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1.
Genetic evidence suggests that the high-affinity L-histidine transport in Salmonella typhimurium requires the participation of a periplasmic binding protein (histidine-binding protein J) and two other proteins (P and Q proteins). The histidine-binding protein J binds L-histidine as the first step in the high-affinity active transport of this amino acid across the cytoplasmic membrane. High-resolution proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy at 600 MHz is used to investigate the conformations of this protein in the absence and presence of substrate. Previous nuclear magnetic resonance results reported by this laboratory have shown that there are extensive spectral changes in this protein upon the addition of L-histidine. When resonances from individual amino acid residues of a protein can be resolved in the proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectrum, a great deal of detailed information about substrate-induced structural changes can be obtained. In order to gain a deeper insight into the nature of these structural changes, deuterated phenylalanine or tyrosine has been incorporated into the bacteria. Proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectra of selectively deuterated histidine-binding protein J were obtained and compared to the normal protein. Several of the proton resonances have been assigned to the various aromatic amino acid residues of this protein. A model for the high-affinity transport of L-histidine across the cytoplasmic membrane of S typhimurium is proposed. This model, which is a version of the pore model, assumes that both P and Q proteins are membrane-bound and that the interface between these two proteins forms the channel for the passage of substrate. The histidine-binding protein J serves as the “key” for the opening of the channel for the passage of L-histidine. In the absence of substrate, this channel or gate is closed owing to a lack of appropriate interactions among these three proteins. The channel can be opened upon receiving a specific signal from the “key”; namely, the substrate-induced conformational changes in the histidine-binding protein J molecule. This model is consistent with available experimental evidence for the high-affinity transport of L-histidine across the cytoplasmic membrane of S typhimurium.  相似文献   

2.
R S Zukin  M F Klos    R E Hirsch 《Biophysical journal》1986,49(6):1229-1235
The Salmonella typhimurium periplasmic histidine-binding J-protein is one of four proteins encoded by the histidine transport operon. Mutant J-protein hisJ5625 binds L-histidine, but does not transport it. The tertiary structure and conformational dynamics of native and mutant J-protein have been compared using steady state fluorescence, fluorescence polarization, and fluorescence energy transfer measurements. The two proteins have different three-dimensional structures and exhibit different responses to histidine binding. Ligand-induced conformational changes were demonstrated in both J-proteins using fluorescence energy transfer (distant reporter method) between the single tryptophan residue per mole of protein and a fluorescein-labeled methionine residue. However, the conformational change of the mutant protein is qualitatively and quantitatively different from that of the wild-type protein. Moreover, the microenvironment of the tryptophan and its distance from the labeled methionine (44A for the wild type, 60A for the mutant J-protein) are different in the two proteins. In conclusion, these results indicate that the specific conformational change induced in the wild type J-protein is a necessary requirement for the transport of L-histidine.  相似文献   

3.
Histidine-binding protein J of Salmonella typhimurium has been chosen as a model system for a proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopic investigation of binding protein-ligand interaction. This interaction is involved in the recognition step of the osmotic shock-sensitive active transport systems. When J protein binds L-histidine, four new, low-field, exchangeable proton resonances appear in the region +7 to +12 parts per million downfield from the water proton resonance (or +11.7 to +16.7 parts per million downfield from the methyl proton resonance of 2,2-dimethyl-2-silapentane-5-sulfonate). Due to their chemical shift range and other properties, they indicate the formation of both intra- and intermolecular hydrogen bonds. Experiments with 15N-labeled compounds confirm this conclusion. The specificity of the hydrogen-bond formation is demonstrated by observing the effects of substrate analogs, temperature, pH, and mutations on the exchangeable proton resonances. Proton-proton nuclear Overhauser effect measurements suggest that two of these exchangeable proton resonances (at +7.2 and +10.6 parts per million from H2O) are most likely from intramolecular hydrogen-bonded protons, while the other two (at +7.1 and +9.5 parts per million from H2O) are intermolecular hydrogen bonds. Our finding of L-histidine-induced hydrogen-bond formation in histidine-binding protein J in the solution state is an excellent demonstration of the production of specific conformational changes in a periplasmic binding protein upon binding of ligand.  相似文献   

