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1.
It is well established that the octameric mitochondrial form of creatine kinase (mtCK) binds to the outer face of the inner mitochondrial membrane mainly via electrostatic interactions with cardiolipin (CL). However, little is known about the consequences of these interactions on membrane and protein levels. Brewster angle microscopy investigations provide, for the first time to our knowledge, images indicating that mtCK binding induced cluster formation on CL monolayers. The thickness of the clusters (10-12 nm) corresponds to the theoretical height of the mtCK-CL complex. Protein insertion into a condensed CL film, together with monolayer stabilization after protein addition, was observed by means of differential capacity measurements. Polarization modulation infrared reflection-absorption spectroscopy showed that the mean orientation of α-helices within the protein shifted upon CL binding from 30° to 45° with respect to the interface plane, demonstrating protein domain movements. A comparison of data obtained with CL and phosphatidylcholine/phosphatidylethanolamine/CL (2:1:1) monolayers indicates that mtCK is able to selectively recruit CL molecules within the mixed monolayer, consolidating and changing the morphology of the interfacial film. Therefore, CL-rich domains induced by mtCK binding could modulate mitochondrial inner membrane morphology into a raft-like organization and influence essential steps of mitochondria-mediated apoptosis.  相似文献   

2.
Our study highlights the tight relationship between protein binding to monolayers and the phase-state of the phospholipids. Interaction of mitochondrial creatine kinase with phospholipidic membranes was analysed using a two-phase monolayer system containing anionic phospholipids under chain mismatch conditions. Monolayers were made up of mixtures of DMPC/DPPG or DPPC/DMPG containing 40% negatively charged phospholipids which is approximately the negative charge content of the mitochondrial inner membrane. Langmuir isotherms of these monolayers showed that they underwent a phase transition from a liquid expanded state to a liquid-condensed phase at about 2 mN/m and 5 mN/m respectively. Interface morphology modifications caused by injection of mtCK under these monolayers at low or high surface pressure were monitored by Brewster angle microscopy. This work provides evidence that the presence at the air/water interface of discrete domains with increased charge density, may lead to difference in partition of soluble proteins such as mtCK, interacting with the lipid monolayer. Conversely these proteins may help to organize charged phospholipid domains in a membrane.  相似文献   

3.
The membrane binding properties of cytosolic and mitochondrial creatine kinase isoenzymes are reviewed in this article. Differences between both dimeric and octameric mitochondrial creatine kinase (Mi-CK) attached to membranes and the unbound form are elaborated with respect to possible biological function. The formation of crystalline mitochondrial inclusions under pathological conditions and its possible origin in the membrane attachment capabilities of Mi-CK are discussed. Finally, the implications of these results on mitochondrial energy transduction and structure are presented.  相似文献   

4.
The interfacial properties of bovine testicular hyaluronidase were investigated by demonstrating the association of hyaluronidase activity with membranes prepared from bovine testis. Protein adsorption to the air/water interface was investigated using surface pressure-area isotherms. In whichever way the interfacial films were obtained (protein injection or deposition), the hyaluronidase exhibited a significant affinity for the air/water interface. The isotherm obtained 180 min after protein injection into a pH 5.3 subphase was similar to the isotherm obtained after spreading the same amount of protein onto the same subphase, indicating that bovine testicular hyaluronidase molecules adopted a similar arrangement and/or conformation at the interface. Increasing the subphase pH from 5.3 to 8 resulted in changes of the protein isotherms. These modifications, which could correspond to the small pH-induced conformational changes observed by Fourier-transform IR spectroscopy, were discussed in relation to the pH influence on the hyaluronidase activity. Adding hyaluronic acid, the enzyme substrate, to the subphase tested the stability of the interfacial properties of hyaluronidase. The presence of hyaluronic acid in the subphase did not modify the protein adsorption and allowed substrate binding to a preformed film of hyaluronidase at pH 5.3, the optimal pH for the enzyme activity. Such effects of hyaluronic acid were not observed when the subphase was constituted of pure water, a medium where the enzyme activity was negligible. These influences of hyaluronic acid were discussed in relation to the modelled structure of bovine testis hyaluronidase where a hydrophobic region was proposed to be opposite of the catalytic site.  相似文献   

