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1.
We have determined by (15)N, (1)H, and (13)C NMR, the chemical behavior of the six histidines in subtilisin BPN' and their PMSF and peptide boronic acid complexes in aqueous solution as a function of pH in the range of from 5 to 11, and have assigned every (15)N, (1)H, C(epsilon 1), and C(delta2) resonance of all His side chains in resting enzyme. Four of the six histidine residues (17, 39, 67, and 226) are neutrally charged and do not titrate. One histidine (238), located on the protein surface, titrates with pK(a) = 7.30 +/- 0.03 at 25 degrees C, having rapid proton exchange, but restricted mobility. The active site histidine (64) in mutant N155A titrates with a pK(a) value of 7.9 +/- 0.3 and sluggish proton exchange behavior, as shown by two-site exchange computer lineshape simulation. His 64 in resting enzyme contains an extremely high C(epsilon 1)-H proton chemical shift of 9.30 parts per million (ppm) owing to a conserved C(epsilon 1)-H(.)O=C H-bond from the active site imidazole to a backbone carbonyl group, which is found in all known serine proteases representing all four superfamilies. Only His 226, and His 64 at high pH, exist as the rare N(delta1)-H tautomer, exhibiting (13)C(delta1) chemical shifts approximately 9 ppm higher than those for N(epsilon 2)-H tautomers. His 64 in the PMSF complex, unlike that in the resting enzyme, is highly mobile in its low pH form, as shown by (15)N-(1)H NOE effects, and titrates with rapid proton exchange kinetics linked to a pK(a) value of 7.47 +/- 0.02.  相似文献   

2.
G I Rhyu  W J Ray  J L Markley 《Biochemistry》1985,24(18):4746-4753
1H and 31P NMR pH titrations were conducted to monitor changes in the environment and protonation state of the histidine residues and phosphoserine group of rabbit muscle phosphoglucomutase on binding of metal ions at the activating site and of substrate (glucose phosphate) at the catalytic site. Imidazole C epsilon-H signals from 8 of the 10 histidines present in the free enzyme were observed in 1H NMR spectra obtained by a spin-echo pulse sequence at 470 MHz; their pH (uncorrected pH meter reading of a 2H2O solution measured with a glass electrode standardized with H2O buffer) titration properties (in 99% 2H2O) were determined. Three of these histidine residues, which have pKa values ranging from 6.5 to 7.9, exhibited an atypical pH-dependent perturbation of their chemical shifts with a pHmid of 5.8 and a Hill coefficient of about 2. Since none of the observed histidines has a pKa near 5.8, it appears that these three histidines interact with a cluster consisting of two or more groups which become protonated cooperatively at this pH. Binding of Cd2+ at the activating site of the enzyme abolishes the pH-dependent transition of these histidines; hence, the putative anion cluster may constitute the metal ion binding site, or part of it. Two separate 31P NMR peaks from phosphoserine-116 of the phosphoenzyme were observed between pH 6 and 9. Apparently, the metal-free enzyme exists as a pH-dependent mixture of conformers that provide two different environments, I and II, for the enzymic phosphate group; the transition of the phosphate group between these two environments is slow on the NMR time scale.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
Bacillus circulans xylanase contains two histidines, one of which (His 156) is solvent exposed, whereas the other (His 149) is buried within its hydrophobic core. His 149 is involved in a network of hydrogen bonds with an internal water and Ser 130, as well as a potential weak aromatic-aromatic interaction with Tyr 105. These three residues, and their network of interactions with the bound water, are conserved in four homologous xylanases. To probe the structural role played by His 149, NMR spectroscopy was used to characterize the histidines in BCX. Complete assignments of the 1H, 13C, and 15N resonances and tautomeric forms of the imidazole rings were obtained from two-dimensional heteronuclear correlation experiments. An unusual spectroscopic feature of BCX is a peak near 12 ppm arising from the nitrogen bonded 1H epsilon 2 of His 149. Due to its solvent inaccessibility and hydrogen bonding to an internal water molecule, the exchange rate of this proton (4.0 x 10(-5) s-1 at pH*7.04 and 30 degrees C) is retarded by > 10(6)-fold relative to an exposed histidine. The pKa of His 156 is unperturbed at approximately 6.5, as measured from the pH dependence of the 15N- and 1H-NMR spectra of BCX. In contrast, His 149 has a pKa < 2.3, existing in the neutral N epsilon 2H tautomeric state under all conditions examined. BCX unfolds at low pH and 30 degrees C, and thus His 149 is never protonated significantly in the context of the native enzyme. The structural importance of this buried histidine is confirmed by the destablizing effect of substituting a phenylalanine or glutamine at position 149 in BCX.  相似文献   

