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1.
Flow dialysis measurements of calcium binding to bovine brain S100 alpha alpha, S100a (alpha beta), and S100b (beta beta) proteins in 20 mM Tris-HCl buffer at pH 7.5 and 8.3 revealed that S100 proteins bind specifically 4 Ca2+ eq/mol of protein dimer. The specific calcium-binding sites had, therefore, been assigned to typical amino acid sequences on the alpha and beta subunit. The protein affinity for calcium is much lower in the presence of magnesium and potassium. Potassium strongly antagonizes calcium binding on two calcium-binding sites responsible for most of the Ca2+-induced conformational changes on S100 proteins (probably site II alpha and site II beta). Zinc-binding studies in the absence of divalent cations revealed eight zinc-binding sites/mol of S100b protein dimer that we assumed to correspond to 4 zinc-binding sites/beta subunit. Zinc binding to S100b studied with UV spectroscopy methods showed that the occupation of the four higher affinity sites and the four lower affinity sites on the protein dimer were responsible for different conformational changes in S100b structure. Zinc binding on the higher affinity sites regulates calcium binding to S100b by increasing the protein affinity for calcium and decreasing the antagonistic effect of potassium on calcium binding. Zinc-binding studies on S100a and S100 alpha alpha protein showed that the Trp-containing S100 proteins bind zinc more weakly than S100b protein. Calcium-binding studies on zinc-bound S100a proved that calcium- and zinc-binding sites were distinct although there was no increase in zinc-bound S100a affinity for calcium, as in S100b protein. Finally we provide evidence that discrepancies between previously published results on the optical properties of S100b protein probably result from oxidation of the sulfhydryl groups in the protein.  相似文献   

2.
As an initial step in studies aimed at addressing the question of what common and unique features of the S100 family of proteins are related to their specific functions and localizations, a gene coding for one of the S100 proteins, S100 beta, has been prepared by ligation of 12 overlapping, synthetic oligonucleotides. Automated DNA sequence analysis demonstrated that the final construct has the expected structure. The gene was inserted into a plasmid vector that contains a tac promoter and ampicillin-resistance gene, thus allowing both amplification and direct expression cloning in Escherichia coli. The gene was designed to allow rapid, efficient changes of single or multiple amino acids by using cassette-based mutagenesis while the gene is resident in the vector. The expressed protein (VUSB-1) is indistinguishable from bovine brain S100 beta in terms of electrophoretic mobility, reactivity with antibodies to S100 beta, amino acid composition, and partial amino acid sequence analysis. Preparations of expressed protein are also functionally similar to bovine brain S100 beta as determined by aldolase activator activity and neurite extension factor activity, supporting the concept that these activities are a property of the S100 beta polypeptide.  相似文献   

3.
A partial amino acid sequence for bovine adipose tissue S100 was elucidated by characterization of peptides generated by cyanogen bromide cleavage. The cyanogen bromide peptides were aligned by homology with the bovine brain S100 beta sequence. The results demonstrate that adipose S100 beta is probably identical to brain S100 beta, and suggest that S100 beta is a conserved protein among tissues of the same species.  相似文献   

4.
A rat brain S100-binding protein, R40,000, has been isolated, characterized, and identified as fructose-1,6-bisphosphate aldolase. R40,000 was purified by ammonium sulfate precipitation, hydroxylapatite chromatography, dye-binding chromatography, and electroelution from sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels. Microsequence analysis of a fragment of R40,000 revealed a 15-residue amino acid sequence which shows a high degree of homology to the amino acid sequence of fructose-1,6-bisphosphate aldolase from rabbit muscle and rat liver. Further characterization demonstrated that R40,000 has an amino acid composition, subunit molecular weight, and cyanogen bromide map similar to aldolase. In addition, purified aldolase interacts with S100 alpha and S100 beta by gel overlay, and aldolase enzyme activity is stimulated 2-fold in vitro by S100 alpha and S100 beta. S100 interacts predominantly with the C or brain-specific form of the enzyme in gels and stimulates the activity of the C-enriched form of the enzyme in a calcium-dependent manner. Altogether, these data suggest that fructose-1,6-bisphosphate aldolase may be an intracellular target of S100 action in brain.  相似文献   

