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1.
To better understand ligand-induced structural transitions in cytochrome P450 2B4, protein-ligand interactions were investigated using a bulky inhibitor. Bifonazole, a broad spectrum antifungal agent, inhibits monooxygenase activity and induces a type II binding spectrum in 2B4dH(H226Y), a modified enzyme previously crystallized in the presence of 4-(4-chlorophenyl)imidazole (CPI). Isothermal titration calorimetry and tryptophan fluorescence quenching indicate no significant burial of protein apolar surface nor altered accessibility of Trp-121 upon bifonazole binding, in contrast to recent results with CPI. A 2.3 A crystal structure of 2B4-bifonazole reveals a novel open conformation with ligand bound in the active site, which is significantly different from either the U-shaped cleft of ligand-free 2B4 or the small active site pocket of 2B4-CPI. The O-shaped active site cleft of 2B4-bifonazole is widely open in the middle but narrow at the top. A bifonazole molecule occupies the bottom of the active site cleft, where helix I is bent approximately 15 degrees to accommodate the bulky ligand. The structure also defines unanticipated interactions between helix C residues and bifonazole, suggesting an important role of helix C in azole recognition by mammalian P450s. Comparison of the ligand-free 2B4 structure, the 2B4-CPI structure, and the 2B4-bifonazole structure identifies structurally plastic regions that undergo correlated conformational changes in response to ligand binding. The most plastic regions are putative membrane-binding motifs involved in substrate access or substrate binding. The results allow us to model the membrane-associated state of P450 and provide insight into how lipophilic substrates access the buried active site.  相似文献   

2.
BackgroundThe SecA DEAD (Asp-Glu-Ala-Asp) motor protein uses binding and hydrolysis of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) to push secretory proteins across the plasma membrane of bacteria. The reaction coordinate of nucleotide exchange is unclear at the atomic level of detail.MethodsWe performed multiple atomistic computations of the DEAD motor domain of SecA with different occupancies of the nucleotide and magnesium ion sites, for a total of ~1.7 μs simulation time. To characterize dynamics at the active site we analyzed hydrogen-bond networks.ResultsATP and ADP can bind spontaneously at the interface between the nucleotide binding domains, albeit at an intermediate binding site distinct from the native site. Binding of the nucleotide is facilitated by the presence of a magnesium ion close to the glutamic group of the conserved DEAD motif. In the absence of the magnesium ion, protein interactions of the ADP molecule are perturbed.ConclusionsA protein hydrogen-bond network whose dynamics couples to the occupancy of the magnesium ion site helps guide the nucleotide along the nucleotide exchange path. In SecA, release of magnesium might be required to destabilize the ADP binding site prior to release of the nucleotide.General significanceWe identified dynamic hydrogen-bond networks that help control nucleotide exchange in SecA, and stabilize ADP at an intermediate site that could explain slow release. The reaction coordinate of the protein motor involves complex rearrangements of a hydrogen-bond network at the active site, with perturbation of the magnesium ion site likely occurring prior to the release of ADP.  相似文献   

3.
The Group IVA (GIVA) phospholipase A(2) associates with natural membranes in response to an increase in intracellular Ca(2+) along with increases in certain lipid mediators. This enzyme associates with the membrane surface as well as binding a single phospholipid molecule in the active site for catalysis. Employing deuterium exchange mass spectrometry, we have identified the regions of the protein binding the lipid surface and conformational changes upon a single phospholipid binding in the absence of a lipid surface. Experiments were carried out using natural palmitoyl arachidonyl phosphatidylcholine vesicles with the intact GIVA enzyme as well as the isolated C2 and catalytic domains. Lipid binding produced changes in deuterium exchange in eight different regions of the protein. The regions with decreased exchange included Ca(2+) binding loop one, which has been proposed to penetrate the membrane surface, and a charged patch of residues, which may be important in interacting with the polar head groups of phospholipids. The regions with an increase in exchange are all located either in the hydrophobic core underneath the lid region or near the lid and hinge regions from 403 to 457. Using the GIVA phospholipase A(2) irreversible inhibitor methyl-arachidonyl fluorophosphonate, we were able to isolate structural changes caused only by pseudo-substrate binding. This produced results that were very similar to natural lipid binding in the presence of a lipid interface with the exception of the C2 domain and region 466-470. This implies that most of the changes seen in the catalytic domain are due to a substrate-mediated, not interface-mediated, lid opening, which exposes the active site to water. Finally experiments carried out with inhibitor plus phospholipid vesicles showed decreases at the C2 domain as well as charged residues on the putative membrane binding surface of the catalytic domain revealing the binding sites of the enzyme to the lipid surface.  相似文献   

