首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Ligand-dependent structural changes in serum albumin are suggested to underlie its role in physiological solute transport and receptor-mediated cellular selection. Evidence of ligand-induced (oleic acid) structural changes in serum albumin are shown in both time-resolved and steady-state fluorescence quenching and anisotropy measurements of tryptophan 214 (Trp214). These studies were augmented with column chromatography separations. It was found that both the steady-state and time-resolved Stern-Volmer collisional quenching studies of Trp214 with acrylamide pointed to the existence of an oleate-dependent structural transformation. The bimolecular quenching rate constant of defatted human serum albumin, 1.96 x 10(9) M-1 s-1, decreased to 0.94 x 10(9) M-1 s-1 after incubation with oleic acid (9:1). Furthermore, Stern-Volmer quenching studies following fractionation of the structural forms by hydrophobic interaction chromatography were in accordance with this interpretation. Time-resolved fluorescence anisotropy measurements of the Trp214 residue yielded information of motion within the protein together with the whole protein molecule. Characteristic changes in these motions were observed after the binding of oleate to albumin. The addition of oleate was accompanied by an increase in the rotational diffusion time of the albumin molecule from approximately 22 to 33.6 ns. Within the body of the protein, however, the rotational diffusion time for Trp214 exhibited a slight decrease from 191 to 182 ps and was accompanied by a decrease in the extent of the angular motion of Trp214, indicating a transition after oleate binding to a more spatially restricted but less viscous environment.  相似文献   

2.
Seed coat soybean peroxidase (SBP) belongs to class III of the plant peroxidase super family. The protein has a very similar 3-dimensional structure with that of horseradish peroxidase (HRP-C). The fluorescence characteristics of the single tryptophan (Trp117) present in SBP and apo-SBP have been studied by steady-state and pico-second time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy. Fluorescence decay curve of SBP was best described by a four exponential model that gave the lifetimes, 0.035 ns (97.0%), 0.30 ns (2.0%), 2.0 ns (0.8%), and 6.3 ns (0.2%). These lifetime values agreed very well with the values obtained by the model independent maximum entropy method (MEM). The three longer lifetimes that constituted 3% of the fluorophore population in the SBP sample are attributed to the presence of trace quantities of apo-SBP. The pico-second lifetime value of SBP is indicative of efficient energy transfer from Trp117 to heme. From fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) calculations, the energy-transfer efficiency in SBP is found to be relatively higher as compared to HRP-C and is attributed mainly to the higher value of orientation factor, kappa(2) for SBP. Decay-associated spectra of SBP indicated that the tryptophan of SBP is relatively more solvent exposed as compared to HRP-C and is attributed to the various structural features of SBP. Linear Stern-Volmer plots obtained from the quenching measurements using acrylamide gave k(q) = 5.4 x 10(8) M(-1) s(-1) for SBP and 7.2 x 10(8) M(-1) s(-1) for apo-SBP and indicated that on removal of heme in SBP, Trp117 is more solvent exposed.  相似文献   

3.
The interactions between HInd[RuInd2Cl4] and human serum albumin have been investigated through UV-Vis, circular dichroism (CD), fluorescence spectroscopy and the inductively coupled plasma-atomic emission spectroscopy (ICP(AES)) method. Binding of Ru(III)-indazole species to albumin has strong impact on protein structure and it influences considerably albumin binding of other molecules like warfarin, heme or metal ions. The metal complex-human serum albumin (HAS) interactions cause conformational changes with loss of helical stability of the protein and local perturbation in the domain IIA binding pocket. The relative fluorescence intensity of the ruthenium-bound HSA decreased, suggesting that perturbation around the Trp 214 residue took place. This was confirmed by the destabilization of the warfarin-binding site, which includes Trp 214, observed in the metal-bound HSA.  相似文献   

4.

Background

Serum albumin binds avidly to heme to form heme–serum albumin complex, also called methemalbumin, and this binding is thought to protect against the potentially toxic effects of heme. However, the mechanism of detoxification has not been fully elucidated.

Methods

SDS-PAGE and Western blot were used to determine the efficiency of methemalbumin on catalyzing protein carbonylation and nitration. HPLC was used to test the formation of heme to protein cross-linked methemalbumin.

