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1.
2.
Pentameric ligand-gated ion channels (pLGICs) mediate numerous physiological processes and are therapeutic targets for a wide range of clinical indications. Elucidating the structural differences between their closed and open states may help in designing improved drugs that bias receptors toward the desired conformational state. We recently showed that two new hyperekplexia mutations, Q226E and V280M, induced spontaneous activity in α1 glycine receptors. Gln-226, located near the top of transmembrane (TM) 1, is closely apposed to Arg-271 at the top of TM2 in the neighboring subunit. Using mutant cycle analysis, we inferred that Q226E induces activation via an enhanced electrostatic attraction to Arg-271. This would tilt the top of TM2 toward TM1 and hence away from the pore axis to open the channel. We also concluded that the increased side chain volume of V280M, in the TM2-TM3 loop, exerts a steric repulsion against Ile-225 at the top of TM1 in the neighboring subunit. We infer that this steric repulsion would tilt the top of TM3 radially outwards against the stationary TM1 and thus provide space for TM2 to relax away from the pore axis to create an open channel. Because the transmembrane domain movements inferred from this functional analysis are consistent with the structural differences evident in the x-ray atomic structures of closed and open state bacterial pLGICs, we propyose that the model of pLGIC activation as outlined here may be broadly applicable across the eukaryotic pLGIC receptor family.  相似文献   

3.
Kirby TW  DeRose EF  Beard WA  Wilson SH  London RE 《Biochemistry》2005,44(46):15230-15237
The high fidelity of the DNA polymerization process is critically important for the stability of the cellular genome. The role of template and incoming nucleotide base pairing in polymerase fidelity has recently been explored by the use of nucleotide isosteres, which preserve the steric but not the electronic properties of the corresponding bases. The DNA repair enzyme, DNA polymerase beta (Pol beta), is among the most discriminating, being inactive when the thymine isostere difluorotoluene (DFT) is present in the templating base position. To explore the physical basis for this inactivity, we have performed NMR studies on [methyl-13C]methionine-labeled Pol beta complexed with double-hairpin DNA, used to model the gapped nucleotide substrate, and having either a thymine or a DFT isostere at the templating base position. The six methionine residues distributed throughout the enzyme provide useful conformational probes of the lyase and polymerase domains and subdomains. Analysis of the proton shift of Met282 that results from formation of an abortive Pol beta-gapped DNA-dATP complex is consistent with an open to closed conformational change of the enzyme predicted from crystal structures. In contrast, the same resonance is nearly unshifted when a ternary complex is formed from dATP and gapped DNA in which a DFT isostere replaces thymine at the templating base position. Alternatively, the resonances of Met191 and Met155, located in the catalytic subdomain, show perturbations upon formation of the abortive ternary complex, which are qualitatively similar, but significantly weaker, than the changes observed when thymine is present at the templating base position. The changes in the Met155 and Met191 methyl resonances are in fact more similar to those observed in the binary Pol beta-dATP complex. These studies demonstrate that the block in catalysis is directly related to the absence of the set of conformational transitions that include the "open" to "closed" transition monitored by Met282.  相似文献   

4.
The mode of binding of the irreversible thermolysin inhibitor ClCH2CO-DL-(N-OH)Leu-OCH3 [Rasnick, D., & Powers, J.C. (1978) Biochemistry 17, 4363-4369] has been determined by X-ray crystallography at a resolution of 2.3 A and the structure of the covalent complex refined to give a crystallographic residual of 17.0%. This is the first such structural study of an active-site-directed covalent complex of a zinc protease. As anticipated by Rasnick and Powers, the inhibitor alkylates Glu-143 in the thermolysin active site, and the hydroxamic acid moiety coordinates the zinc ion. The formation of the covalent complex is associated with a significant shift in a segment of the polypeptide backbone in the vicinity of the active site. This conformational adjustment appears to be necessary to relieve steric hindrance which would otherwise prevent alkylation of Glu-143. It is suggested that this steric hindrance, which occurs for thermolysin but would not be expected for carboxypeptidase A, accounts for the previously inexplicable difference in reactivity of these two metalloproteases toward N-haloacetyl amino acids. The relevance of this steric hindrance to the mechanism of catalysis is discussed. In agreement with previous results [Kester, W. R., & Matthews, B. W. (1977) Biochemistry 16, 2506-2516], it appears that steric hindrance prevents the direct attack of Glu-143 on the carbonyl carbon of an extended substrate, therefore ruling out the anhydride pathway in thermolysin-catalyzed hydrolysis of polypeptide substrates and their ester analogues.  相似文献   

