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1.
The structures of the oxidized and reduced forms of the rubredoxin from the archaebacterium, Pyrococcus furiosus, an organism that grows optimally at 100 degrees C, have been determined by X-ray crystallography to a resolution of 1.8 A. Crystals of this rubredoxin grow in space group P2(1)2(1)2(1) with room temperature cell dimensions a = 34.6 A, b = 35.5 A, and c = 44.4 A. Initial phases were determined by the method of molecular replacement using the oxidized form of the rubredoxin from the mesophilic eubacterium, Clostridium pasteurianum, as a starting model. The oxidized and reduced models of P. furiosus rubredoxin each contain 414 nonhydrogen protein atoms comprising 53 residues. The model of the oxidized form contains 61 solvent H2O oxygen atoms and has been refined with X-PLOR and TNT to a final R = 0.178 with root mean square (rms) deviations from ideality in bond distances and bond angles of 0.014 A and 2.06 degrees, respectively. The model of the reduced form contains 37 solvent H2O oxygen atoms and has been refined to R = 0.193 with rms deviations from ideality in bond lengths of 0.012 A and in bond angles of 1.95 degrees. The overall structure of P. furiosus rubredoxin is similar to the structures of mesophilic rubredoxins, with the exception of a more extensive hydrogen-bonding network in the beta-sheet region and multiple electrostatic interactions (salt bridge, hydrogen bonds) of the Glu 14 side chain with groups on three other residues (the amino-terminal nitrogen of Ala 1; the indole nitrogen of Trp 3; and the amide nitrogen group of Phe 29). The influence of these and other features upon the thermostability of the P. furiosus protein is discussed.  相似文献   

2.
The crystal structure of rubredoxin from the sulfate-reducing bacterium Desulfovibrio gigas has been determined at 1.4 A resolution (1 A = 0.1 nm) by X-ray diffraction methods; starting with a model of the isostructural rubredoxin from Desulfovibrio vulgaris. Refinement of the molecular model has been carried out by restrained least-squares techniques and Fourier series calculations. The present model includes a formyl at the N-terminal end and 121 possible sites for solvent molecules with full or partial occupancy, which corresponds to the modeling of nearly all the solvent medium. The crystallographic R factor against the data with 10 A greater than d greater than 1.4 A with F greater than 2 sig(F), is 0.136; and R = 0.140 when all the data are considered. The estimated average root-mean-square (r.m.s.) error on the positional parameters is about 0.12 A. The overall structural features of this molecule are close to those of the two highly refined rubredoxins from Clostridium pasteurianum and D. vulgaris. Superposition of these two molecules on the rubredoxin from D. gigas shows in both cases an overall r.m.s. deviation of 0.5 A for the atoms in the main-chain and of 0.4 A for the atoms in the side-chains that make up the hydrophobic core. The iron atom is co-ordinated to four cysteine sulfur atoms forming an almost regular tetrahedron, with Fe-SG distances ranging from 2.27 A to 2.31 A and angles varying from 103 degrees to 115 degrees. The intramolecular hydrogen-bonding pattern is quite comparable to those found in other proteins refined at high resolution. All the polar groups are involved in hydrogen bonds: intramolecular, intermolecular or with solvent molecules. The main structural differences from the other rubredoxins are in the nature and the distribution of some of the charged residues over the molecular surface. The possible influence of several structural factors on the intramolecular and intermolecular electron transfer properties such as the NH...SG bonds, the solvent exposure of the redox center, and the aromatic core is discussed. The conservation, during evolution, of a ring of acidic residues in the proximity of the FeSG4 center suggests that this ring may be implicated in the recognition processes between rubredoxins and their functional partners.  相似文献   

