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1.
《BBA》2021,1862(12):148493
Cryptophytes are among the few eukaryotes employing phycobiliproteins (PBP) for light harvesting during oxygenic photosynthesis. In contrast to cyanobacterial PBP that are organized in membrane-associated phycobilisomes, those from cryptophytes are soluble within the chloroplast thylakoid lumen. Their light-harvesting capacity is due to covalent linkage of several open-chain tetrapyrrole chromophores (phycobilins). Guillardia theta utilizes the PBP phycoerythrin 545 with 15,16-dihydrobiliverdin (DHBV) in addition to phycoerythrobilin (PEB) as chromophores. The assembly of PBPs in cryptophytes involves the action of PBP-lyases as shown for cyanobacterial PBP. PBP-lyases facilitate the attachment of the chromophore in the right configuration and stereochemistry. Here we present the functional characterization of the eukaryotic S-type PBP lyase GtCPES. We show GtCPES-mediated transfer and covalent attachment of PEB to the conserved Cys82 of the acceptor PBP β-subunit (PmCpeB) of Prochlorococcus marinus MED4. On the basis of the previously solved crystal structure, the GtCPES binding pocket was investigated using site-directed mutagenesis. Thereby, amino acid residues involved in phycobilin binding and transfer were identified. Interestingly, exchange of a single amino acid residue Met67 to Ala extended the substrate specificity to phycocyanobilin (PCB), most likely by enlarging the substrate-binding pocket. Variant GtCPES_M67A binds both PEB and PCB forming a stable, colored complex in vitro and produced in Escherichia coli. GtCPES_M67A is able to mediate PCB transfer to Cys82 of PmCpeB. Based on these findings, we postulate that this single amino acid residue has a crucial role for bilin binding specificity of S-type phycoerythrin lyases but additional factors regulate handover to the target protein.  相似文献   

2.
Phycobiliproteins are employed by cyanobacteria, red algae, glaucophytes, and cryptophytes for light-harvesting and consist of apoproteins covalently associated with open-chain tetrapyrrole chromophores. Although the majority of organisms assemble the individual phycobiliproteins into larger aggregates called phycobilisomes, members of the cryptophytes use a single type of phycobiliprotein that is localized in the thylakoid lumen. The cryptophyte Guillardia theta (Gt) uses phycoerythrin PE545 utilizing the uncommon chromophore 15,16-dihydrobiliverdin (DHBV) in addition to phycoerythrobilin (PEB). Both the biosynthesis and the attachment of chromophores to the apophycobiliprotein have not yet been investigated for cryptophytes. In this study, we identified and characterized enzymes involved in PEB biosynthesis. In addition, we present the first in-depth biochemical characterization of a eukaryotic phycobiliprotein lyase (GtCPES). Plastid-encoded HO (GtHo) was shown to convert heme into biliverdin IXα providing the substrate with a putative nucleus-encoded DHBV:ferredoxin oxidoreductase (GtPEBA). A PEB:ferredoxin oxidoreductase (GtPEBB) was found to convert DHBV to PEB, which is the substrate for the phycobiliprotein lyase GtCPES. The x-ray structure of GtCPES was solved at 2.0 Å revealing a 10-stranded β-barrel with a modified lipocalin fold. GtCPES is an S-type lyase specific for binding of phycobilins with reduced C15=C16 double bonds (DHBV and PEB). Site-directed mutagenesis identified residues Glu-136 and Arg-146 involved in phycobilin binding. Based on the crystal structure, a model for the interaction of GtCPES with the apophycobiliprotein CpeB is proposed and discussed.  相似文献   

3.
Genes all5292 (cpcS2) and alr0617 (cpcS1) in the cyanobacterium Nostoc PCC7120 are homologous to the biliprotein lyase cpcS, and genes all5339 (cpcT1) and alr0647 (cpcT2) are homologous to the lyase cpcT. The functions of the encoded proteins were screened in vitro and in a heterologous Escherichia coli system with plasmids conferring biosynthesis of the phycocyanobilin chromophore and of the acceptor proteins beta-phycoerythrocyanin (PecB) or beta-phycocyanin (CpcB). CpcT1 is a regioselective biliprotein lyase attaching phycocyanobilin exclusively to cysteine beta155 but does not discriminate between CpcB and PecB. The in vitro reconstitutions required no cofactors, and kinetic constants were determined for CpcT1 under in vitro conditions. No lyase activity was found for the lyase homologues CpcS2 and CpcT2, but complexes are formed in vitro between CpcT1 and CpcS1, CpcT2, or PecE (subunit of phycoviolobilin:alpha-phycoerythrocyanin isomerase lyase). The genes coding the inactive homologues, cpcS2 and cpcT2, are transcribed in N-starved Nostoc. In sequential binding experiments with CpcT1 and CpcS1, a chromophore at cysteine 84 inhibited the subsequent attachment to cysteine 155, whereas the inverse sequence generates subunits carrying both chromophores.  相似文献   

