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1.
S T Ferreira 《Biochemistry》1989,28(26):10066-10072
The fluorescence properties of the single tryptophan residue in whiting parvalbumin were used to probe the dynamics of the protein matrix. Ca2+ binding caused a blue-shift in the emission (from lambda max = 339 to 315 nm) and a 2.5-fold increase in quantum yield. The fluorescence decay was nonexponential in both Ca2(+)-free and Ca2(+)-bound parvalbumin and was best described by Lorentzian lifetime distributions centered around two components: a major long-lived component at 2-5 ns and a small subnanosecond component. Raising the temperature from 8 to 45 degrees C resulted in a decrease in both the center (average) and width (dispersion) of the major lifetime distribution component, whereas the center, width, and fractional intensity of the fast component increased with temperature. Arrhenius activation energies of 1.3 and 0.3 kcal/mol were obtained in the absence and in the presence of Ca2+, respectively, from the temperature dependence of the center of the major lifetime distribution component. Direct anisotropy decay measurements of local tryptophan rotations yielded an activation energy of 2.3 kcal/mol in Ca2(+)-depleted parvalbumin and indicated a correlation between rotational rates and lifetime distribution parameters (center and width). Ca2+ binding produced a decrease in the width of the major lifetime distribution component and a decrease in tryptophan rotational mobility within the protein. There was a rough correlation between these two parameters with changes in Ca2+ and temperature, so that both measurements may be taken to indicate that the structure of Ca2(+)-bound parvalbumin was more rigid than in Ca2(+)-depleted parvalbumin.  相似文献   

2.
Rezaie AR  He X 《Biochemistry》2000,39(7):1817-1825
The nature of residue 225 on a consensus loop in serine proteases determines whether a protease can bind Na(+). Serine proteases with a Pro at this position are unable to bind Na(+), but those with a Tyr or Phe can bind Na(+). Factor Xa (FXa), the serine protease of the prothrombinase complex, contains a Tyr at this position. Na(+) is also known to stimulate the amidolytic activity of FXa toward cleavage of small synthetic substrates, but the role of Na(+) in the prothrombinase complex has not been investigated. In this study, we engineered a Gla-domainless form of FX (GDFX) in which residue Tyr(225) was replaced with a Pro. We found that Na(+) stimulated the cleavage rate of chromogenic substrates by FXa or GDFXa approximately 8-24-fold with apparent dissociation constants [K(d(app))] of 37 and 182 mM in the presence and absence of Ca(2+), respectively. In contrast, Na(+) minimally affected the cleavage rate of these substrates by the mutant, and no K(d(app)) for Na(+) binding to the mutant could be estimated. Unlike the wild-type enzyme, the reactivity of the mutant with antithrombin was independent of Na(+) and impaired approximately 32-fold. Ca(2+) improved the reactivity of the mutant with antithrombin approximately 5-fold. Affinity of the mutant for binding to factor Va was weakened and its ability to activate prothrombin was severely impaired. Further studies with the wild-type prothrombinase complex revealed that FXa binds to factor Va with a similar K(d(app)) of 1. 1-1.8 nM in the presence of Na(+), K(+), Li(+), Ch(+), and Tris(+) and that the catalytic efficiency of prothrombinase is enhanced less than 1.5-fold by the specific effect of Na(+) in the reaction buffer. These results suggest that (1) the loop including residue 225 (225-loop) is a Na(+) binding site in FXa, (2) the Na(+)- and Ca(2+)-binding loops of FXa are allosterically linked, and (3) the Tyr conformer of the 225-loop is critical for factor Xa function; however, both Na(+)-bound and Na(+)-free forms of factor Xa in the prothrombinase complex can efficiently activate prothrombin.  相似文献   

