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1.
White DJ  Reiter NJ  Sikkink RA  Yu L  Rusnak F 《Biochemistry》2001,40(30):8918-8929
Bacteriophage lambda phosphoprotein phosphatase (lambdaPP) has structural similarity to the mammalian Ser/Thr phosphoprotein phosphatases (PPPs) including the immunosuppressant drug target calcineurin. PPPs possess a conserved active site containing a dinuclear metal cluster, with metal ligands provided by a phosphoesterase motif plus two additional histidine residues at the C-terminus. Multiple sequence alignment of lambdaPP with 28 eubacterial and archeal phosphoesterases identified active site residues from the phosphoesterase motif and in many cases 2 additional C-terminal His metal ligands. Most highly similar to lambdaPP are E. coli PrpA and PrpB. Using the crystal structure of lambdaPP [Voegtli, W. C., et al. (2000) Biochemistry 39, 15365-15374] as a structural and active site model for PPPs and related bacterial phosphoesterases, we have studied mutant forms of lambdaPP reconstituted with Mn(2+) by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy, Mn(2+) binding analysis, and phosphatase kinetics. Analysis of Mn(2+)-bound active site mutant lambdaPP proteins shows that H22N, N75H, and H186N mutations decrease phosphatase activity but still allow mononuclear Mn(2+) and [(Mn(2+))(2)] binding. The high affinity Mn(2+) binding site is shown to consist of M2 site ligands H186 and Asn75, but not H22 from the M1 site which is ascribed as the lower affinity site.  相似文献   

2.
Bacteriophage lambda protein phosphatase (lambdaPP) with Mn(2+) as the activating metal cofactor was studied using phosphatase inhibition kinetics and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy. Orthophosphate and the oxoanion analogues orthovanadate, tungstate, molybdate, arsenate, and sulfate were shown to inhibit the phosphomonoesterase activity of lambdaPP, albeit with inhibition constants (K(i)) that range over 5 orders of magnitude. In addition, small organic anions were tested as inhibitors. Phosphonoacetohydroxamic acid (PhAH) was found to be a strong competitive inhibitor (K(i) = 5.1 +/- 1.6 microM) whereas phosphonoacetic acid (K(i) = 380 +/- 45 microM) and acetohydroxamic acid (K(i) > 75 mM) modestly inhibited lambdaPP. Low-temperature EPR spectra of Mn(2+)-reconstituted lambdaPP in the presence of oxoanions and PhAH demonstrate that inhibitor binding decreases the spin-coupling constant, J, compared to the native enzyme. This suggests a change in the bridging interaction between Mn(2+) ions of the dimer due to protonation or replacement of a bridging ligand. Inhibitor binding also induces several spectral shifts. Hyperfine splitting characteristic of a spin-coupled (Mn(2+))(2) dimer is most prominent upon the addition of orthovanadate (K(i) = 0.70 +/- 0.20 microM) and PhAH, indicating that these inhibitors tightly interact with the (Mn(2+))(2) form of lambdaPP. These EPR and inhibition kinetic results are discussed in the context of establishing a common mechanism for the hydrolysis of phosphate esters by lambdaPP and other serine/threonine protein phosphatases.  相似文献   

3.
The impact of mercuric ions (Hg(2+)) on prawn oocytes was examined. Prawn oocytes constitute an unusual system in that they are activated at spawning by seawater Mg(2+), which mediates correlated dynamic changes in intracellular free calcium concentration [(Ca(2+))(i)] and membrane conductance associated with the meiosis resumption. Using a voltage clamp technique and intracellular calcium measurements, we observed that treatment with Hg(2+) (5, 10, and 20 microM) resulted in simultaneous impairments of both (Ca(2+))(i) and membrane current responses to external Mg(2+). Treatment with Hg(2+) also resulted in a gradual dose-dependent slow increase in the baseline level of both (Ca(2+))(i) and membrane conductance, independent of stimulation with external Mg(2+). The effect of Hg(2+) on (Ca(2+))(i) and membrane conductance changes resulted from a block of the signal transduction pathway at some point before the InsP(3) receptor channel involved in Ca(2+) release from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stocks. The Hg(2+)-dependent gradual increase in both (Ca(2+))(i) and membrane conductance baseline levels may potentially result from a slow permeabilization of the ER membrane, resulting in Ca(2+) leaking into the cytosol. Indeed, this effect could be blocked with the cell permeable Hg(2+) competitor dithiothreitol, which was able to displace Hg(2+) from its intracellular target regardless of whether external Ca(2+) was present or not.  相似文献   

