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1.
  • 1.1. The hemocyanins from six Oniscoidea species are compared by agar immunodiffusion and by quantitative immunoprecipitation.
  • 2.2. The hemocyanins of the investigated species give an immunoprecipitation reaction whatever antihemocyanin antiserum was used.
  • 3.3. The antigenic structure of the Oniscoidea hemocyanins is based on the presence of five or six antigenic determinants; the number of common determinants between the hemocyanins increases with the systematic proximity of the species.
  • 4.4. A model of a phylogenetic species separation is proposed from the antigenic distances between the hemocyanins found by quantitative immunoprecipitation.
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2.
The subunit structure and dissociation of the hemocyanins of two marine snails, Lunatia heros and Littorina littorea, were investigated by light-scattering molecular weight methods. The hemocyanins of both species of snails are readily dissociated to fragments of one-tenth and one-twentieth of the parent proteins of close to 9 X 10(6) daltons by either increasing the pH or using dissociating reagents of the hydrophobic urea series or some of the Hofmeister salts. The lower members of the latter group of reagents, NaCl, and to some extent also NaBr were found to have only marginal effects on the observed molecular weight transitions, suggesting that the two hemocyanins investigated possess beta-type subunits, which are known to be resistant to NaCl dissociation. The molecular weight profiles obtained with the various dissociating reagents were single inverted sigmoidal-shaped curves for both Lunatia and Littorina hemocyanins, suggesting overlapping transitions. The ultracentrifugation patterns and the species-distribution plots based on the urea dissociation data of Littorina hemocyanin suggest the presence of whole, half, and one-tenth molecular weight species in the dissociation transition region. Fitting of the urea dissociation data of Littorina hemocyanin obtained at both pH 5.7 and pH 8.0, assuming a sequential two-step dissociation scheme used in our previous studies [Herskovits, T. T., & Russell, M. W. (1984) Biochemistry 23, 2812-2819], was found to be consistent with a model of a few hydrophobic binding sites at the contact areas of the half-molecules and a much larger apparent number of binding sites (Napp) at the side to side contacts of the one-tenth molecules.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
Recent aspects of the subunit organization and dissociation of hemocyanins   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
1. The hemocyanins of the arthropod phylum are built of multiples of hexamers consisting of 1,2,4,6 and 8 of such basic assemblies. Their molecular weights range from about 0.45 x 10(6) to 3.9 x 10(6) daltons. The basic hexameric unit consists of bean-shaped monomers organized in the form of two layers of trimers placed on top of one another. The subunits are heterogeneous, in most cases consisting of four or more electrophoretically different polypeptide chains. 2. Molluscan hemocyanins have an entirely different structure and pattern of assembly from the arthropodan hemocyanins. The basic assembly of the molluscan hemocyanins are decamers organized in the form of right-handed cylinders approximately 300 A in diameter and 140-190 A in height. Different species have one, two and sometimes more than two such assemblies forming correspondingly longer cylindrical particles with molecular weights ranging from about 3.3 x 10(6) to 13 x 10(6) daltons. Cephalopod and chiton hemocyanins consist of single decameric particles, while gastropods have hemocyanins organized of di-decamers or higher assemblies. The subunits of these hemocyanins are elongated protein chains with seven or eight folded globular domains, each housing a binuclear copper center capable of binding and delivering oxygen. 3. The dissociation behavior of the arthropod hemocyanin hexamers and di-hexamers with the hydrophobic urea series of reagents suggest polar and ionic interactions as the main sources of stabilization of the hexamers and the hexamer to hexamer contacts within the di-hexamers. 4. Dissociation studies with the same urea probes with the molluscan hemocyanins, however, suggest a different pattern of stabilization. The stabilization of the decamer to decamer contacts within the gastropod di-decamers appear to be predominantly polar and ionic with relatively few hydrophobic interaction sites. The dimer contacts within the decamers and the monomer to monomer contacts within the dimers observed in the octopus and chiton hemocyanins appear to be predominantly hydrophobic in nature. 5. The urea and the pH dissociation profiles of the single decameric assemblies of some of the octopus and chiton hemocyanins investigated by light-scattering molecular weight methods, have been fitted using either a two-species, decamer to dimer and decamer to monomer scheme of subunit dissociation or a three-species, decamer to dimer to monomer scheme of dissociation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
The molecular weights, subunit dissociation, and conformation in solution of the hemocyanins of three species of octopi were investigated by light-scattering, ultracentrifugation, absorbance, and circular dichroism methods. The molecular weights of the hemocyanins of Octopus bimaculoides, Octopus bimaculatus, and Octopus rubescens obtained by light scattering were 3.3 X 10(6), 3.4 X 10(6), and 3.5 (+/- 0.3) X 10(6), respectively. The average molecular weights of the fully dissociated hemocyanins of the same octopi, investigated at alkaline pH and in the presence of 8 M urea and 6 M guanidinium chloride (GdmCl), were found to be close to one-tenth of those of the parent proteins, with average molecular masses of 3.4 X 10(5), 3.3 X 10(5), and 3.3 (+/- 0.3) X 10(5). These findings confirm the earlier observations of van Holde and co-workers with other cephalopod hemocyanins that the basic cylindrical assembly of molluscan hemocyanins consists of 10 subunits. Circular dichroism and absorbance measurements suggest that the dissociated subunits at alkaline pH and in concentrated urea solutions retain their native, multidomain folding. Fairly concentrated GdmCl above 3-4 M is necessary to unfold fully the dissociated hemocyanin chains. Molecular weight measurements studied as a function of reagent concentration with the urea and Hofmeister salt series as dissociating agents show that the ureas are very effective dissociating agents, while the salts are ineffective to moderately effective reagents for octopus hemocyanin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
6.
The stabilizing effects of Ca2+ and Mg2+ ions on the decameric structure of hemocyanins from two representative chitons, Stenoplax conspicua and Mopalia muscosa were investigated by light-scattering molecular weight measurements, ultracentrifugation, absorbance, and circular dichroism methods. The dissociation profiles at any given pH resulting from the decrease in divalent ion concentration, investigated at a fixed protein concentration of 0.1 g.liter-1, could be fitted by a decamer-to-dimer-to monomer scheme of subunit dissociation. The initial decline in the light-scattering molecular weight curves required one or two apparent binding sites per hemocyanin dimer formed as intermediate dissociation product, with apparent dissociation constants (kD,2) for Ca2+ ions of 0.7 to 7 X 10(-4) M, not very different from the value of 2.5 X 10(-4) M obtained by Makino by equilibrium dialysis for the hemocyanin of the opistobranch, Dolabella auricularia. The binding of Mg2+ ion to S. conspicua and M. muscosa hemocyanins appears to be both weaker than the binding of Ca2+ and more pH dependent, with kD,2 values ranging from the 3 X 10(-4) to 4 X 10(-2) M at pH 8.5 to 9.5. The dissociation the decameric hemocyanin species (sedimentation coefficient ca. 60 S) is also observed in the ultracentrifugation with the initial appearance of 18-20 S dimers, followed by a shift in equilibrium to monomeric species of lower sedimentation rates of 11-12 S as the divalent ion concentration is reduced below 1 X 10(-4) M Ca2+ and Mg2+. The dissociation of dimers to monomers in the second step of the reaction is characterized by one or two binding sites per subunit and a somewhat stronger affinity for divalent ions, indicated by apparent dissociation constants (kD,1) of 0.7 X 10(-4) to 3 X 10(-3) M. Circular dichroism and absorbance measurements at 222 and 346 nm suggest no significant changes in the conformation of the hemocyanin subunits produced by the different stages of subunit dissociation.  相似文献   