Results

The peroxidase activity of heme increased upon human serum albumin (HSA) binding. Methemalbumin showed higher efficiency in catalyzing tyrosine oxidation than free heme in the presence of H2O2. Methemalbumin catalyzed self-nitration and significantly promoted the nitration of tyrosine in coexistent protein, but decreased the carbonylation of coexistent protein compared with heme. The heme to protein cross-linked form of methemalbumin suggested that HSA trapped the free radical accompanied by the formation of ferryl heme. When tyrosine residues in HSA were modified by iodination, HSA lost of protection effect on protein carbonylation. The low concentration of glutathione could effectively inhibit tyrosine nitration, but had no effect on protein carbonylation.

Conclusion

HSA protects against the toxic effect of heme by transferring the free radical to tyrosine residues in HSA, therefore protecting surrounding proteins from irreversible oxidation, rather than by direct inhibiting the peroxidase activity. The increased tyrosine radicals can be reduced by endogenic antioxidants such as GSH.

General significance

This investigation indicated the important role of tyrosine residues in heme detoxification by HSA and suggested a possible novel mechanism.  相似文献   

5.
The interactions between imidazolium [trans-tetrachlorobis(imidazol) ruthenate(III)] (Ru-im) and human serum albumin (HSA) have been investigated through UV-Vis, CD, fluorescence spectroscopy and by the antibody precipitation test. Binding of Ru(III)-imidazole species to albumin has a strong impact on the protein structure and influences considerably the albumin binding of other molecules such as warfarin or heme. The metal complex-HSA interactions cause conformational changes with the loss of helical stability of the protein and local perturbation in the domain IIA binding pocket. The relative fluorescence intensity of the ruthenium-bound HSA decreased, suggesting that perturbation around the Trp 214 residue took place. This was confirmed by the destabilisation of the warfarin binding site which includes Trp 214, observed in the metal-bound HSA.  相似文献   

6.
Both isomers of diamminedichloroplatinum(II) bind to albumin and induce the formation of the albumin dimer (MW approximately 140 kDa). The trans isomer exhibits a much greater tendency to induce a protein dimerization than the cis isomer. Under similar experimental conditions, the phosphonic derivative of diammineplatinum(II) (DBP) does not induce any dimer formation. The amount of bound complex per mol of human serum albumin (HSA, for an incubation time of 7 days) was found to be 6, 10.5 and 1 mol for cis-, trans-DDP and DBP, respectively. The relative fluorescence intensity of platinum-bound HSA decreases to about 55% for cis-DDP, 45% for trans-DDP and to 85% for DBP when compared to the complex-free protein, suggesting that the binding occurs in the proximity of the Trp214 residue. The structural studies (CD) have shown that only DDP-isomers cause the distinct modification of HSA native structure (alpha-helical content). Pt(II) complexes binding to HSA affect the affinity of HSA towards heme and bilirubin. High excess of DDP prevents the heme and bilirubin binding, while DBP affects this binding much less effectively due to the low amount of the protein-bound complex. Reactions of platinum complexes with albumin are believed to play an important role in the metabolism of this anticancer drug. The minor effect of DBP on HSA may indicate that the toxicity of the phosphonate analog is much lower than toxicities of DDP isomers, most likely due to kinetic reasons.  相似文献   

