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1.
Structure-function relationships for transferrins are discussed in the light of recent X-ray crystal structure determinations. A common folding pattern into two lobes, each comprising two domains is adopted; this allows the tight, but reversible binding of iron. Uptake and release of iron involve substantial domain movements which open and close the binding clefts. The iron binding sites are similar and the key role of the CO3(2-) anion bound with each Fe3+ can now be understood; structural differences near the iron binding sites suggest reasons for the different binding properties of serum transferrin and lactoferrin. The glycan moieties do not appear to affect the protein structure or metal binding properties; they are not clearly seen in the X-ray analyses but have been modelled. The accommodation of different metals and anions is illustrated by the crystal structures of Cu2+ and oxalate-substituted lactoferrins; Al3+ binding is of particular interest. New results on transferrin-receptor interactions with transferrin, and melanotransferrin and an invertebrate transferrin (both of which have defective C-terminal binding sites), emphasize possible functional differences between the two lobes. The availability of site-specific mutants of both transferrin and lactoferrin now offers the opportunity to probe the structural determinants of iron binding, iron release, and receptor binding.  相似文献   

2.
Lactoferrin and Iron: structural and dynamic aspects of binding and release   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0  
Lactoferrin (Lf) has long been recognized as a member of the transferrin family of proteins and an important regulator of the levels of free iron in the body fluids of mammals. Its ability to bind ferric iron with high affinity (KD approximately 10(-20) M) and to retain it to low pH gives the protein bacteriostatic and antioxidant properties. This ability can be well understood in terms of its three dimensional (3D) structure. The molecule is folded into two homologous lobes (N- and C-lobes) with each lobe binding a single Fe3+ ion in a deep cleft between two domains. The iron sites are highly conserved, and highly favorable for iron binding. Iron binding and release are associated with large conformational changes in which the protein adopts either open or closed states. Comparison of available apolactoferrin structures suggests that iron binding is dependent on the dynamics of the open state. What triggers release of the tightly bound iron, however, and why lactoferrin retains iron to much lower pH than its serum homologue, transferrin, has been the subject of much speculation. Comparisons of structural and functional data on lactoferrins and transferrins now suggest that the key factor comes from cooperative interactions between the two lobes of the molecule, mediated by two alpha-helices.  相似文献   

3.
Specific substrate-induced structural changes in the heme pocket are proposed for human cytochrome P450 aromatase (P450arom) which undergoes three consecutive oxygen activation steps. We have experimentally investigated this heme environment by resonance Raman spectra of both substrate-free and substrate-bound forms of the purified enzyme. The Fe-CO stretching mode (nu(Fe)(-)(CO)) of the CO complex and Fe(3+)-S stretching mode (nu(Fe)(-)(S)) of the oxidized form were monitored as a structural marker of the distal and proximal sides of the heme, respectively. The nu(Fe)(-)(CO) mode was upshifted from 477 to 485 and to 490 cm(-)(1) by the binding of androstenedione and 19-aldehyde-androstenedione, substrates for the first and third steps, respectively, whereas nu(Fe)(-)(CO) was not observed for P450arom with 19-hydroxyandrostenedione, a substrate for the second step, indicating that the heme distal site is very flexible and changes its structure depending on the substrate. The 19-aldehyde-androstenedione binding could reduce the electron donation from the axial thiolate, which was evident from the low-frequency shift of nu(Fe)(-)(S) by 5 cm(-)(1) compared to that of androstenedione-bound P450arom. Changes in the environment in the heme distal site and the reduced electron donation from the axial thiolate upon 19-aldehyde-androstenedione binding might stabilize the ferric peroxo species, an active intermediate for the third step, with the suppression of the formation of compound I (Fe(4+)=O porphyrin(+)(*)) that is the active species for the first and second steps. We, therefore, propose that the substrates can regulate the formation of alternative reaction intermediates by modulating the structure on both the heme distal and proximal sites in P450arom.  相似文献   

