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1.
The aqueous solution conformation of adenosine 2':3'-monophosphate at pH 2.5 has been determined by a nuclear magnetic resonance method utilizing lanthanide ions as shift and relaxation probes. The ribose conformation is best described as a rapid equilibrium of 2'-endo(3'-exo) and 3'-endo(2'-exo) conformations in a ratio of approximately 2 to 1. The orientation of the base relative to ribose is restricted to a narrow range about chiCN=-70 degrees.  相似文献   

2.
The conformation and dynamics of the deoxyribose rings of a (nogalamycin)2-d(5'-GCATGC)2 complex have been determined from an analysis of 1H-1H vicinal coupling constants and sums of coupling constants (J1'-2',J1'-2",epsilon 1', epsilon 2' and epsilon 2") measured from one-dimensional n.m.r. spectra and from H-1'-H-2' and H-1'-H-2" cross-peaks in high-resolution phase-sensitive two-dimensional correlation spectroscopy (COSY) and double-quantum-filtered correlation spectroscopy (DQF-COSY) experiments. The value of J3'-4' has also been estimated from the magnitude of H-3'-H-4' cross-peaks in DQF-COSY spectra and H-1'-H-4' coherence transfer cross-peaks in two-dimensional homonuclear Hartman-Hahn spectroscopy (HOHAHA) spectra. The data were analysed, in terms of a dynamic equilibrium between North (C-3'-endo) and South (C-2'-endo) conformers, by using the graphical-analysis methods described by Rinkel & Altona [(1987) J. Biomol. Struct. Dyn. 4,621-649]. The data reveal that the sugars of the 2C-5G and 3A-4T base-pairs, which form the drug-intercalation site, have strikingly different properties. The deoxyribose rings of the 2C-5G base-pair are best described in terms of an equilibrium heavily weighted in favour of the C-2'-endo geometry (greater than 95% 'S'), with a phase angle, P, lying in the range 170-175 degrees and amplitude of pucker between 35 and 40 degrees, as typically found for B-DNA. For the deoxyribose rings of the 3A-4T base-pair, however, the analysis shows that, for 3A, the C-2'-endo and C3'-endo conformers are equally populated, whereas a more limited data set for the 4T nucleotide restricts the equilibrium to within 65-75% C-2'-endo. The deoxyribose rings of the 1G-6C base-pair have populations of 70-80% C-2'-endo, typical of nucleotides at the ends of a duplex. Although drug-base-pair stacking interactions are an important determinant of the enhanced duplex stability of the complex [Searle, Hall, Denny, & Wakelin (1988) Biochemistry 27, 4340-4349], the current findings make it clear that the same interactions can be associated with considerable variations in the degree of local structural dynamics at the level of the sugar puckers.  相似文献   

3.
An empirical force field, denoted AMB99C, has been used to study molecular properties of alpha-(1-->4)-linked carbohydrates in solution. AMB99C was parameterized using structural and energetic parameters from density functional ab initio methodology. In this work we examine the solution behavior of the beta anomer of maltose and cyclohexa-, cyclohepta-, and cyclooctaamyloses (alpha-, beta-, and gamma-cyclodextrins or alpha-, beta-, and gamma-CDs, respectively), as well as of two larger (DP 10, epsilon-CD; DP 21) cyclomaltooligosaccharides, CA10 and CA21. Experimental data used for comparison purposes include X-ray structures, small-angle scattering radius of gyration values, NMR nuclear Overhauser enhancements (NOEs), and proton coupling constants. Molecular dynamics simulations were carried out using explicit water molecules (TIP3P) to establish equilibrium populations of conformations in solution, and these results are compared with other calculated values and a variety of experimental parameters, such as average H-1-H-4' distances between the rings in beta-maltose, and the primary hydroxyl groups' conformational populations. Medium-to-large cyclomaltooligosaccharide molecules were studied to test for glucose ring puckering and stability of kinked and 'flipped' conformations. The results of the solvation studies are in excellent agreement with experimental structural parameters.  相似文献   