7.
Chen J  Toptygin D  Brand L  King J 《Biochemistry》2008,47(40):10705-10721
Human gammaD-crystallin (HgammaD-Crys) is a two-domain, beta-sheet eye lens protein found in the lens nucleus. Its long-term solubility and stability are important to maintain lens transparency throughout life. HgammaD-Crys has four highly conserved buried tryptophans (Trps), with two in each of the homologous beta-sheet domains. In situ, these Trps will be absorbing ambient UV radiation that reaches the lens. The dispersal of the excited-state energy to avoid covalent damage is likely to be physiologically relevant for the lens crystallins. Trp fluorescence is efficiently quenched in native HgammaD-Crys. Previous steady-state fluorescence measurements provide strong evidence for energy transfer from Trp42 to Trp68 in the N-terminal domain and from Trp130 to Trp156 in the C-terminal domain [Chen, J., et al. (2006) Biochemistry 45, 11552-11563]. Hybrid quantum mechanical-molecular mechanical (QM-MM) simulations indicated that the fluorescence of Trp68 and Trp156 is quenched by fast electron transfer to the amide backbone. Here we report additional information obtained using time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy. In the single-Trp-containing proteins (Trp42-only, Trp68-only, Trp130-only, and Trp156-only), the highly quenched Trp68 and Trp156 have very short lifetimes, tau approximately 0.1 ns, whereas the moderately fluorescent Trp42 and Trp130 have longer lifetimes, tau approximately 3 ns. In the presence of the energy acceptor (Trp68 or Trp156), the lifetime of the energy donor (Trp42 or Trp130) decreased from approximately 3 to approximately 1 ns. The intradomain energy transfer efficiency is 56% in the N-terminal domain and is 71% in the C-terminal domain. The experimental values of energy transfer efficiency are in good agreement with those calculated theoretically. The absence of a time-dependent red shift in the time-resolved emission spectra of Trp130 proves that its local environment is very rigid. Time-resolved fluorescence anisotropy measurements with the single-Trp-containing proteins, Trp42-only and Trp130-only, indicate that the protein rotates as a rigid body and no segmental motion is detected. A combination of energy transfer with electron transfer results in short excited-state lifetimes of all Trps, which, together with the high rigidity of the protein matrix around Trps, could protect HgammaD-Crys from excited-state reactions causing permanent covalent damage.  相似文献   

8.
Paclitaxel (trade name Taxol) is one of the world's most effective anticancer drugs. It is used to treat several cancers including tumours of the breast, ovary and lung. In the present work the interaction of paclitaxel with human serum albumin (HSA) in aqueous solution at physiological pH has been investigated through CD, fluorescence spectroscopy and by the antibody precipitate test. Binding of paclitaxel to albumin impact on protein structure and it influences considerably albumin binding of other molecules like warfarin, heme or bilirubin. The paclitaxel-HSA interaction causes the conformational changes with the loss of helical stability of protein and local perturbation in the domain IIA binding pocket. The relative fluorescence intensity of the paclitaxel-bound HSA decreased, suggesting that perturbation around the Trp 214 residue took place. This was confirmed by the destabilization of the warfarin binding site, which includes Trp 214, and high affinity bilirubin binding site located in subdomain IIA.  相似文献   

9.
Optical spectroscopy and molecular docking methods were used to examine the binding of aristolochic acid I (AAI) to human serum albumin (HSA) in this paper. By monitoring the intrinsic fluorescence of single Trp214 residue and performing displacement measurements, the specific binding of AAI in the vicinity of Sudlow's Site I of HSA has been clarified. An apparent distance of 2.53 nm between the Trp214 and AAI was obtained via fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) method. In addition, the changes in the secondary structure of HSA after its complexation with the ligand were studied with circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy, which indicated that AAI does not has remarkable effect on the structure of the protein. Moreover, thermal denaturation experiments clearly indicated that the HSA−AAI complexes are conformationally more stable. Finally, the binding details between AAI and HSA were further confirmed by molecular docking studies, which revealed that AAI was bound at subdomain IIA through multiple interactions, such as hydrophobic effect, van der Waals forces and hydrogen bonding.  相似文献   

10.
The interaction of the heme octa (MP-8) and undeca (MP-11) peptides derived from cytochrome c with lipidated human serum albumin (HSA) has been investigated in aqueous solution. It is demonstrated that complex formation occurs in each case with a 1:1 stoichiometry. CN- binding has been used to investigate the accessibility of the heme in each complex by comparison with CN- interaction with methemalbumin. A preliminary study of the kinetics of the Fe3+MP-8/11 human serumalbumin (HSA) interaction demonstrates a clear ligand-size-related effect on mechanism of interaction--an ad hoc explanation of which is given in terms of HSA existing as two nonconverting conformers in solution.  相似文献   

