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1.
Adachi K  Yang Y  Lakka V  Wehrli S  Reddy KS  Surrey S 《Biochemistry》2003,42(34):10252-10259
The role of heterotetramer interaction sites in assembly and autoxidation of hemoglobin is not clear. The importance of beta(116His) (G-18) and gamma(116Ile) at one of the alpha1beta1 or alpha1gamma1 interaction sites for homo-dimer formation and assembly in vitro of beta and gamma chains, respectively, with alpha chains to form human Hb A and Hb F was assessed using recombinant beta(116His)(-->)(Asp), beta(116His)(-->)(Ile), and beta(112Cys)(-->)(Thr,116His)(-->)(Ile) chains. Even though beta chains (e.g., 116 His) are in monomer/tetramer equilibrium, beta(116Asp) chains showed only monomer formation. In contrast, beta(116Ile) and beta(112Thr,116Ile) chains showed homodimer and homotetramer formation like gamma-globin chains which contain 116 Ile. Assembly rates in vitro of beta(116Ile) or beta(112Thr,116Ile) chains with alpha chains were 340-fold slower, while beta(116Asp) chains promoted assembly compared to normal beta-globin chains. These results indicate that amino acid hydrophobicity at the G-18 position in non-alpha chains plays a key role in homotetramer, dimer, and monomer formation, which in turn plays a critical role in assembly with alpha chains to form Hb A and Hb F. These results also suggest that stable dimer formation of gamma-globin chains must not occur in vivo, since this would inhibit association with alpha chains to form Hb F. The role of beta(116His) (G-18) in heterotetramer-induced stabilization of the bond with oxygen in hemoglobin was also assessed by evaluating autoxidation rates using recombinant Hb tetramers containing these variant globin chains. Autoxidation rates of alpha(2)beta(2)(116Asp) and alpha(2)beta(2)(116Ile) tetramers showed biphasic kinetics with the faster rate due to alpha chain oxidation and the slower to the beta chain variants whose rates were 1.5-fold faster than that of normal beta-globin chains. In addition, NMR spectra of the heme area of these two hemoglobin variant tetramers showed similar resonance peaks, which are different from those of Hb A. Oxygen-binding properties of alpha(2)beta(2)(116His)(-->)(Asp) and alpha(2)beta(2)(116His)(-->)(Ile), however, showed slight alteration compared to Hb A. These results suggest that the beta116 amino acid (G18) plays a critical role in not only stabilizing alpha1beta1 interactions but also in inhibiting hemoglobin oxidation. However, stabilization of the bonds between oxygen and heme may not be dependent on stabilization of alpha1beta1 interactions. Tertiary structural changes may lead to changes in the heme region in beta chains after assembly with alpha chains, which could influence stability of dioxygen binding of beta chains.  相似文献   

2.
The hydroxyl group of Tyr alpha 42 in human hemoglobin forms a hydrogen bond with the carboxylate of Asp beta 99 which is considered to be one of the most important hydrogen bonds for stabilizing the "T-state." However, no spontaneous mutation at position 42 of the alpha subunit has been reported, and the role of the tyrosine has not been tested experimentally. Two artificial human mutant hemoglobins in which Tyr alpha 42 was replaced by phenylalanine or histidine were synthesized in Escherichia coli, and their proton NMR spectra were studied with particular attention to the hyperfine-shifted and hydrogen-bonded proton resonances. The site-directed mutagenesis of the Tyr alpha 42----Phe removes the hydrogen bond described above and prevents transition to the T-state so that the mutant Hb is rather similar to the "R-state" even when deoxygenated. On the other hand, the mutation from tyrosine to histidine causes less drastic structural changes, and its quaternary and tertiary structures are almost the same as native deoxy-Hb A. This may be attributed to the formation of a new hydrogen bond between His alpha 1(42) and Asp beta 2(99). These observations indicate that the hydrogen bond formed between Tyr alpha 42 and Asp beta 99 is required to convert unliganded Hb to the T-state.  相似文献   