4.
Crystal structures of the complexes formed between cytochrome c peroxidase and cyanide, nitric oxide, carbon monoxide, and fluoride have been determined and refined to 1.85 A. In all four complexes significant changes occur in the distal heme pocket due to movement of Arg-48, His-52, and a rearrangement of active site water molecules. In the cyanide, nitric oxide, and carbon monoxide complexes, Arg-48 moves away from the ligand while in the fluoride complex Arg-48 moves in toward the ligand to form a hydrogen bond or ion pair with the fluoride. More subtle changes occur on the proximal side of the heme. In an earlier study at lower resolution (Edwards, S. L., Kraut, J., and Poulos, T. L. (1988) Biochemistry 27, 8074-8081), we found that nitric oxide binding causes perturbations in the proximal domain involving Trp-191 which has been confirmed by the present study. Trp-191 is stacked parallel to and in contact with the proximal ligand, His-175. Nitric oxide binding results in a slight movement of Trp-191 away from His-175 and a large increase in crystallographic temperature factors indicating increased mobility of these residues on the proximal side of the heme. These proximal-side changes are unique to nitric oxide and are not related strictly to spin-state or oxidation state of the iron atom since similar changes were not observed in the cyanide (low-spin ferric), carbon monoxide (low-spin ferrous), or fluoride (high-spin ferric) complexes.  相似文献   

5.
The phycobilin: Cysteine-84-phycobiliprotein lyase, CpeS1, catalyzes phycocyanobilin (PCB) and phycoerythrobilin attachment to nearly all cysteine-84 (consensus sequence) binding sites of phycoerythrin, phycoerythrocyanin, phycocyanin and allophycocyanin (Zhao et al. (2007) Proc Natl Acad Sci 104:14300–14305). We now show that CpeS1 can bind PCB, as assayed by Ni2+ chelating affinity chromatography. Binding is rapid, and the chromophore is bound in an extended conformation similar to that in phycobiliproteins but only poorly fluorescent. Upon addition of apo-biliproteins, the chromophore is transferred to the latter much slower (∼1 h), indicating that chromophorylated CpeS1 is an intermediate in the enzymatic reaction. In addition, imidazole is bound to PCB, as shown by mass spectroscopy of tryptic digests of the intermediate CpeS1–PCB complex.  相似文献   

6.
The phycocyanin lyase CpcT1 (encoded by gene all5339) and lyase CpcS1 (encoded by gene alr0617) are capable of catalyzing the phycocyanobilin (PCB) covalently bound to the different sites of phycocyanin's and phycoerythrocyanin's β subunits, respectively. Lyase CpcS1, whose catalytic mechanism had been researched clearly, participates in the covalent coupling of phycobilin and apoprotein in the form of chaperone, and its important amino acids have been confirmed. In order to identify the functional amino acid residues of CpcT1, chemical modification was conducted to arginine, histidine, tryptophan, lysine and amino acid carboxyl of CpcT1. The results indicated that the catalytic activity of the CpcT1 was changed. After the modification of arginine, tryptophan and histidine, site-directed mutations were performed to those highly conserved amino acids which were selected by means of homologous comparison. The mutated lyase, apoprotein and the enzymes that synthesize the phycobilins were recombined in Escherichia coli (E. coli) and in vitro, yielding chromoproteins, which were detected by fluorescence and UV absorption spectrometry. The spectra were compared with that of the chromoprotein catalyzed by wild type lyase CpcT1, achieving relative specific activities of the various mutants. Meanwhile, the mutants were expressed in E. coli, and then circular dichroism structure of near-UV region was determined. The results demonstrated that H33F, W175S, R97A, C137S and C116S influence the catalytic activity of CpcT1. Being different from wild CpcT1, a great deal of α helix was involved in the structure of circular dichroism of R97A and W13S. CpcT1 or its mutants and the enzymes that synthesize the phycobilins, were reconstituted in E. coli and detected by spectra to check the bounding of lyases and PCB. The results of spectra and SDS-PAGE confirm that CpcT1 and its mutants cannot bind phycobilin, differing from the catalytic mechanism of CpcS1.  相似文献   