4.
G Woehlke 《FEBS letters》2001,508(3):291-294
Kinesins are microtubule-dependent motors that serve a multitude of cellular purposes. The conserved motor domain provides the energy required for these processes. Shortly after the solution of the first kinesin motor domain crystal structures the similarity to myosin and G-proteins was noted. By analogy, it was suspected that regions flanking the gamma-phosphate group of the nucleotide (in particular the so-called switch I and II regions) play important roles in the catalytic mechanism and the communication between the nucleotide cleft and the microtubule binding site. Since then, mutational analyses have supported this notion. Moreover, additional high-resolution structures have demonstrated that the switch regions can assume variable conformations. In one case, a comparison of an ADP state and an ATP-like state indicates a crucial involvement of the helix flanking switch II in modulating microtubule affinity. High-resolution structures of a kinesin-related protein mutated in the switch regions confirm the correlation between structural features in the switch vicinity and coupling of microtubule binding and nucleotide state.  相似文献   

5.
The conformation and dynamics of the ATP binding site of cytidine monophosphate kinase from Escherichia coli (CMPK(coli)), which catalyzes specifically the phosphate exchange between ATP and CMP, was studied using the fluorescence properties of 3'-anthraniloyl-2'-deoxy-ADP, a specific ligand of the enzyme. The spectroscopic properties of the bound fluorescent nucleotide change strongly with respect to those in aqueous solution. These changes (red shift of the absorption and excitation spectra, large increase of the excited state lifetime) are compared to those observed in different solvents. These data, as well as acrylamide quenching experiments, suggest that the anthraniloyl moiety is protected from the aqueous solvent upon binding to the ATP binding site, irrespective of the presence of CMP or CDP. The protein-bound ADP analogue exhibits a restricted fast subnanosecond rotational motion, completely blocked by CMP binding. The energy-minimized models of CMPK(coli) complexed with 3'-anthraniloyl-2'-deoxy-ADP using the crystal structures of the ligand-free protein and of its complex with CDP (PDB codes and, respectively) were compared to the crystal structure of UMP/CMP kinase from Dictyostelium discoideum complexed with substrates (PDB code ). The key residues for ATP/ADP binding to CMPK(coli) were identified as R157 and I209, their side chains sandwiching the adenine ring. Moreover, the residues involved in the fixation of the phosphate groups are conserved in both proteins. In the model, the accessibility of the fluorescent ring to the solvent should be substantial if the LID conformation remained unchanged, by contrast to the fluorescence data. These results provide the first experimental arguments about an ATP-mediated induced-fit of the LID in CMPK(coli) modulated by CMP, leading to a closed conformation of the active site, protected from water.  相似文献   

6.
The motor protein myosin uses energy derived from ATP hydrolysis to produce force and motion. Important conserved components (P-loop, switch I, and switch II) help propagate small conformational changes at the active site into large scale conformational changes in distal regions of the protein. Structural and biochemical studies have indicated that switch I may be directly responsible for the reciprocal opening and closing of the actin and nucleotide-binding pockets during the ATPase cycle, thereby aiding in the coordination of these important substrate-binding sites. Smooth muscle myosin has displayed the ability to simultaneously bind tightly to both actin and ADP, although it is unclear how both substrate-binding clefts could be closed if they are rigidly coupled to switch I. Here we use single tryptophan mutants of smooth muscle myosin to determine how conformational changes in switch I are correlated with structural changes in the nucleotide and actin-binding clefts in the presence of actin and ADP. Our results suggest that a closed switch I conformation in the strongly bound actomyosin-ADP complex is responsible for maintaining tight nucleotide binding despite an open nucleotide-binding pocket. This unique state is likely to be crucial for prolonged tension maintenance in smooth muscle.  相似文献   