3.
As new structural data have become available, somewhat contrasting explanations of the Root effect in fish haemoglobins (Hb) have been provided. Hb 1 of the Antarctic fish Trematomus newnesi has a nearly pH-independent oxygen affinity, in spite of 95 % sequence identity with Hb 1 of Trematomus (previously named Pagothenia) bernacchii that has a strong Root effect. Here, the 2.2 A R-state structure of Trematomus newnesi Hb 1 is presented. The structure is similar to that of Root effect fish Hbs from Spot and T. bernacchii, suggesting that the differences in the pH dependence cannot be related to the modulation of the R-state. In comparison to T. bernacchii Hb 1, the role of the three mutations Thr41 (C6)alpha-->Ile, Ala97 (G3)alpha-->Ser and His41 (C7)beta-->Tyr at the alpha1beta2-interface is discussed.  相似文献   

4.
Fertilin beta (also known as ADAM2), a mammalian sperm protein that mediates gamete cell adhesion during fertilization, is a member of the ADAM protein family whose members have disintegrin domains with homology to integrin ligands found in snake venoms. Fertilin beta utilizes an ECD sequence within its disintegrin domain to interact with the egg plasma membrane; the Asp is especially critical. Based on what is known about different integrin subfamilies and their ligands, we sought to characterize fertilin beta binding sites on mouse eggs, focusing on integrin subfamilies that recognize short peptide sequences that include an Asp residue: the alpha(5)/alpha(8)/alpha(v)/alpha(IIb) or RGD-binding subfamily (alpha(5)beta(1), alpha(8)beta(1), alpha(V)beta(1), alpha(V)beta(3), alpha(V)beta(5), alpha(V)beta(6), alpha(V)beta(8), and alpha(IIb)beta(3)) and the alpha(4)/alpha(9) subfamily (alpha(4)beta(1), alpha(9)beta(1), and alpha(4)beta(7)). We tested peptide sequences known to perturb interactions mediated by these integrins in two different assays for fertilin beta binding. Peptides with the sequence MLDG, which perturb alpha(4)/alpha(9) integrin-mediated interactions, significantly inhibit fertilin beta binding to eggs, which suggests a role for a member of this integrin subfamily as a fertilin beta receptor. RGD peptides, which perturb alpha(5)/alpha(8)/alpha(v)/alpha(IIb) integrin-mediated interactions, have partial inhibitory activity. The anti-alpha(6) antibody GoH3 has little or no inhibitory activity. An antibody to the integrin-associated tetraspanin protein CD9 inhibits the binding of a multivalent presentation of fertilin beta (immobilized on beads) but not soluble fertilin beta, which we speculate has implications for the role of CD9 in the strengthening of fertilin beta-mediated cell adhesion but not in initial ligand binding.  相似文献   

5.
To clarify the functional role of Tyr-42(C7) alpha, which forms a hydrogen bond with Asp-99(G1) beta at the alpha 1-beta 2 interface of human deoxyhaemoglobin, we engineered two artificial mutant haemoglobins (Hb), in which Tyr-42 alpha was replaced by Phe (Hb Phe-42 alpha) or His (Hb His-42 alpha), and investigated their oxygen binding properties together with structural consequences of the mutations by using various spectroscopic probes. Like most of the natural Asp-99 beta mutants, Hb Phe-42 alpha showed a markedly increased oxygen affinity, a reduced Bohr effect and diminished co-operativity. Structural probes such as ultraviolet-region derivative and oxy-minus-deoxy difference spectra, resonance Raman scattering and proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectra indicate that, in Hb Phe-42 alpha, the deoxy T quaternary structure is highly destabilized and the strain imposed on the Fe-N epsilon (proximal His) bond is released, stabilizing the oxy tertiary structure. In contrast with Hb Phe-42 alpha, Hb His-42 alpha showed an intermediately impaired function and only moderate destabilization of the T-state, which can be explained by the formation of a new, weak hydrogen bond between His-42 alpha and Asp-99 beta. Spectroscopic data were consistent with this assumption. The present study proves that the hydrogen bond between Tyr-42 alpha and Asp-99 beta plays a key role in stabilizing the deoxy T structure and consequently in co-operative oxygen binding.  相似文献   