7.
S L Edwards  J Kraut  T L Poulos 《Biochemistry》1988,27(21):8074-8081
We have collected X-ray diffraction data from a crystal of cytochrome c peroxidase (CCP) complexed with the inhibitor nitric oxide to a resolution of 2.55 A. A difference Fourier map shows density indicating the NO ligand is bound to the heme iron at the sixth coordination site in a bent configuration. Structural adjustments were determined by least-squares refinement that yielded an agreement residual of R = 0.18. The orientation of the ligand, tilting toward Arg-48, causes adjustment in the position of this nearby polar side chain. As a model for the substrate hydrogen peroxide, this geometry is consistent with the suggestion that Arg-48 serves to polarize the O-O peroxide bond to promote heterolytic cleavage of the bond [Poulos, T. L., & Kraut, J. (1980) J. Biol. Chem. 255, 8199-8205]. Strong difference density is also observed near residues 190-194, especially around the indole ring of Trp-191. The density indicates movement of the indole ring away from the proximal His-175 imidazole ring by about 0.25 A, which appears to cause perturbation of the neighboring residues. The response of Trp-191 on the proximal side of the heme to binding nitric oxide on the distal side probably results from delocalization of the electron density of the ligand. Relevant to this is the recent finding that a mutant in which Trp-191 is replaced by phenylalanine has dramatically reduced activity, less than 0.05% of the parent activity [Mauro, J. M., Fishel, L. A., Hazzard, J. T., Meyer, T. E., Tollin, G., Cusanovich, M. A., & Kraut, J. (1988) Biochemistry 27, 6243-6256].(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
The lac permease of Escherichia coli was modified by site-directed mutagenesis such that Arg-302 in putative helix IX was replaced with Leu. In addition, Ser-300 (helix IX) was replaced with Ala, and Lys-319 in putative helix X was replaced with Leu. Permease with Leu at position 302 manifests properties that are similar to those of permease with Arg in place of His-322 [Püttner, I. B., Sarkar, H. K., Poonian, M. S., & Kaback, H. R. (1986) Biochemistry 25, 4483]. Thus, permease with Leu-302 is markedly defective in active lactose transport, efflux, exchange, and counterflow but catalyzes downhill influx of lactose at high substrate concentrations without H+ translocation. In contrast, permease molecules with Ala at position 300 or Leu at position 319 catalyze lactose/H+ symport in a manner indistinguishable from that of wild-type permease. By molecular modeling, Arg-302 may be positioned in helix IX so that it faces the postulated His-322/Glu-325 ion pair in helix X. In this manner, the guanidino group in Arg-302 may interact with the imidazole of His-322 and thereby play a role in the H+ relay suggested to be involved in lactose/H+ symport [Carrasco, N., Antes, L. M., Poonian, M. S., & Kaback, H. R. (1986) Biochemistry 25, 4486].  相似文献   

9.
The antithrombotic monoclonal antibody 82D6A3 is directed against amino acids Arg-963, Pro-981, Asp-1009, Arg-1016, Ser-1020, Met-1022, and His-1023 of the von Willebrand factor A3-domain (Vanhoorelbeke, K., Depraetere, H., Romijn, R. A., Huizinga, E., De Maeyer, M., and Deckmyn, H. (2003) J. Biol. Chem. 278, 37815-37821). By this, it potently inhibits the interaction of von Willebrand factor to collagens, which is a prerequisite for blood platelet adhesion to the injured vessel wall at sites of high shear. To fully understand the mode of action of 82D6A3 at the molecular level, we resolved its crystal structure in complex with the A3-domain and fine mapped its paratope by construction and characterization of 13 mutants. The paratope predominantly consists of two short sequences in the heavy chain CDR1 (Asn-31 and Tyr-32) and CDR3 (Asp-99, Pro-101, Tyr-102 and Tyr-103), forming one patch on the surface of the antibody. Trp-50 of the heavy and His-49 of the light chain, both situated adjacent to the patch, play ancillary roles in antigen binding. The crystal structure furthermore confirms the epitope location, which largely overlaps with the collagen binding site deduced from mutagenesis of the A3-domain (Romijn, R. A., Westein, E., Bouma, B., Schiphorst, M. E., Sixma, J. J., Lenting, P. J., and Huizinga, E. G. (2003) J. Biol. Chem. 278, 15035-15039). We herewith further consolidate the location of the collagen binding site and reveal that the potent action of the antibody is due to direct competition for the same interaction site. This information allows the design of a paratope-mimicking peptide with antithrombotic properties.  相似文献   