5.
We isolated a new calcium-binding protein from porcine cardiac muscle by calcium-dependent hydrophobic and dye-affinity chromatography. It showed an apparent molecular weight of 11,000 on SDS-PAGE. Amino acid sequence determination revealed that the protein contained two calcium-binding domains of the EF-hand motif. The cDNA gene coding for this protein was cloned from the porcine lung cDNA library. Sequence analysis of the cloned cDNA showed that the protein was composed of 99 amino acid residues and its molecular weight was estimated to be 11,179. Immunological and functional characterization showed that the recombinant S100C protein expressed in Escherichia coli was identical to the natural protein. Homologies to calpactin light chain, S100 alpha and beta protein were 41.1%, 40.9% and 37.5%, respectively. The protein was expressed at high levels in lung and kidney, and low levels in liver and brain. The tissue distribution was apparently different from those of the other S100 protein family. These results indicate that this protein represents a new member of the S100 protein family, and thus we refer to it as S100C protein.  相似文献   

6.
S100 protein, an acidic and calcium-binding protein, was believed to be localized in the nervous tissue, but recently it has been reported to be mainly present in the cardiac and the skeletal muscles of various mammals in the alpha alpha form (S100a0) at much higher levels than the nervous tissues. We isolated here S100 protein from human cardiac muscles. The isolated cardiac muscle S100 protein showed a single band on electrophoresis at the same position as that of human skeletal muscle S100a0. The amino acid composition of the purified S100 protein was quite similar to that of human skeletal muscle S100a0 or bovine brain S100a0. The immunohistochemical study by use of antibodies monospecific to the alpha subunit of S100 protein (S100-alpha) revealed that S100-alpha was strongly labeled in human myocardial cells, whereas the beta subunit of S100 protein (S100-beta) was not detected in the cells. These results suggest that a predominant form of S100 protein in human myocardial cells is not S100a (alpha beta) or S100b (beta beta), but S100a0 (alpha alpha). In order to determine the ultrastructural localization of S100a0 in mouse cardiac muscle, the direct peroxidase-labeled antibody method was employed. S100a0 was mainly localized in the polysomes in the interfibrillar spaces, the fine filamentous structure of the Z line and fascia adherens of the intercalated disc and in the lumen of junctional sarcoplasmic reticulum.  相似文献   

7.
The amino acid sequence of a novel G protein alpha subunit (Gx alpha) has been deduced from the nucleotide sequence of a human cDNA clone isolated from a differentiated HL-60 cDNA library. The cDNA encodes a polypeptide of 354 amino acids (Mr 40,519) which is closely related to Gi alpha proteins. The amino acid sequence homology between Gx alpha and human myeloid Gi alpha is 86% with 15 nonconservative substitutions. Gx alpha also shares 86% homology with both rat brain and mouse macrophage Gi alpha but is more homologous (94%) to bovine brain Gi alpha with only 5 nonconservative amino acid differences. G proteins previously termed Gi alpha may fall into at least two distinct groups, with one including human myeloid Gi alpha, rat brain Gi alpha and mouse macrophage Gi alpha; and other Gx alpha and bovine brain Gi alpha. One group probably contains true Gi and the other a new class of G protein whose function remains to be determined.  相似文献   

8.
Concentrations of alpha-S100 protein (S100ao or alpha alpha form, and S100a or alpha beta form) and beta-S100 protein (S100b or beta beta form, and S100a or alpha beta form) in various human tissues were determined by employing the enzyme immunoassay system specific to each subunit of bovine S-100 protein. Immunoreactive alpha-S100 protein was found in the heart and striated muscles at high levels of about or more than 1 microgram/mg soluble protein. Concentrations of beta-S100 protein in those tissues were low (less than 50 ng/mg protein). A considerable content of alpha-S100 protein was also found in the kidney and thyroid gland (about 160 and 100 ng/mg protein, respectively), where the beta-S100 content was less than 5 ng/mg protein. The immunoreactive alpha-S100 proteins in the extracts of heart, kidney and brain were eluted in the same fractions from a column of butyl-Sepharose and in the fractions corresponding to a molecular weight of approx. 20 000 from a column of Sephadex G-100. Both alpha-S100 and beta-S100 proteins were found at a relatively high concentration (100-250 ng/mg protein) in the skin and trachea. The alpha-S100 contents in the other peripheral organs, including gastrointestinal tract, lung, liver, spleen, urinary bladder, gall bladder, uterus, prostate and aorta, were low (less than 50 ng/mg protein). Since brains contain about 300 ng alpha-S100 protein/mg soluble protein, it can be concluded that alpha-S100 (or S-100ao) protein is mainly located in the heart and striated muscle tissues.  相似文献   