3.
The influence of amino acid substitutions and deletions on the stability of bovine calbindin D9k, the smallest protein known with a pair of EF-hand calcium-binding sites, has been studied using circular dichroism and ultraviolet absorption spectroscopy. The five modifications are confined to one of the two Ca2+ -binding sites. The Ca2+-loaded forms of the wild-type and mutant calbindins are too stable to be significantly denatured by heating at 90 degrees C or by adding 8 M urea. For the Ca2+-free (apo) forms thermal unfolding appears to be only half complete at 90 degrees C, while denaturation is complete in 7-8 M urea. Four of the mutant proteins show reduced resistance towards unfolding by urea, but one of the modified proteins (Glu-17----Gln) shows an increased stability, presumably because of a reduced electrostatic repulsion in the native state. According to X-ray crystallographic data the OH group of the single tyrosine of calbindin (Tyr-13) is hydrogen-bonded to the carboxyl group of Glu-35, thus linking the two alpha helices flanking the N-terminal Ca2+ site. The pK of ionization of the Tyr-13 hydroxyl group was over 13 for calcium forms of the wild-type protein, between 12.3 and 12.8 for the calcium form of three mutants and between 11.5 and 11.7 for the apoproteins. Significant differences in pH stability between wild type and mutants were observed in the calcium forms, but were not apparent in the apo forms.  相似文献   

4.
Calbindin-D(28K) is a biologically important protein required for normal neural function and for the transport of calcium in epithelial cells of the intestine and kidney. We have used fluorescence and circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy to characterize the effects of calcium binding on the structure and stability of calbindin. Ca(2+) titration monitored by fluorescence spectroscopy reveals the presence of two classes of calcium-binding sites with association constants approximately 10(7.5) and approximately 10(8.9)M(-1). CD spectra in the far-UV spectral range show minor changes upon Ca(2+) titration, implying that the secondary structure of calbindin-D(28K) is not greatly affected. On the basis of the CD spectra in the near-UV spectral range, we conclude that the tertiary structure is more sensitive to Ca(2+) addition. The most significant change occurs between pCa 7.0 and pCa 8.0. The variations in the protein thermostability are correlated with those in the near-UV CD spectra. The enthalpy changes upon heat denaturation of calbindin in the apo-state are characteristic of proteins containing several weakly interacting domains with similar thermodynamical properties. Thus, calcium binding by calbindin-D(28K) largely affects the local structure around the aromatic residues and the thermal stability of the protein; the changes in the secondary structure are insignificant.  相似文献   

5.
By means of saturation transfer electron spin resonance spectroscopy the rotational motion of spin-labeled Ca2+-dependent ATPase molecules has been investigated for three kinds of preparations of rabbit skeletal muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum: MacLennan's enzyme (purified ATPase preparation), DOPC- and egg PC-ATPase (purified ATPase preparations in which endogenous lipids are replaced with dioleoyl and egg yolk phosphatidylcholine, respectively). The rotational mobility of the enzyme in these preparations is somewhat lower than that in the intact membrane, probably due to the reduced amount of lipids. For all the preparations, however, the Arrhenius plot for rotational mobility showed a break at about 18 degrees C, the same temperature at which a break in the Arrhenius plot for Ca2+-ATPase activity occurs. This result provides further evidence that the break in the Arrhenius plot is not related to a lipid phase transition but to a change in the physical state of the Ca2+-ATPase molecule existing in fluid lipids.  相似文献   