5.
Phosphate extraction of mitochondrial creatine kinase (Mi-CK, EC 2.7.3.2) from freshly isolated intact mitochondria of chicken cardiac muscle, after short swelling in hypotonic medium, yielded more than 90% of octameric and only small amounts of dimeric Mi-CK as judged by fast protein liquid chromatography-gel permeation analysis of the supernatants immediately after extraction of the enzyme. In extraction buffer, octameric Mi-CK displayed a tendency to dissociate, albeit at a slow rate with a half-life of approximately 3-5 days, into stable dimers. Experiments with purified Mi-CK octamers or dimers, or defined mixtures thereof, incubated under identical conditions with Mi-CK-depleted mitoplasts revealed that both oligomeric forms of Mi-CK can rebind to mitoplasts. However, the association of Mi-CK was strongly pH-dependent and, in addition, octameric and dimeric Mi-CK showed different pH dependences of rebinding. Therefore, it was possible under certain pH conditions to rebind either both oligomeric forms or selectively the octamers only. Furthermore, evidence is presented that Mi-CK dimers partially form octamers upon rebinding to the inner membrane. The differential association of the two oligomeric Mi-CK forms with the inner mitochondrial membrane together with the dynamic equilibrium between octameric and dimeric Mi-CK (Schlegel, J., Zurbriggen, B., Wegmann, G., Wyss, M., Eppenberger, H.M., and Wallimann, T. (1988) J. Biol. Chem., 263, 16942-16953) suggest that both oligomeric forms are physiologically relevant. A change in the octamer to dimer ratio may influence the association behavior of Mi-CK in general and thus modulate mitochondrial energy flux as discussed in the phosphoryl creatine circuit model (Wallimann, T., Schnyder, T., Schlegel, J., Wyss, M., Wegmann, G., Rossi, A.-M., Hemmer, W., Eppenberger, H.M., and Quest, A.F.G. (1989) Prog. Clin. Biol. Res. 315, 159-176.  相似文献   

6.
Using isoelectrofocusing in three pH gradients differing in the initial pH value of the ampholyte gel mixture and in gradient pH range, the isoelectric points for the dimeric and octameric forms of mitochondrial creatine kinase from bovine heart and pigeon breast muscle were determined. The isoelectric points for the dimer and octamer are equal to 9.67 +/- 0.01 and 8.93 +/- 0.05 for the heart enzyme and to 9.56 +/- 0.08 and 8.91 +/- 0.23 for the skeletal muscle enzyme. The correctness of identification of the oligomeric forms of mitochondrial creatine kinase was confirmed by ultracentrifugation in a sucrose density linear gradient. Since creatine kinase is known to bind to mitochondrial membrane cardiolipin by electrostatic forces, it can be assumed that both oligomeric forms of the enzymes can bind to the membranes. However, the properties of the creatine kinase dimer suggest its greater ability to bind to mitochondrial membranes.  相似文献   

7.
Properties of human creatine kinase isoenzymes (MM, MB and BB) are investigated. The most pronounced differences in properties of these isoenzymes are found under their urea inactivation, heat denaturation and the inhibition by rabbit antisera to isoenzymes. Differences in values of the Mikhaelis constant and substrate and pH dependencies are much less pronounced. The presence of ADP stabilizes creatine kinase isoenzymes under conditions of urea and heat inactivation. Properties of hybrid MB isoenzymes are found to be intermediate with respect to MM and BB isoenzymes. A mode of the interaction of M and B subunits in dimeric molecules of creatine kinase isoenzymes is discussed.  相似文献   