11.
The primary structure of the 142 residue Glossoscolex paulistus d-chain hemoglobin has been determined from Edman degradation data of 11 endo-Glu-C peptides and 11 endo-Lys-C peptides, plus the results of Edman degradation of the intact globin. Tryptophan occupies positions 15, 33 and 129. Homology modeling allowed us to assign the positions of these Trp residues relative to the heme and its environment. The reference coordinates of the indole rings (average coordinates of the C(varepsilon2) and C(delta2) atoms) for W15 and W129 were 16.8 and 18.5 A, respectively, from the geometric center of the heme, and W33 was located in close proximity to the heme group at a distance which was approximately half of that for W15 and W129. It was possible to identify three rotamers of W33 on the basis of electrostatic and Van der Waals energy criteria. The calculated distances from the center of the heme were 8.3, 8.4 and 9.1 A for Rot1, Rot2 and Rot3, respectively. Radiationless energy transfer from the excited indole to the heme was calculated on the basis of F?rster theory. For W33, the distance was more important than the orientation factor, kappa(2), due to its proximity to the heme. However, based on kappa(2), Rot2 (kappa(2)=0.945) was more favorable for the energy transfer than Rot1 (kappa(2)=0.433) or Rot3 (kappa(2)=0.125). In contrast, despite its greater distance from the heme, the kappa(2) of W129 (2.903) established it as a candidate to be more efficiently quenched by the heme than W15 (kappa(2)=0.191). Although the F?rster approach is powerful for the evaluation of the relative efficiency of quenching, it can only explain pico- and sub-nanosecond lifetimes. With the average lifetime, =3 ns, measured for the apomonomer as the reference, the lifetimes calculated for each emitter were: W33-1 (1 ps), W33-2 (2 ps), W33-3 (18 ps), W129 (100 ps), and W15 (600 ps). Experimentally, there are four components for oxymonomers at pH 7: two long ones of 4.6 and 2.1 ns, which contribute approximately 90% of the total fluorescence, one of 300 ps (4%), and the last one of 33 ps (7.4%). It is clear that the equilibrium structure resulting from homology modeling explains the sub-nanosecond fluorescence lifetimes, while the nanosecond range lifetimes require more information about the protein in solution, since there is a significant contribution of lifetimes that resemble the apo molecule.  相似文献   

12.
Tryptophan 214, the only tryptophan residue in human serum albumin, is located in the physiologically important subdomain 2A ligand binding site. In the present study the fluorescence lifetime of tryptophan 214 in the following human serum albumin (HSA) mutants with substitutions in subdomain 2A were determined: K195M, K199M, F211V, R218M, R218H, R218A, R222M, H242V, and R257M. An HSA mutant in which tryptophan was moved from subdomain 2A to subdomain 3A (W214L/Y411W) was also examined. Additionally, the fluorescence lifetime of tryptophan 214 in an HSA fragment consisting of subdomains 1A, 1B, and 2A (1A-1B-2A HSA) was determined. For those species expected to have the most dramatic changes in tryptophan microenvironment, W214L/Y411W and 1A-1B-2A HSA, clear changes in tryptophan lifetimes were observed. Significant changes were also seen for those species with mutations at position 218, which is next to tryptophan in the X-ray structure of HSA. However, significant changes were also observed for H242V and R257M, which contain substitutions at positions not immediately adjacent to tryptophan 214, highlighting the conformational flexibility of subdomain 2A.  相似文献   