6.
The Ca2(+)-ATPase in native sarcoplasmic reticulum membranes was selectively spin-labeled for saturation transfer electron spin resonance (ESR) studies by prelabeling with N-ethylmaleimide and by using low label/protein ratios. Results with the nitroxide derivative of the standard sulphydryl-modifying reagent, maleimide, were compared with a series of six novel nitroxide beta-substituted vinyl aryl ketone derivatives which differed (with two exceptions) in the substituent at the ketone position. The two exceptions had a different electron withdrawing group at the alpha-carbon, to enhance further the electrophilic character of the beta-carbon. Although differing in their reactivity, all the conjugated unsaturated ketone nitroxide derivatives displayed saturation transfer ESR spectra indicative of much slower motion than did the maleimide derivative. The saturation transfer ESR spectra of maleimide-labeled Ca2(+)-ATPase therefore most likely contain substantial contributions from segmental motion of the labeled group. The effects of the level of spin labeling were also investigated. With increasing degree of spin label incorporation, the linewidths of the conventional ESR spectrum progressively increased and the intensity of the saturation transfer spectrum dropped dramatically, as a result of increasing spin-spin interactions. The hyperfine splittings of the conventional spectrum and the outer lineheight ratios of the saturation transfer spectrum remained relatively unchanged. Extrapolation back to zero labeling level yielded comparable values for the effective rotational correlation times deduced from the saturation transfer spectrum intensities and from the lineheight ratios, for the vinyl ketone label. For the maleimide label the extrapolated values from the integral are significantly lower than those from the lineheight ratios, probably because of the segmental motion. Comparison is made of the effective rotational correlation time for the vinyl ketone label with the predictions of hydrodynamic models for the protein diffusion, in a discussion of the aggregation state of the Ca2(+)-ATPase in the native sarcoplasmic reticulum membrane. The implications for the study of protein rotational diffusion and segmental motion, and of the proximity relationships between labeled groups, using saturation transfer ESR spectroscopy are discussed.  相似文献   

7.
The effects of Ca2+ on lipid diffusion   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The effects of Ca2+ on rotational and translational diffusion of lipids in multilamellar dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC)-water systems were investigated by time-resolved phosphorescence anisotropy steady-state fluorescence polarization and fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP) experiments. Above the phase transition temperature (Tm), addition of Ca2+ caused a steady increase in the segmental motion of the phosphorescent probe, but resulted in slower diffusion of the fluorescent and lateral diffusion probes. The former result is attributed to changes in the structure of the lipid/water interface that affects the chromophore mobility on the phosphorescence time scale but does not reflect lipid motion. Below the phase transition temperature, slower diffusion of all probes were observed with increasing concentrations of Ca2+, with sudden large changes occurring at [Ca2+] approximately 500 mM. This behaviour is attributed to association of Ca2+ with the lipid phosphate groups and the exclusion of water molecules which results in tighter packing of lipids and smaller segmental motion, leading eventually to the immobilization of lipid molecules.  相似文献   

8.
S Linse  O Teleman  T Drakenberg 《Biochemistry》1990,29(25):5925-5934
One- and two-dimensional 1H NMR have been used to study the backbone dynamics in Ca2(+)-free (apo) and Ca2(+)-loaded (Ca2) calbindin D9k at pH 7.5 and 25 degrees C. Hydrogen exchange rates of all 71 backbone amide protons (NH's) have been measured for the Ca2 form by both a direct exchange-out experiment and another experiment that measures the transfer of saturation from water protons to amide protons. A large number of NH's are found to be highly protected against exchange with solvent protons. The results for the Ca2 form are related to solvent accessibility and hydrogen bonding obtained in molecular dynamics simulations of calcium-loaded calbindin. The correlation with these parameters is strong within the N-terminal half of calbindin, which is found to be more stable than the C-terminal half. The amide proton exchange in the apo form is much faster than in the Ca2 form and was studied in a series of experiments in which the exchange was quenched after different times by Ca2+ addition. This experiment is applicable to all amide hydrogens that exchange slowly in the Ca2 form. For these NH's the effects of Ca2+ removal span from a 10(2)-fold decrease to a 10(5)-fold increase of the exchange rate, and the average is a 220-fold increase. The effects on individual NH exchange rates show that the four alpha-helices are almost intact after calcium removal and that the changes in dynamics involve not only the Ca2(+)-binding region. Hydrogen bonds involving backbone NH's in the Ca2+ loops appear to be broken or weakened when calbindin releases Ca2+, whereas the beta-sheet between the Ca2+ loops is found to be present in both the Ca2 and apo forms. Large Ca2(+)-induced effects on NH exchange rates were measured for a few residues at alpha-helix ends far from the two Ca2(+)-binding sites. This may be the result of a change in interhelix angles (or the rate of interhelix angle fluctuations) on calcium binding.  相似文献   