4.
R V Hosur  K V Chary  A Saran  G Govil  H T Miles 《Biopolymers》1990,29(6-7):953-959
Homonuclear two-dimensional (J, delta) proton spectroscopy has been suggested as a method for the measurement of 1H-31P coupling constants in oligonucleotides. The technique has been applied to a dinucleoside monophosphate G2'p5'C and a deoxydecanucleotide d(ACATCGATGT). PCILO energy calculations have been carried out to find minimum energy conformations with respect to the DNA backbone torsion angle epsilon, and these have been considered for the interpretation of the observed H3'-31P coupling constants in oligonucleotides.  相似文献   

5.
The conformation of cyclic 3′,5′-adenosine monophosphate in deuterium oxide has been determined at pH 2.0 and pH 5.5, using lanthanide ions as paramagnetic nuclear magnetic resonance probes.The lanthanide ion-induced shifts in the nuclear magnetic resonance energy for a given nucleus are dependent on the geometric position of that nucleus relative to the bound lanthanide ion. As expected, these shifts are pseudocontact in origin and are consistent with axial symmetry. Analysis of the concentration dependence of the shift shows that the lanthanide ion is bound to the phosphate entity giving a 1:1 complex. Further, base stacking and other intermolecular interactions are negligible.To confirm the conformation, which is found from a computer search with the above shift data, we have measured the changes in relaxation times, T1 and T2, induced by binding of Gd3+. The geometric dependence of these relaxation effects is different from that of shifts, being dependent only on distance. The agreement of these data with the computer “shift” conformation is satisfactory.Some 31P nuclear magnetic resonance experiments were done to confirm the metal co-ordination position although, here, there are contact contributions to both shift and relaxation.The computer program finds the conformations that have the correct geometry to account for the shift data, by searching all possible conformations. Non-bond rotations were used as a method of changing the pucker of the phosphate and ribose rings, the position of the base being defined by a single bond rotation. The nuclear magnetic resonance data and minimum van der Waals' distances were used as “active filters” in the computer search.At both values of the pH we have found closely related families of solutions, with the pucker of the phosphate and ribose rings roughly similar to those in an approximate X-ray study of cyclic AMP. The orientation of the base varies with pH.  相似文献   

6.
The concentration dependence of the chemical shifts of the protons H-2, H-8 and H-1' for 2'-, 3'- and 5'-AMP2- and of the protons H-2, H-7, H-8 and H-1' for tubercidin 5'-monophosphate (= 7-deaza-AMP2-; TuMP2-) has been measured in D2O at 27 degrees C to elucidate the self-association of the nucleoside monophosphates (NMPs). The results are consistent with the isodesmic model of indefinite non-cooperative stacking; the association constants for all four NMPs are very similar: K approximately 2 M-1. These 1H-NMR measurements and those on the dependence of the chemical shifts on the pD of the solutions indicate that the NMP2- species exist predominately in the anti conformation. Comparison of the shift data for 5'-TuMP and 5'-AMP shows that no hydrogen bonding between N-7 and -PO3H- occurs; hence, the previously observed and confirmed 'wrongway' chemical shift [Martin, R. B. (1985) Acc. Chem. Res 18, 32] connected with the deprotonation of the -PO3H- group most probably results from the anisotropic properties of the phosphate group which is in the anti conformation close to N-7. From the dependence between the chemical shift and the pD of the solutions the acidity constants were calculated for the four protonated NMPs, and for adenosine and D-ribose 5'-monophosphate. The measurements also allow an estimation of the first acidity constant of H3(5'-AMP)+ (pKDD3(AMP) = 0.9 and pKHH3(AMP) = 0.4). The values for pKHH2(NMP) and pKHH(NMP) were also determined from potentiometric pH titrations in aqueous solution (I = 0.1 M, NaNO3; 25 degrees C). The agreement of the results obtained by the two methods is excellent. The position of the phosphate group at the ribose moiety and the presence of N-7 in the base moiety influence somewhat the acid-base properties of the mentioned NMPs. Measurements with 5'-AMP in 50% (v/v) aqueous dioxane show that lowering of the solvent polarity facilitates removal of the proton from the H+(N-1) site while the -PO2-3 group becomes more basic; this increases the pH range in which the monoprotonated H(5'-AMP)- species is stable and which is now also extended into the physiological pH region. Some consequences of this observation for biological systems are indicated.  相似文献   