4.
Two active site histidine residues have been implicated in the catalysis of phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C (PI-PLC). In this report, we present the first study of the pKa values of histidines of a PI-PLC. All six histidines of Bacillus cereus PI-PLC were studied by 2D NMR spectroscopy and site-directed mutagenesis. The protein was selectively labeled with 13C epsilon 1-histidine. A series of 1H-13C HSQC NMR spectra were acquired over a pH range of 4.0-9.0. Five of the six histidines have been individually substituted with alanine to aid the resonance assignments in the NMR spectra. Overall, the remaining histidines in the mutants show little chemical shift changes in the 1H-13C HSQC spectra, indicating that the alanine substitution has no effect on the tertiary structure of the protein. H32A and H82A mutants are inactive enzymes, while H92A and H61A are fully active, and H81A retains about 15% of the wild-type activity. The active site histidines, His32 and His82, display pKa values of 7.6 and 6.9, respectively. His92 and His227 exhibit pKa values of 5.4 and 6.9. His61 and His81 do not titrate over the pH range studied. These values are consistent with the crystal structure data, which shows that His92 and His227 are on the surface of the protein, whereas His61 and His81 are buried. The pKa value of 6.9 corroborates the hypothesis of His82 acting as a general acid in the catalysis. His32 is essential to enzyme activity, but its putative role as the general base is in question due to its relatively high pKa.  相似文献   

5.
In a recent MAS NMR study, two types of histidine residues in the light-harvesting complex II (LH2) of Rhodopseudomonas acidophila were resolved: Type 1 (neutral) and Type 2 (positively charged) (Alia et al. J. Am. Chem. Soc. ). The isotropic (13)C shifts of histidines coordinating to B850 BChl a are similar to fully positively charged histidine, while the (15)N shift anisotropy shows a predominantly neutral character. In addition the possibility that the ring currents are quenched by overlap in the superstructure of the complete ring of 18 B850 molecules in the LH2 complex could not be excluded. In the present work, by using two-dimensional heteronuclear ((1)H-(13)C) dipolar correlation spectroscopy with phase-modulated Lee-Goldburg homonuclear (1)H decoupling applied during the t(1) period, a clear and unambiguous assignment of the protons of histidine interacting with the magnesium of a BChl a molecule is obtained and a significant ring current effect from B850 on the coordinating histidine is resolved. Using the ring current shift on (1)H, we refine the (13)C chemical shift assignment of the coordinating histidine and clearly distinguish the electronic structure of coordinating histidines from that of fully positively charged histidine. The DFT calculations corroborate that the coordinating histidines carry approximately 0.2 electronic equivalent of positive charge in LH2. In addition, the data indicate that the ground state electronic structures of individual BChl a /His complexes is largely independent of supermolecular pi interactions in the assembly of 18 B850 ring in LH2.  相似文献   

6.
NMR signals from all four histidine ring C epsilon protons and three of the four histidine C delta protons in the protein staphylococcal nuclease have been assigned by comparing spectra of the wild-type (Foggi strain) protein to spectra of three variants that each lack a different histidine residue. All proteins studied were cloned and overproduced in Escherichia coli. The NMR spectra of the three mutant proteins (H8R, H46Y, and H124L) used to make these assignments were similar to one another and to those of the wild type, except for signals from the mutated residues. The pKa values of those histidines conserved between the wild type and the mutants remained essentially unchanged. Multiple histidine C epsilon proton resonances due to non-native forms of nuclease were observed in both thermally induced and acid-induced unfolding. Residue-specific assignments of H epsilon protons in the thermally denatured forms of the mutant H46Y were obtained from connectivities to the native state by saturation transfer.  相似文献   