4.
X-ray structures of bovine heart cytochrome c oxidase with bound respiratory inhibitors (O(2) analogues) have been determined at 1.8-2.05? resolution to investigate the function of the O(2) reduction site which includes two metal sites (Fe(a3)(2+) and Cu(B)(1+)). The X-ray structures of the CO- and NO-bound derivatives indicate that although there are three possible electron donors that can provide electrons to the bound O(2), located in the O(2) reduction site, the formation of the peroxide intermediate is effectively prevented to provide an O(2)-bound form as the initial intermediate. The structural change induced upon binding of CN(-) suggests a non-sequential 3-electron reduction of the bound O(2)(-) for the complete reduction without release of any reactive oxygen species. The X-ray structure of the derivative with CO bound to Cu(B)(1+) after photolysis from Fe(a3)(2+) demonstrates weak side-on binding. This suggests that Cu(B) controls the O(2) supply to Fe(a3)(2+) without electron transfer to provide sufficient time for collection of protons from the negative side of the mitochondrial membrane. The proton-pumping pathway of bovine heart cytochrome c oxidase includes a hydrogen-bond network and a water channel located in tandem between the positive and negative side of the mitochondrial membrane. Binding of a strong ligand to Fe(a3) induces a conformational change which significantly narrows the water channel and effectively blocks the back-leakage of protons from the hydrogen bond network. The proton pumping mechanism proposed by these X-ray structural analyses has been functionally confirmed by mutagenesis analyses of bovine heart cytochrome c oxidase. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Allosteric cooperativity in respiratory proteins.  相似文献   

5.
The ferric binding protein (FbpA) transports iron across the periplasmic space of certain Gram-negative bacteria and is an important component involved in iron acquisition by pathogenic Neisseria spp. (Neisseria gonorrheae and Neisseria meningitidis). Previous work has demonstrated that the synergistic anion, required for tight Fe(3+) sequestration by FbpA, also plays a key role in inserting Fe(3+) into the FbpA binding site. Here, we investigate the iron release process from various forms of holo-FbpA, Fe(3+)FbpA-X, during the course of a chelator competition reaction using EDTA and Tiron. Fe(3+)FbpA-X represents the protein assembly complex with different synergistic anions, X = PO(4)(3)(-) and NTA. Stepwise mechanisms of Fe(3+) release are proposed on the basis of kinetic profiles of these chelator competition reactions. Fe(3+)FbpA-PO(4) and Fe(3+)FbpA-NTA react differently with EDTA and Tiron during the Fe(3+)-exchange process. EDTA replaces PO(4)(3)(-) and NTA from the first coordination shell of Fe(3+) and acts as a synergistic anion to give a spectroscopically distinguishable intermediate, Fe(3+)FbpA-EDTA, prior to pulling Fe(3+) out of the protein. Tiron, on the other hand, does not act as a synergistic anion but is a more efficient competing chelator as it removes Fe(3+) from FbpA at rate much faster than EDTA. These results reaffirm the contribution of the synergistic anion to the FbpA iron transport process as the anion, in addition to playing a facilitative role in iron binding, appears to have a "gatekeeper" role, thereby modulating the Fe(3+) release process.  相似文献   

6.
Three-dimensional (3D) structure of a new form of diferric mare lactoferrin has been determined at 3.8 A resolution. The protein was crystallized in a space group P2(1)2(1)2(1) with a = 80.1 A, b = 103.7 A, c = 112.2 A with a solvent content of 57%. The structure was solved by molecular replacement method using the model of native mare lactoferrin. The structure has been refined using X-PLOR to a final R-factor of 22.6% for all the data in 15.0-3.8 A resolution range. The final refined model comprises 5281 protein atoms, 2Fe3+ and 2CO3(2-) ions. The protein folds into two globular N- and C-lobes. The two lobes are further divided into two domains N1, N2 in the N-lobe and C1, C2 in the C-lobe. The overall folding of the protein is similar to that observed for the native protein. The superposition of Calpha traces of native mare lactoferrin and the present structure gives an r.m.s shift of 0.7 A. There is a slight variation in the orientation of two lobes but the domain orientations in the present structure are identical to those observed in the native mare lactoferrin.  相似文献   