7.
H A Tajmir-Riahi 《Biopolymers》1991,31(9):1065-1075
The interaction of the La (III) and Tb (III) ions with adenosine-5'-monophosphate (5'-AMP), guanosine-5'-monophosphate (5'-GMP), and 2'-deoxyguanosine-5'-monophosphate (5'-dGMP) anions with metal/nucleotide ratios of 1 and 2 has been studied in aqueous solution in acidic and neutral pHs. The solid complexes were isolated and characterized by Fourier transform ir and 1H-nmr spectroscopy. The lanthanide (III)-nucleotide complexes are polymeric in nature both in the solid and aqueous solutions. In the metal-nucleotide complexes isolated from acidic solution, the nucleotide binding is via the phosphate group (inner sphere) and an indirect metal-N-7 interaction (outer-sphere) with the adenine N-1 site protonated. In the complexes obtained from neutral solution, metal chelation through the N-7 and the PO3(2-) group is prevailing. In aqueous solution, an equilibrium between the inner and outer sphere metal-nucleotide interaction has been observed. The ribose moiety shows C2'-endo/anti pucker in the free AMP anion and in the lanthanide (III)-AMP complexes, whereas the GMP anion with C2'-endo/anti sugar conformation exhibits a mixture of the C2'-endo/anti and C3'-endo/anti sugar puckers in the lanthanide (III)-GMP salts. The deoxyribose has O4'-endo/anti sugar pucker in the free dGMP anion and a C3'-endo/anti, in the lanthanide (III)-dGMP complexes.  相似文献   

8.
S Yokoyama  F Inagaki  T Miyazawa 《Biochemistry》1981,20(10):2981-2988
An advanced method was developed for lanthanide-probe analyses of the conformations of flexible biomolecules such as nucleotides. The new method is to determine structure parameters (such as internal-rotation angles) and population parameters for local conformational equilibria of flexible sites, together with standard deviations of these parameters. As the prominent advantage of this method, the interrelations among local conformations of flexible sites may be quantitatively elucidated from the experimental data of lanthanide-induced shifts and relaxations and vicinal coupling constants. As a structural unit of ribonucleic acids, the molecular conformations and conformational equilibria of uridine 3'-monophosphate in aqueous solution were analyzed. The stable local conformers about the C3'-O3' bond are the G+ (phi' = 281 +/- 11 degrees) and G- (phi' = 211 +/- 8 degrees) forms. The internal rotation about the C3'-O3' bond and the ribose-ring puckering are interrelated; 97 +/- 5% of the C3'-endo ribose ring is associated with the G- form while 70 +/- 22% o the C2'-endo ribose ring is associated with the G+ form. An interdependency also exists between the internal rotation about the C4'-C5' bond and the ribose-ring puckering. These short-range conformational interrelations are probably important in controlling the dynamic aspects of ribonucleic acid structures.  相似文献   