5.
Thioredoxin reductase (TrxR) from Escherichia coli consists of two globular domains connected by a two-stranded beta sheet: an FAD domain and a pyridine nucleotide binding domain. The latter domain contains the redox-active disulfide composed of Cys 135 and Cys 138. TrxR is proposed to undergo a conformational change whereby the two domains rotate 66 degrees relative to each other (Waksman G, Krishna TSR, Williams CH Jr, Kuriyan J, 1994, J Mol Biol 236:800-816), placing either redox active disulfide (FO conformation) or the NADPH binding site (FR conformation) adjacent to the flavin. This domain rotation model was investigated by using a Cys 138 Ser active-site mutant. The flavin fluorescence of this mutant is only 7% that of wild-type TrxR, presumably due to the proximity of Ser 138 to the flavin in the FO conformation. Reaction of the remaining active-site thiol, Cys 135, with phenylmercuric acetate (PMA) causes a 9.5-fold increase in fluorescence. Titration of the PMA-treated mutant with the nonreducing NADP(H) analogue, 3-aminopyridine adenine dinucleotide phosphate (AADP+), results in significant quenching of the flavin fluorescence, which demonstrates binding adjacent to the FAD, as predicted for the FR conformation. Wild-type TrxR, with or without PMA treatment, shows similar quenching by AADP+, indicating that it exists mostly in the FR conformer. These findings, along with increased EndoGluC protease susceptibility of PMA-treated enzymes, agree with the model that the FO and FR conformations are in equilibrium. PMA treatment, because of steric limitations of the phenylmercuric adduct in the FO form, forces the equilibrium to the FR conformer, where AADP+ binding can cause fluorescence quenching and conformational restriction favors proteolytic susceptibility.  相似文献   

6.
The steric dependence of anomeric and allylic effects has been subjected to classical conformational analysis. The allylic effect of a methyl group is determined by steric interactions that also play an important role in the anomeric effect. Contradictory experimental results on cyclohexen-3-ol concerning the allylic effect are critically discussed.  相似文献   

7.
Hypothetically, antibodies may neutralize enveloped viruses by diverse mechanisms, such as disruption of receptor binding, interference with conformational changes required for virus entry, steric hindrance, or virus aggregation. Here, we demonstrate that retroviral infection mediated by the avian sarcoma-leukosis virus (ASLV-A) envelope glycoproteins can be neutralized by an antibody directed against a functionally unimportant component of a chimeric receptor protein. Thus, the binding of an antibody in proximity to the retroviral envelope glycoprotein-receptor complex, without binding to the entry machinery itself, results in neutralization. This finding provides additional support for the hypothesis that steric hindrance is sufficient for antibody-mediated neutralization of retroviruses.  相似文献   

8.
DNA polymerases insert a dNTP by a multistep mechanism that involves a conformational rearrangement from an open to a closed ternary complex, a process that positions the incoming dNTP in the proper orientation for phosphodiester bond formation. In this work, the importance and relative contribution of hydrogen-bonding interactions and the geometric shape of the base pair that forms during this process were studied using Escherichia coli DNA polymerase I (Klenow fragment, 3'-exonuclease deficient) and natural dNTPs or non-hydrogen-bonding dNTP analogues. Both the geometric fit of the incoming nucleotide and its ability to form Watson-Crick hydrogen bonds with the template were found to contribute to the stability of the closed ternary complex. Although the formation of a closed complex in the presence of a non-hydrogen-bonding nucleotide analogue could be detected by limited proteolysis analysis, a comparison of the stabilities of the ternary complexes indicated that hydrogen-bonding interactions between the incoming dNTP and the template increase the stability of the complex by 6-20-fold. Any deviation from the Watson-Crick base pair geometry was shown to have a destabilizing effect on the closed complex. This degree of destabilization varied from 3- to 730-fold and was found to be correlated with the size of the mismatched base pair. Finally, a stable closed complex is not formed in the presence of a ddNTP or rNTP. These results are discussed in relation to the steric exclusion model for the nucleotide insertion.  相似文献   