3.
Superoxide reductases are a class of non-haem iron enzymes which catalyse the monovalent reduction of the superoxide anion O2- into hydrogen peroxide and water. Treponema pallidum (Tp), the syphilis spirochete, expresses the gene for a superoxide reductase called neelaredoxin, having the iron protein rubredoxin as the putative electron donor necessary to complete the catalytic cycle. In this work, we present the first cloning, overexpression in Escherichia coli and purification of the Tp rubredoxin. Spectroscopic characterization of this 6 kDa protein allowed us to calculate the molar absorption coefficient of the 490 nm feature of ferric iron, epsilon=6.9+/-0.4 mM(-1) cm(-1). Moreover, the midpoint potential of Tp rubredoxin, determined using a glassy carbon electrode, was -76+/-5 mV. Reduced rubredoxin can be efficiently reoxidized upon addition of Na(2)IrCl(6)-oxidized neelaredoxin, in agreement with a direct electron transfer between the two proteins, with a stoichiometry of the electron transfer reaction of one molecule of oxidized rubredoxin per one molecule of neelaredoxin. In addition, in presence of a steady-state concentration of superoxide anion, the physiological substrate of neelaredoxin, reoxidation of rubredoxin was also observed in presence of catalytic amounts of superoxide reductase, and the rate of rubredoxin reoxidation was shown to be proportional to the concentration of neelaredoxin, in agreement with a bimolecular reaction, with a calculated k(app)=180 min(-1). Interestingly, similar experiments performed with a rubredoxin from the sulfate-reducing bacteria Desulfovibrio vulgaris resulted in a much lower value of k(app)=4.5 min(-1). Altogether, these results demonstrated the existence for a superoxide-mediated electron transfer between rubredoxin and neelaredoxin and confirmed the physiological character of this electron transfer reaction.  相似文献   

4.
Biotransformation using alkane-oxidizing bacteria or their alkane hydroxylase (AH) systems have been little studied at the molecular level. We have cloned and sequenced genes from Gordonia sp. TF6 encoding an AH system, alkB2 (alkane 1-monooxygenase), rubA3 (rubredoxin), rubA4 (rubredoxin), and rubB (rubredoxin reductase). When expressed in Escherichia coli, these genes allowed the construction of biotransformation systems for various alkanes. Normal alkanes with 5 to 13 carbons were good substrates for this biotransformation, and oxidized to their corresponding 1-alkanols. Surprisingly, cycloalkanes with 5 to 8 carbons were oxidized to their corresponding cycloalkanols as well. This is the first study to achieve biotransformation of alkanes using the E. coli expressing the minimum component genes of the AH system. Our biotransformation system has facilitated assays and analysis leading to improvement of AH systems, and has indicated a cycloalkane oxidation pathway in microorganisms for the first time.  相似文献   

5.
Rubredoxin from Desulfovibrio desulfuricans (strain 27774) has been isolated and crystallized. Preliminary amino acid and crystallographic analyses indicate that this rubredoxin is the smallest rubredoxin isolated so far. The amino acid analysis indicates that the molecule is composed of 45 to 48 residues and contains histidine, which is unusual for rubredoxins from anaerobic bacteria. The X-ray diffraction pattern from these crystals reveals they belong to space group P1 with cell parameters: a = 24.92 A, b = 17.79 A, c = 19.72 A, alpha = 101.0 degrees, beta = 83.4 degrees, gamma = 104.5 degrees. The unit cell volume of 8283 A3 indicates a molecule with molecular weight no greater than 5500 and is consistent with the smaller number of amino acids found in this rubredoxin. The solvent content of this rubredoxin crystal appears to be the lowest observed in crystalline proteins.  相似文献   