4.
High-resolution 1 H-NMR spectroscopy at 600 MHz has been used to investigate the conformational transitions of the histidine-binding protein J of Salmonella Typhinmrium in solution as a function of pH and of l-histidine concentration. The dissociation constant for the binding of l-histidine to histidine-binding protein J increases from 6.0 × 10?8 to 5.1 × 10?7 M in going from pH 5.57 to 8.00. The conformation of this protein as observed by 1H-NMR also changes over this range of pH. However, when l-histidine is bound, the changes in conformation with pH are much smaller. Also, the pk for the single histidyl residue in histidine-binding protein J changes from 6.75 in the absence of l-histidine to 6.52 when l-histidine is bound. Earlier work in this laboratory resulted in the identification of several proton resonances believed to be at or near the l-histidine-binding site. Two of these resonances have been assigned to a tyrosine and the single histidyl residue in the histidine-binding protein J molecule.  相似文献   

5.
The transmission of regulatory signals between the alpha- and beta-subunits of the tryptophan synthase alpha 2 beta 2 complex from Salmonella typhimurium has been investigated by monitoring the luminescence properties of the enzyme in the presence and in the absence of the alpha-subunit ligand DL-alpha-glycerol 3-phosphate, the alpha- and beta-subunit substrate indole, and the beta-subunit substrate analog L-histidine. The beta-subunit contains as intrinsic probes Trp-177 and pyridoxal 5'-phosphate, whereas the alpha-subunit has been mutagenized by replacing Ala-129 with a Trp residue. In contrast to the inertness of L-histidine, DL-alpha-glycerol 3-phosphate was found (i) to alter the phosphorescence spectrum of Trp-129, (ii) to shift the fluorescence thermal quenching profile of both Trp-177 and coenzyme to higher temperature, (iii) to slow down the triplet decay kinetics of Trp-177 in fluid solution, and (iv) to affect the equilibrium between different conformations of the enzyme. These findings provide direct evidence that DL-alpha-glycerol 3-phosphate binding affects the structure of the alpha-subunit and, in the presence of coenzyme, induces a conformational change in the beta-subunit that leads to a considerably more rigid structure. As opposed to DL-alpha-glycerol 3-phosphate, the shortening of the phosphorescence lifetime upon indole binding suggests that this substrate increases structural fluctuations in the beta-subunit. Implications for the mechanism of the allosteric regulation between alpha- and beta-subunits are discussed.  相似文献   

6.
L Fetler  P Tauc  G Hervé  M M Ladjimi  J C Brochon 《Biochemistry》1992,31(49):12504-12513
Aspartate transcarbamylase (EC 2.1.3.2) contains two tryptophan residues in position 209 and 284 of the catalytic chains (c) and no such chromophore in the regulatory chains (r). Thus, as a dodecamer [(c3)2(r2)3] the native enzyme molecule contains 12 tryptophan residues. The present study of the regulatory conformational changes in this enzyme is based on the fluorescence properties of these intrinsic probes. Site-directed mutagenesis was used in order to differentiate the respective contributions of the two tryptophans to the fluorescence properties of the enzyme and to identify the mobility of their environment in the course of the different regulatory processes. Each of these tryptophan residues gives two independent fluorescence decays, suggesting that the catalytic subunit exists in two slightly different conformational states. The binding of the substrate analog N-phosphonacetyl-L-aspartate promotes the same fluorescence signal whether or not the catalytic subunits are associated with the regulatory subunits, suggesting that the substrate-induced conformational change of the catalytic subunit is the essential trigger for the quaternary structure transition involved in cooperativity. The binding of the substrate analog affects mostly the environment of tryptophan 284, while the binding of the activator ATP affects mostly the environment of tryptophan 209, confirming that this activator acts through a mechanism different from that involved in homotropic cooperativity.  相似文献   

7.
The physical properties and conformational dynamics of the Salmonella typhimurium ribose and galactose receptors have been examined. Studies involving circular dichroism, fluorescence, absorption spectroscopy, and sedimentation analysis show that the two receptor proteins have different morphologies and exhibit diverse responses to sugar binding. The ribose receptor lacks both tryptophan and disulfide residues, and the galactose receptor lacks disulfides and has only a single tryptophan residue. By virtue of these fortuitous properties, the conformational changes induced in these proteins by sugar binding can be dissected by utilizing a variety of physical probes. A ligand-induced conformational change in the ribose receptor is shown by circular dichroism and fluorescence spectroscopy, which reveal spectral changes assignable to tyrosine, phenylalanine, and methionine residues. A conformational change in the galactose receptor has been demonstrated by fluorescence spectroscopy involving the distant reporter group method, which shows changes assignable to tryptophan and methionine sites and which is corroborated by sedimentation analysis. It is clear that there are extensive conformational changes in the two receptor proteins and that the different physical methods provide complementary information on the nature of these changes.  相似文献   