4.
F Rusnak  L Yu  S Todorovic  P Mertz 《Biochemistry》1999,38(21):6943-6952
The interaction of bacteriophage lambda protein phosphatase with Mn2+ was studied using biochemical techniques and electron paramagnetic resonance spectrometry. Reconstitution of bacteriophage lambda protein phosphatase in the presence of excess MnCl2 followed by rapid desalting over a gel filtration column resulted in the retention of approximately 1 equiv of Mn2+ ion bound to the protein. This was determined by metal analyses and low-temperature EPR spectrometry, the latter of which provided evidence of a mononuclear high-spin Mn2+ ion in a ligand environment of oxygen and nitrogen atoms. The Mn2+-reconstituted enzyme exhibited negligible phosphatase activity in the absence of added MnCl2. The EPR spectrum of the mononuclear species disappeared upon the addition of a second equivalent of Mn2+ and was replaced by a spectrum attributed to an exchange-coupled (Mn2+)2 cluster. EPR spectra of the dinuclear (Mn2+)2 cluster were characterized by the presence of multiline features with a hyperfine splitting of 39 G. Temperature-dependent studies indicated that these features arose from an excited state. Titrations of the apoprotein with MnCl2 provided evidence of one Mn2+ binding site with a micromolar affinity and at least one additional Mn2+ site with a 100-fold lower affinity. The dependence of the phosphatase activity on Mn2+ concentration indicates that full enzyme activity probably requires occupation of both Mn2+ sites. These results are discussed in the context of divalent metal ion activation of this enzyme and possible roles for Mn2+ activation of other serine/threonine protein phosphatases.  相似文献   

5.
The identity of the physiological metal cofactor for human methionine aminopeptidase-2 (MetAP2) has not been established. To examine this question, we first investigated the effect of eight divalent metal ions, including Ca(2+), Co(2+), Cu(2+), Fe(2+), Mg(2+), Mn(2+), Ni(2+), and Zn(2+), on recombinant human methionine aminopeptidase apoenzymes in releasing N-terminal methionine from three peptide substrates: MAS, MGAQFSKT, and (3)H-MASK(biotin)G. The activity of MetAP2 on either MAS or MGAQFSKT was enhanced 15-25-fold by Co(2+) or Mn(2+) metal ions in a broad concentration range (1-1000 microM). In the presence of reduced glutathione to mimic the cellular environment, Co(2+) and Mn(2+) were also the best stimulators (approximately 30-fold) for MetAP2 enzyme activity. To determine which metal ion is physiologically relevant, we then tested inhibition of intracellular MetAP2 with synthetic inhibitors selective for MetAP2 with different metal cofactors. A-310840 below 10 microM did not inhibit the activity of MetAP2-Mn(2+) but was very potent against MetAP2 with other metal ions including Co(2+), Fe(2+), Ni(2+), and Zn(2+) in the in vitro enzyme assays. In contrast, A-311263 inhibited MetAP2 with Mn(2+), as well as Co(2+), Fe(2+), Ni(2+), and Zn(2+). In cell culture assays, A-310840 did not inhibit intracellular MetAP2 enzyme activity and did not inhibit cell proliferation despite its ability to permeate and accumulate in cytosol, while A-311263 inhibited both intracellular MetAP2 and proliferation in a similar concentration range, indicating cellular MetAP2 is functioning as a manganese enzyme but not as a cobalt, zinc, iron, or nickel enzyme. We conclude that MetAP2 is a manganese enzyme and that therapeutic MetAP2 inhibitors should inhibit MetAP2-Mn(2+).  相似文献   