6.
The four human glycoprotein hormones are heterodimers that contain a common alpha subunit and a hormone-specific beta subunit. Within this hormone family, 23 amino acid sequences from 11 mammalian species are available. There are 19 invariant amino acid residues in the beta subunits, 12 of which are Cys that form six disulfide bonds. Of the remaining seven conserved amino acid residues, we have investigated the role of an Asp which occurs at position 99 in human choriogonadotropin beta (hCG beta). Site-directed mutagenesis was used to replace hCG beta Asp99 with three residues, Glu, Asn, and Arg, and to prepare an inversion double mutant protein, Arg94----Asp and Asp99----Arg. The cDNAs were placed in a eukaryotic expression vector, and the plasmids were transiently transfected into Chinese hamster ovary cells containing a stably integrated gene for bovine alpha. Radioimmunoassays demonstrated that the mutant forms of hCG beta were capable of subunit assembly to the same extent as hCG beta wild type. The heterologous heterodimers were assayed in vitro using transformed mouse Leydig cells (MA-10) by competitive inhibition of 125I-hCG binding and stimulation of progesterone production. The gonadotropins containing Glu and Asn were active, although the potency was less than that associated with the hCG beta wild type-containing gonadotropin. In contrast, the Arg99-containing mutant protein and the inversion mutant protein Asp94/Arg99 were devoid of activity. Thus, in hCG beta Asp99 can be substituted with certain residues without total loss of function, although replacement with a positively charged residue leads to an inactive heterodimer. The primary role of Asp99 in hCG beta seems to involve, either directly or indirectly, receptor recognition.  相似文献   

7.
Prolyl 4-hydroxylase (EC 1.14.11.2), an alpha2beta2 tetramer, catalyzes the formation of 4-hydroxyproline in collagens. We converted 16 residues in the human alpha subunit individually to other amino acids, and expressed the mutant polypeptides together with the wild-type beta subunit in insect cells. Asp414Ala and Asp414Asn inactivated the enzyme completely, whereas Asp414Glu increased the K(m) for Fe2+ 15-fold and that for 2-oxoglutarate 5-fold. His412Glu, His483Glu and His483Arg inactivated the tetramer completely, as did Lys493Ala and Lys493His, whereas Lys493Arg increased the K(m) for 2-oxoglutarate 15-fold. His501Arg, His501Lys, His501Asn and His501Gln reduced the enzyme activity by 85-95%; all these mutations increased the K(m) for 2-oxoglutarate 2- to 3-fold and enhanced the rate of uncoupled decarboxylation of 2-oxoglutarate as a percentage of the rate of the complete reaction up to 12-fold. These and other data indicate that His412, Asp414 and His483 provide the three ligands required for the binding of Fe2+ to a catalytic site, while Lys493 provides the residue required for binding of the C-5 carboxyl group of 2-oxoglutarate. His501 is an additional critical residue at the catalytic site, probably being involved in both the binding of the C-1 carboxyl group of 2-oxoglutarate and the decarboxylation of this cosubstrate.  相似文献   

8.
The Root effect describes the drastic drop of oxygen affinity and loss of cooperativity at acidic pH expressed in the hemoglobins (Hb) of certain fish. The comparison between the deoxy structures of the Root effect Hb from the Antarctic fish Trematomus bernacchii (HbTb) at different pHs (pH = 6.2 and pH = 8.4) shows that the most significant differences are localized at the CDα region, where a salt bridge between Asp48 and His55 breaks during the low-to-high pH transition. In order to shed light on the relationship between pH, CDα loop structure and dynamics, and oxygen access to the active site in the alpha chain of HbTb, different computer simulation techniques were performed. Our results highlight the importance of the protonation of His55 in regulating oxygen access, underscoring its pivotal role in the structural and functional properties of HbTb. These data provide further support to the hypothesis that this residue might contribute to the release of Root protons in HbTb and underline the fact that an efficient transport of molecular oxygen in Hbs relies on a subtle balance of tertiary structure and protein conformational flexibility.  相似文献   