10.
Hu IC  Lee TR  Lin HF  Chiueh CC  Lyu PC 《Biochemistry》2006,45(23):7092-7099
Allophycocyanin (APC) is one of the phycobiliproteins expressed in cyanobacteria. Phycobiliproteins contain a covalently bound chromophore, and thus, they are valuable as fluorescent probes. Biosynthesis of a functional phycobiliprotein is achieved by a bilin attachment process between the chromophore and apoprotein. Chromophore lyases are necessary to catalyze the chromophorylation of cyanobacterial phycobiliproteins, such as C-phycocyanin, and phycoerythrocyanin. To identify the lyase that catalyzes the chromophorylation of the APC alpha-subunit (ApcA), we searched the entire genomes of two cyanobacteria, Synechocystis sp. PCC6803 and Anabaena sp. PCC 7120; however, these genomes do not appear to encode an APC-specific chromophore lyase. In this study, chromophorylated ApcA (chromo-ApcA) was obtained via a spontaneous bilin attachment reaction. The absorption and fluorescence characteristics of chromo-ApcA were similar to those of the native APC alpha-subunit. The extent of chromophore attachment to apo-ApcA was comparable to that of the lyase-catalyzed reactions for other phycobiliproteins. These results indicate that ApcA has autocatalytic bilin:biliprotein lyase activity.  相似文献   

11.
Transfer RNA (Gm18) methyltransferase (TrmH) catalyzes the methyl transfer from S-adenosyl-L-methionine (AdoMet) to the 2'-OH group of the G18 ribose in tRNA. To identify amino acid residues responsible for the tRNA recognition, we have carried out the alanine substitution mutagenesis of the basic amino acid residues that are conserved only in TrmH enzymes and not in the other SpoU proteins. We analyzed the mutant proteins by S-adenosyl-L-homocysteine affinity column chromatography, gel mobility shift assay, and kinetic assay of the methyl transfer reaction. Based on these biochemical studies and the crystal structure of TrmH, we found that the conserved residues can be categorized according to their role (i) in the catalytic center (Arg-41), (ii) in the initial site of tRNA binding (Lys-90, Arg-166, Arg-168, and Arg-176), (iii) in the tRNA binding site required for continuation the catalytic cycle (Arg-8, Arg-19, and Lys-32), (iv) in the structural element involved in release of S-adenosyl-L-homocysteine (Arg-11-His-71-Met-147 interaction), (v) in the assisted phosphate binding site (His-34), or (vi) in an unknown function (Arg-109). Furthermore, the difference between the Kd and Km values for tRNA suggests that the affinity for tRNA is enhanced in the presence of AdoMet. To confirm this idea, we carried out the kinetic studies, a gel mobility shift assay with a mutant protein disrupted in the catalytic center, and the analytical gel-filtration chromatography. Our experimental results clearly show that the enzyme has a semi-ordered sequential mechanism in which AdoMet both enhances the affinity for tRNA and induces formation of the tetramer structure.  相似文献   

12.
We expressed an active form of CtCel5E (a bifunctional cellulase/xylanase from Clostridium thermocellum), performed biochemical characterization, and determined its apo- and ligand-bound crystal structures. From the structures, Asn-93, His-168, His-169, Asn-208, Trp-347, and Asn-349 were shown to provide hydrogen-bonding/hydrophobic interactions with both ligands. Compared with the structures of TmCel5A, a bifunctional cellulase/mannanase homolog from Thermotoga maritima, a flexible loop region in CtCel5E is the key for discriminating substrates. Moreover, site-directed mutagenesis data confirmed that His-168 is essential for xylanase activity, and His-169 is more important for xylanase activity, whereas Asn-93, Asn-208, Tyr-270, Trp-347, and Asn-349 are critical for both activities. In contrast, F267A improves enzyme activities.  相似文献   