6.
A new non-heme iron protein from the periplasmic fraction of Desulfovibrio vulgaris (Hildenbourough NCIB 8303) has been purified to homogeneity, and its amino acid composition, molecular weight, redox potential, iron content, and optical, EPR, and M?ssbauer spectroscopic properties have been determined. This new protein is composed of two identical subunits with subunit molecular weight of 21,900 and contains four iron atoms per molecule. The as-purified oxidized protein exhibits an optical spectrum with absorption maxima at 492, 365, and 280 nm, and its EPR spectrum shows resonances at g = 4.3 and 9.4, characteristic of oxidized rubredoxin. The M?ssbauer data indicate the presence of approximately equal amounts of two types of iron; we named them the Rd-like and the Hr-like iron due to their similarity to the iron centers of rubredoxins (Rds) and hemerythrins (Hrs), respectively. For the Rd-like iron, the measured fine and hyperfine parameters (D = 1.5 cm-1, E/D = 0.26, delta EQ = -0.55 mm/s, delta = 0.27 mm/s, Axx/gn beta n = -16.5 T, Ayy/gn beta n = -15.6 T, and Azz/gn beta n = -17.0 T) are almost identical with those obtained for the rubredoxin from Clostridium pasteurianum. Redox-titration studies monitored by EPR, however, showed that these Rd-like centers have a midpoint redox potential of +230 +/- 10 mV, approximately 250 mV more positive than those reported for rubredoxins. Another unusual feature of this protein is the presence of the Hr-like iron atoms.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
LeMaster DM  Tang J  Hernández G 《Proteins》2004,57(1):118-127
The striking kinetic stability of many proteins derived from hyperthermophilic organisms has led to the proposal that such stability may result from a heightened activation barrier for unfolding independent of a corresponding increase in the thermodynamic stability. This in turn implies a corresponding retardation of the folding reaction. A commonly cited model for kinetic thermal stabilization is the rubredoxin from Pyrococcus furiosus (Pf), which exhibits an irreversible denaturation lifetime at 100 degrees C of nearly a week. Utilizing protein resonances shifted well outside of the random coil chemical shift envelope, nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) chemical exchange measurements on Pf rubredoxin as well as on the mesophile Clostridium pasteurianum (Cp) rubredoxin demonstrate reversible thermal transition temperatures of 144 degrees C (137 degrees C for the N-terminal modified A2K variant) and 104 degrees C, respectively, with similar (un)folding rates of approximately 25,000 s(-1), only modestly slower than the diffusion controlled rate. The absence of a substantial activation barrier to rubredoxin folding as well as the similar folding kinetics of the mesophile protein indicate that kinetic stabilization has not been utilized by the hyperthermophile rubredoxin in achieving its extreme thermal stability. The two-state folding kinetics observed for Pf rubredoxin contradict a previous assertion of multiphasic folding based on hydrogen exchange data extrapolated to an estimated midpoint of transition temperature (T(m)) of nearly 200 degrees C. This discrepancy is resolved by the observation that the base-catalyzed hydrogen exchange of the model dipeptide (N-acetyl-L-cysteine-N-methylamide)4-Cd2+ is 23-fold slower than that of the free cysteine model dipeptide used to normalize the Pf rubredoxin hydrogen exchange data.  相似文献   

8.
A synthetic gene based on the published amino acid sequence for Clostridium pasteurianum rubredoxin was constructed, cloned in Escherichia coli 71/18 and expressed using the T7 RNA polymerase/promoter system in E. coli HMS273. UV/visible spectroscopy and metal analyses indicated that the as-isolated synthetic gene product is a mixture of holo-(i.e. iron-containing) rubredoxin and zinc-substituted rubredoxin, with the latter amounting to approximately 70% of the total rubredoxin. The UV/visible absorption and resonance Raman spectra of the cloned holorubredoxin are characteristic of the native rubredoxin-type iron site. N-terminal amino acid sequencing suggests that the gene product consists of at least three polypeptide species with the initial sequences (approximate relative abundances): Met-Met-Lys-... (63%), blocked (30%) and Met-Lys-... (7%). The blocked portion presumably consists of a mixture of nMet-Met-Lys-... and nMet-Lys-..., where nMet represents an amino-blocked methionine residue.  相似文献   