9.
Zhu Z  Jones LH  Graichen ME  Davidson VL 《Biochemistry》2000,39(30):8830-8836
Methylamine dehydrogenase (MADH) and amicyanin form a physiologic complex which is required for interprotein electron transfer. The crystal structure of this protein complex is known, and the importance of certain residues on amicyanin in its interaction with MADH has been demonstrated by site-directed mutagenesis. In this study, site-directed mutagenesis of MADH, kinetic data, and thermodynamic analysis are used to probe the molecular basis for stabilization of the protein complex by an interprotein salt bridge between Arg99 of amicyanin and Asp180 of the alpha subunit of MADH. This paper reports the first site-directed mutagenesis of MADH, as well as the construction, heterologous expression, and characterization of a six-His-tagged MADH. alpha Asp180 of MADH was converted to arginine to examine the effect on complex formation with native and mutant amicyanins. This mutation had no effect on the parameters for methylamine oxidation by MADH, but significantly affected its interaction with amicyanin. Of the native and mutant proteins that were studied, their observed order of affinity for each other was as follows: native MADH and native amicyanin > native MADH and R99D amicyanin > alpha D180R MADH and native amicyanin > alpha D180R MADH and R99D amicyanin, and alpha D180R MADH and R99L amicyanin. The alpha D180R mutation also eliminated the ionic strength dependence of the reaction of MADH with amicyanin that is observed with wild-type MADH. Interestingly, the inverse mutation pair of alpha D180R MADH and R99D amicyanin did not restore the favorable salt bridge, but instead disrupted complex formation much more severely than did either individual mutation. These results are explained using molecular modeling and thermodynamic analysis of the kinetic data to correlate the energy contributions of specific stabilizing and destabilizing interactions that are present in the wild-type and mutant complexes. A model is also proposed to describe the sequence of events that leads to stable complex formation between MADH and amicyanin.  相似文献   

10.
The Root effect is a widespread property in fish hemoglobins (Hbs) that produces a drastic reduction of cooperativity and oxygen-binding ability at acidic pH. Here, we report the high-resolution structure of the deoxy form of Hb isolated from the Antarctic fish Trematomus bernacchii (HbTb) crystallized at pH 6.2 and 8.4. The structure at acidic pH has been previously determined at a moderate resolution (Ito et al., J Mol Biol 1995;250:648-658). Our results provide a clear picture of the events occurring upon the pH increase from 6.2 to 8.4, observed within a practically unchanged crystal environment. In particular, at pH 8.4, the interaspartic hydrogen bond at the alpha(1)beta(2) interface is partially broken, suggesting a pK(a) close to 8.4 for Asp95alpha. In addition, a detailed survey of the histidine modifications, caused by the change in pH, also indicates that at least three hot regions of the molecule are modified (Ebeta helix, Cbeta-tail, CDalpha corner) and can be considered to be involved at various levels in the release of the Root protons. Most importantly, at the CDalpha corner, the break of the salt bridge Asp48alpha-His55alpha allows us to describe a detailed mechanism that transmits the modification from the CDalpha corner far to the alpha heme. More generally, the results shed light on the role played by the histidine residues in modulating the strength of the Root effect and also support the emerging idea that the structural determinants, at least for a part of the Root effect, are specific of each Hb endowed with this property.  相似文献   