8.
We show in this study that mitochondrial creatine kinase promotes segregation and clustering of cardiolipin in mixed membranes, a phenomenon that has been proposed to occur at contact sites in the mitochondria. This property of mitochondrial creatine kinase is dependent on the native octameric structure of the protein and does not occur after heat-denaturation or with the native dimeric form of the protein. Cardiolipin segregation was demonstrated by differential scanning calorimetry using membranes containing cardiolipin and either dipalmitoylphosphatidylethanolamine or 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoylphosphatidylethanolamine. Addition of the ubiquitous form of mitochondrial creatine kinase leads to the formation of a phosphatidylethanolamine-rich domain as a result of the protein binding preferentially to the cardiolipin. Such phase separation does not occur if cardiolipin is replaced with dioleoyl phosphatidylglycerol. Lipid phase separation is observed with other cardiolipin-binding proteins, including cytochrome c and, to a very small extent, with truncated Bid (t-Bid), as well as with the cationic polypeptide poly-L-lysine, but among these proteins the octameric form of mitochondrial creatine kinase is by far the most effective in causing segregation and clustering of cardiolipin. The proteins included in this study are found at mitochondrial contact sites where they are known to associate with cardiolipin. Domains in mitochondria enriched in cardiolipin play an important role in apoptosis and in energy flux processes.  相似文献   

9.
Granjon T  Vacheron MJ  Vial C  Buchet R 《Biochemistry》2001,40(9):2988-2994
Structural modifications of rabbit heart mitochondrial creatine kinase induced by the binding of its nucleotide substrates and Pi were investigated. Reaction-induced difference spectra (RIDS), resulting from the difference between infrared spectra recorded before and after the photorelease of a caged ligand, allow us to detect very small variations in protein structure. Our results indicated that the protein secondary structure remained relatively stable during nucleotide binding. Indeed, this binding to creatine kinase affected only a few amino acids, and caused small peptide backbone deformations and alterations of the carbonyl side chains of aspartate or glutamate, reflecting modifications within preexisting elements rather than a net change in secondary structure. Nonetheless, MgADP and MgATP RIDS were distinct, whereas the MgPi RIDS presented some similarities with the MgATP one. The difference between MgADP and MgATP RIDS could reflect a distinct configuration of the two metal-nucleotide complexes inducing a different positioning and/or a distinct binding mode to the creatine kinase active site. Comparison of the MgATP and MgPi RIDS suggests that Pi binding took place at the same binding site as the gamma-phosphoryl group of ATP. Thus, the difference between MgADP and MgATP RIDS would mainly be due to the effect of the gamma-P of ATP. The differences observed when comparing the RIDS resulting from the binding of nucleotides to octameric mitochondrial creatine kinase or dimeric cytosolic isoform could reflect the distinct oligomerization states and physicochemical or kinetic properties of the two isoenzymes.  相似文献   

10.
Summary Mitochondrial creatine kinase (CK) purified from canine myocardium showed a single protein band on SDS-PAGE and was free of MMCK. Its amino acid composition was different than MMCK or BBCK and did not react to antiserum to MMCK or BBCK. Using purified mitochondrial, MM and BBCK, the velocity of reaction (V) was estimated for creatine phosphate (CP), creatine (C), adenosine triphosphate (ATP) and adenosine diphosphate (ADP) over a wide range of concentrations including those at Vmax. The values for Km (mM/L) derived from Lineweaver-Burke plots are shown: The affinity of mitochondrial CK for C is much greater than MMCK which is compatible with the energy shuttle hypothesis, namely ATP is converted by mitochondrial CK to CP, and then diffuses to the myofibril for conversion to ATP for utilization.  相似文献   