9.
The rotational mobility of lac repressor from Escherichia coli was investigated by nanosecond fluorescence depolarization spectroscopy. A single rotational correlation time (φ) of the repressor was observed by monitoring the emission anisotropic decay of the intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence. The small value of φ (9·5 ns) suggests that one or both of the two tryptophan residues in the repressor are located in a flexible segment of the protein molecule. This segmental flexibility is enhanced by binding of inducer (isopropyl-β-d-thiogalactoside) to the repressor while it is restrained by binding of anti-inducer (glucose) or small DNA fragments, as indicated by the changes in φ. Further time-dependent emission anisotropy studies with an extrinsic fluorescent probe, N-(iodoacetylaminoethyl)-5-naphthylamine-1-sulfonate, covalently attached to the repressor yielded two rotational correlation times. The shorter φS (6·7 ns) also corresponds to a segmental flexibility whereas the longer φL (118 ns) represents the rotational motion of the entire repressor molecule. Both the values of φS and φL vary by addition of inducer or anti-inducer in a manner similar to that observed for the intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence but they are insensitive to addition of DNA fragments. The changes in local mobility of the lac repressor molecule observed in these studies may provide some insight into how inducer (or anti-inducer) destabilizes (or stabilizes) the repressor-operator complex.  相似文献   

10.
The effects of the divalent cations Mg2+, Mn2+ and Ca2+ on the Brownian rotational motion of fluorescently labeled myosin, heavy meromyosin and myosin subfragment-1 were measured by the method of time-resolved fluorescence depolarization. When Mg2+ was added to solutions of myosin or heavy meromyosin and EDTA, their rotational mobility increased. Ca2+ had no effect. Mn2+ increased the mobility of heavy meromyosin but decreased that of myosin. None of these divalent cations effected the mobility of subfragment-1. The binding of heavy meromyosin to actin was affected very little by Mg2+ or EDTA over a wide range of conditions. Divalent cations appear to change the swivel about which the heads of myosin rotate, presumably by binding to light chain 2 (also called DTNB light chain). However, the heads are still able to bind actin in nearly the same way whether Mg2+ is present or not. The concentration of free Mg2+ for the mid-point of the change in heavy meromyosin mobility is in good agreement with that for EDTA activation of ATPase activity. This suggests that EDTA activation is due to removal of Mg2+ bound to myosin itself.  相似文献   

11.
Frequency-domain fluorescence measurements to 2 GHz were able to recover and account for essentially all of the intrinsic tyrosine anisotropy of calmodulin and its proteolytic fragments containing one or two tyrosine residues. Low-temperature measurements have detected a very rapid initial anisotropy decay in the 2-tyrosine species which may be attributed to radiationless energy transfer between the two tyrosines. The observed values of the rotational correlation times indicate that both tyrosines of calmodulin possess considerable mobility, which decreases in the presence of Ca2+ and at low temperatures.  相似文献   