11.
Refined crystal structure of dogfish M4 apo-lactate dehydrogenase   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
The crystal structure of M4 apo-lactate dehydrogenase from the spiny dogfish (Squalus acanthius) was initially refined by a constrained-restrained, and subsequently restrained, least-squares technique. The final structure contained 286 water molecules and two sulfate ions per subunit and gave an R-factor of 0.202 for difraction data between 8.0 and 2.0 A resolution. The upper limit for the co-ordinate accuracy of the atoms was estimated to be 0.25 A. The elements of secondary structure of the refined protein have not changed from those described previously, except for the appearance of a one-and-a-half turn 3(10) helix immediately after beta J. There is also a short segment of 3(10) helix between beta C and beta D in the part of the chain that connects the two beta alpha beta alpha beta units of the six-stranded parallel sheet (residues Tyr83 to Ala87). Examination of the interactions among the different elements of secondary structure by means of a surface accessibility algorithm supports the four structural clusters in the subunit. The first of the two sulfate ions is in the active site and occupies a cavity near the essential His195. Its nearest protein ligands are Arg171, Asp168 and Asn140. The second sulfate ion is located near the P-axis subunit interface. It is liganded by His188 and Arg173. These two residues are conserved in bacterial lactate dehydrogenase and form part of the fructose 1,6-bisphosphate effector binding site. Two other data sets in which one (collected at pH 7.8) or both (collected at pH 6.0) sulfate ions were replaced by citrate ions were also analyzed. Five cycles of refinement with respect to the pH 6.0 data (25 to 2.8 A resolution) resulted in an R value of 0.191. Only water molecules occupy the subunit boundary anion binding site at pH 7.8. The amino acid sequence was found to be in poor agreement with (2Fobs-Fcalc) electron density maps for the peptide between residues 207 and 211. The original sequence WNALKE was replaced by NVASIK. The essential His195 is hydrogen bonded to Asp168 on one side and Asn140 on the other. The latter residue is part of a turn that contains the only cis peptide bond of the structure at Pro141. The "flexible loop" (residues 97 to 123), which folds down over the active center in ternary complexes of the enzyme with substrate and coenzyme, has a well-defined structure. Analysis of the environment of Tyr237 suggests how its chemical modification inhibits the enzyme.  相似文献   

12.
Lipid A is an integral component of the lipopolysaccharide (LPS) that forms the selective and protective outer monolayer of Gram-negative bacteria, and is essential for bacterial growth and viability. UDP-N-acetylglucosamine acyltransferase (LpxA) initiates lipid A biosynthesis by catalyzing the transfer of R-3-hydroxymyristic acid from acyl carrier protein to the 3'-hydroxyl group of UDP-GlcNAc. The enzyme is a homotrimer, and previous studies suggested that the active site lies within a positively charged cleft formed at the subunit-subunit interface. The crystal structure of Escherichia coli LpxA in complex with UDP-GlcNAc reveals details of the substrate-binding site, with prominent hydrophilic interactions between highly conserved clusters of residues (Asn198, Glu200, Arg204 and Arg205) with UDP, and (Asp74, His125, His144 and Gln161) with the GlcNAc moiety. These interactions serve to bind and orient the substrate for catalysis. The crystallographic model supports previous results, which suggest that acylation occurs via nucleophilic attack of deprotonated UDP-GlcNAc on the acyl donor in a general base-catalyzed mechanism involving a catalytic dyad of His125 and Asp126. His125, the general base, interacts with the 3'-hydroxyl group of UDP-GlcNAc to generate the nucleophile. The Asp126 side-chain accepts a hydrogen bond from His125 and helps orient the general base to participate in catalysis. Comparisons with an LpxA:peptide inhibitor complex indicate that the peptide competes with both nucleotide and acyl carrier protein substrates.  相似文献   