9.
F Shimizu  M Ogata  T Yagi  S Wakabayashi  H Matsubara 《Biochimie》1989,71(11-12):1171-1177
Rubredoxin was purified from Desulfovibrio vulgaris Miyazaki. It was sequenced and some of its properties determined. Rubredoxin is composed of 52 amino acids. It is highly homologous to that from D. vulgaris Hildenborough. Its N-terminal methionyl residue is partially formylated. The millimolar absorption coefficients of the rubredoxin at 489 nm and 280 nm are 8.1 and 18.5, respectively, and the standard redox potential is +5 mV, which is slightly higher than those of other rubredoxins. Rubredoxin, as well as cytochrome c-553, was reduced with lactate by the action of lactate dehydrogenase of this organism, and the reaction was stimulated with 2-methyl-1,4-naphthoquinone. It is suggested that rubredoxin, in collaboration with membranous quinone, functions as a natural electron carrier for cytoplasmic lactate dehydrogenase of this organism, whereas cytochrome c-553 plays the same role for periplasmic lactate dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

10.
Crystals of beta-lactamase II (EC 3.5.2.6., 'penicillinase') from Bacillus cereus were grown with Cd(II) in place of the natural Zn(II) cofactor and stabilized by cross-linking with glutaraldehyde. Their space group is C2, the cell dimensions are a = 5.44 nm, b = 6.38 nm, c = 7.09 nm and beta = 93.6 degrees, and there is one molecule in the asymmetric unit. Diffraction data were collected from cross-linked crystals of the Cd(II)-enzyme, the apoenzyme and six heavy-atom derivatives. The electron-density map calculated at 0.35 nm resolution reveals the essential Cd(II) ion surrounded by three histidine residues and one cysteine residue. The position of a glutamic acid residue, modification of which destroys activity [Little, Emanuel, Gagnon & Waley (1986) Biochem. J. 233, 465-469], suggests the probable location of the active site of the enzyme. Two minor Cd(II) sites not essential for activity were also located. The structure of the apoenzyme at this resolution appears to differ from that of the Cd(II)-enzyme only in the orientation of two of the histidine residues and the cysteine residue that surround the metal ion.  相似文献   

11.
NAD(P)H:rubredoxin oxidoreductase (NROR) has been purified from the hyperthermophilic archaeon Pyrococcus furiosus. The enzyme is exceedingly active in catalyzing the NADPH-dependent reduction of rubredoxin, a small (5.3-kDa) iron-containing redox protein that had previously been purified from this organism. The apparent Vmax at 80 degrees C is 20,000 micromol/min/mg, which corresponds to a kcat/Km value of 300,000 mM(-1) s(-1). The apparent Km values measured at 80 degrees C and pH 8.0 for rubredoxin, NADPH, and NADH were 50, 5, and 34 microM, respectively. The enzyme did not reduce P. furiosus ferredoxin. NROR is a monomer with a molecular mass of 45 kDa and contains one flavin adenine dinucleotide molecule per mole but lacks metals and inorganic sulfide. The possible physiological role of this hyperactive enzyme is discussed.  相似文献   

12.
Oxidized rubredoxin from Clostridium pasteurianum has been investigated by magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) spectroscopy over the temperature range 1.5 to 150 K and at magnetic fields between 0 and 4.5 tesla. The results show that studies of the temperature and field dependence of MCD transitions afford insight into the polarization of electronic transitions for ground states with large g-value anisotropy, in addition to estimates of ground-state g values and zero-field splitting parameters. In agreement with the assignment made by Eaton and Lovenberg (Eaton, W.A. and Lovenberg, W. (1973) in Iron-Sulfur Proteins, Vol. II (Lovenberg, W., ed.), pp. 131-162, Academic Press, New York), the ultraviolet-visible spectrum of oxidized rubredoxin is assigned to two S----Fe(III) charge transfer transitions (both 6A1----6T2 under tetrahedral symmetry), each spanning a range of 650-430 nm and 430-330 nm, respectively. The observed splitting in each of these transitions is attributed to a predominant axial distortion in the excited state resulting in effective D2d symmetry.  相似文献   