7.
The subunit structure and solution conformation of the hemocyanin of the chiton Acanthopleura granulata were investigated by light-scattering, ultracentrifugation, viscosity, absorbance, and circular dichroism methods. The molecular weight, determined by light scattering at pH 7.4 in the presence of 0.05 M Mg2+ and 0.01 M Ca2+, was (4.2 +/- 0.3) X 10(6), while those of dissociated subunits in the presence of 8.0 M urea (at pH 7.4) and at pH 10.7 were found to be 4.57 X 10(5) and 4.58 X 10(5), respectively. Circular dichroism and absorbance measurements at 222 and 346 nm indicate only minor changes in the conformation of the folded domains of the hemocyanin subunits in these dissociating solvents. As with the hemocyanins of the snails Busycon canaliculatum, Lunatia heros, and Littorina littorea, exposure to 4.0-6.0 M guanidinium chloride (GdmCl) is found to produce unfolding of the domains, resulting in much more pronounced spectral changes and a further drop in molecular weight. A Mw of 3.2 X 10(5) was obtained with Acanthopleura hemocyanin in 6.0 M GdmCl, suggesting hidden breaks in the polypeptide chains analogous to those observed with the gastropodan hemocyanins. Both urea and pH dissociation showed gradual declines in the molecular weights, consistent with a decamer-dimer-monomer scheme of subunit dissociation. The bell-shaped molecular weight profiles obtained in the pH region from 5 to 11 can be accounted for by assuming two proton-linked groups per dimer, characterized by apparent pK values of 5.5 and 9.5, and the further involvement of five to eight acidic and five to eight basic groups per monomer, having apparent pK values of 5.0 and 10.2.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
The carbon monoxide binding equilibria and kinetics of a number of molluscan and arthropodal hemocyanins have been investigated employing the visible luminescence of the carbon monoxide-copper complex.Proteins from both phyla, in oligomeric and monomeric form, bind carbon monoxide non-co-operatively; the reaction is largely enthalpy driven is associated with a small unfavourable entropy change.Molluscan hemocyanins display a carbon monoxide affinity (p50 = 1 to 10mm Hg) higher than that of arthropodal hemocyanins (p50 = 100 to 700mm Hg), and only Panulirus interruptus hemocyanin, among those studied here, exhibits a small Bohr effect. The observed differences in equilibrium constant are kinetically reflected in differences in the carbon monoxide dissociation rate constant, which ranges from 20 to 70 s?1 for molluscan hemocyanins and from 200 to 9000 s?1 for arthropodal hemocyanins; on the other hand the differences in the combination rate constants between the two phyla are considerably smaller. A comparison of the equilibrium and kinetic results shows some discrepancies between the two sets of data, suggesting that carbon monoxide binding may be governed by a complex mechanism.The correlation between the ligand binding properties and the stereochemistry of the active site is discussed in the light of the knowledge that, while oxygen is bound to both copper atoms in a site, carbon monoxide is a “non-bridging” ligand, being bound to only one of the metals.  相似文献   