6.
The catalytically competent Mn(II)-loaded form of the argE-encoded N-acetyl-l-ornithine deacetylase from Escherichia coli (ArgE) was characterized by kinetic, thermodynamic, and spectroscopic methods. Maximum N-acetyl-l-ornithine (NAO) hydrolytic activity was observed in the presence of one Mn(II) ion with k cat and K m values of 550 s−1 and 0.8 mM, respectively, providing a catalytic efficiency (k cat/K m) of 6.9 × 105 M−1 s−1. The ArgE dissociation constant (K d) for Mn(II) was determined to be 0.18 μM, correlating well with a value obtained by isothermal titration calorimetry of 0.30 μM for the first metal binding event and 5.3 μM for the second. An Arrhenius plot of the NAO hydrolysis for Mn(II)-loaded ArgE was linear from 15 to 55 °C, suggesting the rate-limiting step does not change as a function of temperature over this range. The activation energy, determined from the slope of this plot, was 50.3 kJ mol−1. Other thermodynamic parameters were ΔG = 58.1 kJ mol−1, ΔH = 47.7 kJ mol−1, and ΔS = –34.5 J mol−1 K−1. Similarly, plots of lnK m versus 1/T were linear, suggesting substrate binding is controlled by a single step. The natural product, [(2S,3R)-3-amino-2-hydroxy-4-phenylbutanoyl]leucine (bestatin), was found to be a competitive inhibitor of ArgE with a K i value of 67 μM. Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) data recorded for both [Mn(II)_(ArgE)] and [Mn(II)Mn(II)(ArgE)] indicate that the two Mn(II) ions form a dinuclear site. Moreover, the EPR spectrum of [Mn(II)Mn(II)(ArgE)] in the presence of bestatin indicates that bestatin binds to ArgE but does not form a μ-alkoxide bridge between the two metal ions.  相似文献   

7.
Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium requires Mn(2+), but only a few Mn(2+)-dependent enzymes have been identified from bacteria. To characterize Mn(2+)-dependent enzymes from serovar Typhimurium, two putative PPP-family protein phosphatase genes were cloned from serovar Typhimurium and named prpA and prpB. Their DNA-derived amino acid sequences showed 61% identity to the corresponding Escherichia coli proteins and 41% identity to each other. Each phosphatase was expressed in E. coli and purified to near electrophoretic homogeneity. Both PrpA and PrpB absolutely required a divalent metal for activity. As with other phosphatases of this class, Mn(2+) had the highest affinity and stimulated the greatest activity. The apparent K(a) of PrpA for Mn(2+) of 65 microM was comparable to that for other bacterial phosphatases, but PrpB had a much higher affinity for Mn(2+) (1.3 microM). The pH optima were pH 6.5 for PrpA and pH 8 for PrpB, while the optimal temperatures were 45 to 55 degrees C for PrpA and 30 to 37 degrees C for PrpB. Each phosphatase could hydrolyze phosphorylated serine, threonine, or tyrosine residues, but their relative specific activities varied with the specific substrate tested. These differences suggest that each phosphatase is used by serovar Typhimurium under different growth or environmental conditions such as temperature or acidity.  相似文献   