13.
The slow folding of a single tryptophan-containing mutant of barstar has been studied in the presence of 2 M urea at 10 degrees C, using steady state and time-resolved fluorescence methods and far and near-UV CD measurements. The protein folds in two major phases: a fast phase, which is lost in the dead time of measurement during which the polypeptide collapses to a compact form, is followed by a slow observable phase. During the fast phase, the rotational correlation time of Trp53 increases from 2.2 ns to 7.2 ns, and its mean fluorescence lifetime increases from 2.3 ns to 3.4 ns. The fractional changes in steady-state fluorescence, far-UV CD, and near-UV CD signals, which are associated with the fast phase are, respectively, 36 %, 46 %, and 16 %. The product of the fast phase can bind the hydrophobic dye ANS. These observations together suggest that the folding intermediate accumulated at the end of the fast phase has: (a) about 20 % of the native-state secondary structure, (b) marginally formed or disordered tertiary structure, (c) a water-intruded and mobile protein interior; and (d) solvent-accessible patches of hydrophobic groups. Measurements of the anisotropy decay of Trp53 suggest that it undergoes two types of rotational motion in the intermediate: (i) fast (tau(r) approximately 1 ns) local motion of its indole side-chain, and (ii) a slower (tau(r) approximately 7.2 ns) motion corresponding to global tumbling of the entire protein molecule. The ability of the Trp53 side-chain to undergo fast local motion in the intermediate, but not in the fully folded protein where it is completely buried in the hydrophobic core, suggests that the core of the intermediate is still poorly packed. The global tumbling time of the fully folded protein is faster at 5.6 ns, suggesting that the volume of the intermediate is 25 % more than that of the fully folded protein. The rate of folding of this intermediate to the native state, measured by steady-state fluorescence, far-UV CD, and near-UV CD, is 0.07(+/-0.01) min(-1) This rate compares to a rate of folding of 0.03(+/-0.005) min(-1), determined by double-jump experiments which monitor directly formation of native protein; and to a rate of folding of 0.05 min(-1), when determined from time-resolved anisotropy measurements of the long rotational correlation time, which relaxes from an initial value of 7.2 ns to a final value of 5. 6 ns as the protein folds. On the other hand, the amplitude of the short correlation time decreases rapidly with a rate of 0.24(+/-0.06) min(-1). These results suggest that tight packing of residues in the hydrophobic core occurs relatively early during the observable slow folding reaction, before substantial secondary and tertiary structure formation and before final compaction of the protein.  相似文献   

14.
Fluctuation domains in myoglobin. Fluorescence quenching studies   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The dynamics of two domains in the myoglobin molecule, close to the heme and inside the protein medium including the surface, are investigated through the study of the fluorescence oxygen quenching of two probes imbedded in the heme pocket: zinc protoporphyrin IX (with a fluorescence lifetime of 2.1 ns) and metal-free protoporphyrin IX (with a fluorescence lifetime of 17.8 ns).  相似文献   

15.
16.
We monitored the unfolding of human serum albumin (HSA) and glycated human serum albumin (gHSA) subjected to guanidine hydrochloride (GndHCl) by using fluorescence and circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy. A two-state model with sloping baselines best described the Trp-214 fluorescence unfolding measurements, while a three-state model best described the far-UV CD unfolding data. Glycation of HSA increased the [D](50%) point by approximately 0.20M. This corresponded to an increase in the free energy of unfolding of gHSA relative to HSA of 2.6kJ/mol. The intrinsic fluorescence of Trp-214 in gHSA is 0.72 of that of HSA and the far-UV CD spectrum of gHSA is nearly identical to that of HSA. These results showed that glycation altered the local structure around Trp-214 while not significantly impacting the secondary structure, and this alteration translated into an overall change in the stability of gHSA compared to HSA.  相似文献   

17.
Human serum albumin (HSA), the most abundant protein found in blood plasma, transports many drugs and ligands in the circulatory system. The drug binding ability of HSA strongly influences free drug concentrations in plasma, and is directly related to the effectiveness of clinical therapy. In current work, binding of HSA to angiotensin II receptor blockers (ARBs) are investigated using docking and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. Docking results demonstrate that the main HSA–ARB binding site is subdomain IIIA of HSA. Simulation results reveal clearly how HSA binds with valsartan and telmisartan. Interestingly, electrostatic interactions appear to be more important than hydrophobic interactions in stabilizing binding of valsartan to HSA, and vice versa for HSA–telmisartan. The molecular distance between HSA Trp214 (donor) and the drug (acceptor) can be measured by fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) in experimental studies. The average distances between Trp-214 and ARBs are estimated here based on our MD simulations, which could be valuable to future FRET studies. This work will be useful in the design of new ARB drugs with desired HSA binding affinity.  相似文献   