11.
MgADP binding to mitochondrial creatine kinase (mtCK) adsorbed on liposomes was induced by the photorelease of caged ADP. The nucleotide binding produced two types of structural changes. One was related to the well-established release of mtCK from the liposomes. The other corresponded to reversible structural changes induced by nucleotide binding to mtCK as demonstrated here. Infrared spectroscopy data show that the MgADP-induced desorption of mtCK from vesicles led to a slight increase in alpha-helix structures in mtCK at the expense of a small decrease in beta-sheet structures and a concomitant increase in the fluidity of the membranes. The desorption of mtCK induced by MgADP and MgATP was almost complete, as shown by centrifugation and enzymatic activity measurements. The photorelease of MgADP in a reactive medium containing phosphocreatine and mtCK associated with liposomes led to nucleotide binding and to the formation of MgATP and creatine. Addition of phosphocreatine also desorbed mtCK from liposomes, while addition of creatine did not. Interpretation of these results would suggest that ADP, ATP or phosphocreatine induce the release of mtCK from membranes, increase the phospholipid bilayer fluidity, and may also decrease the number of contact sites between inner and outer mitochondrial membranes, thus affecting the activity of other mitochondrial enzymes. It is tempting to propose that membrane mtCK binding regulation by nucleotide and PCr concentrations may serve as a physiological adaptation for energy supply.  相似文献   

12.
The interaction of mitochondrial creatine kinase (Mi-CK; EC 2.7.3.2) with phospholipid monolayers and spread mitochondrial membranes at the air/water interface has been investigated. It appeared that Mi-CK penetrated into these monolayers as evidenced by an increase in surface pressure upon incorporation of Mi-CK. The increase in surface pressure was dependent on (1) the amount and (2) the oligomeric form of Mi-CK in the subphase, as well as on (3) the initial surface pressure and (4) the phospholipid composition of the monolayer. In this experimental system Mi-CK was able to interact equally well with both inner and outer mitochondrial membranes.  相似文献   

13.
MgADP binding to mitochondrial creatine kinase (mtCK) adsorbed on liposomes was induced by the photorelease of caged ADP. The nucleotide binding produced two types of structural changes. One was related to the well-established release of mtCK from the liposomes. The other corresponded to reversible structural changes induced by nucleotide binding to mtCK as demonstrated here. Infrared spectroscopy data show that the MgADP-induced desorption of mtCK from vesicles led to a slight increase in &#102 -helix structures in mtCK at the expense of a small decrease in &#103 -sheet structures and a concomitant increase in the fluidity of the membranes. The desorption of mtCK induced by MgADP and MgATP was almost complete, as shown by centrifugation and enzymatic activity measurements. The photorelease of MgADP in a reactive medium containing phosphocreatine and mtCK associated with liposomes led to nucleotide binding and to the formation of MgATP and creatine. Addition of phosphocreatine also desorbed mtCK from liposomes, while addition of creatine did not. Interpretation of these results would suggest that ADP, ATP or phosphocreatine induce the release of mtCK from membranes, increase the phospholipid bilayer fluidity, and may also decrease the number of contact sites between inner and outer mitochondrial membranes, thus affecting the activity of other mitochondrial enzymes. It is tempting to propose that membrane mtCK binding regulation by nucleotide and PCr concentrations may serve as a physiological adaptation for energy supply.  相似文献   

14.
It was found that in the octameric form of mitochondrial creatine kinase (Mr = 340 kD), only 52% of active centers bind Mg-ADP into a E-Mg-ADP-creatine complex with the dissociation constant, K(Cr)ADP, of 0.105 mM, which is close to the Km value for the enzyme (0.072 mM). In the dimeric form of cytoplasmic creatine kinase (Mr = 82 kD), 100% of active centers bind Mg--ADP; the K(Cr)ADP value (0.11 mM) is close to the Km value for the given enzyme preparation (0.083 mM). All active centers of rabbit muscle cytoplasmic creatine kinase were shown to form an analog of the transition state complex (ATSC) - E-Mg-ADP-NO3- -creatine. The constant for Mg-ADP dissociation from ATSC is identical for all centers of cytoplasmic creatine kinase and equals to 6.0 microM. The curves for ATSC saturation with Mg-ADP in the presence of iodacetamide for mitochondrial creatine kinase were constructed and computer analyzed. It was shown that in the octameric form of the enzyme only 54 +/- 13% of subunits can form ATSC. The constant for Mg-ADP dissociation from ATSC, KATSCADP is equal to 1.9 +/- 0.8 microM. It was concluded that 50% of subunits of the octameric form of mitochondrial creatine kinase are not involved in the catalytic act due to masking of their active centres and their inability to form transition state complexes. A model of regulation of cell supply with high energy compounds, e.g., ATP, creatine phosphate, via association-dissociation of mitochondrial creatine kinase oligomers is proposed.  相似文献   