8.
Bacterial acetone carboxylase catalyzes the ATP-dependent carboxylation of acetone to acetoacetate with the concomitant production of AMP and two inorganic phosphates. The importance of manganese in Rhodobacter capsulatus acetone carboxylase has been established through a combination of physiological, biochemical, and spectroscopic studies. Depletion of manganese from the R. capsulatus growth medium resulted in inhibition of acetone-dependent but not malate-dependent cell growth. Under normal growth conditions (0.5 microm Mn2+ in medium), growth with acetone as the carbon source resulted in a 4-fold increase in intracellular protein-bound manganese over malate-grown cells and the appearance of a Mn2+ EPR signal centered at g = 2 that was absent in malate-grown cells. Acetone carboxylase purified from cells grown with 50 microm Mn2+ had a 1.6-fold higher specific activity and 1.9-fold higher manganese content than cells grown with 0.5 microm Mn2+, consistently yielding a stoichiometry of 1.9 manganese/alpha2beta2gamma2 multimer, or 0.95 manganese/alphabetagamma protomer. Manganese in acetone carboxylase was tightly bound and not removed upon dialysis against various metal ion chelators. The addition of acetone to malate-grown cells grown in medium depleted of manganese resulted in the high level synthesis of acetone carboxylase (15-20% soluble protein), which, upon purification, exhibited 7% of the activity and 6% of the manganese content of the enzyme purified from acetone-grown cells. EPR analysis of purified acetone carboxylase indicates the presence of a mononuclear Mn2+ center, with possible spin coupling of two mononuclear sites. The addition of Mg.ATP or Mg.AMP resulted in EPR spectral changes, whereas the addition of acetone, CO2, inorganic phosphate, and acetoacetate did not perturb the EPR. These studies demonstrate that manganese is essential for acetone carboxylation and suggest a role for manganese in nucleotide binding and activation.  相似文献   

9.
The immobilization of asparatase-containing Escherichia coli was investigated by various methods, and the most active immobilized cells were obtained by entrapment in a polyacrylamide gel lattice. Other asparatase-containing bacteria were also entrapped by the same method, and the enzymatically active immobilized cells were obtained. The aspartase activity of the immobilized E. coli cells was increased nine- to tenfold by autolysis of the cells entrapped in the gel lattice. Enzymatic properties of the immobilized E. coli cells were investigated and compared with those of the intact cells. The optimal pH was 8.5 for the immobilized cells and 10.5 for the intact cells. The aspartase activities of immobilized and intact cells were not activated by Mn(2+), which can activate the immobilized and native aspartases. The heat stability of the immobilized cells was somewhat higher than that of the intact cells. Bivalent metal ions such as Mn(2+), Mg(2+), Ca(2+) protected against thermal inactivation of the aspartase activity of the immobilized and intact cells.  相似文献   

10.
Horton TE  DeRose VJ 《Biochemistry》2000,39(37):11408-11416
The effects of Co(NH(3))(6)(3+) on the hammerhead ribozyme are analyzed using several techniques, including activity measurements, electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR), and circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopies and thermal denaturation studies. Co(NH(3))(6)(3+) efficiently displaces Mn(2+) bound to the ribozyme with an apparent dissociation constant of K(d app) = 22 +/- 4.2 microM in 500 microM Mn(2+) (0.1 M NaCl). Displacement of Mn(2+) coincides with Co(NH(3))(6)(3+) inhibition of hammerhead activity in 500 microM Mn(2+), reducing the activity of the WT hammerhead by approximately 15-fold with an inhibition constant of K(i) = 30.9 +/- 2.3 microM. A residual 'slow' activity is observed in the presence of Co(NH(3))(6)(3+) and low concentrations of Mn(2+). Under these conditions, a single Mn(2+) ion remains bound and has a low-temperature EPR spectrum identical to that observed previously for the highest affinity Mn(2+) site in the hammerhead ribozyme in 1 M NaCl, tentatively attributed to the A9/G10.1 site [Morrissey, S. R. , Horton, T. E., and DeRose, V. J. (2000) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 122, 3473-3481]. Circular dichroism and thermal denaturation experiments also reveal structural effects that accompany the observed inhibition of cleavage and Mn(2+) displacement induced by addition of Co(NH(3))(6)(3+). Taken together, the data indicate that a high-affinity Co(NH(3))(6)(3+) site is responsible for significant inhibition accompanied by structural changes in the hammerhead ribozyme. In addition, the results support a model in which at least two types of metal sites, one of which requires inner-sphere coordination, support hammerhead activity.  相似文献   