13.
The microbial degradation of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) by the biphenyl catabolic (Bph) pathway is limited in part by the pathway's fourth enzyme, BphD. BphD catalyzes an unusual carbon-carbon bond hydrolysis of 2-hydroxy-6-oxo-6-phenylhexa-2,4-dienoic acid (HOPDA), in which the substrate is subject to histidine-mediated enol-keto tautomerization prior to hydrolysis. Chlorinated HOPDAs such as 3-Cl HOPDA inhibit BphD. Here we report that BphD preferentially hydrolyzed a series of 3-substituted HOPDAs in the order H>F>Cl>Me, suggesting that catalysis is affected by steric, not electronic, determinants. Transient state kinetic studies performed using wild-type BphD and the hydrolysis-defective S112A variant indicated that large 3-substituents inhibited His-265-catalyzed tautomerization by 5 orders of magnitude. Structural analyses of S112A.3-Cl HOPDA and S112A.3,10-diF HOPDA complexes revealed a non-productive binding mode in which the plane defined by the carbon atoms of the dienoate moiety of HOPDA is nearly orthogonal to that of the proposed keto tautomer observed in the S112A.HOPDA complex. Moreover, in the 3-Cl HOPDA complex, the 2-hydroxo group is moved by 3.6 A from its position near the catalytic His-265 to hydrogen bond with Arg-190 and access of His-265 is blocked by the 3-Cl substituent. Nonproductive binding may be stabilized by interactions involving the 3-substituent with non-polar side chains. Solvent molecules have poor access to C6 in the S112A.3-Cl HOPDA structure, more consistent with hydrolysis occurring via an acyl-enzyme than a gem-diol intermediate. These results provide insight into engineering BphD for PCB degradation.  相似文献   

14.
The 270-MHz proton NMR spectra of cobrotoxin from Naja naja atra were observed in 2H2O solution. The pKa value (5.93) of His-32 is slightly lower than the pKa value (6.65) of the reference model of N-acetylhistidine methylamide, because of the electrostatic interaction with Arg-33 and Asp-31. The pKa value (5.3--5.4) of His-4 is appreciably low, because of the interaction with the positively charged guanidino group possibly of Arg-59. The hydrogen-deuterium exchange rates in 2H2O solution were measured of cobrotoxin and imidazole-bearing models. The second-order rate constants of N-acetylhistidine methylamide, N-acetylhistidine and imidazole acetic acid satisfy the Br?nsted relation. With reference to this Br?nsted relation, the imidazole ring of His-32 is confirmed to be exposed. The imidazole ring of His-4 is also exposed and the exchange rate is excessively promoted by the presence possibly of Arg-59 in the proximity. All the methyl proton resonances are assigned to amino-acid types, by conventional double-resonance method and more effectively by the spin-echo double-resonance method. Eight methyl proton resonances are identified as due to the gamma and/or delta-methyl groups of Val-46, Leu-1, Ile-50 and Ile-52 residues. The proximity of aromatic ring protons and methyl protons is elucidated by the analyses of nulcear Overhauser effect enhancements. The aromatic proton resonances of Trp-29 are affected by the ionizable groups of Asp-31, His-32 and Tyr-35. The methyl groups of Ile-50 are in the proximity to the aromatic ring of Trp-29 and the methyl groups of Ile-52 are in the proximity to Tyr-25. The highest-field methyl proton resonance is due to a threonine residue in the proximity to His-4. The appreciable temperature-dependent chemical shift of this methyl proton resonance suggests a temperature-dependent local conformational equilibrium around the His-4 residue of the first loop of the cobrotoxin molecule.  相似文献   

15.
The chemical modification of histidine and arginine residues results in a loss of binding of the Mr 46,000 mannose 6-phosphate receptor (MPR 46) to a phosphomannan affinity matrix (Stein, M., Meyer, J. E., Hasilik, A., and von Figura, K. (1987) Biol. Chem. Hoppe-Seyler 368, 927-936). Reversal of the modification or presence of mannose 6-phosphate during the modification partially restores or protects the binding activity, indicating that histidine and arginine residues contribute to the mannose 6-phosphate binding site. The 5 histidine and 8 arginine residues within the luminal domain of MPR 46, which contains the ligand binding site, were exchanged by site-directed mutagenesis. Only the conservative replacement of His-131 and Arg-137 by serine and lysine, respectively, results in a loss of binding activity without affecting other properties of the receptor such as the presence of intramolecular disulfide bonds, immunoreactivity, processing of N-linked oligosaccharides, formation of dimers, intracellular distribution, and surface expression. Conservative replacement of other histidine and arginine residues did not affect the binding activity. Nonconservative replacement of several arginine residues reduced binding activity and immunoreactivity, indicating that the loss of a positive charge at these positions alters the folding of MPR 46. We conclude from these results that His-131 and Arg-137 are essential for binding of ligands by MPR 46.  相似文献   