9.
We describe an "inverting basket" model for transport in the erythrocyte anion exchanger, AE1. The inverting basket is formed by the side chains of three putative key residues, two positively (Lys 826 and Arg 730) and one negatively (Glu 681) charged residue. We have tentatively chosen seven transmembrane helices, TM1, TM2, TM4, TM8, TM10, TM12 and TM13 to form a conical channel using the well-established Glu 681 of TM8 and candidates Lys 826 and Arg 730 of TM12-13 and TM10, respectively, to form the inverting basket. We assume that these residues bind to an anion and shift from outward facing (C(o)) to inward facing (C(i)) conformation without significant backbone movements to transport an anion across the membrane. The transition of the complex (residues and ion) from outward facing (C(o)) to inward facing (C(i)) constitutes one "basket" inversion. The barrier to inversion is composed of two major components: that of the anhydrous complex, which we refer to as a steric energy barrier and a dehydration effect due to the removal of charges in the complex from water in the channel. The steric barrier is dependent on the side chain charge and configuration and on the ion charge and size. The dehydration effect, for our model, ameliorates the steric barrier, in the case of the empty complex but less so for the monovalent and divalent ions. We conclude, that it is possible for a seven-helix bundle to have a steric barrier to basket inversion, but that hydration effects in thin hydrophobic barrier models may be more complex than usually envisioned.  相似文献   

10.
Tran HT  Wang X  Pappu RV 《Biochemistry》2005,44(34):11369-11380
Radii of gyration of denatured proteins vary with chain length and are insensitive to details of amino acid sequence. Observations of sequence independence in polymeric properties conflict with results from spectroscopic experiments, which suggest the presence of sequence-specific residual structure in denatured states. Can we reconcile the two apparently conflicting sets of observations? To answer this question, we need knowledge of the ensemble of conformations accessible to proteins in good solvents. The excluded-volume limit provides an ideal mimic of polymers in good solvents. Therefore, we attempt to solve the "reconciliation problem" by simulating conformational ensembles accessible to peptides and proteins in the excluded-volume limit. Analysis of these ensembles for a variety of polypeptide sequences leads to results that are consistent with experimental observations of sequence-specific conformational preferences in short peptides and the scaling behavior of polymeric quantities for denatured proteins. Reconciliation in the excluded-volume limit comes about due to a tug of war between two factors, namely, minimization of steric overlap and the competing effects of conformational entropy. Minimization of steric overlap promotes chain stretching and leads to experimentally observed sequence-dependent preferences for locally extended segments such as polyproline II helices, beta-strands, and very short stretches of alpha-helix. Conformational entropy opposes chain stretching, and the calculated persistence length for sequence-dependent conformational preferences is less than five amino acids. This estimate does not vary with amino acid sequence. The short persistence lengths lead directly to experimental observations of generic sequence-independent behavior of radii of gyration for denatured proteins.  相似文献   