8.
SecB is a homotetrameric, cytosolic chaperone that forms part of the protein translocation machinery in Escherichia coli. We have investigated the bound-state conformation of a model protein substrate of SecB, bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (BPTI) as well as the conformation of SecB itself by using proximity relationships based on site-directed spin-labeling and pyrene fluorescence methods. BPTI is a 58-residue protein and contains three disulfide groups between residues 5 and 55, 14 and 38, as well as 30 and 51. Mutants of BPTI that contained only a single disulfide were reduced, and the free cysteines were labeled with either thiol-specific spin labels or pyrene maleimide. The relative proximity of the labeled residues was studied using either electron spin resonance spectroscopy or fluorescence spectroscopy. The data suggest that SecB binds a collapsed coil of reduced unfolded BPTI, which then undergoes a structural rearrangement to a more extended state upon binding to SecB. Binding occurs at multiple sites on the substrate, and the binding site on each SecB monomer accommodates less than 21 substrate residues. In addition, we have labeled four solvent-accessible cysteine residues in the SecB tetramer and have investigated their relative spatial arrangement in the presence and absence of the substrate protein. The electron spin resonance data suggest that these cysteine residues are in close proximity (15 A) when no substrate protein is bound but move away to a distance of greater than 20 A when SecB binds substrate. This is the first direct evidence of a conformational change in SecB upon binding of a substrate protein.  相似文献   

9.
The anthranilate synthase-phosphoribosyl transferase complex, a heterotetrameric enzyme made up of the TrpE and TrpD polypeptides, catalyzes three reactions comprising the first two steps of tryptophan biosynthesis in Salmonella typhimurium. All three activities of the complex are subject to feedback inhibition by tryptophan, which results from allosteric effects associated with the binding of one molecule of inhibitor to each of the TrpE subunits of the complex. Random in vitro chemical mutagenesis of the trpE gene was used to generate a collection of mutant forms of the complex which displayed varying degrees of resistance to feedback inhibition. Single amino acid substitutions, identified by DNA sequencing, were found at 14 different residues within the TrpE polypeptide. The residues were distributed throughout TrpE, but those that appeared to be most critical for regulation were found in two clusters, one at the extreme amino-terminal end, including residues Glu-39, Ser-40, and Ala-41, and the other in the middle of the polypeptide, including residues Asn-288, Pro-289, Met-293, Phe-294, and Gly-305. Kinetic and binding studies of the purified mutant complexes demonstrated that 9 of the 14 had a marked decrease in affinity for tryptophan with little or no change in substrate affinity or catalytic capacity. The remaining five enzymes exhibited more subtle changes, having small decreases in inhibitor affinity coupled with small increases in substrate affinity. Mutant enzymes that were not totally feed-back-resistant had a decreased kinetic response to tryptophan binding. All enzymes exhibited alterations in tryptophan-induced conformational changes as monitored by dye-ligand chromatography.  相似文献   

10.
Covalent binding of L-methionine as an external aldimine to the pyridoxal 5'-phosphate-cofactor in the K41A mutant of O-acetylserine sulfhydrylase from Salmonella typhimurium induces a large conformational change in the protein. Methionine mimics the action of the substrate O-acetyl-L-serine during catalysis. The alpha-carboxylate moiety of L-methionine in external aldimine linkage with the active site pyridoxal 5'-phosphate forms a hydrogen bonding network to the "asparagine-loop" P67-T68-N69-G70 which adopts a different conformation than in the native protein. The side-chain nitrogen of Asn69 moves more than 7 A to make a hydrogen bond to the alpha-carboxylate group of the inhibitor. As the external aldimine is formed, the PLP tilts by 13 degrees along its longitudinal axis such that C4' moves toward the entrance to the active site and the side-chain of the methionine is directed toward the active site entrance. The local rearrangement acts as a trigger to induce a large global conformational change in the protein. A subdomain comprised of beta-strand 4, alpha-helix 3, beta-strand 5 and alpha-helix 4 moves towards the active site by a rotation of 7 degrees. This subdomain movement results in a reduction of the severe twist of its central beta-sheet and reduces the active site entrance to a small hole, giving access only to small molecules like sulfide, the second substrate, or acetate, the first product.  相似文献   