12.
Berggård T  Silow M  Thulin E  Linse S 《Biochemistry》2000,39(23):6864-6873
Calbindin D(28k) is a member of a large family of intracellular Ca(2+) binding proteins characterized by EF-hand structural motifs. Some of these proteins are classified as Ca(2+)-sensor proteins, since they are involved in transducing intracellular Ca(2+) signals by exposing a hydrophobic patch on the protein surface in response to Ca(2+) binding. The hydrophobic patch serves as an interaction site for target enzymes. Other members of this group are classified as Ca(2+)-buffering proteins, because they remain closed after Ca(2+) binding and participate in Ca(2+) buffering and transport functions. ANS (8-anilinonaphthalene-1-sulfonic acid) binding and affinity chromatography on a hydrophobic column suggested that both the Ca(2+)-free and Ca(2+)-loaded form of calbindin D(28k) have exposed hydrophobic surfaces. Since exposure of hydrophobic surface is unfavorable in the aqueous intracellular milieu, calbindin D(28k) most likely interacts with other cellular components in vivo. A Ca(2+)-induced conformational change was readily detected by several optical spectroscopic methods. Thus, calbindin D(28k) shares some of the properties of Ca(2+)-sensor proteins. However, the Ca(2+)-induced change in exposed hydrophobic surface was considerably less pronounced than that in calmodulin. The data also shows that calbindin D(28k) undergoes a rapid and reversible conformational change in response to a H(+) concentration increase within the physiological pH range. The pH-dependent conformational change was shown to reside mainly in EF-hands 1-3. Urea-induced unfolding of the protein at pH 6, 7, and 8 showed that the stability of calbindin D(28k) was increased in response to H(+) in the range examined. The results suggest that calbindin D(28k) may interact with targets in a Ca(2+)- and H(+)-dependent manner.  相似文献   

13.
Time-resolved fluorescence studies have been performed on (+)-anti-7,8-dihydrodiol-9,10-epoxybenzo[a]pyrene adducts in double-stranded poly(dG-dC).(dG-dC). Part of the adduct population gives rise to excimer fluorescence. The heterogeneous fluorescence emission decay curves at 22 degrees C could be resolved into three components with lifetimes: 0.4 ns, 3 ns and 24 ns for the total fluorescence (monomer and excimer emission), and 0.5 ns, 5 ns and 24 ns, respectively, for excimer emission alone. The relative amplitudes for the longer lifetimes were larger for the pure excimer population than for the mixed population. The fluorescence polarization anisotropy decay curves were resolved into two components of rotational correlation times: 0.4 ns and 25 ns for the total fluorescence and 0.3 ns and 33 ns for the excimer fluorescence. We interpret the two rotational correlation times to correspond to local motion of the adduct and segmental motion of the polynucleotide, respectively.  相似文献   

14.
The calcium-induced conformational changes of the 108-amino acid residue proteins, cod III parvalbumin and oncomodulin, were compared using tryptophan as a sensitive spectroscopic probe. As native oncomodulin is devoid of tryptophan, site-specific mutagenesis was performed to create a mutant protein in which tryptophan was placed in the identical position (residue 102) as the single tryptophan residue in cod III parvalbumin. The results showed that in the region probed by tryptophan-102, cod III parvalbumin experienced significantly greater changes in conformation upon decalcification compared to the oncomodulin mutant, F102W. Addition of 1 eq of Ca2+ produced greater than 90% of the total fluorescence response in F102W, while in cod III parvalbumin, only 74% of the total was observed. Cod III parvalbumin displayed a negligible response upon Mg2+ addition. In contrast, F102W did respond to Mg2+, but the response was considerably less when compared to Ca2+ addition. Time-resolved fluorescence showed that the tryptophan in both proteins existed in at least two conformational states in the presence of Ca2+ and at least three conformational states in its absence. Comparison with quantum yield measurements indicated that the local electronic environment of the tryptophan was significantly different in the two proteins. Collectively, these results demonstrate that both cod III parvalbumin and oncomodulin undergo Ca2(+)-specific conformational changes. However, oncomodulin is distinct from cod III parvalbumin in terms of the electronic environment of the hydrophobic core, the magnitude of the Ca2(+)-induced conformational changes, and the number of calcium ions required to modulate the major conformational changes.  相似文献   