11.
The aim of this study was to investigate the dependence of the observed cleavage rates (k(obs)) of a tertiary stabilized hammerhead ribozyme (tsHHRz) and of a minimal hammerhead ribozyme (mHHRz), both derived from tobacco ringspot virus, on the type and concentration of divalent metal ions in order to interpret the functional role of high-affinity ions detected by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR). To measure the fast cleavage of the cis tsHHRz, a new method using chemically synthesized fluorescent-labeled RNAs has been developed. The tsHHRz cleavage rate is up to 20-fold faster than that of the mHHRz under similar conditions. The presence of Mn(2+) ions leads to a 60-fold faster cleavage than in the presence of Mg(2+) ions. The functional role of the high-affinity ion was evaluated using neomycin B inhibition studies. Neomycin B reduces the cleavage activity of both ribozymes but the inhibitory effect on tsHHRz is much weaker than that on the mHHRz. EPR data had shown that neomycin B displaces both low-affinity and high-affinity Mn(2+) ions from the mHHRz, but only low-affinity ions from tsHHRz. Inhibition of the tsHHRz activity may be due to the displacement of weakly bound Me(2+) ions required for the local folding leading to cleavage, whereas both the high-affinity ion required for folding and the weakly bound ions are replaced in the mHHRz. The high-affinity metal ion is required for the stabilization of the global HHRz structure, but is not involved in catalysis or stabilization of the transient state.  相似文献   

12.
13.
D'souza VM  Bennett B  Copik AJ  Holz RC 《Biochemistry》2000,39(13):3817-3826
The metal-binding properties of the methionyl aminopeptidase from Escherichia coli (MetAP) were investigated. Measurements of catalytic activity as a function of added Co(II) and Fe(II) revealed that maximal enzymatic activity is observed after the addition of only 1 equiv of divalent metal ion. Based on these studies, metal binding constants for the first metal binding event were found to be 0.3 +/- 0.2 microM and 0.2 +/- 0.2 microM for Co(II)- and Fe(II)-substituted MetAP, respectively. Binding of excess metal ions (>50 equiv) resulted in the loss of approximately 50% of the catalytic activity. Electronic absorption spectral titration of a 1 mM sample of MetAP with Co(II) provided a binding constant of 2.5 +/- 0.5 mM for the second metal binding site. Furthermore, the electronic absorption spectra of Co(II)-loaded MetAP indicated that both metal ions reside in a pentacoordinate geometry. Consistent with the absorption data, electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectra of [CoCo(MetAP)] also indicated that the Co(II) geometries are not highly constrained, suggesting that each Co(II) ion in MetAP resides in a pentacoordinate geometry. EPR studies on [CoCo(MetAP)] also revealed that at pH 7.5 there is no significant spin-coupling between the two Co(II) ions, though a small proportion ( approximately 5%) of the sample exhibited detectable spin-spin interactions at pH values > 9.6. EPR studies on [Fe(III)_(MetAP)] and [Fe(III)Fe(III)(MetAP)] also suggested no spin-coupling between the two metal ions. (1)H nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectra of [Co(II)_(MetAP)] in both H(2)O and D(2)O buffer indicated that the first metal binding site contains the only active-site histidine residue, His171. Mechanistic implications of the observed binding properties of divalent metal ions to the MetAP from E. coli are discussed.  相似文献   

14.
MnDPDP [manganese(II) N, N'-dipyridoxylethylenediamine- N, N'-diacetate-5,5'-bis(phosphate)] is the active component of Teslascan, a contrast medium for magnetic resonance imaging of the liver. It has previously been shown that MnDPDP is rapidly dephosphorylated to the monophosphate MnDPMP and the non-phosphorylated MnPLED, and that all these substances are rapidly transmetallated to the corresponding Zn complexes. In the present study we used EPR at 9 and 230 GHz to show that no free Mn(2+) ions can be detected in the product or in a mixture of MnDPDP and human serum. Competition experiments between MnDPDP and Zn(2+), Ca(2+), and Mg(2+) ions revealed approximately 15% transmetallation with Zn(2+) in a buffer system containing metal ion concentrations similar to that in serum, whereas approximately 10% transmetallation was obtained with Ca(2+) and only negligible transmetallation was obtained with Mg(2+) under these conditions. Binding experiments with Mn(2+) added to human albumin and human serum indicate that albumin accounts for most of the protein-bound Mn(2+) in serum.  相似文献   