11.
The alpha-subunit of tryptophan synthase (alphaTS) catalyzes the cleavage of indole-3-glycerol phosphate to glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate and indole, which is used to yield the amino acid tryptophan in tryptophan biosynthesis. Here, we report the first crystal structures of wild-type and double-mutant P28L/Y173F alpha-subunit of tryptophan synthase from Escherichia coli at 2.8 and 1.8A resolution, respectively. The structure of wild-type alphaTS from E. coli was similar to that of the alpha(2)beta(2) complex structure from Salmonella typhimurium. As compared with both structures, the conformational changes are mostly in the interface of alpha- and beta-subunits, and the substrate binding region. Two sulfate ions and two glycerol molecules per asymmetric unit bind with the residues in the active sites of the wild-type structure. Contrarily, double-mutant P28L/Y173F structure is highly closed at the window for the substrate binding by the conformational changes. The P28L substitution induces the exposure of hydrophobic amino acids and decreases the secondary structure that causes the aggregation. The Y173F suppresses to transfer a signal from the alpha-subunit core to the alpha-subunit surface involved in interactions with the beta-subunit and increases structural stability.  相似文献   

12.
J E Scheffler  M Cohn 《Biochemistry》1986,25(13):3788-3796
A photochemically induced dynamic nuclear polarization (photo-CIDNP) study of yeast and horse muscle phosphoglycerate kinase with flavin dyes was undertaken to identify the histidine, tryptophan, and tyrosine resonances in the aromatic region of the simplified 1H NMR spectra of these enzymes and to investigate the effect of substrates on the resonances observable by CIDNP. Identification of the CIDNP-enhanced resonances with respect to the type of amino acid residue has been achieved since only tyrosine yields emission peaks and the dye 8-aminoriboflavin enhances tryptophan but not histidine. By use of the known amino acid sequences and structures derived from X-ray crystallographic studies of the enzymes from the two species, assignment of the specific residues in the protein sequences giving rise to the CIDNP spectra was partially achieved. In addition, flavin dye accessibility was used to probe any changes in enzyme structure induced by substrate binding. The nine resonance peaks observed in the CIDNP spectrum of yeast phosphoglycerate kinase have been assigned tentatively to five residues: histidines-53 and -151, tryptophan-310, and tyrosines-48 and -195. The accessibility of a tyrosine to photoexcited flavin is reduced in the presence of MgATP. Since the tyrosine residues are located some distance from the MgATP binding site of the catalytic center, it is proposed either that this change is due to a distant conformational change or that a second metal-ATP site inferred from other studies lies close to one of the tyrosines. Horse muscle phosphoglycerate kinase exhibits seven resonances by CIDNP NMR.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
Phenylalanine hydroxylase (PAH) is generally considered to undergo a large and reversible conformational transition upon l-Phe binding, which is closely linked to the substrate-induced catalytic activation of this hysteretic enzyme. Recently, several crystallographically solvent-exposed hinge-bending regions including residues 31-34, 111-117, 218-226, and 425-429 have been defined/predicted to be involved in the intra-protomer propagation of the substrate-triggered molecular motions generated at the active site. On this basis, single-site mutagenesis of key residues in these regions of the human PAH tetramer was performed in the present study, and their functional impact was measured by steady-state kinetics and the global conformational transition as assessed by surface plasmon resonance and intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence spectroscopy. A strong correlation (r(2) = 0.93-0.96) was observed between the l-Phe-induced global conformational transition and V(max) values for wild-type human PAH and the mutant forms K113P, N223D, N426D, and N32D, in contrast to the substitution T427P, which resulted in a tetrameric form with no kinetic cooperativity. Furthermore, the flexible intra-domain linker region (residues 31-34) seems to be involved in a more local conformational change, and the biochemical/biophysical properties of the G33A/G33V mutant forms support a key function of this residue in the positioning of the autoregulatory sequence (residues 1-30) and thus in the regulation of the solvent and substrate access to the active site. The mutant forms revealed a variably reduced global conformational stability compared with wild-type human PAH, as measured by thermal denaturation and limited proteolysis.  相似文献   