15.
Electrostatic contributions to the binding of Ca2+ in calbindin D9k   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
A set of accurate experimental data is provided for Ca2+ ion binding to calbindin D9k, a protein in the calmodulin superfamily of intracellular regulatory proteins. The study comprises both the role of protein surface charges and the effects of added electrolyte. The two macroscopic Ca2(+)-binding constants K1 and K2 are determined for the wild-type and eight mutant calbindins in 0, 0.05, 0.10, and 0.15 M KCl from titrations in the presence of Quin 2 or 5,5'-Br2BAPTA. The mutations involve replacement of surface carboxylates (of Glu17, Asp19, Glu26, and Glu60) with the corresponding amides. It is found that K1K2 may decrease by a factor of up to 2.5 x 10(5) (triple mutant in 0.15 M KCl as compared to the wild-type protein in 0 M KCl). Ca2(+)-binding constants of the individual Ca2+ sites (microscopic binding constants) have also been determined. The positive cooperativity of Ca2+ binding, previously observed at low salt concentration [Linse et al. (1987) Biochemistry 26, 6723-6735], is also present at physiological ionic strength and amounts to 5 kJ.mol-1 at 0.15 M KCl. The electrolyte concentration and some of the mutations are found to affect the cooperativity. 39K NMR studies show that K+ binds weakly to calbindin. Two-dimensional 1H NMR studies show, however, that potassium binding does not change the protein conformation, and the large effect of KCl on the Ca2+ affinity is thus of unspecific nature. Two-dimensional 1H NMR has also been used to assess the structural consequences of the mutations through assignments of the backbone NH and C alpha H resonances of six mutants.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
The role of the calcium-binding protein, calbindin-D(28k) in potassium/depolarization-stimulated increases in the cytosolic free Ca(2+) concentration ([Ca(2+)](i)) and insulin release was investigated in pancreatic islets from calbindin-D(28k) nullmutant mice (knockouts; KO) or wild type mice and beta cell lines stably transfected and overexpressing calbindin. Using single islets from KO mice and stimulation with 45 mM KCl, the peak of [Ca(2+)](i) was 3.5-fold greater in islets from KO mice compared with wild type islets (p < 0.01) and [Ca(2+)](i) remained higher during the plateau phase. In addition to the increase in [Ca(2+)](i) in response to KCl there was also a significant increase in insulin release in islets isolated from KO mice. Evidence for modulation by calbindin of [Ca(2+)](i) and insulin release was also noted using beta cell lines. Rat calbindin was stably expressed in betaTC-3 and betaHC-13 cells. In response to depolarizing concentrations of K(+), insulin release was decreased by 45-47% in calbindin expressing betaTC cells and was decreased by 70-80% in calbindin expressing betaHC cells compared with insulin release from vector transfected betaTC or betaHC cells (p < 0.01). In addition, the K(+)-stimulated intracellular calcium peak was markedly inhibited in calbindin expressing betaHC cells compared with vector transfected cells (225 nM versus 1,100 nM, respectively). Buffering of the depolarization-induced rise in [Ca(2+)](i) was also observed in calbindin expressing betaTC cells. In summary, our findings, using both isolated islets from calbindin-D(28k) KO mice and beta cell lines, establish a role for calbindin in the modulation of depolarization-stimulated insulin release and suggest that calbindin can control the rate of insulin release via regulation of [Ca(2+)](i).  相似文献   

17.
18.
The Ca2+-transporting ATPase of rabbit skeletal muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum was site-specifically labeled with either N-(1-anilinonaphth-4-yl)maleimide (ANM) or 5-[[(iodoacetamido)-ethyl]amino]naphthalene-1-sulfonate (IAEDANS), and the segmental motion of submolecular domains of the ATPase molecule was examined by means of time-resolved and steady-state fluorescence anisotropy measurements. The ANM-binding domain showed wobbling with a rotational relaxation time phi = 69 ns in the absence of free Ca2+ without any independent wobbling of the ANM moiety. The IAEDANS-binding domain showed a significantly slower wobbling with phi = 190 ns in the absence of Ca2+. The present results demonstrated for the first time that the ATPase molecule is composed of distinct domains whose mobilities are considerably different from each other. The binding of Ca2+ to the transport site increased the segmental motion of ANM-labeled domain, leading to a phi value of 65 ns. Solubilization of the ANM-labeled SR membranes by deoxycholate led to a further increase in the segmental flexibility (phi = 48 ns in the absence of free Ca2+), indicating that the mobility of the ANM-binding domain was considerably restricted through interaction with the membrane. The mobility of the ANM-binding domain of solubilized ATPase was also increased to some extent upon binding of Ca2+.  相似文献   