7.
Phosphorylation of Escherichia coli CheY increases its affinity for its target, FliM, 20-fold. The interaction between BeF(3)(-)-CheY, a phosphorylated CheY (CheY approximately P) analog, and the FliM sequence that it binds has been described previously in molecular detail. Although the conformation that unphosphorylated CheY adopts in complex with FliM was unknown, some evidence suggested that it is similar to that of CheY approximately P. To resolve the issue, we have solved the crystallographic structure of unphosphorylated, magnesium(II)-bound CheY in complex with a synthetic peptide corresponding to the target region of FliM (the 16 N-terminal residues of FliM [FliM(16)]). While the peptide conformation and binding site are similar to those of the BeF(3)(-)-CheY-FliM(16) complex, the inactive CheY conformation is largely retained in the unphosphorylated Mg(2+)-CheY-FliM(16) complex. Communication between the target binding site and the phosphorylation site, observed previously in biochemical experiments, is enabled by a network of conserved side chain interactions that partially mimic those observed in BeF(3)(-)-activated CheY. This structure makes clear the active role that the beta4-alpha4 loop plays in the Tyr(87)-Tyr(106) coupling mechanism that enables allosteric communication between the phosphorylation site and the target binding surface. Additionally, this structure provides a high-resolution view of an intermediate conformation of a response regulator protein, which had been generally assumed to be two state.  相似文献   

8.
The high-resolution structure of the non-haem ferritin from Escherichia coli (EcFtnA) is presented together with those of its Fe(3+) and Zn(2+) derivatives, this being the first high-resolution X-ray analysis of the iron centres in any ferritin.The binding of both metals is accompanied by small changes in the amino acid ligand positions. Mean Fe(A)(3+)-Fe(B)(3+) and Zn(A)(2+)-Zn(B)(2+) distances are 3.24 A and 3.43 A, respectively. In both derivatives, metal ions at sites A and B are bridged by a glutamate side-chain (Glu50) in a syn-syn conformation. The Fe(3+) derivative alone shows a third metal site (Fe( C)( 3+)) joined to Fe(B)(3+) by a long anti-anti bidentate bridge through Glu130 (mean Fe(B)(3+)-Fe(C)(3+) distance 5.79 A). The third metal site is unique to the non-haem bacterial ferritins.The dinuclear site lies at the inner end of a hydrophobic channel connecting it to the outside surface of the protein shell, which may provide access for dioxygen and possibly for metal ions shielded by water. Models representing the possible binding mode of dioxygen to the dinuclear Fe(3+) pair suggest that a gauche micro-1,2 mode may be preferred stereochemically.Like those of other ferritins, the 24 subunits of EcFtnA are folded as four-helix bundles that assemble into hollow shells and both metals bind at dinuclear centres in the middle of the bundles. The structural similarity of EcFtnA to the human H chain ferritin (HuHF) is remarkable (r.m.s. deviation of main-chain atoms 0.66 A) given the low amino acid sequence identity (22 %). Many of the conserved residues are clustered at the dinuclear centre but there is very little conservation of residues making inter-subunit interactions.  相似文献   

9.
Lou BS  Snyder JK  Marshall P  Wang JS  Wu G  Kulmacz RJ  Tsai AL  Wang J 《Biochemistry》2000,39(40):12424-12434
Prostaglandin H synthase isoforms 1 and 2 (PGHS-1 and -2) catalyze the first two steps in the biosynthesis of prostaglandins. Resonance Raman spectroscopy was used to characterize the PGHS heme active site and its immediate environment. Ferric PGHS-1 has a predominant six-coordinate high-spin heme at room temperature, with water as the sixth ligand. The proximal histidine ligand (or the distal water ligand) of this hexacoordinate high-spin heme species was reversibly photolabile, leading to a pentacoordinate high-spin ferric heme iron. Ferrous PGHS-1 has a single species of five-coordinate high-spin heme, as evident from nu(2) at 1558 cm(-1) and nu(3) at 1471 cm(-1). nu(4) at 1359 cm(-1) indicates that histidine is the proximal ligand. A weak band at 226-228 cm(-1) was tentatively assigned as the Fe-His stretching vibration. Cyanoferric PGHS-1 exhibited a nu(Fe)(-)(CN) line at 446 cm(-1) and delta(Fe)(-)(C)(-)(N) at 410 cm(-1), indicating a "linear" Fe-C-N binding conformation with the proximal histidine. This linkage agrees well with the open distal heme pocket in PGHS-1. The ferrous PGHS-1 CO complex exhibited three important marker lines: nu(Fe)(-)(CO) (531 cm(-1)), delta(Fe)(-)(C)(-)(O) (567 cm(-1)), and nu(C)(-)(O) (1954 cm(-1)). No hydrogen bonding was detected for the heme-bound CO in PGHS-1. These frequencies markedly deviated from the nu(Fe)(-)(CO)/nu(C)(-)(O) correlation curve for heme proteins and porphyrins with a proximal histidine or imidazolate, suggesting an extremely weak bond between the heme iron and the proximal histidine in PGHS-1. At alkaline pH, PGHS-1 is converted to a second CO binding conformation (nu(Fe)(-)(CO): 496 cm(-1)) where disruption of the hydrogen bonding interactions to the proximal histidine may occur.  相似文献   