7.
The effects of pH upon the C-2 resonances of the 5 histidine residues of Escherichia coli MB 1428 dihydrofolate reductase in binary complexes with methotrexate, aminopterin, folate, methopterin, and trimethoprim were studied by 300-MHz 1H nmr spectroscopy. Three of the five histidine residues, labeled 1, 2, and 3, exhibited similar pK' values and chemical shifts for their C-2 protons in the five binary complexes. One histidine, 4, was quite different in the folate complex and the last histidine, 5 was quite different in the trimethoprim complex. For all five binary complexes, each histidine had a pK' which was significantly different from the other 4 histidines of that complex. Titration of the binary methotrexate complex of a 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoate)-modified enzyme showed that 2 histidines were not perturbed by this modification of Cys 152, and that the alkaline form of histidine 2, the acid form of histidine 4, and, to a lesser extent, the acid form of histidine 3 were slightly perturbed. Titration of the binary methotrexate complex of a N-bromosuccinimide-modified enzyme demonstrated that this modification slightly affected all of the histidines and drastically affected histidine 5. Histidines 3 and 5 of the binary methotrexate complex reacted rapidly with the histidine-specific reagent, ethoxyformic anhydride, while histidines 2 and 4 reacted at a moderate rate and histidine 1 reacted slowly if at all. The local electrostatic environments of the 5 histidine residues as deduced from the crystal structure of the binary complex of the enzyme with methotrexate (Matthews, D.A., Alden, R.A., Bolin, J.T., Freer, S.T., Hamlin, R., Xuong, N., Kraut, J., Poe, M., Williams, M.N., and Hoogsteen, K. (1977) Science 197, 594-597) were used as the basis for proposed assignments of the five histidine C-2 nmr resonances. The assignments were: 1, pK' 7.9 to 8.2, His 124; 2, pK' 7.2 to 7.4, His 141; 3, pK' 6.5 to 6.7, His 149; 4, pK' 5.7 to 6.3, His 114; and 5, pK' 5.2 to 5.9, His 45. The effect of the chemical modifications upon the enzyme's histidine residues were consistent with the assignments, but no direct chemical evidence in support of the assignments was obtained. It was proposed that, since the crystallographic data provided consistent assignments of the histidine nmr data for both native and chemically modified enzyme, the local environment of each of the 5 histidine residues was similar in the crystal and in solution.  相似文献   

8.
The A domain of the mannitol-specific EII, IIAmtl, was subcloned and proven to be functional in the isolated form (Van Weeghel et al., 1991). It contains a histidine phosphorylation site, the first of two phosphorylation sites in the parent protein. In this paper, we describe the characterization of the three histidine residues in IIAmtl with respect to their protonation and hydrogen bonding state, using 1H[15N] heteronuclear NMR techniques and protein selectively enriched with [delta 1,epsilon 2-15N]histidine. The active site residue has a low pKa (less than 5.8) and shows no hydrogen bond interactions. The proton in the neutral ring is located at the N epsilon 2 position, which also proved to be the site of phosphorylation. The phosphorylation raises the pKa of the active site histidine considerably but does not change the hydrogen bond situation. The other two histidine residues, one of which is probably located on the surface of the protein, were also characterized. Both show hydrogen bond interactions in the unphosphorylated protein, but these are disturbed by the phosphorylation process. These observations, combined with small changes in pKa and titration behavior, indicate that the IIAmtl changes its conformation upon phosphorylation.  相似文献   

9.
The contribution of interactions involving the imidazole ring of His41 to the pH-dependent stability of the villin headpiece (HP67) N-terminal subdomain has been investigated by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spin relaxation. NMR-derived backbone N-H order parameters (S2) for wild-type (WT) HP67 and H41Y HP67 indicate that reduced conformational flexibility of the N-terminal subdomain in WT HP67 is due to intramolecular interactions with the His41 imidazole ring. These interactions, together with desolvation effects, contribute to significantly depress the pKa of the buried imidazole ring in the native state. 15N R1rho relaxation dispersion data indicate that WT HP67 populates a partially folded intermediate state that is 10.9 kJ mol(-1) higher in free energy than the native state under non-denaturing conditions at neutral pH. The partially folded intermediate is characterized as having an unfolded N-terminal subdomain while the C-terminal subdomain retains a native-like fold. Although the majority of the residues in the N-terminal subdomain sample a random-coil distribution of conformations, deviations of backbone amide 1H and 15N chemical shifts from canonical random-coil values for residues within 5A of the His41 imidazole ring indicate that a significant degree of residual structure is maintained in the partially folded ensemble. The pH-dependence of exchange broadening is consistent with a linear three-state exchange model whereby unfolding of the N-terminal subdomain is coupled to titration of His41 in the partially folded intermediate with a pKa,I=5.69+/-0.07. Although maintenance of residual interactions with the imidazole ring in the unfolded N-terminal subdomain appears to reduce pKa,I compared to model histidine compounds, protonation of His41 disrupts these interactions and reduces the difference in free energy between the native state and partially folded intermediate under acidic conditions. In addition, chemical shift changes for residues Lys70-Phe76 in the C-terminal subdomain suggest that the HP67 actin binding site is disrupted upon unfolding of the N-terminal subdomain, providing a potential mechanism for regulating the villin-dependent bundling of actin filaments.  相似文献   