19.
The dynamics in isotopic solvents of selectively 13C labeled synthetic melittin and three analogues have been investigated by using NMR and fluorescence techniques both separately and in combination. In conjunction with the "model-free" approach to interpretation of NMR relaxation data [Lipari, G., & Szabo, A. (1982) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 104, 4546-4570], the availability of steady-state fluorescence anisotropy and lifetime data augment T1, T2, and NOE data to provide quantitative information about fluorophore dynamics in these peptides. A method is presented for using combined fluorescence and NMR data to obtain technique- and model-independent values for parameters describing local motion of 13C-labeled fluorophores in peptides and proteins. The dynamics of melittin and melittin analogues are found to be consistent with structural characteristics inferred from CD, fluorescence, and NMR spectral information presented in the preceding paper (Weaver et al., 1989). In particular, the mobility of the random coil peptide monomers is shown to be quite similar, while side-chain as well as peptide backbone motion in the aggregated or oligomeric species differs markedly among the analogues. For melittin itself, experimentally determined overall rotational correlation times for the monomer and tetramer agree very well with values predicted on the basis of solvent-accessible protein surface area. The local dynamics of selectively 13C-labeled Trp-19 and Gly-12 residues of melittin are also found to be consistent with peptide structure. In random coil melittin monomer, a specific model for the motion indicates that the Trp side chain moves through an approximate angle of +/- 71 degrees about the beta-gamma bond with a correlation time of 159 +/- 24 ps. In melittin tetramer, the indole moiety is spatially more confined with a flip angle of +/- 37 degrees, yet demonstrates an increased rate of motion with a correlation time of 56 +/- 8 ps. The constrained mobility of the Trp-19 side chain is consistent with motional constraints inferred from the X-ray structure of melittin tetramer. These results show that protein side-chain motion, even of moieties as large as indole, can occur on the picosecond time scale and that these motions are reasonably similar to those inferred from molecular dynamics simulations.  相似文献   

20.
The gene 5 protein (g5p) of the Ff virus contains five Tyr, individual mutants of which have now all been characterized by CD spectroscopy. The protein has a dominant tyrosyl 229-nm L(a) CD band that is shown to be approximately the sum of the five individual Tyr contributions. Tyr41 is particularly important in contributing to the high cooperativity with which the g5p binds to ssDNA, and Y41F and Y41H mutants are known to differ in dimer-dimer packing interactions in crystal structures. We compared the solution structures and binding properties of the Y41F and Y41H mutants using CD spectroscopy. Secondary structures of the mutants were similar by CD analyses and close to those derived from the crystal structures. However, there were significant differences in the binding properties of the two mutant proteins. The Y41H protein had an especially low binding affinity and perturbed the spectrum of poly[d(A)] in 2 mM Na(+) much less than did Y41F and the wild-type gene 5 proteins. Moreover, a change in the Tyr 229 nm band, assigned to the perturbation of Tyr34 at the dimer-dimer interface, was absent in titrations with the Y41H mutant under low salt conditions. In contrast, titrations with the Y41H mutant in 50 mM Na(+) exhibited typical CD changes of both the nucleic acid and the Tyr 229-nm band. Thus, protein-protein and g5p-ssDNA interactions appeared to be mutually influenced by ionic strength, indicative of correlated changes in the ssDNA binding and cooperativity loops of the protein or of indirect structural constraints.  相似文献   

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