9.
A rapid separation method for bovine brain S100 alpha alpha, S100a, and S100b protein using fast protein liquid chromatography on a Mono Q column and its application in preparation of a large amount of S100 alpha alpha protein are described. The conformation of S100 alpha alpha in the metal-free forms as well as in the presence of calcium were studied by UV absorption, circular dichroism, intrinsic fluorescence, sulfhydryl reactivity, and interaction with a hydrophobic fluorescent probe. The alpha-subunit appears to have nearly identical conformation in S100 alpha alpha and S100a protein dimers. We also confirmed that only the alpha-subunit exposes hydrophobic domains to solvent in the presence of calcium and that cysteine residues exposed upon Ca2+ binding to S100 proteins correspond to Cys 85 alpha and Cys 84 beta. Incubation of S100a with calcium and KCl proved that calcium binding to the putative calcium-binding sites (site I alpha, I beta) triggers a time- and temperature-dependent conformational change in the protein structure which decreases the antagonistic effect of KCl on calcium binding to sites II alpha and II beta and provokes subunit exchanges between protein dimers and the emergence of S100 alpha alpha and S100b (beta beta) proteins. Dynamic fluorescence measurements showed that incubating calcium at high S100a protein concentrations (greater than 10(-5) M) induces an apparent slow dimer-monomer equilibrium which might result in total subunit dissociation at lower protein concentrations. The effect of acidic pH on subunit dissociation in S100a protein (Morero, R. D., and Weber, G. (1982) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 703, 231-240) arises from conformational changes in the protein structure that are similar to those induced by Ca2+ incubation.  相似文献   

10.
11.
When the concentrations of alpha-S100 (alpha subunit of S100 protein) and beta-S100 (beta subunit) proteins in various tissues of human and rat were determined by the immunoassay method, immunoreactive beta-S100 was present at high levels in the CNS, adipose tissue, and cartilaginous tissue. In contrast, the alpha-S100 was found in the heart and skeletal muscles at concentrations much higher than in the CNS. The concentration of alpha-S100 protein was also high in the heart and skeletal muscles of bovine, porcine, canine, and mouse. Since beta-S100 protein levels in those tissues were low, it was suggested that S100 protein in the muscle tissues is present mainly as the alpha alpha form (S100a0 protein). To confirm the above findings, immunoreactive alpha-S100 protein was purified from human pectoral muscle by employing column chromatographies with butyl-Sepharose, diethylaminoethyl (DEAE)-Sepharose, Sephadex G-75, and finally with an anion-exchange Mono Q column in a HPLC system. The elution profile of alpha-S100 protein from the Mono Q column suggested some heterogeneity of the final preparation. However, each of these fractions traveled with a single band at a position similar to that of bovine S100a0 protein on slab-gel electrophoresis. The amino acid composition of the final preparation was very similar to the composition of bovine S100a0 protein. The purified alpha-S100 protein was eluted from a gel-filtration column (Superose 12) in the same fraction as bovine S100a0 protein.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
We have cloned the cDNA for bovine intestinal vitamin D-dependent calcium-binding protein and, based on the sequence of the DNA, have deduced the structure of the full-length protein. The sequence of the cDNA clone predicts a protein comprised of 78 amino acids with a mol wt of 8788. The mRNA for the protein in bovine duodenum is about 500-600 bases in length. The protein sequence of bovine intestinal calcium-binding protein is 87% homologous with the sequence of porcine intestinal vitamin D-dependent calcium-binding protein and 81% homologous with the sequence of rat intestinal vitamin D-dependent calcium-binding protein. Hydrophilicity plots of the proteins noted above show that despite differences in amino acid sequence the proteins have similar patterns. In addition, the predicted secondary structure of the proteins is similar. Bovine intestinal calcium-binding protein shows 48.6% homology with the alpha-chain and 38.2% homology with the beta-chain of bovine S-100 protein and a similar high degree of homology with the beta-chain of human S-100 protein. The protein also demonstrates 36-43% homology with parvalbumin alpha and beta from various species and with troponin-C. There is some homology with the 28K vitamin D-dependent calcium-binding proteins. Vitamin D-dependent bovine intestinal calcium-binding protein is closely related to other mammalian intestinal calcium-binding proteins and to the S-100 proteins, parvalbumins, and troponin-C.  相似文献   

