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1.
A derivative of the native-sequence tripeptide of the specific Cu(II)-transport site of human serum albumin, L-aspartyl-L-alanyl-L-histidine N-methylamide, was synthesized, and its binding to Cu(II) was examined to determine the influence of the side-chain groups on the Cu(II) binding. The equilibria involved in the Cu(II)-L-aspartyl-L-alanyl-L-histidine N-methylamide system were investigated by analytical potentiometry. Three complex species were found in the pH range 4-10. The same species were identified in both the visible and circular-dichroism spectra. The main species present in the physiological pH range is shown to have the same ligands around the square-planar Cu(II) ion as those reported for albumin and tripeptides diglycyl-L-histidine and its N-methylamide derivative. The results obtained from competition experiments showed that this tripeptide has a higher affinity towards Cu(II) than has albumin itself. The overall findings are compared with those from albumin. At neutral pH the side chains do not play any important role in the Cu(II) binding, but at low pH the beta-carboxyl group of the N-terminal aspartic residue becomes important. A possible competition site on albumin for Cu(II) at low pH is discussed.  相似文献   

2.
The N-terminal region of bovine serum albumin (Asp-Thr-His-Lys) is known to provide a specific binding site for Cu(II) ions, with the histidine residue thought to be mainly responsible for the specificity. Thiomolybdates have been found to increase the binding affinity of Cu(II) to some serum albumins. As part of a series of studies to study the interactions between Cu(II), thiomolybdates and bovine serum albumin, we have performed the syntheses and characterization of small model peptides such as His-Lys, Thr(Ac)-His-Lys and Thr-His-Lys. Proton NMR spectra have been monitored in H(2)O solution as a function of pH and added Cu(II) concentration. Reliable K(a) values for His-Lys and Thr(Ac)-His-Lys have been established. Probable binding sites of Cu(II) and the relative strengths of binding to these peptides are also discussed.  相似文献   

3.
The conformational and binding properties towards Cu(II) and Ni(II) ions of Gly-Gly-His derivatives of poly(l-lysine) have been investigated mainly using circular dichroism (c.d.) spectroscopy. These derivatized polymers can be considered macromolecular analogues of the Cu(II) and Ni(II) binding site of human serum albumin. It has been shown that modification up to 53% of the ε-amino groups of lysine side chains by covalent binding of the tripeptide unit Gly-Gly-His does not induce appreciable alteration of the α-helix forming tendency of the polylysine backbone. The derivatized polymers exhibit strong affinity towards Cu(II) and Ni(II) ions. At neutral pH, complexes are formed in which each tripeptide chelating unit is linked to one metal ion. The spectral characteristics in the visible absorption region are consistent with a square planar geometry of the complexes, with deprotonated peptide groups and one imidazole nitrogen in the coordination sphere of the ion. C.d. measurements in the far u.v. indicate that complex formation in the side chains causes an increase of ordered structure of the peptide backbone at neutral pH. This fact is interpreted in terms of a reduced electrostatic repulsion among side chains due to charge neutralization in the tripeptide units linked to metal ions.  相似文献   

4.
Human albumin (studied here as the recombinant protein rHA), a copper-binding protein in blood plasma, is shown to reduce Cu(II) to Cu(I) in the presence of a Cu(I) chelator, bathocuproinedisulfonate (BD). This reaction was accelerated at low pH, when there was little binding of Cu(II) to rHA. The addition of a competitive metal ion, Ni(II), or an increase in the concentration of BD, enhanced the reduction of Cu(II) to Cu(I). It was concluded that the oxidant was the Cu(II) complex of BD, which is likely to bind strongly to albumin. The free thiol at Cys34 was ruled out as the sole reducing agent, since Cys34-blocked albumin also gave rise to Cu(I) in the presence of BD. Reactions with amino acids and peptides suggested that Tyr and possibly His side-chains are potential reductants. BD and its homologues are frequently used as Cu(I)-specific chelators in biological experiments, but the strong oxidant activity of [Cu(II)(BD)2]2- and its ability to bind to biological macromolecules should not be overlooked, and may artificially trigger/accelerate Cu(II) reduction.  相似文献   