9.
The hemocyanin of the tiger shrimp, Penaeus monodon, was investigated with respect to stability and oxygen binding. While hexamers occur as a major component, dodecamers and traces of higher aggregates are also found. Both the hexamers and dodecamers were found to be extremely stable against dissociation at high pH, independently of the presence of calcium ions, in contrast to the known crustacean hemocyanins. This could be caused by only a few additional noncovalent interactions between amino acids located at the subunit-subunit interfaces. Based on X-ray structures and sequence alignments of related hemocyanins, the particular amino acids are identified. At all pH values, the p50 and Bohr coefficients of the hexamers are twice as high as those of dodecamers. While the oxygen binding of hexamers from crustaceans can normally be described by a simple two-state model, an additional conformational state is needed to describe the oxygen-binding behaviour of Penaeus monodon hemocyanin within the pH range of 7.0 to 8.5. The dodecamers bind oxygen according to the nested Monod-Whyman-Changeaux (MWC) model, as observed for the same aggregation states of other hemocyanins. The oxygen-binding properties of both the hexameric and dodecameric hemocyanins guarantee an efficient supply of the animal with oxygen, with respect to the ratio between their concentrations. It seems that under normoxic conditions, hexamers play the major role. Under hypoxic conditions, the hexamers are expected not to be completely loaded with oxygen. Here, the dodecamers are supposed to be responsible for the oxygen supply.  相似文献   