11.
Experiments dedicated to gaining an understanding of the mechanism underlying the orderly, sequential association of elongation factor Tu (EF-Tu) and elongation factor G (EF-G) with the ribosome during protein synthesis were undertaken. The binding of one EF is always followed by the binding of the other, despite the two sharing the same—or a largely overlapping—site and despite the two having isosteric structures. Aminoacyl-tRNA, peptidyl-tRNA, and deacylated-tRNA were bound in various combinations to the A-site, P-site, or E-site of ribosomes, and their effect on conformation in the peptidyl transferase center, the GTPase-associated center, and the sarcin/ricin domain (SRD) was determined. In addition, the effect of the ribosome complexes on sensitivity to the ribotoxins sarcin and pokeweed antiviral protein and on the binding of EF-G•GTP were assessed. The results support the following conclusions: the EF-Tu ternary complex binds to the A-site whenever it is vacant and the P-site has peptidyl-tRNA; and association of the EF-Tu ternary complex is prevented, simply by steric hindrance, when the A-site is occupied by peptidyl-tRNA. On the other hand, the affinity of the ribosome for EF-G•GTP is increased when peptidyl-tRNA is in the A-site, and the increase is the result of a conformational change in the SRD. We propose that peptidyl-tRNA in the A-site is an effector that initiates a series of changes in tertiary interactions between nucleotides in the peptidyl transferase center, the SRD, and the GTPase-associated center of 23S rRNA; and that the signal, transmitted through a transduction pathway, informs the ribosome of the position of peptidyl-tRNA and leads to a conformational change in the SRD that favors binding of EF-G.  相似文献   

12.
The atropisomeric 2-oxo-4-oxazolidinones 1Z bind weakly to the rhodium atoms in the complex Rh(II)2 [(R)-(+)-MTPA]4 (Rh*, MTPA-H = methoxytrifluoromethylphenylacetic acid identical with Mosher's acid), presumably via the C-2 carbonyl oxygen atom. There are some 1H and 13C NMR signals in these compounds which show small dispersion effects suitable for enantiodifferentiation. In contrast, the thiocarbonyl sulfur atoms in 2Z and 3Z bind strongly so that significant complexation shifts (Delta delta) and diastereomeric dispersion effects (Delta nu) can be observed, and chiral discrimination and the determination of enantiomeric ratios of these thiocarbonyl compounds is easy. So, it is shown that--as expected--C=S is a much better binding site when competing with C=O. In compounds of Series 2 a "syn-methyl effect" was discovered which describes the dependence of dispersion effects of syn-oriented methyl groups 6 on the nature of the substituents Z. A mechanism of combined steric and electronic interaction influencing the conformational equilibria inside the adducts is proposed. Determination of absolute configurations by correlation fails, at least on the basis of the data available.  相似文献   

13.
Geometry-optimized CNDO/2 molecular orbital calculations were carried out on 2, 4-diamino-5-(1-adamantyl 1)-6-methyl pyrimidine (DAMP), a potent inhibitor of mammalian dihydrofolate reductase which is now in clinical trials, and on its inactive 5-(1-naphthyl) analogue (DNMP-1). Crystallographic data show that DAMP (as the ethylsulfonate salt) has a severely distorted, N1 protonated, pyrimidine ring and has steric crowding of the 6-methyl and adamantyl hydrogens whereas DNMP-2 (as a methanol complex) has a planar, nonprotonated pyrimidine ring that is nearly perpendicular to the naphthalene ring. The CNDO/2 results largely reproduce the crystal structure geometry and show that the ring distortions in DAMP are initiated by steric conflicts between the adamantyl group and the 4- and 6-substituents on the ring. In DNMP-1, the non-interfering naphthyl ring induces little strain within the pyrimidine ring and the effect of protonation is negligible. Rotation about the bond joining the two ring groups is restricted in DAMP by a broad barrier of ca. 8.0 kcal mol-1, and no conformation was successful in relieving steric conflicts and hence reducing the ring distortions. In DNMP-1, rotation is less hindered overall with a broad region of accessible conformational space and a maximum barrier of ca. 7.2 kcal mol-1 for the coplanar conformation. The electronic charge distributions of DAMP and DNMP-1 are almost identical and protonation is preferred at N1 rather than at N3 by ca. 3.7 kcal mol-1 for both DAMP and DNMP-1. The calculations establish that the present methodology can be useful as a predictive tool with regard to the structure and conformational characteristics of these and related species.  相似文献   