10.
The hemin complex of Hmu O, a 24-kDa soluble heme degradation enzyme in Corynebacterium diphtheriae, is coordinated axially to a neutral imidazole of a proximal histidine residue in Hmu O. To identify which of the eight histidines in Hmu O is the proximal heme ligand, we have constructed and expressed the plasmids for eight His --> Ala Hmu O mutants. Reconstituted with hemin, the active site structures and enzymatic activity of these mutants have been examined by EPR, resonance Raman, and optical absorption spectroscopy. EPR of the NO-bound ferrous heme-Hmu O mutant complexes reveals His(20) as the proximal heme ligand in Hmu O, and this is confirmed by resonance Raman results from the ligand-free ferrous heme-H20A. All eight His --> Ala mutants bind hemin stoichiometrically, proving that none of the histidines is essential for hemin-Hmu O formation. However, His(20) is crucial to Hmu O catalysis. Its absence by point mutation has inhibited the conversion of hemin to biliverdin. The ferric heme-H20A complex is pentacoordinate. Resonance Raman of the CO-bound ferrous heme-H20A corroborates this and reveals an Fe-C-O bending mode, delta(Fe-C-O), the first reported for a pentacoordinate CO-bound hemeprotein. The appearance of delta(Fe-C-O) in C. diphtheriae Hmu O H20A but not mammalian HO-1 mutant H25A indicates that the heme environment between the two heme oxygenases is different.  相似文献   

11.
Microperoxidase-8, Fe(III)MP-8, the heme octapeptide obtained by horse heart cytochrome c digestion, was studied in the presence of H(2)O(2). A modified form of the catalyst was isolated by HPLC and showed a UV/visible spectrum similar to that of Fe(III)MP-8. ESI-MS measurements revealed a 16 Da increase in molecular mass for the modified catalyst when compared to Fe(III)MP-8, suggesting the insertion of an oxygen atom. ESI-MS(2) fragmentation measurements point at oxygen incorporation on the His18 residue of the octapeptide of the modified catalyst. Comparison of the (1)H NMR chemical shifts of the methyl protons of the porphyrin ring of Fe(III)MP-8 and the modified catalyst shows a large shift for especially the 3-methyl and 5-methyl resonances, whereas the other (1)H NMR chemical shifts are almost unaffected. These observations can best be ascribed to a reorientation of the histidine axial ligand. The latter is suggested to be the consequence of an oxygen insertion, possibly on the imidazole ring of His18, thereby corroborating the data obtained by ESI-MS(2). (1)H NMR NOE difference measurements on Fe(III)MP-8 and on the modified catalyst supported the assignment of the H(delta)2 and H(epsilon)1 protons of the His18 imidazole ring. The ring amine proton H(delta)1 could not be detected in both forms of the catalyst. For Fe(III)MP-8 this absence of the H(delta)1 resonance can be ascribed to fast H/D exchange. For the modified catalyst the NMR data are not contradictory, with an oxygen insertion on position delta1 of the His18 imidazole ring with a fast H/D exchanging hydroxyl proton. Together these data converge in suggesting the H(2)O(2) modified catalyst bears a hydroxylated His18 axial ligand. The mechanism that could underlie Fe(III)MP-8 axial histidine hydroxylation is further discussed.  相似文献   