9.
Conformational properties of branched RNA fragments in aqueous solution   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
M J Damha  K K Ogilvie 《Biochemistry》1988,27(17):6403-6416
The conformational properties of branched trinucleoside diphosphates ACC, ACG, AGC, AGG, AUU, AGU, AUG, ATT, GUU, and aAUU [XYZ = X(2'p5'Y)3'p5'Z] have been studied in aqueous solution by nuclear magnetic resonance (1H, 13C), ultraviolet absorption, and circular dichroism. It is concluded from these studies that the purine ring of the central residue (X; e.g., adenosine) forms a base-base stack exclusively with the purine or pyrimidine ring of the 2'-nucleotidyl unit (Y; 2'-residue). The residue attached to the central nucleoside via the 3'-5'-linkage (Z; 3'-residue) is "free" from the influence of the other two heterocyclic rings. The ribose rings of the central nucleoside and the 2'- and 3'-residues exist as equilibrium mixtures of C2'-endo (2E)-C3'-endo (3E) conformers. The furanose ring of the central nucleoside (e.g., A) when linked to a pyrimidine nucleoside via the 2'-5'-linkage shows a higher preference for the 2E pucker conformation (e.g., AUG, AUU, ACG, ca. 80%) than those linked to a guanosine nucleoside through the same type of bond (AGU, AGG, AGC, ca. 70%). This indicates some correlation between nucleotide sequence and ribose conformational equilibrium. The 2E-3E equilibrium of 2'-pyrimidines (Y) shows significant, sometimes exclusive, preference (70-100%) for the 3E conformation; 3'-pyrimidines and 2'-guanosines have nearly equal 2E and 3E rotamer populations; and the ribose conformational equilibrium of 3'-guanosines shows a preference (60-65%) for the 2E pucker. Conformational properties were quantitatively evaluated for most of the bonds (C4'-C5', C5'-O5', C2'-O2', and C3'-O3') in the branched "trinucleotides" AUU and AGG by analysis of 1H-1H, 1H-31P, and 13C-31P coupling constants. The C4'-C5' bond of the adenosine units shows a significant preference for the gamma + conformation. The dominant conformation about C4'-C5' and C5'-O5' for the 2'-and 3'-nucleotidyl units is gamma + and beta t, respectively, with larger gamma + and beta t rotamer populations for the 2'-unit. The increased conformational purity in the 2'-residue, compared to the 3'-residue, is ascribed to the presence of an ordered (adenine----2'-residue) stacked state. The favored rotamers about C3'-O3' and C2'-O2' are epsilon- and epsilon'-, respectively. The conformational features of AUU and AGG were compared to those of their constitutive dimers A3'p5'G, A2'p5'G, A3'p5'U, and A2'p5'U and monomers 5'pG and 5'pU.  相似文献   

10.
1H NMR data of a series of thyroid hormone analogues, e.g., thyroxine (T4), 3,5,3'-triiodothyronine (T3), 3,3',5'-triiodothyronine (rT3), 3,3'-diiodothyronine (3,3'-T2), 3,5-diiodothyronine (3,5-T2), 3',5'-diiodothyronine (3',5'-T2), 3-monoidothyronine (3-T1), 3'-monoiodothyronine (3'-T1), and thyronine (TO) in dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO) have been obtained on a 300 MHz spectrometer. The chemical shift and coupling constant are determined and tabulated for each aromatic proton. The inner tyrosyl ring protons in T4, T3, and 3,5-T2 have downfield chemical shifts with respect to those of the outer phenolic ring protons. Four-bond cross-ring coupling has been observed in all the monoiodinated rings. However, this long-range coupling does not exist in T4, diiodinated on both rings, and T0, containing no iodines on the rings. There is no evidence that at 30 degrees C these iodothyronines have any motional constraint in DMSO solution. In addition to identification of the hormones, the potential use of some characteristic peaks as probes in binding studies is discussed.  相似文献   

11.
Free-radical reactions induced by OH-radical attack on cytosine-related compounds were investigated by a method combining ESR, spin trapping with 2-methyl-2-nitrosopropane and high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). Cytidine, 2'-deoxycytidine, cytidine 3'-monophosphate, cytidine 5'-monophosphate, 2'-deoxycytidine 5'-monophosphate and their derivatives, of which 5,6-protons at the base moiety were replaced by deuterons, and polycytidylic acid (poly(C] were employed as samples. OH radicals were generated by X-irradiating an N2O-saturated aqueous solution. Five spin adducts were separated by HPLC. Examination of them by ESR spectroscopy and UV photospectrometry showed that spin adducts assigned to C5 and C6 radicals due to OH addition to the 5,6 double-bond, a deaminated form of the spin adduct derived from a C5 radical due to the cyclization reaction between C5' of the sugar and C6 of the base, and a spin adduct assigned to the C4' radical due to H abstraction by OH radicals were produced. From these results the sites of OH-radical attack and the subsequent radical reactions in cytosine-related compounds were clarified.  相似文献   