15.
Methionine aminopeptidases (MetAPs) are ubiquitous metallohydrolases that remove the N-terminal methionine from nascent polypeptide chains. Although various crystal structures of MetAP in the presence of inhibitors have been solved, the structural aspects of the product-bound step has received little attention. Both perpendicular- and parallel-mode electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectra were recorded for the Mn(II)-loaded forms of the type-I (Escherichia coli) and type-II (Pyrococcus furiosus) MetAPs in the presence of the reaction product l-methionine (L-Met). In general, similar EPR features were observed for both [MnMn(EcMetAP-I)]-L-Met and [MnMn(PfMetAP-II)]-L-Met. The observed perpendicular-mode EPR spectra consisted of a six-line hyperfine pattern at g = 2.03 (A = 8.8 mT) with less intense signals with eleven-line splitting at g = 2.4 and 1.7 (A = 4.4 mT). The former feature results from mononuclear, magnetically isolated Mn(II) ions and this signal are 3-fold more intense in the [MnMn(PfMetAP-II)]-L-Met EPR spectrum than in the [MnMn(EcMetAP-I)]-L-Met spectrum. Inspection of the EPR spectra of both [MnMn(EcMetAP-I)]-L-Met and [MnMn(PfMetAP-II)]-L-Met at 40 K in the parallel mode reveals that the [Mn(EcMetAP-I)]-L-Met spectrum exhibits a well-resolved hyperfine split pattern at g = 7.6 with a hyperfine splitting constant of A = 4.4 mT. These data suggest the presence of a magnetically coupled dinuclear Mn(II) center. On the other hand, a similar feature was not observed for the [MnMn(PfMetAP-II)]-L-Met complex. Therefore, the EPR data suggest that L-Met binds to [MnMn(EcMetAP-I)] differently than [MnMn(PfMetAP-II)]. To confirm these data, the X-ray crystal structure of [MnMn(PfMetAP-II)]-L-Met was solved to 2.3 A resolution. Both Mn1 and Mn2 reside in a distorted trigonal bipyramidal geometry, but the bridging water molecule, observed in the [CoCo(PfMetAP-II)] structure, is absent. Therefore, L-Met binding displaces this water molecule, but the carboxylate oxygen atom of L-Met does not bridge between the two Mn(II) ions. Instead, a single carboxylate oxygen atom of L-Met interacts with only Mn1, while the N-terminal amine nitrogen atom binds to M2. This L-Met binding mode is different from that observed for L-Met binding [CoCo(EcMetAP-I)]. Therefore, the catalytic mechanisms of type-I MetAPs may differ somewhat from type-II enzymes when a dinuclear metalloactive site is present.  相似文献   

16.
Human erythrocyte Mn(2+)-dependent (C'A') and -independent (CA) protein-serine/threonine phosphatase (PP) 2A are composed of 34-kDa catalytic C' and C subunits, in which the metal dependency resides, and 63-kDa regulatory A' and A subunits, respectively. Each catalytic and regulatory subunit gave the same V8- and papain-peptide maps, respectively. Stoichiometric zinc and substoichiometric iron were detected in CA but not in C'A' [Nishito et al. (1999) FEBS Lett. 447, 29-33]. The Mn(2+)-dependent protein-tyrosine phosphatase (PTP) activity of C'A' was about 70-fold higher than that of CA. Pre-incubation of CA with 25 mM NaF changed CA to a Mn(2+)-dependent form with higher PTP activity. The same NaF treatment had no effect on C'A'. Pre-incubation of C'A' with ZnCl(2), zinc-metallothionein, or FeCl(2) activated the Mn(2+)-independent PP activity, but pre-incubation with FeCl(3) did not. Ascorbate in the pre-incubation and assay mixture significantly stimulated the effect of FeCl(2). Pre-incubation of C'A' with 5 microM ZnCl(2) and 15 microM FeCl(2) in the presence of 1 mM ascorbate synergistically stimulated the Mn(2+)-independent PP activity, with concomitant suppression of the Mn(2+)-dependent PP and PTP activities. The PP and PTP activities of CA were unaffected by the same zinc and/or iron treatment. Micromolar concentrations of vanadate strongly inhibited the Mn(2+)-dependent PP activity of C'A' but only slightly inhibited the PP activity of CA. Using the distinct effect of vanadate as an indicator, the interconversion between CA and C'A' with the above mentioned treatments was proved. These results support the notion that Mn(2+)-independent CA is a Zn(2+)- and Fe(2+)-metalloenzyme, whose apoenzyme is Mn(2+)-dependent C'A'.  相似文献   