10.
Molecular evolution of the arthropod hemocyanin superfamily   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
Arthropod hemocyanins are members of a protein superfamily that also comprises the arthropod phenoloxidases (tyrosinases), crustacean pseudohemocyanins (cryptocyanins), and insect storage hexamerins. The evolution of these proteins was inferred by neighbor-joining, maximum-parsimony, and maximum-likelihood methods. Monte Carlo shuffling approaches provided evidence against a discernible relationship of the arthropod hemocyanin superfamily and molluscan hemocyanins or nonarthropodan tyrosinases. Within the arthropod hemocyanin superfamily, the phenoloxidase probably emerged early in the (eu-)arthropod stemline and thus form the most likely outgroup. The respiratory hemocyanins evolved from these enzymes before the radiation of the extant euarthropodan subphyla. Due to different functional constraints, replacement rates greatly vary between the clades. Divergence times were thus estimated assuming local molecular clocks using several substitution models. The results were consistent and indicated the separation of the cheliceratan and crustacean hemocyanins close to 600 MYA. The different subunit types of the multihexameric cheliceratan hemocyanin have a rather conservative structure and diversified in the arachnidan stemline between 550 and 450 MYA. By contrast, the separation of the crustacean (malacostracan) hemocyanin subunits probably occurred only about 200 MYA. The nonrespiratory pseudohemocyanins evolved within the Decapoda about 215 MYA. The insect hemocyanins and storage hexamerins emerged independently from the crustacean hemocyanins. The time of divergence of the insect proteins from the malacostracan hemocyanins was estimated to be about 430-440 MYA, providing support for the notion that the Hexapoda evolved from the same crustacean lineage as the Malacostraca.  相似文献   

11.
The structural properties of the hemocyanin isolated from the Mediterranean mud shrimp, Upogebia pusilla (Decapoda: Thalassinidea), were investigated. Our intent was to make use of the U. pusilla case to perform a structural comparison between crustacean and chelicerate 4x6-meric hemocyanins. The thalassinidean hemocyanin appears similar in size but different in structural organization compared to the chelicerate 4x6-mer. Ultracentrifuge analyses on the purified protein revealed a sedimentation coefficient of 39S, typical of 4x6 hemocyanins. Electron micrographs are in agreement with a model in which four 2x6-meric building blocks are arranged in a tetrahedron-like quaternary structure and not in the quasi-square-planar orientation characteristic of the chelicerate protein. Size-exclusion chromatography-fast protein chromatography analysis showed elevated instability of the protein in absence of divalent ions or at pH values higher than 8.0. This analysis also shows that the dissociation of the U. pusilla 4x6-meric hemocyanin into hexamers occurs without any intermediate 2x6-meric state, in contrast with the dissociation profile of the chelicerate protein exhibiting several dissociation intermediates. The oxygen-binding properties of U. pusilla hemocyanin were studied to disclose possible effects by the typical allosteric effectors that modulate the functional properties of crustacean hemocyanin. A marked Bohr and lactate effect, but no significant influence of urate, on the oxygen affinity of U. pusilla hemocyanin were found.  相似文献   