12.
J Sancho  L Serrano  A R Fersht 《Biochemistry》1992,31(8):2253-2258
A single histidine residue has been placed at either the N-terminus or the C-terminus of each of the two alpha-helices of barnase. The pKa of that histidine residue in each of the four mutants has been determined by 1H NMR. The pKas of the two residues at the C-terminus are, on average, 0.5 unit higher, and those of the residues at the N-terminus are 0.8 unit lower, than the pKa of histidines in unfolded barnase at low ionic strength. The conformational stability of the mutant proteins at different values of pH has been measured by urea denaturation. C-Terminal histidine mutants are approximately 0.6 kcal mol-1 more stable when the introduced histidine is protonated, both at low and high ionic strength. N-Terminal mutants with a protonated histidine residue are approximately 1.1 kcal mol-1 less stable at low ionic strength and 0.5 kcal mol-1 less stable at high ionic strength (1 M NaCl). The low-field 1H NMR spectra of the mutant proteins at low pH suggest that the C-terminal histidines form hydrogen bonds with the protein while the N-terminal histidines do not form the same. The perturbations of pKa and stability result from a combination of different electrostatic environments and hydrogen-bonding patterns at either ends of helices. The value of 0.6 kcal mol-1 represents a lower limit to the favorable electrostatic interaction between the alpha-helix dipole and a protonated histidine residue at the C-terminal end of the helix.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
J Altman  J J Lipka  I Kuntz  L Waskell 《Biochemistry》1989,28(19):7516-7523
Diethyl pyrocarbonate (DEP) is an electrophilic reagent that is used to modify reversibly the histidine residues of proteins. Unfortunately, the lability of the acylated histidine adduct usually does not permit the isolation and identification of the modified histidine. By use of 500-MHz proton NMR spectroscopy, it has been possible to identify the C-H resonances of the nonaxial histidines of trypsin-solubilized bovine, rabbit, and porcine cytochrome b5 and therefore observe the interaction of DEP with specific histidine residues of cytochrome b5. In addition, the pKa of the peripheral histidines of bovine and rabbit cytochrome b5 have been measured in D2O. In the bovine protein it was found that the histidines are modified sequentially with increasing DEP concentration in the order His-26 greater than His-15 greater than His-80. This order is maintained in the rabbit protein with the following additions: His-26 approximately His-27 greater than His-15 greater than or equal to His-17 greater than His-80. The relative reactivity of the peripheral histidines with DEP was rationalized by considering three of their characteristics: (1) the pKa of the histidine, (2) the fraction of the side chain exposed to the solvent, and (3) the hydrogen-bond interactions of the imidazole ring.  相似文献   

14.
The 134 amino acid DNase domain of colicin E9 contains a zinc-finger-like HNH motif that binds divalent transition metal ions. We have used 1D 1H and 2D 1H-15N NMR methods to characterise the binding of Co2+, Ni2+ and Zn2+ to this protein. Data for the Co2+-substituted and Ni2+-substituted proteins show that the metal ion is coordinated by three histidine residues; and the NMR characteristics of the Ni2+-substituted protein show that two of the histidines are coordinated through their N(epsilon2) atoms and one via its N(delta1). Furthermore, the NMR spectrum of the Ni2+-substituted protein is perturbed by the presence of phosphate, consistent with an X-ray structure showing that phosphate is coordinated to bound Ni2+, and by a change in pH, consistent with an ionisable group at the metal centre with a pKa of 7.9. Binding of an inhibitor protein to the DNase does not perturb the resonances of the metal site, suggesting there is no substantial conformation change of the DNase HNH motif on inhibitor binding. 1H-15N NMR data for the Zn2+-substituted DNase show that this protein, like the metal-free DNase, exists as two conformers with different 1H-15N correlation NMR spectra, and that the binding of Zn2+ does not significantly perturb the spectra, and hence structures, of these conformers beyond the HNH motif region.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
Multidimensional, multinuclear NMR has the potential to elucidate the mechanisms of allostery and cooperativity in multimeric proteins under near-physiological conditions. However, NMR studies of proteins made up of non-equivalent subunits face the problem of severe resonance overlap, which can prevent the unambiguous assignment of resonances, a necessary step in interpreting the spectra. We report the application of a chain-selective labeling technique, in which one type of subunit is labeled at a time, to carbonmonoxy-hemoglobin A (HbCO A). This labeling method can be used to extend previous resonance assignments of key amino acid residues, which are important to the physiological function of hemoglobin. Among these amino acid residues are the surface histidyls, which account for the majority of the Bohr effect. In the present work, we report the results of two-dimensional heteronuclear multiple quantum coherence (HMQC) experiments performed on recombinant (15)N-labeled HbCO A. In addition to the C2-proton (H epsilon(1)) chemical shifts, these spectra also reveal the corresponding C4-proton (H delta(2)) resonances, correlated with the N epsilon(2) and N delta(1) chemical shifts of all 13 surface histidines per alpha beta dimer. The HMQC spectrum also allows the assignment of the H delta(1), H epsilon(1), and N epsilon(1) resonances of all three tryptophan residues per alpha beta dimer in HbCO A. These results indicate that heteronuclear NMR, used with chain-selective isotopic labeling, can provide resonance assignments of key regions in large, multimeric proteins, suggesting an approach to elucidating the solution structure of hemoglobin, a protein with molecular weight 64.5 kDa.  相似文献   