14.
D Noel  K Nikaido  G F Ames 《Biochemistry》1979,18(19):4159-4165
Mutation hisJ5625 has altered the histidine-binding protein J of Salmonella typhimurium such that histidine transport is impaired, even though binding of histidine by the J protein is unimpaired [Kustu, S.G., & Ames, G.F. (1974) J. Biol. Chem. 249, 6976--6983]. We have determined by protein analytical methods that the only effect of this mutation has been the substitution of a cysteine residue for an arginine at a site in the interior of the polypeptide chain. This arginine residue is therefore potentially essential for the transport function of the protein. The mutant protein migrates in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis more slowly than the wild type protein, as if its molecular weight were greater by as much as 2000. Since this behavior is apparently due to a single amino acid replacement, a molecular weight difference even between two closely related proteins should not be inferred solely on the basis of sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis.  相似文献   

15.
Adenosine deaminase (ADA, EC 3.5.4.4) is a ubiquitous (beta/alpha)8-barrel enzyme crucial for purine metabolism and normal immune competence. In this study, it was observed that loss of enzyme activity of murine ADA (mADA) precedes the global secondary and tertiary structure transition when the protein is exposed to denaturant. The structural mechanism for this phenomenon was probed using site-specific 19F NMR spectroscopy in combination with [6-19F]tryptophan labeling and inhibitor binding. There are four tryptophan residues in mADA and all are located more than 12 A from the catalytic site. The 19F NMR spectra of [6-19F]Trp-labelled mADA show that the urea-induced chemical shift change of 19F resonance of W161, one of the four tryptophan 19F nuclei, correlates with the loss of enzyme activity. The urea-induced chemical shift change of another 19F resonance of W117 correlates with the change of the apparent rate constant for the binding of transition-state analogue inhibitor deoxycoformycin to the enzyme. On the other hand, the chemical environment of the local region around W264 does not change significantly, as a consequence of perturbation by low concentrations of urea or substrate analog. The results indicate that different regions of mADA have different local stability, which controls the activity and stability of the enzyme. The results provide new insights into the relationship between the function of a protein and its conformational flexibility as well as its global stability. This study illustrates the advantage of 19F NMR spectroscopy in probing site-related conformational change information in ligand binding, enzymatic activity and protein folding.  相似文献   

16.
alpha-D-Glucose activates glucokinase (EC 2.7.1.1) on its binding to the active site by inducing a global hysteretic conformational change. Using intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence as a probe on the alpha-D-glucose induced conformational changes in the pancreatic isoform 1 of human glucokinase, key residues involved in the process were identified by site-directed mutagenesis. Single-site W-->F mutations enabled the assignment of the fluorescence enhancement (DeltaF/F(0)) mainly to W99 and W167 in flexible loop structures, but the biphasic time course of DeltaF/F(0) is variably influenced by all tryptophan residues. The human glucokinase-alpha-D-glucose association (K(d) = 4.8 +/- 0.1 mm at 25 degrees C) is driven by a favourable entropy change (DeltaS = 150 +/- 10 J.mol(-1).K(-1)). Although X-ray crystallographic studies have revealed the alpha-d-glucose binding residues in the closed state, the contact residues that make essential contributions to its binding to the super-open conformation remain unidentified. In the present study, we combined functional mutagenesis with structural dynamic analyses to identify residue contacts involved in the initial binding of alpha-d-glucose and conformational transitions. The mutations N204A, D205A or E256A/K in the L-domain resulted in enzyme forms that did not bind alpha-D-glucose at 200 mm and were essentially catalytically inactive. Our data support a molecular dynamic model in which a concerted binding of alpha-D-glucose to N204, N231 and E256 in the super-open conformation induces local torsional stresses at N204/D205 propagating towards a closed conformation, involving structural changes in the highly flexible interdomain connecting region II (R192-N204), helix 5 (V181-R191), helix 6 (D205-Y215) and the C-terminal helix 17 (R447-K460).  相似文献   