7.
Carbamate kinase from Streptococcus faecalis is inactivated by butanedione in borate buffer, which implies the presence of an essential arginine at the active site of the enzyme. The inactivation reaction is first order in [butanedione] and a replot of the inactivation rate data infers that one arginine is modified. The enzyme is protected against inactivation by ADP, ATP, the metal-nucleotides and carbamyl phosphate but not by carbamate. Amino acid analyses reveal that one of three arginines is modified by butanedione in the absence of protecting agents, and the binding of ADP to the enzyme prevents modification. Thus, analysis of the data suggest that (i) substrate binding to arginine and (ii) protein conformational changes at the active site are responsible for protection of an essential arginine against modification by butanedione.  相似文献   

8.
The binding of nucleoside triphosphates to rabbit muscle phosphofructokinase has been determined in 0.05 M phosphate buffers by changes in intrinsic protein fluorescence and by direct binding measurements. These experiments have been performed over a wide range of pH, temperature, and effector concentration. Quenching of protein fluorescence is shown to measure binding of nucleotides to a site which is not the active site but rather a site responsible for inhibition of the kinetic activity. This site is relatively specific for either ATP or MgATP with free ATP binding about 10-fold more tightly than MgATP. A model to describe binding to this site as a function of pH and temperature is proposed. This model assumes that the apparent affinity for ATP is determined by protonation of two ionizable groups (per subunit) and that ATP binds exclusively to protonated enzyme forms. Several ligands which affect the apparent affinity for nucleotide binding at the inhibitory site act by shifting the apparent pK of the ionizable groups. NH4+ and citrate do not influence nucleotide binding to the inhibitory site. At pH 6.9 in 0.05 M phosphate, low concentrations of MgATP or MgGTP enhance the protein fluorescence due to binding at the active site. The fluorescence studies and direct binding studies show that there is one active site and one inhibitory site per subunit. As described elsewhere (Pettigrew, D. W., and Frieden, C. (1978) J. Biol. Chem. 253, 3623-3627), there is a third nucleotide binding site on each subunit which is specific for cAMP, AMP, and ADP.  相似文献   

9.
Ung MU  Lu B  McCammon JA 《Biopolymers》2006,81(6):428-439
The active site of the mammalian cAMP-dependent protein kinase catalytic subunit (C-subunit) has a cluster of nonconserved acidic residues-Glu127, Glu170, Glu203, Glu230, and Asp241-that are crucial for substrate recognition and binding. Studies have shown that the Glu230 to Gln mutant (E230Q) of the enzyme has physical properties similar to the wild-type enzyme and has decreased affinity for a short peptide substrate, Kemptide. However, recent experiments intended to crystallize ternary complex of the E230Q mutant with MgATP and protein kinase inhibitor (PKI) could only obtain crystals of the apo-enzyme of E230Q mutant. To deduce the possible mechanism that prevented ternary complex formation, we used the relaxed-complex method (Lin, J.-H., et al. J Am Chem Soc 2002, 24, 5632-5633) to study PKI binding to the E230Q mutant C-subunit. In the E230Q mutant, we observed local structural changes of the peptide binding site that correlated closely to the reduced PKI affinity. The structural changes occurred in the F-to-G helix loop and appeared to hinder PKI binding. Reduced electrostatic potential repulsion among Asp241 from the helix loop section and the other acidic residues in the peptide binding site appear to be responsible for the structural change.  相似文献   