5.
The conformational and binding properties towards Cu(II) and Ni(II) ions of Gly-Gly-His derivatives of poly(l-lysine) have been investigated mainly using circular dichroism (c.d.) spectroscopy. These derivatized polymers can be considered macromolecular analogues of the Cu(II) and Ni(II) binding site of human serum albumin. It has been shown that modification up to 53% of the ε-amino groups of lysine side chains by covalent binding of the tripeptide unit Gly-Gly-His does not induce appreciable alteration of the α-helix forming tendency of the polylysine backbone. The derivatized polymers exhibit strong affinity towards Cu(II) and Ni(II) ions. At neutral pH, complexes are formed in which each tripeptide chelating unit is linked to one metal ion. The spectral characteristics in the visible absorption region are consistent with a square planar geometry of the complexes, with deprotonated peptide groups and one imidazole nitrogen in the coordination sphere of the ion. C.d. measurements in the far u.v. indicate that complex formation in the side chains causes an increase of ordered structure of the peptide backbone at neutral pH. This fact is interpreted in terms of a reduced electrostatic repulsion among side chains due to charge neutralization in the tripeptide units linked to metal ions.  相似文献   

6.
Thiols (RSH = 2,3,4,6-tetra-O-acetyl-beta-1-D-thioglucose, beta-1-D-thioglucose, and glutathione) can displace either the albumin or the triethylphosphine from the protein-gold complex, AlbSAuPEt3. The albumin is displaced in preference to triethylphosphine, but irreversible oxidation of the latter eventually shifts the equilibria toward Et3PO and AlbSAuSR. Albumin disulfide bonds are the probable oxidants. Neither O2 nor oxidized glutathione substantially enhanced the rate or extent of Et3PO formation. The labilization of the phosphine in AlbSAuPEt3 is attributed to a strong trans effect of the albumin thiolate, Cys-34. The 31P NMR chemical shifts of various thiolato(triethylphosphine)gold(I) complexes are correlated directly with the affinity of the thiols for gold and inversely with their pKSH values. Deacetylated auranofin (1-thio-beta-D-glucopyranosato-S) (triethylphosphine)gold(I) reacts with the mercaptalbumin and oxidized mercaptalbumin (putatively AlbSOH) forms of bovine serum albumin to form AlbSAuPEt3 with displacement of the thioglucose ligand.  相似文献   

7.
Rolf A. Løvstad 《Biometals》2004,17(2):111-113
Serum albumin (human, bovine) has a specific Cu(II)-ion binding site, and is proposed to act as a copper transport protein in blood plasma. Human transferrin, normally about 30% saturated with iron in vivo, has two sites/molecule capable of complexing Cu(II); one more strongly than the other (Hirose et al. 1996). The present study shows that this binding site has a slightly stronger affinity for Cu(II) than that on the albumins. However, both human- and bovine albumin could take up part of the transferrin bound Cu(II), the second order rate constant for the reaction estimated to 12 mM(-1) min(-1) for both species. In vivo the albumin concentration is considerably higher than that of iron-free transferrin, and it seems unlikely that the latter can compete with albumin for non-ceruloplasmin cupric ions.  相似文献   

8.
Interaction of tetracycline (TC) derivatives viz. oxytetracycline, doxycycline, demeclocycline and chlorotetracycline with bovine serum albumin (BSA) and concomitant changes in protein conformation were studied using fluorescence quenching and circular dichroism measurements. Fluorescence data revealed the presence of one to three binding sites on BSA for different TC derivatives. Binding studies with the marker ligands, warfarin and bilirubin, elucidated site-I as a primary binding site for TCs on albumin. Scatchard analysis revealed the binding affinity (Ka) and capacity (n) for these derivatives vary in the range from 0.8 to 3.2×106 l/mole and 1.3–3.4, respectively. Significant reduction (60–45%) in secondary structure (-helical content) of BSA was noticed upon interaction with different TC derivatives in presence of Cu (II) ions. High affinity binding of TCs with BSA signifies drug stability. However, excessive binding at higher TC concentrations in combination with Cu (II) induces conformational change in protein structure, which may exert detrimental effect on cellular protein.  相似文献   