13.
We used yeast two-hybrid and in vitro co-immobilization assays to study the interaction between the Escherichia coli RNA polymerase (RNAP) alpha and beta subunits during the formation of alpha(2)beta, a physiological RNAP assembly intermediate. We show that a 430-amino acid-long fragment containing beta conserved segments F, G, H, and a short part of segment I forms a minimal domain capable of specific interaction with alpha. The alpha-interacting domain is held together by protein-protein interactions between beta segments F and I. Residues in catalytically important beta segments H and I directly participate in alpha binding; substitutions of strictly conserved segment H Asp(1084) and segment I Gly(1215) abolish alpha(2)beta formation in vitro and are lethal in vivo. The importance of these beta amino acids in alpha binding is fully supported by the structural model of the Thermus aquaticus RNAP core enzyme. We also demonstrate that determinants of RNAP assembly are conserved, and that a homologue of beta Asp(1084) in A135, the beta-like subunit of yeast RNAP I, is responsible for interaction with AC40, the largest alpha-like subunit. However, the A135-AC40 interaction is weak compared with the E. coli alpha-beta interaction, and A135 mutation that abolishes the interaction is phenotypically silent. The results suggest that in eukaryotes additional RNAP subunits orchestrate the enzyme assembly by stabilizing weak, but specific interactions of core subunits.  相似文献   

14.
Recent crystallographic studies on the mutant human hemoglobin Ypsilanti (beta 99 Asp-->Tyr) have revealed a previously unknown quaternary structure called "quaternary Y" and suggested that the new structure may represent an important intermediate in the cooperative oxygenation pathway of normal hemoglobin. Here we measure the oxygenation and subunit assembly properties of hemoglobin Ypsilanti and five additional beta 99 mutants (Asp beta 99-->Val, Gly, Asn, Ala, His) to test for consistency between their energetics and those of the intermediate species of normal hemoglobin. Overall regulation of oxygen affinity in hemoglobin Ypsilanti is found to originate entirely from 2.6 kcal of quaternary enhancement, such that the tetramer oxygenation affinity is 85-fold higher than for binding to the dissociated dimers. Equal partitioning of this regulatory energy among the four tetrameric binding steps (0.65 kcal per oxygen) leads to a noncooperative isotherm with extremely high affinity (pmedian = .14 torr). Temperature and pH studies of dimer-tetramer assembly and sulfhydryl reaction kinetics suggest that oxygenation-dependent structural changes in hemoglobin Ypsilanti are small. These properties are quite different from the recently characterized allosteric intermediate, which has two ligands bound on the same side of the alpha 1 beta 2 interface (see ref. 1 for review). The combined results do, however, support the view that quaternary Y may represent the intermediate cooperativity state of normal hemoglobin that binds the last oxygen.  相似文献   

15.
L W Fung  C Ho 《Biochemistry》1975,14(11):2526-2535
Proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectra of human hemoglobins in water reveal several exchangeable protons which are indicators of the quaternary structures of both the liganded and unliganded molecules. A comparison of the spectra of normal human adult hemoglobin with those of mutant hemoglobins Chesapeake (FG4alpha92 Arg yields Leu), Titusville (G1alpha94 Asp yields Asn), M Milwaukee (E11beta67 Val yields Glu), Malmo (FG4beta97 His yields Gln), Kempsey (G1beta99 Asp yields Asn), Yakima (G1beta99 Asp yields His), and New York (G15beta113 Val yields Glu), as well as with those of chemically modified hemoglobins Des-Arg(alpha141), Des-His(beta146), NES (on Cys-beta93)-Des-Arg(alpha141), and spin-labeled hemoglobin [Cys-beta93 reacted with N-(1-oxyl-2,2,6,6-tetramethyl-4-piperidinyl)iodoacetamide], suggests that the proton in the important hydrogen bond between the tyrosine at C7alpha42 and the aspartic acid at G1beta99, which anchors the alpha1beta2 subunits of deoxyhemoglobin (a characteristic feature of the deoxy quaternary structure), is responsible for the resonance at -9.4 ppm from water at 27 degrees. Another exchangeable proton resonance which occurs at -6.4 ppm from H2O is a spectroscopic indicator of the deoxy structure. A resonance at -5.8 ppm from H2O, which is an indicator of the oxy conformation, is believed to originate from the hydrogen bond between the aspartic acid at G1alpha94 and the asparagine at G4beta102 in the alpha1beta2 subunit interface (a characteristic feature of the oxy quaternary structure). In the spectrum of methemoglobin at pH 6.2 both the -6.4- and the -5.8ppm resonances are present but not the -9.4-ppm resonance. Upon the addition of inositol hexaphosphate to methemoglobin at pH 6.2, the usual resonance at -9.4 ppm is shifted to -10 ppm and the resonance at 6.4 ppm is not observed. In the spectrum of methemoglobin at pH greater than or equal to 7.6 with or without inositol hexaphosphate, the resonance at -5.8 ppm is present, but not those at -10 and -6.4 ppm, suggesting that methemoglobin at high pH has an oxy-like structure. Two resonances (at -8.2 and -7.3 ppm) which remain invariant in the two quaternary structures could come from exchangeable protons in the alpha1beta1 subunit interface and/or other exchangeable protons in the hemoglobin molecule which undergo no conformational changes during the oxygenation process. These exchangeable proton resonances serve as excellent spectroscopic probes of the quaternary structures of the subunit interfaces in studies of the molecular mechanism of cooperative ligand binding to hemoglobin.  相似文献   