10.
Anhydro-sugar kinases are unique from other sugar kinases in that they must cleave the 1,6-anhydro ring of their sugar substrate to phosphorylate it using ATP. Here we show that the peptidoglycan recycling enzyme 1,6-anhydro-N-acetylmuramic acid kinase (AnmK) from Pseudomonas aeruginosa undergoes large conformational changes during its catalytic cycle, with its two domains rotating apart by up to 32° around two hinge regions to expose an active site cleft into which the substrates 1,6-anhydroMurNAc and ATP can bind. X-ray structures of the open state bound to a nonhydrolyzable ATP analog (AMPPCP) and 1,6-anhydroMurNAc provide detailed insight into a ternary complex that forms preceding an operative Michaelis complex. Structural analysis of the hinge regions demonstrates a role for nucleotide binding and possible cross-talk between the bound ligands to modulate the opening and closing of AnmK. Although AnmK was found to exhibit similar binding affinities for ATP, ADP, and AMPPCP according to fluorescence spectroscopy, small angle x-ray scattering analyses revealed that AnmK adopts an open conformation in solution in the absence of ligand and that it remains in this open state after binding AMPPCP, as we had observed for our crystal structure of this complex. In contrast, the enzyme favored a closed conformation when bound to ADP in solution, consistent with a previous crystal structure of this complex. Together, our findings show that the open conformation of AnmK facilitates binding of both the sugar and nucleotide substrates and that large structural rearrangements must occur upon closure of the enzyme to correctly align the substrates and residues of the enzyme for catalysis.  相似文献   

11.
The Neurospora crassa plasma membrane H+-ATPase is inactivated by the periodate-oxidized nucleotides, oATP, oADP, and oAMP, with oAMP the most effective. Inhibition of the ATPase is essentially irreversible, because Sephadex G-50 column chromatography of the oAMP-treated ATPase does not result in a reversal of the inhibition. Inhibition of the ATPase by oAMP is protected against by the H+-ATPase substrate ATP, the product ADP, and the competitive inhibitors TNP (2',3'-O-(2,4,6-trinitrocyclohexadienylidine)-ATP and TNP-ADP, suggesting that oAMP inhibition occurs at the nucleotide binding site of the enzyme. The rate of inactivation of the ATPase by oAMP is only slightly affected by EDTA, indicating that the oAMP interaction with the nucleotide binding site of the H+-ATPase occurs in the absence of a divalent cation. The protection against oAMP inhibition by ADP is likewise unaffected by EDTA. The inhibition of the ATPase by oAMP is absolutely dependent on the presence of acidic phospholipids or acidic lysophospholipids known to be required for H+-ATPase activity, suggesting that these lipids either aid in the formation of the nucleotide binding site or render it accessible. Incubation of the ATPase with Mg2+ plus vanadate, which locks the enzyme in a conformation resembling the transition state of the enzyme dephosphorylation reaction, completely protects against inhibition by oAMP, suggesting that in this transition state conformation the nucleotide site either does not exist, or is inaccessible to oAMP. Labeling studies with [14C] oAMP indicate that the incorporation of 1 mol of oAMP is sufficient to cause complete inactivation of the ATPase.  相似文献   

12.
The binding of divalent cations and nucleotide to bovine brain glutamine synthetase and their effects on the activity of the enzyme were investigated. In ADP-supported gamma-glutamyl transfer at pH 7.2, kinetic analyses of saturation functions gave [S]0.5 values of approximately 1 microM for Mn2+, approximately 2 mM for Mg2+, 19 nM for ADP.Mn, and 7.2 microM for ADP.Mg. The method of continuous variation applied to the Mn2+-supported reaction indicated that all subunits of the purified enzyme express activity when 1.0 equiv of ADP is bound per subunit. Measurements of equilibrium binding of Mn2+ to the enzyme in the absence and presence of ADP were consistent with each subunit binding free Mn2+ (KA approximately equal to 1.5 X 10(5) M-1) before binding the Mn.ADP complex (KA' approximately equal to 1.1 X 10(6) M-1). The binding of the first Mn2+ or Mg2+ to each subunit produces structural perturbations in the octameric enzyme, as evidenced by UV spectral and tryptophanyl residue fluorescence changes. The enzyme, therefore, has one structural site per subunit for Mn2+ or Mg2+ and a second site per subunit for the metal ion-nucleotide complex, both of which must be filled for activity expression. Chloride binding (KA' approximately equal to 10(4) M-1) to the enzyme was found to have a specific effect on the protein conformation, producing a substantial (30%) quench of tryptophanyl fluorescence and increasing the affinity of the enzyme 2-4-fold for Mg2+ or Mn2+. Arsenate, which activates the gamma-glutamyl transfer activity by binding to an allosteric site, and L-glutamate also cause conformational changes similar to those produced by Cl- binding. Anion binding to allosteric sites and divalent metal ion binding at active sites both produce tryptophanyl residue exposure and tyrosyl residue burial without changing the quaternary enzyme structure.  相似文献   