12.
This review summarizes recent highlights of our joint work on the structure, evolution, and function of a family of highly complex proteins, the hemocyanins. They are blue-pigmented oxygen carriers, occurring freely dissolved in the hemolymph of many arthropods and molluscs. They are copper type-3 proteins and bind one dioxygen molecule between two copper atoms in a side-on coordination. They possess between 6 and 160 oxygen-binding sites, and some of them display the highest molecular cooperativity observed in nature. The functional properties of hemocyanins can be convincingly described by either the Monod-Wyman-Changeux (MWC) model or its hierarchical extension, the Nested MWC model; the latter takes into account the structural hierarchies in the oligomeric architecture. Recently, we applied these models to interpret the influence of allosteric effectors in detailed terms. Effectors shift the allosteric equilibria but have no influence on the oxygen affinities characterizing the various conformational states. We have shown that hemocyanins from species living at different environmental temperatures have a cooperativity optimum at the typical temperature of their natural habitat. Besides being oxygen carriers, some hemocyanins function as a phenoloxidase (tyrosinase/catecholoxidase) which, however, requires activation. Chelicerates such as spiders and scorpions lack a specific phenoloxidase, and in these animals activated hemocyanin might catalyse melanin synthesis in vivo. We propose a similar activation mechanism for arthropod hemocyanins, molluscan hemocyanins and tyrosinases: amino acid(s) that sterically block the access of phenolic compounds to the active site have to be removed. The catalysis mechanism itself can now be explained on the basis of the recently published crystal structure of a tyrosinase. In a series of recent publications, we presented the complete gene and primary structure of various hemocyanins from different molluscan classes. From these data, we deduced that the molluscan hemocyanin molecule evolved ca. 740 million years ago, prior to the separation of the extant molluscan classes. Our recent advances in the 3D cryo-electron microscopy of hemocyanins also allow considerable insight into the oligomeric architecture of these proteins of high molecular mass. In the case of molluscan hemocyanin, the structure of the wall and collar of the basic decamers is now rapidly becoming known in greater detail. In the case of arthropod hemocyanin, a 10-? structure and molecular model of the Limulus 8 × 6mer shows the amino acids at the various interfaces between the eight hexamers, and reveals histidine-rich residue clusters that might be involved in transferring the conformational signals establishing cooperative oxygen binding.  相似文献   

13.
1. The hemocyanin of the bivalve, Yoldia limatula (Say) was found by light-scattering to have a mol. wt of 8.0 +/- 0.6 x 10(6). Mass measurements by scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) gave a particle mass of 8.25 +/- 0.42 x 10(6) for the native particle and 4.09 +/- 0.20 x 10(6) for the half-molecule. 2. The hemocyanin subunits fully dissociated in 8.0 M urea and 6.0 M GdmCl at pH 8.0, and at pH 11.0, 0.01 M EDTA have mol. wts of 4.38 x 10(5), 4.22 x 10(5) and 4.71 x 10(5), close to one-twentieth of the parent molecular weight of Y. limatula hemocyanin and most gastropod hemocyanins. 3. Analyses of the urea dissociation transitions studied at pH 8.0, 1 x 10(-2) M Mg2+, 1 x 10(-2) M Ca2+ and pH 8.0, 3 x 10(-3) M Ca2+ suggest few hydrophobic amino acid groups, of the order of 10 to 15 at the contact areas of each half-molecule or decamer. 4. The further dissociation of the decamers to dimers and the dimers to monomers indicates the presence of a larger number of amino acid groups of ca 35-40/dimer and 100-120/monomer. 5. This suggests hydrophobic stabilization of the dimer to dimer and monomer to monomer contacts within the decamers, as observed with other molluscan hemocyanins.  相似文献   