16.
The Saccharomyces cerevisiae His6 gene codes for the enzyme phosphoribosyl-5-amino-1-phosphoribosyl-4-imidazolecarboxamide isomerase, catalyzing the fourth step in histidine biosynthesis. To get an insight into the structure and function of this enzyme, we determined its X-ray structure at a resolution of 1.30 A using the anomalous diffraction signal of the protein's sulphur atoms at 1.77 A wavelength. His6 folds in an (alpha/beta)8 barrel similar to HisA, which performs the same function in bacteria and archaea. We found a citrate molecule from the buffer bound in a pocket near the expected position of the active site and used it to model the open form of the substrate (phosphoribulosyl moiety), which is a reaction intermediate. This model enables us to identify catalytic residues and to propose a reaction mechanism where two aspartates act as acid/base catalysts: Asp134 as a proton donor for ring opening, and Asp9 as a proton acceptor and donor during enolization of the aminoaldose. Asp9 is conserved in yeast His6 and bacterial or archaeal HisA sequences, and Asp134 has equivalents in both HisA and TrpF, but they occur at a different position in the protein sequence.  相似文献   

17.
We cloned a cDNA encoding a novel synGAP, synGAP-d (GenBank(TM) accession number ), from a rat brain cDNA library. The clone consisted of 4801 nucleotides with a coding sequence of 3501 nucleotides, encoded a protein consisting of 1166 amino acids with >99% homology with 1092 amino acid overlaps to synGAP, and contained a 13-nucleotide insertion to the previously reported synGAP mRNAs, which suggested that the clone was a splice variant of synGAP. We also found that there are at least seven variants in the 3' portion of the synGAP mRNA and that they encoded five different protein isoforms. The coding sequence of these C-terminal variants were classified into alpha1, alpha2, beta1, beta2, beta3, beta4, and gamma, and synGAP-d was classified as the beta1 form. The previously reported synGAPs (synGAP-a, -b, and -c and p135synGAP) can be classified as the alpha1 isoform. All isoforms were expressed specifically in the brain. Unexpectedly, the beta isoform, which lacks a C-terminal PSD-95-binding motif ((S/T)XV), was more restricted to the postsynaptic density fraction than the motif-containing alpha1 isoform. The beta isoform did not interact with PSD-95 but specifically interacted with a nonphosphorylated alpha subunit of Ca(2+)/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II through its unique C-terminal tail.  相似文献   

