O and H2O solutions. By means of chemical modification and double resonance all the aromatic residue resonances have been assigned. From the NMR titration curves, pK values of histidine 4 and histidine 31 residues have been determined. For one of the two neighbouring tryptophan residues pH dependence (in the 2-8-pH range) of the chemical shifts of indole protons has been revealed. According to the different sensitivity of the linewidth of indole NH resonances to pH in H2O solution, the accessibility of each of the tryptophan residues has been estimated. Temperature dependence has been observed for the linewidth of the aromatic resonances of the tyrosine 24 residue. Deuterium exchange rates have been measured for amide protons as well as for C(2)H histidine resonances. The NMR data obtained have allowed the conclusions to be made that the two histidine residues and one of the tryptophan residues should be localized on the surface of the protein globule, that arginine residues should be present in the environment of histidine 4, that histidine 31 and the buried tryptophan are possibly localized in close spatial proximity and that the side chain of tyrosine 24 is buried within the protein globule.  相似文献   

20.
P J Lodi  J R Knowles 《Biochemistry》1991,30(28):6948-6956
To illuminate the role of histidine-95 in the catalytic reaction mediated by triosephosphate isomerase, 13C and 15N NMR titration studies have been carried out both on the wild-type enzyme and on a mutant isomerase in which the single remaining histidine (that at the active site) has been isotopically enriched in the imidazole ring. 15N NMR has proved especially useful in the unambiguous demonstration that the imidazole ring of histidine-95 is uncharged over the entire pH range of isomerase activity, between pH 5 and pH 9.9. The results require that the first pKa of histidine-95 is below 4.5. This abnormally low pKa rules out the traditional view that the positively charged imidazolium cation of histidine-95 donates a proton to the developing charge on the substrate's carbonyl oxygen. 15N NMR experiments on the enzyme in the presence of the reaction intermediate analogue phosphoglycolohydroxamate show the presence of a strong hydrogen bond between N epsilon 2 of histidine-95 and the bound inhibitor. These findings indicate that, in the catalyzed reaction, proton abstraction from C-1 of dihydroxyacetone phosphate first yields an enediolate intermediate that is strongly hydrogen bonded to the neutral imidazole side chain of histidine-95. The imidazole proton involved in this hydrogen bond then protonates the enediolate, with the transient formation of the enediol-imidazolate ion pair. Abstraction of the hydroxyl proton on O-1 now produces the other enediolate intermediate, which collapses to give the product glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

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