14.
1. The hemocyanin of the chiton, Stenoplax conspicua, has a molecular weight determined by light-scattering of 4.2 X 10(6) daltons, (dt) and a sedimentation coefficient of 60 S. 2. The fully dissociated subunits in 6.0 and 8.0 M urea, and at pH 8.9-10 in the absence of divalent ions, have molecular weights of 4.15-4.30 x 10(5) and 4.17-4.75 x 10(5) dt, which is close to one-tenth of the molecular weight of the parent hemocyanin assembly. 3. The pH dependence of the molecular weights from pH 4.5 to 11 exhibit bell-shaped transition profiles, best accounted for by a three-species, decamer to dimer to monomer scheme of subunit dissociation, with one acidic and one basic ionizing group per dimer and 5-8 acidic and basic groups per monomer. 4. In the absence of stabilizing divalent ions S. conspicua hemocyanin is relatively unstable. At pH 7.4 in the presence of 0.01 M EDTA, it is predominantly in the dimeric state, characterized by a sedimentation constant of 18 S. It is also more readily dissociated to monomers at high pHs (8-9 and above) than are the C. stelleri and A. granulata hemocyanins. 5. Urea and GdmCl are effective dissociating agents of S. conspicua hemocyanin. The urea dissociation profile obtained at pH 8.5, 0.01 M Mg2+, 0.01 M Ca2+, and analyzed by means of the decamer-dimer-monomer scheme of subunit dissociation gave estimates of about 30 amino acid groups (Napp) at the dimer contacts within the hemocyanin decamers and about 120 groups per monomer within each dimer, suggesting hydrophobic stabilization of hemocyanin assembly.  相似文献   

15.
The enzymes tyrosinase, catecholoxidase and hemocyanin all share similar active sites, although their physiological functions differ. Hemocyanins serve as oxygen carrier proteins, and tyrosinases and catecholoxidases (commonly referred to as phenoloxidases in arthropods) catalyze the hydroxylation of monophenols or the oxidation of o-diphenols to o-quinones, or both. Tyrosinases are activated in vivo by limited proteolytic cleavage, which might open up substrate access to the catalytic site. It has recently been demonstrated that if hemocyanins are subjected to similar proteolytic treatments (in vitro) they also exhibit at least catecholoxidase reactivity. On the basis of their molecular structures, hemocyanins are used as model systems to understand the substrate-active-site interaction between catecholoxidases and tyrosinases.  相似文献   

16.
The high molecular weight hemocyanin found in the hemolymph of the horseshoe crab, Limulus polyphemus, is composed of at least eight different kinds of subunits. Ion exchange chromatography at high pH in the presence of EDTA yields five major zones, hemocyanins I to V, three of which are electrophoretically heterogeneous. The subunits have similar molecular weights, 65,000 to 70,000, and their amino acid compositions are remarkably similar to each other and to other arthropod and molluscan hemocyanins. Digestion of the native subunits of Limulus hemocyanin by formic acid or trypsin shows considerable structural diversity which is supported by cyanogen bromide cleavage patterns and by peptide mapping of the tryptic peptides prepared from denatured hemocyanin subunits. The structural differentiation of the subunits is accompanied by functional differentiation, as shown in previous investigations of their O2 and CO affinities (Sullivan, B., Bonaventura, J., and Bonaventura, C. (1974) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 71, 2558-2562; Bonaventura, C., Bonaventura, J., Sullivan, B., and Bourne, S. (1975) Biochemistry 13, 4784-4789). The subunit diversity of Limulus hemocyanin suggests that other electrophoretically heterogeneous hemocyanins may be composed of structurally distinct subunits.  相似文献   

17.
The molecular basis of high cooperativity in multi-subunit proteins is still unknown in most cases. Oxygen binding by multi-subunit hemocyanins produces two intrinsic spectroscopic signals which are, however, either limited to the UV or are very weak. Here we demonstrate that fluorescence labels emitting in the visible can be used as sensors for cooperative oxygen binding of hemocyanins. Fluorescence resonance energy transfer to the oxygenated active sites quenches the emission of the labels by roughly 50% upon oxygenation of the protein. The labels give strong and photo-stable emission, allowing imaging of single hemocyanin molecules. Therefore, this study opens up a new perspective for investigating the molecular basis of cooperative oxygen binding at the single-molecule level. In addition, another novel application is provided by these labels, i.e., the investigation of the influence of effectors by recording simultaneously the binding of oxygen in the visible and of effectors in the UV.  相似文献   