16.
F S Lee  B L Vallee 《Biochemistry》1989,28(8):3556-3561
The importance of specific residues in angiogenin for binding to placental ribonuclease inhibitor (PRI) has been assessed by examining the interaction of angiogenin derivatives with PRI. PRI binds native angiogenin with a Ki value of 7.1 X 10(-16) M [Lee, F. S., Shapiro, R., & Vallee, B. L. (1989) Biochemistry 28, 225-230]. Substitution of a Gln for Lys-40 in angiogenin by site-specific mutagenesis decreases the association rate constant 3-fold and increases the dissociation rate constant 440-fold, resulting in a 1300-fold weaker Ki value. The half-life of the mutant.PRI complex is 3.4 h compared to approximately 60 days for the native angiogenin.PRI complex. The magnitude of the change in Ki value suggests that in the complex, Lys-40 forms a salt bridge or hydrogen bond with an anionic moiety in PRI. Carboxymethylation of His-13 or His-114 with bromoacetate increases the Ki value 15-fold, and oxidation of Trp-89 by means of dimethyl sulfoxide and hydrochloric acid increases it 2.4-fold, suggesting that these residues also form part of the contact region with PRI. The changes in Ki value reflect an increase in the dissociation rate constant. On the other hand, dinitrophenylation of either Lys-50 or Lys-60 with 1-fluoro-2,4-dinitrobenzene does not significantly alter the Ki value, suggesting that these residues are not part of the contact region. These results indicate that PRI inhibition minimally involves the three residues critical for the activity of angiogenin--Lys-40, His-13, and His-114--and to a lesser extent its single tryptophan, Trp-89.  相似文献   

17.
R Loewenthal  J Sancho  A R Fersht 《Biochemistry》1991,30(27):6775-6779
Fluorescence spectra of wild-type barnase and mutants in which tryptophan and histidine residues have been substituted have been analyzed to give the individual contributions of the three tryptophan residues. The spectrum is dominated by the contribution of Trp-35. The fluorescence intensity varies with pH according to an ionization of a pKa of 7.75. This pKa is close to that previously determined by NMR titration of the C2-H resonances of His-18 as a function of pH (Sali et al., 1989). This histidine residue is close to Trp-94. The pH dependence of the spectrum is abolished when either His-18 or Trp-94 is mutated, and so appears to be caused by the His-18/Trp-94 interaction. The spectral response of this interaction can serve as a probe of the folding pathway and of electrostatic effects within the protein. Changes in the fluorescence spectra on substitution of Trp-94 and His-18 suggest that there is net energy transfer from Trp-71 to Trp-94.  相似文献   

18.
NAD kinase catalyzes the phosphorylation of NAD+ to synthesize NADP+, whereas NADH kinase catalyzes conversion of NADH to NADPH. The mitochondrial protein Pos5 of Saccharomyces cerevisiae shows much higher NADH kinase than NAD kinase activity and is therefore referred to as NADH kinase. To clarify the structural determinant underlying the high NADH kinase activity of Pos5 and its selectivity for NADH over NAD+, we determined the tertiary structure of Pos5 complexed with NADH at a resolution of 2.0 Å. Detailed analysis, including a comparison of the tertiary structure of Pos5 with the structures of human and bacterial NAD kinases, revealed that Arg-293 of Pos5, corresponding to His-351 of human NAD kinase, confers a positive charge on the surface of NADH-binding site, whereas the corresponding His residue does not. Accordingly, conversion of the Arg-293 into a His residue reduced the ratio of NADH kinase activity to NAD kinase activity from 8.6 to 2.1. Conversely, simultaneous changes of Ala-330 and His-351 of human NAD kinase into Ser and Arg residues significantly increased the ratio of NADH kinase activity to NAD kinase activity from 0.043 to 1.39; human Ala-330 corresponds to Pos5 Ser-272, which interacts with the side chain of Arg-293. Arg-293 and Ser-272 were highly conserved in Pos5 homologs (putative NADH kinases), but not in putative NAD kinases. Thus, Arg-293 of Pos5 is a major determinant of NADH selectivity. Moreover, Ser-272 appears to assist Arg-293 in achieving the appropriate conformation.  相似文献   