13.
The reactivity of recombinant pea cytosolic ascorbate peroxidase (rAPX) towards H2O2, the nature of the intermediates and the products of the reaction have been examined using UV/visible and EPR spectroscopies together with HPLC. Compound I of rAPX, generated by reaction of rAPX with 1 molar equivalent of H2O2, contains a porphyrin pi-cation radical. This species is unstable and, in the absence of reducing substrate, decays within 60 s to a second species, compound I*, that has a UV/visible spectrum [lambda(max) (nm) = 414, 527, 558 and 350 (sh)] similar, but not identical, to those of both horseradish peroxidase compound II and cytochrome c peroxidase compound I. Small but systematic differences were observed in the UV/visible spectra of compound I* and authentic rAPX compound II, generated by reaction of rAPX with 1 molar equivalent H2O2 in the presence of 1 molar equivalent of ascorbate [lambda(max) (nm) = 416, 527, 554, 350 (sh) and 628 (sh)]. Compound I* decays to give a 'ferric-like' species (lambda(max) = 406 nm) that is not spectroscopically identical to ferric rAPX (lambda(max) = 403 nm) with a first order rate constant, k(decay)' = (2.7 +/- 0.3) x 10(-4) s(-1). Authentic samples of compound II evolve to ferric rAPX [k(decay) = (1.1 +/- 0.2) x 10(-3) s(-1)]. Low temperature (10 K) EPR spectra are consistent with the formation of a protein-based radical, with g values for compound I* (g parallel = 2.038, g perpendicular = 2.008) close to those previously reported for the Trp191 radical in cytochrome c peroxidase (g parallel = 2.037, g perpendicular = 2.005). The EPR spectrum of rAPX compound II was essentially silent in the g = 2 region. Tryptic digestion of the 'ferric-like' rAPX followed by RP-HPLC revealed a fragment with a new absorption peak near 330 nm, consistent with the formation of a hydroxylated tryptophan residue. The results show, for the first time, that rAPX can, under certain conditions, form a protein-based radical analogous to that found in cytochrome c peroxidase. The implications of these data are discussed in the wider context of both APX catalysis and radical formation and stability in haem peroxidases.  相似文献   

14.
Hydration of oxidized rubredoxin (Fe(III)(S-Cys)(4) center) was investigated by (1)H and (17)O relaxation measurements of bulk water as a function of the applied magnetic field (nuclear magnetic relaxation dispersion). Oxidized rubredoxin showed an increased water (1)H relaxation profile with respect to the diamagnetic gallium derivative or reduced species. Analysis of the data shows evidence of exchangeable proton(s) approximately 4.0-4.5 A from the metal ion, the exchange time being longer than 10(-10) s and shorter than 10(-5) s. The correlation time for the proton-electrons interaction is 7 x 10(-11) s and is attributed to the effective electron relaxation time. Its magnitude is consistent with the large signal linewidths of the protein donor nuclei, observed in high resolution NMR spectra. For reduced rubredoxin, such correlation time is proposed to be smaller than 10(-11) s. (17)O relaxation measurements suggest the presence of at least one long-lived protein-bound water molecule. Analogous relaxation measurements were performed on the C6S rubredoxin variant, whose iron(III) center has been previously shown to be coordinated to three cysteine residues and a hydroxide ion above pH 6. (1)H nuclear magnetic relaxation dispersion profiles indicate increased hydration with respect to the wild-type.  相似文献   