18.
J L Imler  A Miyajima    G Zurawski 《The EMBO journal》1992,11(6):2047-2053
The beta chain of the interleukin-2 (IL-2) receptor (IL-2R beta) and the interleukin-3 (IL-3) binding protein AIC2A are members of the family of cytokine receptors, which also includes the receptors for growth hormone (GHR) and prolactin. A four amino acid sequence of AIC2A has recently been shown to be critical for IL-3 binding. We analyze here the function of the analogous sequence of human IL-2R beta and identify three amino acids, Ser132, His133 and Tyr134, which play a critical role in IL-2 binding. We show that some mutant IL-2 proteins with substitutions of a critical Asp residue in the N-terminal alpha-helix bind the mutant IL-2R beta receptor with a higher affinity than the wild-type receptor. This suggests that the critical Asp34 in the ligand and the sequence Ser-His-Tyr (positions 132-134) in the receptor interact directly. On the double barrel beta-stranded structural model of cytokine receptors, the residues important for ligand binding in IL-2R beta, AIC2A and GHR map to strikingly similar locations within a barrel, with the interesting difference that it is the N-terminal barrel for GHR and the C-terminal barrel for IL-2R beta and AIC2A.  相似文献   

19.
The strong pH dependence of A beta oligomerization could arise from favorable intermolecular charge-charge interactions between His and carboxylate groups, or, alternatively, by mutual electrostatic repulsion of peptide molecules. To test between these two possibilities, the pH dependence of the oligomerization of A beta and three charge substitution variants with Asp, Glu and His substituted by Ala is measured. All four peptides oligomerize, as detected by thioflavin T fluorescence, turbidity, and amyloid fibril formation; therefore, specific charge-charge interactions are nonessential for oligomerization. The strong negative correlation between net charge and oligomerization indicates that electrostatic repulsion between A beta monomers impedes their association.  相似文献   

20.
Adachi K  Ding M  Wehrli S  Reddy KS  Surrey S  Horiuchi K 《Biochemistry》2003,42(15):4476-4484
Hb S (alpha(2)beta(2)(6Glu-->Val)) forms polymers, while Hb C-Harlem (alpha(2)beta(2)(6Glu-->Val,73Asp-->Asn)) forms crystals upon oversaturation. Since the only difference between the two is the beta73 amino acid, it follows that this site is a critical determinant in promoting either polymerization or crystallization. Beta73 Asp in Hb S forms a hydrogen bond with beta4 Thr, while beta73 Asn in Hb C-Harlem may inhibit this interaction as well as increase the hydrophobicity at the EF helix beta6 Val acceptor sites. Two new beta73 Hb S variants (beta73 His and Leu) were constructed and analyzed to define other amino acids facilitating formation of Hb S-like polymers versus Hb C-Harlem-like crystals. The two variants that were chosen were expected to either (1) enhance formation of the beta73-beta4 hydrogen bond (beta73 His) or (2) inhibit it and increase the hydrophobicity of the EF helix beta6 Val acceptor sites (beta73 Leu). beta73 His Hb S formed fibers but at a lower concentration than Hb S, while beta73 Leu Hb S formed crystals but at a higher concentration than Hb C-Harlem. The solubility of beta73 His Hb S was (1)/(7) of that of Hb S, while the solubility of beta73 Leu Hb S was similar to that of Hb C-Harlem. The delay time prior to polymer or crystal formation depended on Hb concentration. The delay time for beta73 His Hb S was 10(5)-fold shorter than that for Hb S, while that for beta73 Leu Hb S was 10(5)-fold longer in 1.0 M phosphate buffer. NMR results indicate beta73 amino acid changes induce alteration in the beta-chain heme pocket region, while CD results indicate no change in the helical content of the variants. These results suggest that enhancing the beta73-beta4 hydrogen bond and/or induced changes in the heme pocket by the beta73 Asp to His change facilitate formation of Hb S-like fibers. Our results also suggest that removal of the beta73-beta4 hydrogen bond and enhancing the hydrophobicity of the EF helix beta6 Val acceptor sites by the beta73 Asp to Leu or Asn changes delay nuclei formation and facilitate formation of Hb C-Harlem-like crystals.  相似文献   

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