12.
In the present study, the conformational behaviour of methylated pectic disaccharide 4-O-alpha-D-galactopyranurosyl 1-O-methyl-alpha-D-galactopyranuronic 6,6'-dimethyl diester 1 has been completely characterized through combined n.m.r. and molecular modelling studies. The 1H-1H n.O.e. across the glycosidic bond was measured by both steady-state and transient 1D and 2D experiments. In parallel, the complete conformational analysis of the disaccharide has been achieved with the MM3 molecular mechanics method. The conformation of the pyranose ring is confirmed by the excellent agreement between the experimental and calculated intracyclic scalar coupling constants. The iso-energy contours displayed on the 'relaxed' map indicate an important flexibility about the glycosidic linkage. There is no significant influence of the methoxyl group on the conformational behaviour of the disaccharide. The theoretical n.m.r. data were calculated taking into account all the accessible conformations and using the averaging methods appropriate for slow internal motions. 3JC-H coupling constants were calculated using an equation suitable for C-O-C-H segments. The agreement between experimental and theoretical data is excellent. Within the potential energy surface calculated for the disaccharide, several conformers can be identified. When these conformations are extrapolated to a regular polymer structure, they generate pectins with right- and left-handed chirality along with a two-fold helix. These different types of helical structure are the result of small changes in conformation, without any drastic variation of the fibre repeat.  相似文献   

13.
The conformation in solution of alpha-D-glucopyranosyl alpha-D-glucopyranoside (alpha,alpha-trehalose, 1), alpha-D-glucopyranosyl alpha-D-mannopyranoside (3) and their corresponding 1-thioglycosyl analogs, alpha-D-glucopyranosyl 1-thio-alpha-D-glucopyranoside (1-thio-alpha,alpha-trehalose, 2) and alpha-D-glucopyranosyl 1-thio-alpha-D-mannopyranoside (4) were established from high-resolution 1H-NMR and 13C-NMR measurements. These experimental results are in good agreement with the conformations as inferred from hard-sphere calculations. The dihedral angles phi H and psi H are not significantly different for the O-glycosyl disaccharides 1 and 3 compared with their 1-thioglycosyl analogs 2 and 4; however, the internuclear H-1--H-1' and H-1--H-5' distances appear to be longer for 1-thiodisaccharides. This may account for the differences in affinities of cockchafer trehalase which have been observed. This enzyme exhibits less affinity for the competitive inhibitor alpha-D-glucopyranosyl 1-thio-alpha-D-mannopyranoside (4) than for its O-glycosyl analog 3 (Ki 0.055 mM versus 0.0057 mM). From the similarity in Ki between 1-thio-alpha, alpha-trehalose and alpha-D-glucopyranosyl 1-thio-alpha-D-mannopyranoside (0.050 mM versus 0.055 mM), it is possible to assume a similar decrease in the enzymic affinity between the natural substrate (1) and the corresponding 1-thioglycosyl inhibitor (2), which can together be ascribed to the aforementioned difference in the conformation of the molecules.  相似文献   

14.
A graphical method is presented for the conformational analysis of the sugar ring in DNA fragments by means of proton-proton couplings. The coupling data required for this analysis consist of sums of couplings, which are referred to as sigma 1' (= J1'2' + J1'2'), sigma 2' (= J1'2' + J2'3' + J2'2'), sigma 2' (= J1'2' + J2'3' + J2'2') and sigma 3' (= J2'3' + J2'3' + J3'4'). These sums of couplings correspond to the distance between the outer peaks of the H1', H2', H2' and H3' [31P] resonances, respectively, (except for sigma 2' and sigma 2' in the case of a small chemical shift difference between the H2' and H2' resonances) and can often be obtained from 1H-NMR spectra via first-order measurement, obviating the necessity of a computer-assisted simulation of the fine structure of these resonances. Two different types of graphs for the interpretation of the coupling data are discussed: the first type of graph serves to probe as to whether or not the sugar ring occurs as a single conformer, and if so to analyze the coupling data in terms of the geometry of this sugar ring. In cases where the sugar ring does not occur as a single conformer, but as a blend of N- and S-type sugar puckers, the second type of graph is used to analyze the coupling data in terms of the geometry and population of the most abundant form. It is shown that the latter type of analysis can be carried out on the basis of experimental values for merely sigma 1',sigma 2' and sigma 2', without any assumptions or restrictions concerning a relation between the geometry of the N- and S-type conformer. In addition, the question is discussed as to how insight can be gained into the conformational purity of the sugar ring from the observed fine structure of the H1' resonance. Finally, a comparison is made between experimental coupling data reported for single-stranded and duplex DNA fragments and covalent RNA-DNA hybrids on the one hand and the predicted couplings and sums of couplings presented in this paper on the other hand.  相似文献   