14.
Fiala KA  Suo Z 《Biochemistry》2004,43(7):2116-2125
The kinetic mechanism of DNA polymerization catalyzed by Sulfolobus solfataricus P2 DNA polymerase IV (Dpo4) is resolved by pre-steady-state kinetic analysis of single-nucleotide (dTTP) incorporation into a DNA 21/41-mer. Like replicative DNA polymerases, Dpo4 utilizes an "induced-fit" mechanism to select correct incoming nucleotides. The affinity of DNA and a matched incoming nucleotide for Dpo4 was measured to be 10.6 nM and 230 microM, respectively. Dpo4 binds DNA with an affinity similar to that of replicative polymerases due to the presence of an atypical little finger domain and a highly charged tether that links this novel domain to its small thumb domain. On the basis of the elemental effect between the incorporations of dTTP and its thio analogue S(p)-dTTPalphaS, the incorporation of a correct incoming nucleotide by Dpo4 was shown to be limited by the protein conformational change step preceding the chemistry step. In contrast, the chemistry step limited the incorporation of an incorrect nucleotide. The measured dissociation rates of the enzyme.DNA binary complex (0.02-0.07 s(-1)), the enzyme.DNA.dNTP ternary complex (0.41 s(-1)), and the ternary complex after the protein conformational change (0.004 s(-1)) are significantly different and support the existence of a bona fide protein conformational change step. The rate-limiting protein conformational change was further substantiated by the observation of different reaction amplitudes between pulse-quench and pulse-chase experiments. Additionally, the processivity of Dpo4 was calculated to be 16 at 37 degrees C from analysis of a processive polymerization experiment. The structural basis for both the protein conformational change and the low processivity of Dpo4 was discussed.  相似文献   

15.
Adduct-induced conformational heterogeneity complicates the understanding of how DNA adducts exert mutation. A case in point is the N-deacetylated AF lesion [N-(2'-deoxyguanosin-8-yl)-2-aminofluorene], the major adduct derived from the strong liver carcinogen N-acetyl-2-aminofluorene. Three conformational families have been previously characterized and are dependent on the positioning of the aminofluorene rings: B is in the "B-DNA" major groove, S is "stacked" into the helix with base-displacement, and W is "wedged" into the minor groove. Here, we conducted (19)F NMR, CD, T(m), and modeling experiments at various primer positions with respect to a template modified by a fluorine tagged AF-adduct (FAF). In the first set, the FAF-G was paired with C and in the second set it was paired with A. The FAF-G:C oligonucleotides were found to preferentially adopt the B or S-conformers while the FAF-G:A mismatch ones preferred the B and W-conformers. The conformational preferences of both series were dependent on temperature and complementary strand length; the largest differences in conformation were displayed at lower temperatures. The CD and T(m) results are in general agreement with the NMR data. Molecular modeling indicated that the aminofluorene moiety in the minor groove of the W-conformer would impose a steric clash with the tight-packing amino acid residues on the DNA binding area of the Bacillus fragment (BF), a replicative DNA polymerase. In the case of the B-type conformer, the carcinogenic moiety resides in the solvent-exposed major groove throughout the replication/translocation process. The present dynamic NMR results, combined with previous primer extension kinetic data by Miller & Grollman, support a model in which adduct-induced conformational heterogeneities at positions remote from the replication fork affect polymerase function through a long-range DNA-protein interaction.  相似文献   

16.
Sennett NC  Kadirvelraj R  Wood ZA 《Biochemistry》2011,50(44):9651-9663
UDP-α-D-xylose (UDX) acts as a feedback inhibitor of human UDP-α-D-glucose 6-dehydrogenase (hUGDH) by activating an unusual allosteric switch, the Thr131 loop. UDX binding induces the Thr131 loop to translate ~5 ? through the protein core, changing packing interactions and rotating a helix (α6(136-144)) to favor the formation of an inactive hexameric complex. But how does to conformational change occur given the steric packing constraints of the protein core? To answer this question, we deleted Val132 from the Thr131 loop to approximate an intermediate state in the allosteric transition. The 2.3 ? resolution crystal structure of the deletion construct (Δ132) reveals an open conformation that relaxes steric constraints and facilitates repacking of the protein core. Sedimentation velocity studies show that the open conformation stabilizes the Δ132 construct as a hexamer with point group symmetry 32, similar to that of the active complex. In contrast, the UDX-inhibited enzyme forms a lower-symmetry, horseshoe-shaped hexameric complex. We show that the Δ132 and UDX-inhibited structures have similar hexamer-building interfaces, suggesting that the hinge-bending motion represents a path for the allosteric transition between the different hexameric states. On the basis of (i) main chain flexibility and (ii) a model of the conformational change, we propose that hinge bending can occur as a concerted motion between adjacent subunits in the high-symmetry hexamer. We combine these results in a structurally detailed model for allosteric feedback inhibition and substrate--product exchange during the catalytic cycle.  相似文献   