15.
To examine the role of the distal His42 residue in the catalytic mechanism of pea cytosolic ascorbate peroxidase, two site-directed variants were prepared in which His42 was replaced with alanine (H42A) or glutamic acid (H42E). Electronic spectra of the ferric derivatives of H42A and H42E (pH 7.0, mu = 0.10 m, 25.0 degrees C) revealed wavelength maxima [lambda(max) (nm): 397, 509, approximately equal to 540(sh), 644 (H42A); 404, 516, approximately equal to 538(sh), 639 (H42E)] consistent with a predominantly five-co-ordinate high-spin iron. The specific activity of H42E for oxidation of L-ascorbate (8.2 +/- 0.3 U.mg(-1)) was approximately equal to 30-fold lower than that of the recombinant wild-type enzyme (rAPX); the H42A variant was essentially inactive but activity could be partially recovered by addition of exogenous imidazoles. The spectra of the Compound I intermediates of H42A [lambda(max) (nm) = 403, 534, 575(sh), 645] and H42E [lambda(max) (nm) = 404, 530, 573(sh), 654] were similar to those of rAPX. Pre-steady-state data for formation of Compound I for H42A and H42E were consistent with a mechanism involving accumulation of a transient enzyme intermediate (K(d)) followed by conversion of this intermediate into Compound I (k'(1)). Values for k'(1) and K(d) were, respectively, 4.3 +/- 0.2 s(-1) and 30 +/- 2.0 mM (H42A) and 28 +/- 1.0 s(-1) and 0.09 +/- 0.01 mM (H42E). Photodiode array experiments for H42A revealed wavelength maxima for this intermediate at 401 nm, 522 nm and 643 nm, consistent with the formation of a transient [H42A-H(2)O(2)] species. Rate constants for Compound I formation for H42A were independent of pH, but for rAPX and H42E were pH-dependent [pKa = 4.9 +/- 0.1 (rAPX) and pK(a) = 6.7 +/- 0.2 (H42E)]. The results provide: (a) evidence that His42 is critical for Compound I formation in APX; (b) confirmation that titration of His42 controls Compound I formation and an assignment of the pK(a) for this group; (c) mechanistic and spectroscopic evidence for an intermediate before Compound I formation; (d) evidence that a glutamic acid residue at position 42 can act as the acid-base catalyst in ascorbate peroxidase.  相似文献   

16.
Magnetic circular dichroism of non-heme iron proteins   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) at 45 kgauss has been determined for a group of non-heme iron proteins. Both transferrin and conalbumin exhibit a single, positive ellipticity band at 330 nm ([θ]M = 560). Oxy- and methemerythrin, spinach and clostridial ferredoxins and rubredoxin all display distinctive multibanded spectra which may reflect such factors as coordination of the metal, its ligands, metal bridging by other atoms, and varying degrees of metalmetal coupling. The MCD spectra of both ferredoxins and rubredoxin undergo dramatic change upon oxidoreduction providing a potential means for relating the electronic structure of the iron to protein function. In contrast to the plant ferredoxins, the magnetic field does not significantly affect the CD spectra of adrenodoxin and putidaredoxin.  相似文献   

17.
The full-length and ectodomain forms of beta-site APP cleavage enzyme (BACE) have been cloned, expressed in Sf9 cells, and purified to homogeneity. This aspartic protease cleaves the amyloid precursor protein at the beta-secretase site, a critical step in the Alzheimer's disease pathogenesis. Comparison of BACE to other aspartic proteases such as cathepsin D and E, napsin A, pepsin, and renin revealed little similarity with respect to the substrate preference and inhibitor profile. On the other hand, these parameters are all very similar for the homologous enzyme BACE2. Based on a collection of decameric substrates, it was found that BACE has a loose substrate specificity and that the substrate recognition site in BACE extends over several amino acids. In common with the aspartic proteases mentioned above, BACE prefers a leucine residue at position P1. Unlike cathepsin D etc., BACE accepts polar or acidic residues at positions P2'0 and P1 but prefers bulky hydrophobic residues at position P3. BACE displays poor kinetic constants toward its known substrates (wild-type substrate, SEVKM/DAEFR, K(m) = 7 microm, K(cat) = 0.002 s(-1); Swedish mutant, SEVNL/DAEFR, K(m) = 9 microm, K(cat) = 0.02 s(-1)). A new substrate (VVEVDA/AVTP, K(m) = 1 microm, K(cat) = 0.004) was identified by serendipity.  相似文献   