10.
The concentration of melanin determines the intensity of colors of the skin and hair of animals. Melanin pigments are tyrosine-based polymers formed in melanocytes within specialized organelles called melanosomes. In order to understand the mechanism of melanin polymerization, lactoferrin, a basic protein with a pI value of 9.0, has been used to produce melanin. Lactoferrin is a monomeric iron-binding protein with a molecular weight of 80 kDa. The crystals of lactoferrin were soaked in a solution containing dihydroxyphenylalanine (DOPA) and tyrosinase enzyme. These crystals were used for X-ray intensity data collection. The intensity data were collected to 2.7-A resolution to an overall completeness of 91% with an R(sym) of 0.071. The crystals belong to orthorhombic space group P2(1)2(1)2(1) with cell dimensions: a = 85.0 A, b = 99.8 A, c = 103.4 A. The structure was determined by molecular replacement method, using the model of diferric mare lactoferrin, and refined to an R-factor 0.215 (R(free) = 0.287) for all the data to 2.7-A resolution. The final model comprises 5,281 protein atoms from 689 amino acids, 2Fe(3+), 2CO(2-)(3) ions, 2 indole-5,6-quinone molecules (IQ), and 73 water molecules. Two IQ molecules, one in each lobe, bind to lactoferrin. In the C-lobe, the IQ binds in the iron-binding cleft, whereas in the N-lobe, it is located in the side pocket between two alpha-helices, filled with solvent molecules in the native iron-saturated mare lactoferrin. The IQ molecules interact with protein molecule mainly through glutamic acid in both lobes, without significant perturbation to the protein structure. The orientation of N- and C-lobes in the present structure is similar to that observed in the native iron-saturated protein. However, as a result of the binding of IQ molecules, the orientations of the domains N1, N2 and C1, C2 in the two cases differ slightly.  相似文献   

11.
Bacteria solubilize iron (Fe(3+)) with secreted siderophores, which are then taken up as Fe(3+)-siderophore complexes. Some bacteria also use iron in heme, hemoglobin, hemopexin, transferrin and lactoferrin of eukaryotic hosts. Crystal structures of two outer membrane transport proteins, FhuA and FepA, and biochemical data reveal strong long-range conformational changes of the proteins upon binding of Fe(3+)-siderophore complexes and in response to energy transfer from the cytoplasmic membrane into the outer membrane via the TonB-ExbB-ExbD protein complex. The crystal structure of the periplasmic binding protein FhuD strongly deviates from the uniform overall structure of binding proteins hitherto determined. Sideromycins, antibiotics that contain Fe(3+)-siderophore complexes as carriers, are highly effective, as they enter cells via Fe(3+)-siderophore transport systems. In this review, recently published data is discussed to demonstrate the state of understanding of iron transport across the outer membrane and the cytoplasmic membrane.  相似文献   

12.
Neuroglobin (Ngb) is a newly discovered oxygen-binding heme protein that is primarily expressed in the brain of humans and other vertebrates. To characterize the structure/function relationships of this new heme protein, we have used resonance Raman spectroscopy to determine the structure of the heme environment in Ngb from mice. In the Fe(2+)CO complex, two conformations of the Fe-CO unit are present, one of which arises from an open conformation of the heme pocket in which the CO is not interacting with any nearby residue, and the other arises from a closed conformation where a positively charged residue near the CO group stabilizes the complex. For the Fe(2+)O(2) complex, we detect a single nu(Fe-OO) stretching mode at a frequency similar to that of oxymyoglobins and oxyhemoglobins of vertebrates (571 cm(-1)). Based on the Fe-C-O frequencies of the closed conformation of Ngb, a highly polar distal environment is indicated from which the O(2) off-rate is predicted to be lower than that of Mb. In the absence of exogenous ligands, a heme pocket residue coordinates to the heme iron, forming a six-coordinate complex, thereby predicting a low on-rate for exogenous ligands. These structural properties of the heme pocket of Ngb are discussed with respect to its proposed in vivo oxygen delivery function.  相似文献   