15.
All H,H, H,P and several C,P coupling constants, including those between C-4' and the vicinal phosphorus atom, have been determined for NADP+, NADPH coenzymes and for a 4,4-dimer obtained from one-electron electrochemical reduction of NADP+. From these data the preferred conformation of the ribose, that of the 1,4-dihydronicotinamide rings, and the conformation about bonds C(4')-C(5') and C(5')-O(5') were deduced. The preferred form of the 1,4- and 1,6-dihydropyridine rings and the conformation about the ring-ring junction were also obtained for all the other 4,4- and 4,6-dimers formed in the same reduction. All the dimers show a puckered structure, i.e., a boat form for the 1,4- and a twist-boat for the 1,6-dihydronicotinamide ring; both protons at the ring-ring junctions are equatorial and have preferred gauche orientation. On the contrary, the reduced coenzyme NADPH displays a planar or highly flexible conformation, rapidly flipping between two limiting boat structures. The conformation of the ribose rings, already suggested for the NADP coenzymes to be an equilibrium mixture of C(2')-endo (S-type) and C(3')-endo (N-type) puckering modes, has been reexamined by using the Altona procedure and the relative proportion of the two modes has been obtained. The S and N families of conformers have almost equal population for the adenine-ribose, whereas for the nicotinamide-ribose rings the S-type reaches the 90%. The rotation about the ester bond C(5')-O(5') and about C(4')-C(5'), defined by torsion angles beta and gamma respectively, displays a constant high preference for the trans conformer beta t (75-80%), whereas the rotamers gamma are spread out in a range of different populations. The values are distributed between the gauche gamma + (48-69%) and the trans gamma t forms (28-73%). The gamma + conformer reaches a 90% value in the case of NADP+ and NMN+. The conformations of the mononucleotides 5'-AMP, NMN+ and NMNH were also calculated from the experimental coupling constant values of the literature.  相似文献   

16.
Two conformations adopted by the tetranucleoside triphosphate d(TCGA) in aqueous solution are in slow-exchange equilibrium on the NMR time scale. 1H and 31P NMR spectra obtained at temperatures below 25 degrees C contain two sets of signals that vary in relative proportions with changing temperature. High-field NMR techniques allow the conformations of these species to be examined. Both forms are right-handed double-helical structures, and their interconversion does not involve a single-stranded species since transfer of saturation is observed between corresponding imino protons held in the base pairs of each duplex. The form that predominates at higher temperatures resembles B-DNA, but the other, while of similar conformation at the ends of the molecule, is distorted at the C-G step. Shearing at the center of the duplex results in interstrand stacking of the two cytosines in a way that is reminiscent of Z-DNA. Distances between nonexchangeable protons in this model are consistent with nuclear Overhauser effects observed for resonances of the low-temperature form, while the 1H NMR spectrum shows cytidine H-2' resonances at unusually high field. The relative stabilities of the two forms are discussed in terms of base stacking and hydration, but the origin of the high activation energy for interconversion implicit in the slow-exchange rate is unclear. The conformation of the low-temperature form may represent a sequence-dependent structural feature important in natural DNA, although somewhat fortuitously exemplified by this tetramer. The suggested involvement in correct nucleosome phasing of the pentamer d(TTCGA), present in some eukaryotic genes, is noted.  相似文献   