18.
Influence of isopropanol (iPrOH) on the structural dynamics of Thermomyces lanuginosa lipase (TLL) was studied by steady-state, time-resolved, and stopped-flow fluorescence spectroscopy, monitoring the intrinsic emission of Trp residues. The fluorescence of the four Trps of the wild-type enzyme report on the global changes of the whole lipase molecule. To monitor the conformational changes in the so-called "lid," an alpha-helical surface loop, the single Trp mutant W89m (W117F, W221H, W260H) was employed. Circular dichroism (CD) spectra revealed that iPrOH does not cause major alterations in the secondary structures of the wild-type TLL and W89m. With increasing [iPrOH], judged by the ratio of emission intensities at 350 nm and 330 nm, the average microenvironment of the Trps in the wild-type TLL became more hydrophobic, whereas Trp89 of W89m moved into a more hydrophilic microenvironment. Time-resolved fluorescence measurements revealed no major changes to be induced by iPrOH neither in the shorter fluorescence lifetime component (tau(1) = 0.5--1.2 ns) for the wild-type TLL nor in the longer fluorescence lifetime component (tau(2) = 4.8--6.0 ns) in the wild-type TLL and the W89m mutant. Instead, for W89m on increasing iPrOH from 25% to 50% the value for tau(1) increased significantly, from 0.43 to 1.5 ns. The shorter correlation time phi(1) of W89m had a minimum of 0.08 ns in 25% iPrOH. Judged from the residual anisotropy r(infinity) the amplitude of the local motion of Trp89 increased upon increasing [iPrOH] 10%. Stopped-flow fluorescence spectroscopy measurements suggested the lid to open within approximately 2 ms upon transfer of W89m into 25% iPrOH. Steady-state anisotropies and longer correlation times revealed increasing concentrations of iPrOH to result also in the formation of dimers as well as possibly also higher oligomers by TLL.  相似文献   

19.
Virstatin is a small molecule that inhibits Vibrio cholerae virulence regulation, the causative agent for cholera. Here we report the interaction of virstatin with human serum albumin (HSA) using various biophysical methods. The drug binding was monitored using different isomeric forms of HSA (N form ~pH 7.2, B form ~pH 9.0 and F form ~pH 3.5) by absorption and fluorescence spectroscopy. There is a considerable quenching of the intrinsic fluorescence of HSA on binding the drug. The distance (r) between donor (Trp214 in HSA) and acceptor (virstatin), obtained from Forster-type fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET), was found to be 3.05 nm. The ITC data revealed that the binding was an enthalpy-driven process and the binding constants K(a) for N and B isomers were found to be 6.09×10(5 )M(-1) and 4.47×10(5) M(-1), respectively. The conformational changes of HSA due to the interaction with the drug were investigated from circular dichroism (CD) and Fourier Transform Infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy. For 1:1 molar ratio of the protein and the drug the far-UV CD spectra showed an increase in α- helicity for all the conformers of HSA, and the protein is stabilized against urea and thermal unfolding. Molecular docking studies revealed possible residues involved in the protein-drug interaction and indicated that virstatin binds to Site I (subdomain IIA), also known as the warfarin binding site.  相似文献   

20.
The nanosecond dynamics of the single tryptophan, Trp10, of HPr from Streptomyces coelicolor, HPrsc, has been monitored at different pHs. Time-resolved fluorescence methods and DOSY measurements have been used to map the compactness of the protein. At low pHs, where a molten globule-like species has been described, the correlation times from fluorescence showed an abrupt change as the pH was increased. When the protein was folded (above pH 4), two correlation times were observed, which remained practically constant up to pH 9.5. The long correlation time, around 7.5 ns, corresponds to the global rotational motion of the protein, since this value is in agreement with that determined theoretically from hydrodynamic measurements. The short correlation time, around 1.4 ns, must report on fast movements of the protein segment containing the tryptophan residue. On the other hand, fluorescence lifetimes showed the same abrupt change as the correlation times at low pH, but, in addition, a sigmoidal change with a pKa approximately 4.3 was also observed. On the basis of the modeled structure of HPrsc, this last transition could be due to the proximity of Glu12 to Trp10. The changes monitored by the fluorescence lifetimes agree with those observed previously by steady-state fluorescence, CD, and ANS binding experiments. Taken together, these data suggest a multistate equilibrium during folding of HPrsc starting from low pHs.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号