17.
TRPM7 provides an ion channel mechanism for cellular entry of trace metal ions   总被引:18,自引:0,他引:18  
Trace metal ions such as Zn(2+), Fe(2+), Cu(2+), Mn(2+), and Co(2+) are required cofactors for many essential cellular enzymes, yet little is known about the mechanisms through which they enter into cells. We have shown previously that the widely expressed ion channel TRPM7 (LTRPC7, ChaK1, TRP-PLIK) functions as a Ca(2+)- and Mg(2+)-permeable cation channel, whose activity is regulated by intracellular Mg(2+) and Mg(2+).ATP and have designated native TRPM7-mediated currents as magnesium-nucleotide-regulated metal ion currents (MagNuM). Here we report that heterologously overexpressed TRPM7 in HEK-293 cells conducts a range of essential and toxic divalent metal ions with strong preference for Zn(2+) and Ni(2+), which both permeate TRPM7 up to four times better than Ca(2+). Similarly, native MagNuM currents are also able to support Zn(2+) entry. Furthermore, TRPM7 allows other essential metals such as Mn(2+) and Co(2+) to permeate, and permits significant entry of nonphysiologic or toxic metals such as Cd(2+), Ba(2+), and Sr(2+). Equimolar replacement studies substituting 10 mM Ca(2+) with the respective divalent ions reveal a unique permeation profile for TRPM7 with a permeability sequence of Zn(2+) approximately Ni(2+) > Ba(2+) > Co(2+) > Mg(2+) >/= Mn(2+) >/= Sr(2+) >/= Cd(2+) >/= Ca(2+), while trivalent ions such as La(3+) and Gd(3+) are not measurably permeable. With the exception of Mg(2+), which exerts strong negative feedback from the intracellular side of the pore, this sequence is faithfully maintained when isotonic solutions of these divalent cations are used. Fura-2 quenching experiments with Mn(2+), Co(2+), or Ni(2+) suggest that these can be transported by TRPM7 in the presence of physiological levels of Ca(2+) and Mg(2+), suggesting that TRPM7 represents a novel ion-channel mechanism for cellular metal ion entry into vertebrate cells.  相似文献   

18.
Adenylyl cyclase toxin of Bordetella pertussis has been shown by several investigators to require Ca(2+) for its actions on target cells, but little is known about the nature and specificity of divalent metal binding to this novel toxin. Calcium is the preferred divalent metal since toxic actions are markedly reduced in the presence of divalent species other than calcium. Mn(2+) EPR was used to quantitate and characterize divalent metal binding and revealed that the toxin contains approximately 40 divalent metal sites, consisting of at least one class of high-affinity sites that bind Mn(2+) with a K(D) of 0.05 to 0.35 microM and one or more classes of lower affinity sites. Water proton relaxation data indicate that approximately 30 of these sites are completely inaccessible to bulk solvent. Our observations, together with the sequence homology between adenylyl cyclase toxin and the alkaline protease of Pseudomonas aeruginosa, indicate that the formation of five beta-sheet helices within the repeat domain of the toxin upon binding Ca(2+) is required for cell intoxication.  相似文献   