18.
Hemocyanins, the high molecular weight copper proteins which serve as oxygen carriers in many arthropods and molluscs, are representative of multisubunit complexes which are capable of reversible dissociation and assembly. Although reversible, in many hemocyanins these processes are not in true thermodynamic equilibria, and it has been suggested that there is "microheterogeneity" among the molecules in solution. An alternative explanation is that their complex behavior is due to the existence of quaternary interactions between structurally distinct types of subunits within the native molecule which have varying pH and ionic strength sensitivity. Limulus IV hemocyanin was used as a model system to examine structure-function relationships in the absence of subunit heterogeneity. Purified subunit IV of Limulus polyphemus hemocyanin is homogeneous by a number of electrophoretic and immunological criteria and is capable of undergoing pH-dependent self-assembly into hexamers. The monomer-hexamer transition was found to be an equilibrium whose rate is dependent on the presence or absence of calcium ions. The observation that the assembly of this homopolymer behaves as a true equilibrium suggests that the nonequilibrium dissociation profiles observed for native Limulus hemocyanin are related to the extensive subunit heterogeneity of the native protein. In calcium-containing buffers, the monomer-hexamer transitions of Limulus IV hemocyanin can be described by a cooperative mechanism with approximately six protons per hexamer lost on assembly from acid pH and three protons gained on assembly from alkaline pH. Increased ionic strength or increased temperature favors dissociation. Like the native molecule, Limulus IV hemocyanin behaves as an allosteric protein.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
Structure-function relationships in a molluscan hemocyanin have been investigated by determining the crystal structure of the Rapana thomasiana (gastropod) hemocyanin functional unit RtH2e in deoxygenated form at 3.38 A resolution. This is the first X-ray structure of an unit from the wall of the molluscan hemocyanin cylinder. The crystal structure of RtH2e demonstrates molecular self-assembly of six identical molecules forming a regular hexameric cylinder. This suggests how the functional units are ordered in the wall of the native molluscan hemocyanins. The molecular arrangement is stabilized by specific protomer-to-protomer interactions, which are probably typical for the functional units building the wall of the cylinders. A molecular mechanism for cooperative dioxygen binding in molluscan hemocyanins is proposed on the basis of the molecular interactions between the protomers. In particular, the deoxygenated RtH2e structure reveals a tunnel leading from two opposite sides of the molecule to the active site. The tunnel represents a possible entrance pathway for dioxygen molecules. No such tunnels have been observed in the crystal structure of the oxy-Odg, a functional unit from the Octopus dofleini (cephalopod) hemocyanin in oxygenated form.  相似文献   

20.
Dipteran arylphorin receptors, insect hexamerins, cheliceratan and crustacean hemocyanins, and crustacean and insect tyrosinases display significant sequence similarities. We have undertaken a systematic comparison of primary and secondary structures of these proteins. On the basis of multiple sequence alignments the phylogeny of these proteins was investigated. Hexamerin subunits, hemocyanin subunits, and tyrosinases share extensive similarities throughout the entire amino acid sequence. Our studies suggest the origin of arthropod hemocyanins from ancient tyrosinase-like proteins. Insect hexamerins likely evolved from hemocyanins of ancient crustaceans, supporting the proposed sister-group position of these subphyla. Arylphorin receptors, responsible for incorporation of hexamerins into the larval fat body of diptera, are related to hexamerins, hemocyanins, and tyrosinase. The receptor sequences display extensive similarities to the first and third domains of hemocyanins and hexamerins. In the middle region only limited amino acid conservation was observed. Elements important for hexamer formation are deleted in the receptors. Phylogenetic analysis indicated that dipteran arylphorin receptors diverged from ancient hexamerins, probably early in insect evolution. Correspondence to: T. Burmester  相似文献   

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