17.
Four n.m.r. methods that are especially useful for characterization of oligosaccharides are applied to the trisaccharide alpha-Neu5Ac-(2----3)-beta-Gal-(1----4)-Glc (1). Three of these are two-dimensional, heteronuclear methods that provide chemical-shift correlation maps having much higher sensitivity than was previously possible, because they rely on indirect observation of 13C via 1H detection. These methods are used to assign, completely, the 1H- and 13C-n.m.r. spectra of both anomers of the trisaccharide. In addition to these two-dimensional methods, a one-dimensional method is used to measure 1H-1H coupling-constants accurately within each sugar ring. The values of the coupling constants thus measured for 1 are evidence that the conformations of the individual sugar rings are not affected by linkage into the trisaccharide.  相似文献   

18.
W Lafuse  M Edidin 《Biochemistry》1980,19(1):49-54
The major histocompatibility complex of mice, the H-2 complex, regulates the steady-state level of adenosine cyclic 3',5'-monophosphate (cAMP) in liver. This effect of H-2 may be due to an effect on hormone binding to receptors. Here we show that liver membranes from animals of different H-2 types differ in their sensitivity to glucagon stimulation of adenylate cyclase and in the affinity of their receptors for glucagon. No H-2-associated differences are seen in basal, NaF-stimulated, or GMP-PNP-stimulated adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

19.
The conformation of d(A-T-G-G) and d(A-T-G-G)cisPt has been investigated by 1H-NMR at 500 MHz and 90 MHz under various experimental conditions of temperature and concentration. Analysis of the coupling constants between the deoxyribose protons shows that all the sugar rings of d(A-T-G-G) adopt the S(C2'-endo) conformation most of the time. By contrast, in the platinated tetramer, d(A-T-G-G)cisPt, the N(C3'-endo) conformation is highly predominant for the internal dG residue while the S(C2'-endo) conformation is largely favoured for the other residues as in the case of the unplatinated compound. The relaxation time and nuclear Overhauser effect measurements indicate that the orientation of the two guanines of d(A-T-G-G)cisPt is anti in agreement with the previous results obtained for the dimers: r(G-G)cisPt, d(G-G)cisPt. On lowering the temperature from 80 degrees C to 20 degrees C, several proton resonances of d(A-T-G-G)cisPt exhibit large chemical shift and linewidth variations. The most spectacular temperature effect was observed for the internal dG(H1') and dT(H4') protons. All the delta = f(t) curves display a sigmoid form with the same mid-point temperature of 44 +/- 2 degrees C. This mid-point temperature together with the observed chemical shift and linewidth variations were found to be independent of the d(A-T-G-G)cisPt concentration. These results suggest that d(A-T-G-G)cisPt can adopt two different conformations depending on the temperature. The enthalpy for the transition between the high and low temperature conformations is about 84 kJ/mol.  相似文献   

20.
The interactions of RNase A with cytidine 3'-monophosphate (3'-CMP) and deoxycytidyl-3',5'-deoxyadenosine (d(CpA)) were analyzed by X-ray crystallography. The 3'-CMP complex and the native structure were determined from trigonal crystals, and the d(CpA) complex from monoclinic crystals. The differences between the overall structures are concentrated in loop regions and are relatively small. The protein-inhibitor contacts are interpreted in terms of the catalytic mechanism. The general base His 12 interacts with the 2' oxygen, as does the electrostatic catalyst Lys 41. The general acid His 119 has 2 conformations (A and B) in the native structure and is found in, respectively, the A and the B conformation in the d(CpA) and the 3'-CMP complex. From the present structures and from a comparison with RNase T1, we propose that His 119 is active in the A conformation. The structure of the d(CpA) complex permits a detailed analysis of the downstream binding site, which includes His 119 and Asn 71. The comparison of the present RNase A structures with an inhibitor complex of RNase T1 shows that there are important similarities in the active sites of these 2 enzymes, despite the absence of any sequence homology. The water molecules were analyzed in order to identify conserved water sites. Seventeen water sites were found to be conserved in RNase A structures from 5 different space groups. It is proposed that 7 of those water molecules play a role in the binding of the N-terminal helix to the rest of the protein and in the stabilization of the active site.  相似文献   

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