13.
A Labahn  P Fromme  P Gr?ber 《FEBS letters》1990,271(1-2):116-118
Uni-site ATP synthesis was measured with thylakoids. The membrane-bound ATP-synthase, CF0F1, was brought into the active, reduced state by illumination in the presence of thioredoxin, dithiothreitol and phosphate. This enzyme contains two tightly bound ATP per CF0F1. ATP was released from the enzyme when ADP was added in substoichiometric amounts during illumination. Experiments with [14C]ADP indicated that after binding the same nucleotide was phosphorylated and released as [14C]ATP, i.e. only one site is involved in ATP-synthesis ('uni-site ATP-synthesis'). The two tightly bound ATP are not involved in the catalytic turnover. The rate constant for ADP binding was (4 +/- 2) x 10(6) M-1s-1. Compared to deenergized conditions the rate constant for ADP binding and that for ATP-release were drastically increased, i.e. membrane energization increased the rate constants for the ATP-synthesis direction.  相似文献   

14.
Li M  Zheng W 《Biochemistry》2012,51(25):5022-5032
In this study, we have performed a comprehensive structural investigation of three major biochemical states of a kinesin complexed with microtubule under the constraint of high-quality cryo-electron-microscopy (EM) maps. In addition to the ADP and ATP state which were captured by X-ray crystallography, we have also modeled the nucleotide-free or APO state for which no crystal structure is available. We have combined flexible fitting of EM maps with regular molecular dynamics simulations, hydrogen-bond analysis, and free energy calculation. Our APO-state models feature a subdomain rotation involving loop L2 and α6 helix of kinesin, and local structural changes in active site similar to a related motor protein, myosin. We have identified a list of hydrogen bonds involving key residues in the active site and the binding interface between kinesin and microtubule. Some of these hydrogen bonds may play an important role in coupling microtubule binding to ATPase activities in kinesin. We have validated our models by calculating the binding free energy between kinesin and microtubule, which quantitatively accounts for the observation of strong binding in the APO and ATP state and weak binding in the ADP state. This study will offer promising targets for future mutational and functional studies to investigate the mechanism of kinesin motors.  相似文献   

15.
Acetate kinase catalyzes transfer of the gamma-phosphate of ATP to acetate. The only crystal structure reported for acetate kinase is the homodimeric enzyme from Methanosarcina thermophila containing ADP and sulfate in the active site (Buss, K. A., Cooper, D. C., Ingram-Smith, C., Ferry, J. G., Sanders, D. A., and Hasson, M. S. (2001) J. Bacteriol. 193, 680-686). Here we report two new crystal structure of the M. thermophila enzyme in the presence of substrate and transition state analogs. The enzyme co-crystallized with the ATP analog adenosine 5'-[gamma-thio]triphosphate contained AMP adjacent to thiopyrophosphate in the active site cleft of monomer B. The enzyme co-crystallized with ADP, acetate, Al(3+), and F(-) contained a linear array of ADP-AlF(3)-acetate in the active site cleft of monomer B. Together, the structures clarify the substrate binding sites and support a direct in-line transfer mechanism in which AlF(3) mimics the meta-phosphate transition state. Monomers A of both structures contained ADP and sulfate, and the active site clefts were closed less than in monomers B, suggesting that domain movement contributes to catalysis. The finding that His(180) was in close proximity to AlF(3) is consistent with a role for stabilization of the meta-phosphate that is in agreement with a previous report indicating that this residue is essential for catalysis. Residue Arg(241) was also found adjacent to AlF(3), consistent with a role for stabilization of the transition state. Kinetic analyses of Arg(241) and Arg(91) replacement variants indicated that these residues are essential for catalysis and also indicated a role in binding acetate.  相似文献   