15.
Mitochondrial creatine kinase was purified from canine myocardium. The preparation exhibited a positively charged isoenzyme free of other creatine kinase isoenzymes and on sodium dodecyl sulfate gel exhibited a single protein band. Amino acid composition showed mitochondrial creatine kinase to be different from that of MM or BB creatine kinase and did not hybridize with the M or B subunits of the cytosolic forms. Antiserum was developed to mitochondrial creatine kinase which did not cross-react with cytosolic creatine kinases. Antiserum to cytosolic creatine kinase exhibited no reaction to mitochondrial creatine kinase. Utilizing the specific antiserum, a radioimmunoassay was developed for the specific detection of mitochondrial creatine kinase. Thus, mitochondrial creatine kinase was purified and shown to be comprised of a unique subunit which is biochemically and immunologically distinct from the cytosolic creatine kinases.  相似文献   

16.
The mitochondrial isoform of creatine kinase (Mi-CK, EC 2.7.3.2) purified to homogeneity from chicken cardiac muscle by the mild and efficient technique described in this article was greater than or equal to 99.5% pure and consisted of greater than or equal to 95% of a distinct, octameric Mi-CK protein species, with a Mr of 364,000 +/- 30,000 and an apparent subunit Mr of 42,000. The remaining 5% were dimeric Mi-CK with an apparent Mr of 86,000 +/- 8,000. Octamerization was not due to covalent linkages or intermolecular disulfide bonding. Upon dilution into buffers of low ionic strength and alkaline pH, octameric Mi-CK slowly dissociated in a time-dependent manner (weeks-months) into dimeric Mi-CK. However, the time scale of dimerization was reduced to minutes by the addition to diluted Mi-CK octamers of a mixture of Mg2+, ADP, creatine and nitrate known to induce a transition-state analogue complex (Milner-White, E.J., and Watts, D. C. (1971) Biochem. J. 122, 727-740). The conversion was fully reversible, and octamers were reformed by simple concentrations of Mi-CK dimer solutions to greater than or equal to 1 mg/ml at near neutral pH and physiological salt concentrations in the absence of adenine nucleotide. After separation of the two Mi-CK species by gel filtration, electron microscopic analysis revealed uniform square-shaped particles with a central negative-stain-filled cavity in the octamer fractions and "banana-shaped" structures in the dimer fractions. Mi-CK was localized inside the mitochondria by immunogold labeling with polyclonal antibodies. A dynamic model of the octamer-dimer equilibrium of Mi-CK and the preferential association of the octameric Mi-CK form with the inner mitochondrial membrane is discussed in the context of regulation of Mi-CK activity, mitochondrial respiration, and the CP shuttle.  相似文献   

17.
Granjon T  Vacheron MJ  Vial C  Buchet R 《Biochemistry》2001,40(20):6016-6026
Structural modifications induced by the binding of mitochondrial creatine kinase (mtCK) to saturated and unsaturated phospholipids were monitored by using Laurdan, a membrane probe sensitive to the polarity of the environment. The abrupt change characteristic of a phase transition of lipids alone was attenuated by addition of mtCK. Generalized polarization spectra indicated that mtCK surface binding changed the phospholipid liquid-crystalline state to a more rigid state. Infrared spectra of lipids further strengthened these results: upon mtCK binding, the phospholipid methylene chains had a more rigid conformation than that observed without mtCK at the same temperature. After mtCK binding to vesicles of perdeuterated dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine and nondeuterated dimyristoylphosphatidylglycerol, no lateral phase separation was observed, suggesting that both lipids were rigidified. Moreover, mtCK bound to liposomes exhibited an uncommon red edge excitation shift of 19 nm, while that of the soluble enzyme was only 6 nm. These results indicated that the environment of some mtCK tryptophan residues was motionally restricted. Strong stabilization of the enzyme structure against heat denaturation was observed upon lipid binding. In addition, lipids promoted a new reversible protein-protein or protein-lipid interaction, as evidenced by infrared data showing a slight modification of the beta sheet over alpha helix ratio with formation of a new 1632-cm(-)(1) beta sheet instead of the soluble protein 1636-cm(-)(1) one. Such modifications, inducing a decrease in the fluidity of the mitochondrial membranes, may play a role in vesicle aggregation; they could be implicated in the appearance of contact sites between internal and external mitochondrial membranes.  相似文献   