13.
Molecular cloning of cDNA of S100 alpha subunit mRNA   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The primary structure of the bovine S-100 alpha mRNA on the basis of molecular cloning and sequence analysis of the cDNA are described. The sequence is composed of 532 bp which include the 282 bp of the complete coding region, 89 bp at the 5'-noncoding region, 161 bp at the 3'-noncoding region, polyadenylation signal, ATTAAA and poly(A) tail. Northern blot analysis shows that the size of S-100 alpha mRNA is about 700-800 bases long and a single mRNA occurs in bovine brain. Bovine brain contains both S100 alpha and beta subunits and their mRNAs. In contrast, the rat brain contains only S100 beta subunit and its mRNA.  相似文献   

14.
Neff S  Mason PW  Baxt B 《Journal of virology》2000,74(16):7298-7306
We have previously reported that Foot-and-mouth disease virus (FMDV), which is virulent for cattle and swine, can utilize the integrin alpha(v)beta(3) as a receptor on cultured cells. Since those studies were performed with the human integrin, we have molecularly cloned the bovine homolog of the integrin alpha(v)beta(3) and have compared the two receptors for utilization by FMDV. Both the alpha(v) and beta(3) subunits of the bovine integrin have high degrees of amino acid sequence similarity to their corresponding human subunits in the ectodomains (96%) and essentially identical transmembrane and cytoplasmic domains. Within the putative ligand-binding domains, the bovine and human alpha(v) subunits have a 98.8% amino acid sequence similarity while there is only a 93% similarity between the beta(3) subunits of these two species. COS cell cultures, which are not susceptible to FMDV infection, become susceptible if cotransfected with alpha(v) and beta(3) subunit cDNAs from a bovine or human source. Cultures cotransfected with the bovine alpha(v)beta(3) subunit cDNAs and infected with FMDV synthesize greater amounts of viral proteins than do infected cultures cotransfected with the human integrin subunits. Cells cotransfected with a bovine alpha(v) subunit and a human beta(3) subunit synthesize viral proteins at levels equivalent to those in cells expressing both human subunits. However, cells cotransfected with the human alpha(v) and the bovine beta(3) subunits synthesize amounts of viral proteins equivalent to those in cells expressing both bovine subunits, indicating that the bovine beta(3) subunit is responsible for the increased effectiveness of this receptor. By engineering chimeric bovine-human beta(3) subunits, we have shown that this increase in receptor efficiency is due to sequences encoding the C-terminal one-third of the subunit ectodomain, which contains a highly structured cysteine-rich repeat region. We postulate that amino acid sequence differences within this region may be responsible for structural differences between the human and bovine beta(3) subunit, leading to more efficient utilization of the bovine receptor by this bovine pathogen.  相似文献   