16.
Adenosine 5'-phosphosulfate kinase (APSK) catalyzes the ATP-dependent synthesis of adenosine 3'-phosphate 5'-phosphosulfate (PAPS), which is an essential metabolite for sulfur assimilation in prokaryotes and eukaryotes. Using APSK from Arabidopsis thaliana, we examine the energetics of nucleotide binary and ternary complex formation and probe active site features that coordinate the order of ligand addition. Calorimetric analysis shows that binding can occur first at either nucleotide site, but that initial interaction at the ATP/ADP site was favored and enhanced affinity for APS in the second site by 50-fold. The thermodynamics of the two possible binding models (i.e. ATP first versus APS first) differs and implies that active site structural changes guide the order of nucleotide addition. The ligand binding analysis also supports an earlier suggestion of intermolecular interactions in the dimeric APSK structure. Crystallographic, site-directed mutagenesis, and energetic analyses of oxyanion recognition by the P-loop in the ATP/ADP binding site and the role of Asp(136), which bridges the ATP/ADP and APS/PAPS binding sites, suggest how the ordered nucleotide binding sequence and structural changes are dynamically coordinated for catalysis.  相似文献   

17.
The effects of adenine nucleotides on pea seed glutamine synthetase (EC 6.3.1.2) activity were examined as a part of our investigation of the regulation of this octameric plant enzyme. Saturation curves for glutamine synthetase activity versus ATP with ADP as the changing fixed inhibitor were not hyperbolic; greater apparent Vmax values were observed in the presence of added ADP than the Vmax observed in the absence of ADP. Hill plots of data with ADP present curved upward and crossed the plot with no added ADP. The stoichiometry of adenine nucleotide binding to glutamine synthetase was examined. Two molecules of [gamma-32P]ATP were bound per subunit in the presence of methionine sulfoximine. These ATP molecules were bound at an allosteric site and at the active site. One molecule of either [gamma-32P]ATP or [14C]ADP bound per subunit in the absence of methionine sulfoximine; this nucleotide was bound at an allosteric site. ADP and ATP compete for binding at the allosteric site, although ADP was preferred. ADP binding to the allosteric site proceeded in two kinetic phases. A Vmax value of 1.55 units/mg was measured for glutamine synthetase with one ADP tightly bound per enzyme subunit; a Vmax value of 0.8 unit/mg was measured for enzyme with no adenine nucleotide bound at the allosteric site. The enzyme activation caused by the binding of ADP to the allosteric sites was preceded by a lag phase, the length of which was dependent on the ADP concentration. Enzyme incubated in 10 mM ADP bound approximately 4 mol of ADP/mol of native enzyme before activation was observed; the activation was complete when 7-8 mol of ADP were bound per mol of the octameric, native enzyme. The Km for ATP (2 mM) was not changed by ADP binding to the allosteric sites. ADP was a simple competitive inhibitor (Ki = 0.05 mM) of ATP for glutamine synthetase with eight molecules of ADP tightly bound to the allosteric sites of the octamer. Binding of ATP to the allosteric sites led to marked inhibition.  相似文献   