17.
Miraculin differs from other sweet-tasting proteins because it is a taste-modifier having the unusual property of modifying sourness into sweetness. Its dimer is covalently linked by an inter-chain disulphide bond, and shows its taste-modifying activity at acidic pH, with maximum at pH 3.0, while it is flat at neutral pH. Previous studies suggested the importance of two histidine residues for the taste-modifying activity of miraculin. In this work, we have conducted molecular dynamics simulations on wild type miraculin and on three mutated dimers (H29A, H59A and H29A/H59A) both at neutral and acidic pH to investigate the structural and functional role of these two His residues. Our results suggested that at acidic pH the presence of two charged His at the interface induced a structural rearrangement of the two monomers, thus leading to their relative opening and the following adaptation of their conformation to the receptor surface. On the other hand the simulations on three mutants showed that the mutated dimers had a closed form, and highlighted the important role of H29 in stabilizing/destabilizing the dimer arrangement and also a cooperative effect of the two histidines.  相似文献   

18.
The pKa values of the three histidine residues in the Fv fragment (variable region of the heavy and light chains) of the mouse myeloma protein MOPC 315, measured by high resolution n.m.r. (nuclear magnetic resonance), are 5.9, 6.9 and 8.2. The perturbation of the pKa of one of the histidines (pKa 6.9) on the addition of hapten and the narrow linewidth of its proton resonances suggests that it is at the edge of the combining site. References to the model of the Fv fragment [Padlan, Davies, Pecht, Givol & Wright (1976) Cold Spring Harbor Symp. Quant. Biol. 41, in the press] allows assignment of the three histidine residues, histidine-102H, histidine-97L and histidine-44L. The determination of the pKa of the phosphorus group, by 31P n.m.r., of a homologous series of Dnp- and Tnp- (di- and tri-nitrophenyl) haptens has located a positively charged residue. Molecular-model studies on the conformations of these haptens show that the residue is at the edge of the site. The model suggests that the positively charged residue is either arginine-95L or lysine-52H.  相似文献   

19.
In order to turn the subunit association and biotin binding of avidin into pH-sensitive phenomena, we have replaced individually three amino acid residues in avidin (Met96, Val115 and Ile117) with histidines in the 1-3 interface, and in combination with a histidine conversion in the 1-2 interface (Trp110). The single replacements Met96His and Val115His in the 1-3 interface were found to have a clear effect on the quaternary structure of avidin, since subunit associations of these mutants became pH-dependent. The histidine replacement in the 1-2 interface affected the biotin-binding properties of the mutants, in particular reversibility of binding and protein-ligand complex formation were pH-sensitive, as measured by IAsys biosensor and fluorescence correlation spectroscopy, respectively. The possibility of regulating the quaternary structure and function of avidin in a controlled and predictable manner, due to introduced interface histidines, will expand even further the range and versatility of the avidin-biotin technology.  相似文献   

20.
The imidazole (15)N signals of histidine 64 (His(64)), involved in the catalytic function of human carbonic anhydrase II (hCAII), were assigned unambiguously. This was accomplished by incorporating the labeled histidine as probes for solution NMR analysis, with (15)N at ring-N(delta1) and N(epsilon2), (13)Cat ring-Cepsilon1, (13)C and (15)N at all carbon and nitrogen, or (15)N at the amide nitrogen and the labeled glycine with (13)C at the carbonyl carbon. Using the pH dependence of ring-(15)N signals and a comparison between experimental and simulated curves, we determined that the tautomeric equilibrium constant (K(T)) of His(64) is 1.0, which differs from that of other histidine residues. This unique value characterizes the imidazole nitrogen atoms of His(64) as both a general acid (a) and base (b): its epsilon2-nitrogen as (a) releases one proton into the bulk, whereas its delta1-nitrogen as (b) extracts another proton from a water molecule within the water bridge coupling to the zinc-bound water inside the cave. This accelerates the generation of zinc-bound hydroxide to react with the carbon dioxide. Releasing the productive bicarbonate ion from the inside separates the water bridge pathway, in which the next water molecules move into beside zinc ion. A new water molecule is supplied from the bulk to near the delta1-nitrogen of His(64). These reconstitute the water bridge. Based on these features, we suggest here a catalytic mechanism for hCAII: the tautomerization of His(64) can mediate the transfers of both protons and water molecules at a neutral pH with high efficiency, requiring no time- or energy-consuming processes.  相似文献   

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