13.
The differential properties of anion-mediated Fe(3+) release between the N- and C-lobes of transferrins have been a focus in transferrin biochemistry. The structural and kinetic characteristics for isolated lobe have, however, been documented with the N-lobe only. Here we demonstrate for the first time the quantitative Fe(3+) release kinetics and the anion-binding structure for the isolated C-lobe of ovotransferrin. In the presence of pyrophosphate, sulfate, and nitrilotriacetate anions, the C-lobe released Fe(3+) with a decelerated rate in a single exponential progress curve, and the observed first order rate constants displayed a hyperbolic profile as a function of the anion concentration. The profile was consistent with a newly derived single-pathway Fe(3+) release model in which the holo form is converted depending on the anion concentration into a "mixed ligand" intermediate that releases Fe(3+). The apo C-lobe was crystallized in ammonium sulfate solution, and the structure determined at 2.3 A resolution demonstrated the existence of a single bound SO(4)(2-) in the interdomain cleft, which interacts directly with Thr(461)-OG1, Tyr(431)-OH, and His(592)-NE2 and indirectly with Tyr(524)-OH. The latter three groups are Fe(3+)-coordinating ligands, strongly suggesting the facilitated Fe(3+) release upon the anion occupation at this site. The SO(4)(2-) binding structure supported the single-pathway kinetic model.  相似文献   

14.
The crystal structure of the iron-free (apo) form of the Haemophilus influenzae Fe(3+)-binding protein (hFbp) has been determined to 1.75 A resolution. Information from this structure complements that derived from the holo structure with respect to the delineation of the process of iron binding and release. A 21 degrees rotation separates the two structural domains when the apo form is compared with the holo conformer, indicating that upon release of iron, the protein undergoes a change in conformation by bending about the central beta-sheet hinge. A surprising finding in the apo-hFbp structure was that the ternary binding site anion, observed in the crystals as phosphate, remained bound. In solution, apo-hFbp bound phosphate with an affinity K(d) of 2.3 x 10(-3) M. The presence of this ternary binding site anion appears to arrange the C-terminal iron-binding residues conducive to complementary binding to Fe(3+), while residues in the N-terminal binding domain must undergo induced fit to accommodate the Fe(3+) ligand. These observations suggest a binding process, the first step of which is the binding of a synergistic anion such as phosphate to the C-terminal domain. Next, iron binds to the preordered half-site on the C-terminal domain. Finally, the presence of iron organizes the N-terminal half-site and closes the interdomain hinge. The use of the synergistic anion and this iron binding process results in an extremely high affinity of the Fe(3+)-binding proteins for Fe(3+) (nFbp K'(eff) = 2.4 x 10(18) M(-1)). This high-affinity ligand binding process is unique among the family of bacterial periplasmic binding proteins and has interesting implications in the mechanism of iron removal from the Fe(3+)-binding proteins during FbpABC-mediated iron transport across the cytoplasmic membrane.  相似文献   

15.
Lactoferrin is a monomeric glycoprotein with a molecular mass of approximately 80 kDa. The three-dimensional structure of mare diferric lactoferrin (mlf) has been determined at 2.6 A resolution. The protein crystallizes in the space group P 212121with a=85.2 A, b=99.5 A, c=103.1 A with a solvent content of 55 % (v/v). The structure was solved by the molecular replacement method using human diferric lactoferrin as the model. The structure has been refined using XPLOR to a final R -factor of 0.194 for all data in the 15-2.6 A resolution range. The amino acid sequence of mlf was determined using a cDNA method. The final refined model comprises 5281 protein atoms, 2 Fe3+, 2 CO32-and 112 water molecules. The overall folding of mlf is similar to that of other proteins of the transferrin family. The protein folds into two globular lobes, N and C. The lobes are further divided into two domains, N1 and N2, and C1 and C2. The iron-binding cleft is situated between the domains in each lobe. The N lobe appears to be well ordered and is more stable than the C lobe in mlf unlike in other lactoferrins, where the C lobe is the more stable. The opening of the binding cleft in the N lobe of mlf is narrower than those in other proteins of the transferrin family. This is very unusual and is found only in mare lactoferrin. Apart from certain hydrophobic interactions at the mouth of the cleft, one salt-bridge (Lys301 . . . . . . . . Glu216) crosses between the two walls of the cleft. The two lobes are connected covalently by a three-turn alpha-helix involving residues 334-344. The N lobe displays a highly ordered structure with appreciably low temperature factors. The iron coordination is more symmetrical in the N lobe than in the C lobe. There are only 16 intermolecular hydrogen bonds in the structure of mlf.  相似文献   