17.
The Escherichia coli L-leucine receptor is an aqueous protein and the first component in the distinct transport pathway for hydrophobic amino acids. L-leucine binding induces a conformational change, which enables the receptor to dock to the membrane components. To investigate the ligand-induced conformational change and binding properties of this protein, we used (19)F NMR to probe the four tryptophan residues located in the two lobes of the protein. The four tryptophan residues were labeled with 5-fluorotryptophan and assigned by site-directed mutagenesis. The (19)F NMR spectra of the partially ligand free proteins show broadened peaks which sharpen when L-leucine is bound, showing that the labeled wild-type protein and mutants are functional. The titration of L-phenylalanine into the 5-fluorotryptophan labeled wild-type protein shows the presence of closed and open conformers. Urea-induced denaturation studies support the NMR results that the wild-type protein binds L-phenylalanine in a different manner to L-leucine. Our studies showed that the tryptophan to phenylalanine mutations on structural units linked to the binding pocket produce subtle changes in the environment of Trp18 located directly in the binding cleft.  相似文献   

18.
Periplasmic transport systems consist of a membrane-bound complex and a periplasmic substrate-binding protein and are postulated to function by translocating the substrate either through a nonspecific pore or through specific binding sites located in the membrane complex. We have isolated mutants carrying mutations in one of the membrane-bound components of the histidine permease of Salmonella typhimurium that allow transport in the absence of both histidine-binding proteins HisJ and LAO (lysine-, arginine-, ornithine-binding protein). All of the mutations are located in a limited region of the nucleotide-binding component of the histidine permease, HisP. The mutants transported substrate in the absence of binding proteins only when the membrane-bound complex was produced in large amounts. At low (chromosomal) levels, the mutant complex was unable to transport substrate in the absence of binding proteins but transported it efficiently in the presence of HisJ. The alterations responsible for the mutations were identified by DNA sequencing; they are closely related to a group of hisP mutations isolated as suppressors of HisJ interaction mutations (G. F.-L. Ames and E. N. Spudich, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 73:1877-1881, 1976). The hisP suppressor mutations behaved similarly to these newly isolated mutations despite the entirely different selection procedure. The results are consistent with the HisP protein carrying or contributing to the existence of a substrate-binding site that can be mutated to function in the absence of a binding protein.  相似文献   

19.
T Endo  T Ueda  H Yamada  T Imoto 《Biochemistry》1987,26(7):1838-1845
Nuclear magnetic resonance analyses have been made of the individual hydrogen-deuterium exchange rates of tryptophan indole N-1 hydrogens in native lysozyme and its chemically modified derivatives including lysozyme with an ester cross-linkage between Glu-35 and Trp-108, lysozyme with an internal amide cross-linking between the epsilon-amino group of Lys-13 and the alpha-carboxyl group of Leu-129, and lysozyme with the beta-aspartyl sequence at Asp-101. The pH dependence curves of the exchange rates for Trp-63 and Trp-108 are different from those expected for tryptophan. The pH dependence curve for Trp-108 exchange exhibits the effects from molecular aggregation at pH above 5 and from a transition between the two conformational fluctuations at around pH 4. The exchange rates for tryptophan residues in native lysozyme and modified derivatives are not correlated with the thermodynamic or kinetic parameters in protein denaturation, suggesting that the fluctuations responsible for the exchange are not global ones. The exchange rates for tryptophan residues remote from the modification site are perturbed. Such tryptophan residues are found to be involved in a small but distinct conformational change due to the modification. Therefore, the perturbations of the N-1 hydrogen exchange rates are related to the minor change in local conformation or in conformational strain induced by the chemical modification.  相似文献   

20.
To further investigate favorable effects of divalent cations on the formation of protein crystals, three complexes of Salmonella typhimurium histidine-binding protein were crystallized with varying concentrations of cadmium salts. For each of the three histidine-binding protein complexes, cadmium cations were found to promote or improve crystallization. The optimal cadmium concentration is ligand specific and falls within a narrow concentration range. In each case, crystals grown in the presence of cadmium diffract to better than 2.0 angstroms resolution and belong to the orthorhombic space group P2(1)2(1)2(1). From our results and from the analysis of cadmium sites in well-refined protein structures, we propose that cadmium addition provides a generally useful technique to modify crystal morphology and to improve diffraction quality.  相似文献   

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