18.
Previous kinetic studies demonstrated that nucleotide-derived conformational changes regulate function in the COOH-terminal Src kinase. We have employed enhanced methods of hydrogen-deuterium exchange-mass spectrometry (DXMS) to probe conformational changes on CSK in the absence and presence of nucleotides and thereby provide a structural framework for understanding phosphorylation-driven conformational changes. High quality peptic fragments covering approximately 63% of the entire CSK polypeptide were isolated using DXMS. Time-dependent deuterium incorporation into these probes was monitored to identify short peptide segments that exchange differentially with solvent. Regions expected to lie in loops exchange rapidly, whereas other regions expected to lie in stable secondary structure exchange slowly with solvent implying that CSK adopts a modular structure. The ATP analog, AMPPNP, protects probes in the active site and distal regions in the large and small lobes of the kinase domain, the SH2 domain, and the linker connecting the SH2 and kinase domains. The product ADP protects similar regions of the protein but the extent of protection varies markedly in several crucial areas. These areas correspond to the activation loop and helix G in the kinase domain and several inter-domain regions. These results imply that delivery of the gamma phosphate group of ATP induces unique local and long-range conformational changes in CSK that may influence regulatory motions in the catalytic pathway.  相似文献   

19.
Identifying conformational changes in kinesin family motors associated with nucleotide and microtubule (MT) binding is essential to determining an atomic-level model for force production and motion by the motors. Using the mobility of nucleotide analog spin probes bound at the active sites of kinesin family motors to monitor conformational changes, we previously demonstrated that, in the ADP state, the open nucleotide site closes upon MT binding [Naber, N., Minehardt, T. J., Rice, S., Chen, X., Grammer, J., Matuska, M., et al. (2003). Closing of the nucleotide pocket of kinesin family motors upon binding to microtubules. Science, 300, 798-801]. We now extend these studies to kinesin-1 (K) and ncd (nonclaret disjunctional protein) motors in ATP and ATP-analog states. Our results reveal structural differences between several triphosphate and transition-state analogs bound to both kinesin and ncd in solution. The spectra of kinesin/ncd in the presence of SLADP•AlFx/BeFx and kinesin, with the mutation E236A (K-E236A; does not hydrolyze ATP) bound to ATP, show an open conformation of the nucleotide pocket similar to that seen in the kinesin/ncd•ADP states. In contrast, the triphosphate analogs K•SLAMPPNP and K-E236A•SLAMPPNP induce a more immobilized component of the electron paramagnetic resonance spectrum, implying closing of the nucleotide site. The MT-bound states of all of the triphosphate analogs reveal two novel spectral components. The equilibrium between these two components is only weakly dependent on temperature. Both components have more restricted mobility than observed in MT-bound diphosphate states. Thus, the closing of the nucleotide pocket when the diphosphate state binds to MTs is amplified in the triphosphate state, perhaps promoting accelerated ATP hydrolysis. Consistent with this idea, molecular dynamics simulations show a good correlation between our spectroscopic data, X-ray crystallography, and the electron microscopy of MT-bound triphosphate-analog states.  相似文献   

20.
Hsp70 chaperones assist protein folding processes by a nucleotide-driven cycle of substrate binding and release. Although structural information is available for the isolated nucleotide-binding (NBD) and substrate-binding domains (SBD) in the high affinity conformation, the low affinity conformations and the conformational changes associated with mutual allosteric regulation remained largely enigmatic. By using amide hydrogen exchange in combination with mass spectrometry, we analyzed the Escherichia coli Hsp70 homologue DnaK as full-length protein and its individual domains in the nucleotide-free and ATP-bound conformation. We found a surprising degree of flexibility in both domains. The comparison of the full-length protein with the isolated domains demonstrates a mutual stabilization of both domains. This protection from solvent was most pronounced and in addition was nucleotide-dependent in the lowerbeta-sheet of the SBD and the loop that connects the last beta-strand with helix alphaA. Interestingly, the linker region, which connects NBD and SBD and which is close to the protected loop in the SBD, is solvent-exposed in the absence of nucleotide and completely protected from hydrogen exchange in the presence of ATP. Peptide binding to DnaK.ATP reverts the ATP-induced conformational changes in the linker and selected parts of the NBD. Our data outline a pathway for allosteric interdomain control and suggest an important role of the linker and the base of helix alphaA.  相似文献   

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