16.
GRP94, the endoplasmic reticulum paralog of Hsp90, is regulated by adenosine nucleotides that bind to its N-terminal regulatory domain. Because of its weak affinity for nucleotides, the functionally relevant transition in GRP94 is likely to be between the unliganded and nucleotide-bound states. We have determined the structure of the unliganded GRP94 N-domain. The helix 1-4-5 subdomain of the unliganded protein adopts the closed conformation seen in the structure of the protein in complex with inhibitors. This conformation is distinct from the open conformation of the subdomain seen when the protein is bound to ATP or ADP. ADP soaked into crystals of the unliganded protein reveals an intermediate conformation midway between the open and closed states and demonstrates that in GRP94 the conversion between the open and closed states is driven by ligand binding. The direction of the observed movement in GRP94 shows that nucleotides act to open the subdomain elements rather than close them, which is contrary to the motion proposed for Hsp90. These observations support a model where ATP binding dictates the conformation of the N-domain and regulates its ability to form quaternary structural interactions.  相似文献   

17.
The folding of Pseudomonas aeruginosa apo-azurin was investigated with the intent of identifying putative intermediates. Two apo-mutants were constructed by replacing the main metal-binding ligand C112 with a serine (C112S) and an alanine (C112A). The guanidinium-induced unfolding free energies (DeltaG(U-N)(H2O)) of the C112S and C112A mutants were measured to 36.8 +/- 1 kJ mole(-1) and 26.1 +/- 1 kJ mole(-1), respectively, and the m-value of the transition to 23.5 +/- 0.7 kJ mole(-1) M(-1). The difference in folding free energy (DeltaDeltaG(U-N)(H2O)) is largely attributed to the intramolecular hydrogen bonding properties of the serine Ogamma in the C112S mutant, which is lacking in the C112A structure. Furthermore, only the unfolding rates differ between the two mutants, thus pointing to the energy of the native state as the source of the observed Delta DeltaG(U-N)(H2O). This also indicates that the formation of the hydrogen bonds present in C112S but absent in C112A is a late event in the folding of the apo-protein, thus suggesting that formation of the metal-binding site occurs after the rate-limiting formation of the transition state. In both mutants we also noted a burst-phase intermediate. Because this intermediate was capable of binding 1-anilinonaphtalene-8-sulfonate (ANS), as were an acid-induced species at pH 2.6, we ascribe it molten globule-like status. However, despite the presence of an intermediate, the folding of apo-azurin C112S is well approximated by a two-state kinetic mechanism.  相似文献   

18.
The anion-binding properties of lactoferrin (Lf), with Fe3+ or Cu2+ as the associated metal ion, have been investigated by physicochemical and crystallographic techniques. These highlight differences between the two sites and in the anion-binding behavior when different metals are bound. Carbonate, oxalate, and hybrid carbonate-oxalate complexes have been prepared and their characteristic electronic and EPR spectra recorded. Oxalate can displace carbonate from either one or both anion sites of Cu2(CO3)2Lf, depending on the oxalate concentration, but no such displacement occurs for Fe2(CO3)2Lf. Addition of oxalate and the appropriate metal ion to apoLf under carbonate-free conditions gives dioxalate complexes with both Fe3+ and Cu2+, except when traces of EDTA remain associated with the protein, when hybrid complexes M2(CO3)(C2O4)Lf can result. The anion sites in the crystal structures of Fe2(CO3)2Lf, Cu2-(CO3)2Lf, and Cu2(CO3)(C2O4)Lf, refined at 2.2, 2.1, and 2.2 A, respectively, have been compared. In every case, the anion is hydrogen bonded to the N-terminus of helix 5, an associated arginine side chain, and a nearby threonine side chain. The carbonate ion binds in bidentate fashion to the metal, except in the N-lobe site of dicupric lactoferrin, where it is monodentate; the difference arises from slight movement of the metal ion. The hybrid complex shows that the oxalate ion binds preferentially in the C-lobe site, in 1,2-bidentate mode, but with the displacement of several nearby side chains. These observations lead to a generalized model for synergistic anion binding by transferrins.  相似文献   