19.
Otto H  Lamparter T  Borucki B  Hughes J  Heyn MP 《Biochemistry》2003,42(19):5885-5895
We investigated the dimerization of phytochrome Cph1 from the cyanobacterium Synechocystis by fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET). As donor we used the chromophore analogue phycoerythrobilin (PEB) and as acceptor either the natural chromophore phycocyanobilin (PCB; hetero transfer) or PEB (homo transfer). Both chromophores bind in a 1:1 stoichiometry to apo-monomers expressed in Escherichia coli. Energy transfer was characterized by time-resolved fluorescence intensity and anisotropy decay after excitation of PEB by picosecond pulses from a tunable Ti-sapphire laser system. ApoCph1 was first assembled with PEB at a low stoichiometry of 0.1. The remaining sites were then sequentially titrated with PCB. In the course of this titration, the mean lifetime of PEB decreased from 3.33 to 1.25 ns in the P(r) form of Cph1, whereas the anisotropy decay was unaffected. In the P(fr)/P(r) photoequilibrium (about 65% P(fr)), the mean lifetime decreased significantly less, to 1.67 ns. These observations provide strong support for inter-chromophore hetero energy transfer in mixed PEB/PCB dimers. The reduced energy transfer in P(fr) may be due to a structural difference but is at least in part due to the difference in spectral overlap, which was 4.1 x 10(-13) and 1.6 x 10(-13) cm(3) M(-1) in P(r) and P(fr), respectively. From the changes in the mean lifetime, rates of hetero energy transfer of 0.68 and 0.37 ns(-1) were calculated for the P(r) form and the P(fr)/P(r) photoequilibrium, respectively. Sequential titration of apo Cph1 with PEB alone to full occupancy did not affect the intensity decay but led to a substantial increase in depolarization. This is the experimental signature of homo energy transfer. Values for the rate of energy transfer k(HT) (0.47 ns(-1)) and the angle 2theta between the transition dipole moment directions (2theta = 45 +/- 5 degrees) were determined from an analysis of the concentration dependence of the anisotropy at five different PEB/Cph1 stoichiometries. The independently determined rates of hetero and homo energy transfer are thus of comparable magnitude and consistent with the energy transfer interpretation. Using these results and exploiting the 2-fold symmetry of the dimer, the chromophore-chromophore distance R(DA) was calculated and found to be in the range 49 A < R(DA) < 63 A. Further evidence for energy transfer in Cph1 dimers was obtained from dilution experiments with PEB/PEB dimers: the lifetime was unchanged, but the anisotropy increased as the dimers dissociated with increasing dilution. These experiments allowed a rough estimate of 5 +/- 3 microM for the dimer dissociation constant. With the deletion mutant Cph1Delta2 that lacks the carboxy terminal histidine kinase domain less energy transfer was observed suggesting that in this mutant dimerization is much weaker. The carboxy terminal domain of Cph1 that is involved in intersubunit trans-phosphorylation and signal transduction thus plays a dominant role in the dimerization. The FRET method provides a sensitive assay to monitor the association of Cph1 monomers.  相似文献   

20.
Rhodopsin undergoes rearrangements of its transmembrane helices after photon absorption to transfer a light signal to the G-protein transducin. To investigate the mechanism by which rhodopsin adopts the transducin-activating conformation, the local environmental changes in the transmembrane region were probed using the cysteine S-H group, whose stretching frequency is well isolated from the other protein vibrational modes. The S-H stretching modes of cysteine residues introduced into Helix III, which contains several key residues for the helical movements, and of native cysteine residues were measured by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. This method was applied to metarhodopsin IIa, a precursor of the transducin-activating state in which the intramolecular interactions are likely to produce a state ready for helical movements. No environmental change was observed near the ionic lock between Arg-135 in Helix III and Glu-247 in Helix VI that maintains the inactive conformation. Rather, the cysteine residues that showed environmental changes were located around the chromophore, Ala-164, His-211, and Phe-261. These findings imply that the hydrogen bond between Helix III and Helix V involving Glu-122 and His-211 and the hydrophobic packing between Helix III and Helix VI involving Gly-121, Leu-125, Phe-261, and Trp-265 are altered before the helical rearrangement leading toward the active conformation.  相似文献   

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