19.
DNA polymerase I (Pol I) is an enzyme of DNA replication and repair containing three active sites, each requiring divalent metal ions such as Mg2+ or Mn2+ for activity. As determined by EPR and by 1/T1 measurements of water protons, whole Pol I binds Mn2+ at one tight site (KD = 2.5 microM) and approximately 20 weak sites (KD = 600 microM). All bound metal ions retain one or more water ligands as reflected in enhanced paramagnetic effects of Mn2+ on 1/T1 of water protons. The cloned large fragment of Pol I, which lacks the 5',3'-exonuclease domain, retains the tight metal binding site with little or no change in its affinity for Mn2+, but has lost approximately 12 weak sites (n = 8, KD = 1000 microM). The presence of stoichiometric TMP creates a second tight Mn2+ binding site or tightens a weak site 100-fold. dGTP together with TMP creates a third tight Mn2+ binding site or tightens a weak site 166-fold. The D424A (the Asp424 to Ala) 3',5'-exonuclease deficient mutant of the large fragment retains a weakened tight site (KD = 68 microM) and has lost one weak site (n = 7, KD = 3500 microM) in comparison with the wild-type large fragment, and no effect of TMP on metal binding is detected. The D355A, E357A (the Asp355 to Ala, Glu357 to Ala double mutant of the large fragment of Pol I) 3',5'-exonuclease-deficient double mutant has lost the tight metal binding site and four weak metal binding sites. The binding of dGTP to the polymerase active site of the D355A,E357A double mutant creates one tight Mn2+ binding site with a dissociation constant (KD = 3.6 microM), comparable with that found on the wild-type enzyme, which retains one fast exchanging water ligand. Mg2+ competes at this site with a KD of 100 microM. It is concluded that the single tightly bound Mn2+ on Pol I and a weakly bound Mn2+ which is tightened 100-fold by TMP are at the 3',5'-exonuclease active site and are essential for 3',5'-exonuclease activity, but not for polymerase activity. Additional weak Mn2+ binding sites are detected on the 3',5'-exonuclease domain, which may be activating, and on the polymerase domain, which may be inhibitory. The essential divalent metal activator of the polymerase reaction requires the presence of the dNTP substrate for tight metal binding indicating that the bound substrate coordinates the metal.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
Reiter TA  Rusnak F 《Biochemistry》2004,43(3):782-790
Bacteriophage lambda protein phosphatase (lambdaPP) is a member of a large superfamily of metallophosphoesterases, including serine/threonine protein phosphatases, purple acid phosphatases, 5'-nucleotidase, and DNA repair enzymes such as Mre11. Members of this family share several common characteristics, including a common phosphoesterase motif, secondary structural fold (betaalphabetaalphabeta), and metal ligand environment, and often accommodate a dinuclear metal center. The identity of the active site metals often differs between family members. Despite the extensive spectroscopic studies of several family members, only the standard redox potential of porcine purple acid phosphate (PAP) has been measured. In this report, we investigate the redox properties of another member of this protein family. The standard redox potentials of the mono-Fe, Fe-Zn, and Fe-Fe metalloisoforms of lambdaPP were determined from anaerobic redox titration experiments. Two different S = 5/2, mono-Fe3+ lambdaPP species were identified: the first with an E/D approximately 0.17, g = 8.9 and 4.8, and an Eo' approximately +130 mV; the second with E/D approximately 0.05, g = 6.7, 5.9, and 4.4, and an Eo' approximately +120 mV. The first and second mono-Fe3+ species are thought to represent Fe present in the M2 and M1 sites, respectively. The addition of Zn2+ to mono-Fe3+ lambdaPP results in a decrease in both mono-Fe3+ species and the appearance of a new S = 5/2, Fe(3+)-Zn2+ species (E/D approximately 0.02, g = 5.9, and an Eo' > +175 mV). The Fe-Fe lambdaPP titration revealed an S = 1/2, Fe(3+)-Fe2+ (g < 2) species with an Eo' > +128 mV. These results suggest that the active site of lambdaPP supports a high oxidation potential for both metal sites and may indicate an equally oxidizing active site for other member metallophosphoesterases.  相似文献   

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