19.
Reduced cytochrome c oxidase binds molecular oxygen, yielding an oxygenated intermediate first (Oxy) and then converts it to water via the reaction intermediates of P, F, and O in the order of appearance. We have determined the iron-oxygen stretching frequencies for all the intermediates by using time-resolved resonance Raman spectroscopy. The bound dioxygen in Oxy does not form a bridged structure with Cu(B) and the rate of the reaction from Oxy to P (P(R)) is slower at higher pH in the pH range between 6.8 and 8.0. It was established that the P intermediate has an oxo-heme and definitely not the Fe(a(3))-O-O-Cu(B) peroxy bridged structure. The Fe(a(3))=O stretching (nu(Fe=O)) frequency of the P(R) intermediate, 804/764 cm(-1) for (16)O/(18)O, is distinctly higher than that of F intermediate, 785/750 cm(-1). The rate of reaction from P to F in D(2)O solution is evidently slower than that in H(2)O solution, implicating the coupling of the electron transfer with vector proton transfer in this process. The P intermediate (607-nm form) generated in the reaction of oxidized enzyme with H(2)O(2) gave the nu(Fe=O) band at 803/769 cm(-1) for H(2)(16)O(2)/H(2)(18)O(2) and the simultaneously measured absorption spectrum exhibited the difference peak at 607 nm. Reaction of the mixed valence CO adduct with O(2) provided the P intermediate (P(M)) giving rise to an absorption peak at 607 nm and the nu(Fe=O) bands at 804/768 cm(-1). Thus, three kinds of P intermediates are considered to have the same oxo-heme a(3) structure. The nu(4) and nu(2) modes of heme a(3) of the P intermediate were identified at 1377 and 1591 cm(-1), respectively. The Raman excitation profiles of the nu(Fe=O) bands were different between P and F. These observations may mean the formation of a pi cation radical of porphyrin macrocycle in P.  相似文献   

20.
Several lines of functional evidence have shown that anion binding to a nonsynergistic site is a prerequisite for the anion-mediated iron release mechanism of transferrins. We report here structural evidence of the location of sulfate anion binding sites of the ovotransferrin N-lobe via the 1.90 A resolution apo crystal structure. The crystals were grown in an ammonium sulfate solution and belonged to space group P6(3)22 with the following unit cell dimensions: a = b = 125.17 A and c = 87.26 A. The structural determination was performed by isomorphous replacement, using Pt and Au derivatives. The structure refinement gave an R-factor of 0.187 in the resolution range of 7.0-1.90 A for the final model. From the electron density map, the existence of four bound SO(4)(2)(-) anions was detected. Three of them that exhibited reasonably low B-factors were all located in the opened interdomain cleft (sites 1-3). In site 1, the bound anion directly interacts with an Fe(3+)-coordinating ligand; SO(4) O1 and SO(4) O3 form hydrogen bonds with His250 NE2. Oxygen atom O3 of the same sulfate anion makes a hydrogen bond with Ser91 OG in a hinge strand. The sulfate anion in site 2 partially occupies the synergistic anion binding sites; SO(4) O2 and SO(4) O3 are hydrogen bonded to Arg121 NE and NH2, respectively, both of which are consensus anchor groups for CO(3)(2)(-) anion in holotransferrins. The former oxygen atom of SO(4)(2)(-) is also hydrogen bonded to Ser122 N, which forms a hydrogen bond with Fe(3+)-coordinating ligand Asp60 OD2 in holotransferrins. Some of the SO(4)(2)(-) oxygen atoms in sites 1 and 2 interact indirectly through H(2)O molecules with functionally important protein groups, such as the other Fe(3+)-coordinating ligands, Tyr92 OH and Tyr191 OH, and a dilysine trigger group, Lys209 NZ. In site 3, SO(4) O1 and SO(4) O4 form hydrogen bonds with Ser192 OG and Tyr191 N, respectively, and SO(4) O2 forms hydrogen bonds with Ser192 N and Ser192 OG. These structural data are consistent with the view that the anion bindings to the interdomain cleft, especially to sites 1 and 2, play crucial roles in the domain opening and synergistic carbonate anion release in the iron release mechanism of the ovotransferrin N-lobe.  相似文献   

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