15.
We purified to homogeneity rat brain S100b protein, which constitutes about 90% of the soluble S100 protein fraction. Purified rat S100b protein comigrates with bovine S100b protein in nondenaturant system electrophoresis but differs in its amino acid composition and in its electrophoretic mobility in urea-sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel with bovine S100b protein. The properties of the Ca2+ and Zn2+ binding sites on rat S100b protein were investigated by flow dialysis and by fluorometric titration, and the conformation of rat S100b in its metal-free form as well as in the presence of Ca2+ or Zn2+ was studied. The results were compared with those obtained for the bovine S100b protein. In the absence of KCl, rat brain S100b protein is characterized by two high-affinity Ca2+ binding sites with a KD of 2 X 10(-5) M and four lower affinity sites with KD about 10(-4) M. The calcium binding properties of rat S100b protein differ from bovine S100b only by the number of low-affinity calcium binding sites whereas similar Ca2+-induced conformational changes were observed for both proteins. In the presence of 120 mM KCl rat brain S100b protein bound two Zn2+-ions/mol of protein with a KD of 10(-7) M and four other with lower affinity (KD approximately equal to 10(-6) M). The occupancy of the two high-affinity Zn2+ binding sites was responsible for most of the Zn2+-induced conformational changes in the rat S100b protein. No increase in the tyrosine fluorescence quantum yield after Zn2+ binding to rat S100b was observed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
The EF-hand calcium-binding protein S100B has been shown to interact in vitro in a calcium-sensitive manner with many substrates. These potential S100B target proteins have been screened for the preservation of a previously identified consensus sequence across species. The results were compared to known structural and in vitro properties of the proteins to rationalize choices for potential binding partners. Our approach uncovered four oligomeric proteins tubulin (alpha and beta), glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), desmin, and vimentin that have conserved regions matching the consensus sequence. In the type III intermediate filament proteins (GFAP, vimentin, and desmin), this region corresponds to a portion of a coiled-coil (helix 2A), the structural element responsible for their assembly. In tubulin, the sequence matches correspond to regions of alpha and beta tubulin found at the alpha beta tubulin interface. In both cases, these consensus sequence matches provide a logical explanation for in vitro observations that S100B is able to inhibit oligomerization of these proteins.  相似文献   

17.
Phosphatidylethanolamine synthesis through the phosphatidylserine (PtdSer) decarboxylation pathway requires PtdSer transport from the endoplasmic reticulum or mitochondrial-associated membrane to the mitochondrial inner membrane in mammalian cells. The transport-dependent PtdSer decarboxylation in permeabilized Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells was enhanced by cytosolic factors from bovine brain. A cytosolic protein factor exhibiting this enhancing activity was purified, and its amino acid sequence was partially determined. The sequence was identical to part of the amino acid sequence of an EF-hand type calcium-binding protein, S100B. A His(6)-tagged recombinant CHO S100B protein was able to remarkably enhance the transport-dependent PtdSer decarboxylation in permeabilized CHO cells. Under the standard assay conditions for PtdSer decarboxylase, the recombinant S100B protein did not stimulate PtdSer decarboxylase activity and exhibited no PtdSer decarboxylase activity. These results implicated the S100B protein in the transport of PtdSer to the mitochondrial inner membrane.  相似文献   

18.
19.
Bovine S100 G (calbindin D9k, small Ca2+-binding protein of the EF-hand superfamily) is considered as a calcium buffer protein; i.e., the binding of Ca2+ practically does not change its general conformation. A set of experimental approaches has been used to study structural properties of apo- and Ca2+-loaded forms of mouse S100 G (81.4% identity in amino acid sequence with bovine S100 G). This analysis revealed that, in contrast to bovine S100 G, the removal of calcium ions increases α-helices content of mouse S100 G protein and enhances its accessibility to digestion by α-chymotrypsin. Furthermore, mouse apo-S100 G is characterized by a decreased surface hydrophobicity and reduced tendency for oligomerization. Such behavior is typical of calcium sensor proteins. Apo-state of mouse S100 G still has rather compact structure, which can be cooperatively unfolded by temperature and GdnHCl. Computational analysis of amino acid sequences of S100 G proteins shows that these proteins could be in a disordered state upon a removal of the bound calcium ions. The experimental data show that, although mouse apo-S100 G is flexible compared to the Ca2+-loaded state, the apo-form is not completely disordered and preserves some cooperatively meting structure. The origin of the unexpectedly high stability of mouse S100 G can be rationalized by an exceptionally strong association of its N- and C-terminal parts containing the EF-hands I and II, respectively.  相似文献   

20.
Abstract: The tryptophan-containing subunit (α-subunit) of bovine brain S-100 protein was purified from a S -aminoethyl derivative of S-100a protein, and its amino acid sequence was determined. The α-subunit contained 93 residues, including one tryptophan, and had a molecular weight of 10,400. The sequence shows an extensive homology (58% identity) to the sequence of another "tryptophan-free" subunit (β-subunit) found in both S-100a and S-100b protein, and has a calcium binding site characteristic of the "E-F hand" proteins, such as calmodulin or troponin C. The tryptophan residue is located at position 90 which is presumably adjacent to the C-terminal end of the α-helix following the calcium binding loop, and thus appears likely to serve as a specific probe in structure-function studies of S-100a protein.  相似文献   

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