18.
A ferredoxin and a rubredoxin from Butyribacterium methylotrophicum, which displays a carbonyl-dependent acetyl-coenzyme A synthesis, were purified to electrophoretic homogeneity. The two electron carriers showed absorption spectra similar to those in Clostridium species. The ferredoxin displayed absorption peaks at 280 and 391 nm, while rubredoxin displayed absorption peaks at 279, 382, and 482 nm. Minimum molecular weights calculated from the respective amino acid compositions were 5,727 for ferredoxin and 5,488 for rubredoxin, excluding iron and inorganic sulfur atoms. Both electron carriers were isolated as monomers, according to gel-filtration data. Electron spin resonance analysis revealed that the ferredoxin was a 2[4Fe-4S]-type and that both clusters had a midpoint redox potential value of -410 mV, whereas rubredoxin contained one acid-stable iron and had a redox value of -40 mV. The coupling of these electron carriers to hydrogenase and carbon monoxide dehydrogenase activities was investigated. Rubredoxin showed higher activity towards carbon monoxide dehydrogenase, whereas ferredoxin showed higher activity towards hydrogenase.  相似文献   

19.
The crystal structure of Ac-Pro-delta Val-NHCH3 was examined to determine the influence of the alpha,beta-dehydrovaline residue on the nature of peptide conformation. The peptide crystallizes from methanol-diethyl ether solution at 4 degrees in needle-shaped form in orthorhombic space group P2(1)2(1)2(1) with a = 11.384(2) A, b = 13.277(2) A, c = 9.942(1) A, V = 1502.7(4) A3, Z = 4, Dm = 1.17 g.cm-3 and Dc = 1.18 g.cm-3. The structure was solved by direct methods using SHELXS-86 and refined to an R value of 0.057 for 1922 observed reflections. The peptide is found to adopt a beta-bend between the type I and the type III conformation with phi 1 = -68.3(4) degrees, psi 1 = -20.1(4) degrees, phi 2 = -73.5(4) degrees and psi 2 = -14.1(4) degrees. An intramolecular hydrogen bond between the carbonyl oxygen of ith residue and the NH of (i + 3)th residue stabilizes the beta-bend. An additional intermolecular N...O hydrogen bond joins molecules into infinite chains. In the literature described crystal structures of peptides having a single alpha,beta-dehydroamino acid residue in the (i + 2) position and forming a beta-bend reveal a type II conformation.  相似文献   

20.
G Hernández  D M LeMaster 《Biochemistry》2001,40(48):14384-14391
Spatially localized differences in the conformational dynamics of the rubredoxins from the hyperthermophile Pyrococcus furiosus (Pf) and the mesophile Clostridium pasteurianum (Cp) are monitored via amide exchange measurements. As shown previously for the hyperthermophile protein, nearly all backbone amides of the Cp rubredoxin exhibit EX(2) hydrogen exchange kinetics with conformational opening rates of >1 s(-)(1). Significantly slower amide exchange is observed for Pf rubredoxin in the region surrounding the metal site and the proximal end of the three-stranded beta-sheet, while for the rest of the structure, the exchange rates at 23 degrees C are similar for both proteins. For the multiple-turn region comprising residues 14-32 in both rubredoxins, the uniformity of both the exchange rate constants and the values of the activation energy at the slowly exchanging sites is consistent with a model of solvent exposure via a subglobal cooperative conformational opening. In contrast to the common expectation of increased rigidity in the hyperthermophile proteins, below room temperature Pf rubredoxin exhibits a larger apparent flexibility in this multiple-turn region. The smaller enthalpy for the conformational opening process of this region in Pf rubredoxin reflects the much weaker temperature dependence of the underlying conformational equilibrium in the hyperthermophile protein.  相似文献   

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