18.
Creatine kinase isoenzymes are very susceptible to free radical damage and are inactivated by superoxide radicals and peroxynitrite. In this study, we have analyzed the effects of peroxynitrite on enzymatic activity and octamer stability of the two human mitochondrial isoenzymes (ubiquitous mitochondrial creatine kinase (uMtCK) and sarcomeric mitochondrial creatine kinase (sMtCK)), as well as of chicken sMtCK, and identified the involved residues. Inactivation by peroxynitrite was concentration-dependent and similar for both types of MtCK isoenzymes. Because peroxynitrite did not lower the residual activity of a sMtCK mutant missing the active site cysteine (C278G), oxidation of this residue is sufficient to explain MtCK inactivation. Mass spectrometric analysis confirmed oxidation of Cys-278 and further revealed oxidation of the C-terminal Cys-358, possibly involved in MtCK/membrane interaction. Peroxynitrite also led to concentration-dependent dissociation of MtCK octamers into dimers. In this study, ubiquitous uMtCK was much more stable than sarcomeric sMtCK. Mass spectrometric analysis revealed chemical modifications in peptide Gly-263-Arg-271 located at the dimer/dimer interface, including oxidation of Met-267 and nitration of Trp-268 and/or Trp-264, the latter being a very critical residue for octamer stability. These data demonstrate that peroxynitrite affects the octameric state of MtCK and confirms human sMtCK as the generally more susceptible isoenzyme. The results provide a molecular explanation of how oxidative damage can lead to inactivation and decreased octamer/dimer ratio of MtCK, as seen in neurodegenerative diseases and heart pathology, respectively.  相似文献   

19.
In a recent study it has been shown that mitochondrial creatine kinase from chicken brain (Mia-CK) and heart (Mib-CK) are two distinct isoenzymes differing in ten out of the thirty N-terminal amino acids (Hossle, J.P., Schlegel, J., Wegmann, G., Wyss, M., B?hlen, P., Eppenberger, H.M., Wallimann, T., and Perriard J.C. (1988) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 151, 408-416). The present article describes the purification and biophysical characterization of the mitochondrial creatine kinase isoenzyme from chicken brain (Mia-CK). Gel permeation chromatography, direct mass measurements of individual molecules by scanning transmission electron microscopy, and analytical ultracentrifugation confirmed the existence of two different oligomeric forms, dimeric and octameric Mia-CK, with molecular masses of 85 kDa and 306-352 kDa and with sedimentation constants of 4.9-5.3 and 11.6-12.0 S, respectively. In addition, it was tested if Mia- and Mib-CK can form heterodimeric and heterooctameric molecules with subunits of other CK isoenzymes. By denaturation in urea or guanidine hydrochloride and subsequent renaturation, MiaMib-CK and surprisingly also MiaM-CK heterodimers could be generated. In contrast, no heterodimers were obtained between Mib- and M- or B-CK. Furthermore, reoctamerization of a mixture of Mia- and Mib-CK homodimers led to the formation of MiaMib-CK heterooctamers. In these heterooctamers, the Mia- and Mib-CK homodimers remained the fundamental building blocks. No subunit exchange between adjacent dimers within the heterooctamer could be observed even after storage for 3 months at 4 degrees C. The relevance of these data on the structural organization of the Mi-CK octamer and on the physiological aspects of tissue-specific isoenzyme expression are discussed.  相似文献   

20.
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