17.
Conformational diversity within unique amino acid sequences is observed in diseases like scrapie and Alzheimer's disease. The molecular basis of such diversity is unknown. Similar phenomena occur in subtilisin, a serine protease homologous with eukaryotic pro-hormone convertases. The subtilisin propeptide functions as an intramolecular chaperone (IMC) that imparts steric information during folding but is not required for enzymatic activity. Point mutations within IMCs alter folding, resulting in structural conformers that specifically interact with their cognate IMCs in a process termed "protein memory." Here, we show a mechanism that mediates conformational diversity in subtilisin. During maturation, while the IMC is autocleaved and subsequently degraded by the active site of subtilisin, enzymatic properties of this site differ significantly before and after cleavage. Although subtilisin folded by Ile-48 --> Thr IMC (IMCI-48T) acquires an "altered" enzymatically active conformation (SubI-48T) significantly different from wild-type subtilisin (SubWT), both precursors undergo autocleavage at similar rates. IMC cleavage initiates conformational changes during which the IMC continues its chaperoning function subsequent to its cleavage from subtilisin. Structural imprinting resulting in conformational diversity originates during this reorganization stage and is a late folding event catalyzed by autocleavage of the IMC.  相似文献   

18.
The relative steric size of methyl, methoxy, and methylthio groups was determined from circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy using a sensitive system based on the bilirubin model. In the cyclohexane model, equatorial vs. axial orientation and conformational analysis led to quantitative measurements of orientation preference or steric demand: conformational A-values CH(3) > SCH(3) > OCH(3). A more sterically demanding model for assessing group size has been found in bilirubin analogs, which are yellow pigments that adopt a ridge-tile shape stabilized by a matrix of intramolecular hydrogen bonds. Optically active bilirubins have been shown to exhibit intense bisignate CD Cotton effects from exciton coupling of their two dipyrrinone chromophores held in either of two enantiomeric ridge-tile conformations. Interconversion of these M and P conformational enantiomers of helical chirality is rapid at room temperature but may be displaced toward either enantiomer by intramolecular nonbonded steric interactions that arise when substituents are introduced at equivalent sterically demanding sites, viz., the alpha or beta carbons of the pigment's propionic acid chains. Such substituents shift the conformational equilibrium toward the M or the P-chirality conformer, depending only on the S or R stereochemistry at the alpha and beta sites, and the resulting exciton CD for the approximately 430 nm transition(s) was used to evaluate the relative steric size, SCH(3) > CH(3) > OCH(3).  相似文献   

19.
20.
We report three crystal structures of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis cell division protein FtsZ, as the citrate, GDP, and GTPgammaS complexes, determined at 1.89, 2.60, and 2.08A resolution. MtbFtsZ crystallized as a tight, laterally oriented dimer distinct from the longitudinal polymer observed for alphabeta-tubulin. Mutational data on Escherichia coli FtsZ suggest that this dimer interface is important for proper protofilament and "Z-ring" assembly and function. An alpha-to-beta secondary structure conformational switch at the dimer interface is spatially analogous to, and has many of the hallmarks of, the Switch I conformational changes exhibited by G-proteins upon activation. The presence of a gamma-phosphate in the FtsZ active site modulates the conformation of the "tubulin" loop T3 (spatially analogous to the G-protein Switch II); T3 switching upon gamma-phosphate ligation is directly coupled to the alpha-to-beta switch by steric overlap. The dual conformational switches observed here for the first time in an FtsZ link GTP binding and hydrolysis to FtsZ (and tubulin) lateral assembly and Z-ring contraction, and they are suggestive of an underappreciated functional analogy between FtsZ, tubulin and G-proteins.  相似文献   

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