9.
10.
J P Laussac  B Sarkar 《Biochemistry》1984,23(12):2832-2838
As a basis for understanding the role of albumin in the transport of metal ions, detailed investigations have been carried out to elucidate the structure of Ni(II)- and Cu(II)-binding site of the peptide residue corresponding to the NH2-terminal peptide fragment 1-24 of human serum albumin by 1H and 13C NMR spectroscopy. These studies have been conducted in aqueous medium at different pH values and at different ligand/metal ratios. The results show the following: (i) Diamagnetic Ni(II) complex and paramagnetic Cu(II) complex are in slow exchange NMR time scale. (ii) Titration results of Ni(II)-bound form of peptide 1-24 show the presence of a 1:1 complex in the wide pH range (6.0-11.0), and the same stoichiometry is proposed for Cu(II) as well. (iii) Analysis of the spectra suggests that both Ni(II) and Cu(II) have one specific binding site at the NH2-terminal tripeptide segment (Asp-Ala-His...) involving the Asp alpha-NH2, His N(1) imidazole, two deprotonated peptide nitrogens (Ala NH and His NH), and the Asp COO- group. (iv) Complexation of Ni(II) and Cu(II) causes conformational change near the metal-binding site of the polypeptide chain, but there is no other binding group involved besides those in the first three residues.  相似文献   

11.
The pH dependence of the uv/visible and CD spectra of the 1:1 Ni(BSA) complex in aqueous solutions is interpreted in terms of a major square-planar form and an octahedral form. At pH 7.4, the two forms, respectively, account for ca. 70% and 30% of the total Ni(II). The two forms are in rapid equilibrium with each other and so both probably involve Ni(II) binding to the N-terminal region of the albumin protein. The kinetics of the equilibrium reaction of Ni(BSA) with His were studied at 37 degrees C in buffered media of pH 7.4 and 9.3. In line with predictions, the two Ni(BSA) forms show markedly different reactivities, with the square-planar form being the more thermodynamically stable and the less reactive. The octahedral form reacts with an observed zero-order dependence on His concentration while the square-planar form shows both zero-order and first-order dependence, the latter being the more dominant. The significance of the slow equilibrium rate at pH 7.4 to the possible physiological role of Ni-albumin in blood serum is discussed.  相似文献   

12.
The pathogen Helicobacter pylori requires two nickel-containing enzymes, urease and [NiFe]-hydrogenase, for efficient colonization of the human gastric mucosa. These enzymes possess complex metallocenters that are assembled by teams of proteins in multistep pathways. One essential accessory protein is the GTPase HypB, which is required for Ni(II) delivery to [NiFe]-hydrogenase and participates in urease maturation. Ni(II) or Zn(II) binding to a site embedded in the GTPase domain of HypB modulates the enzymatic activity, suggesting a mechanism of regulation. In this study, biochemical and structural analyses of H. pylori HypB (HpHypB) revealed an intricate link between nucleotide and metal binding. HpHypB nickel coordination, stoichiometry, and affinity were modulated by GTP and GDP, an effect not observed for zinc, and biochemical evidence suggests that His-107 coordination to nickel toggles on and off in a nucleotide-dependent manner. These results are consistent with the crystal structure of HpHypB loaded with Ni(II), GDP, and Pi, which reveals a nickel site distinct from that of zinc-loaded Methanocaldococcus jannaschii HypB as well as subtle changes to the protein structure. Furthermore, Cys-142, a metal ligand from the Switch II GTPase motif, was identified as a key component of the signal transduction between metal binding and the enzymatic activity. Finally, potassium accelerated the enzymatic activity of HpHypB but had no effect on the other biochemical properties of the protein. Altogether, this molecular level information about HpHypB provides insight into its cellular function and illuminates a possible mechanism of metal ion discrimination.  相似文献   

13.
Ash MR  Chong LX  Maher MJ  Hinds MG  Xiao Z  Wedd AG 《Biochemistry》2011,50(43):9237-9247
The bacterium Cupriavidus metallidurans CH34 is resistant to high environmental concentrations of many metal ions. Upon copper challenge, it upregulates the periplasmic protein CopK (8.3 kDa). The function of CopK in the copper resistance response is ill-defined, but CopK demonstrates an intriguing cooperativity: occupation of a high-affinity Cu(I) binding site generates a high-affinity Cu(II) binding site, and the high-affinity Cu(II) binding enhances Cu(I) binding. Native CopK and targeted variants were examined by chromatographic, spectroscopic, and X-ray crystallographic probes. Structures of two distinct forms of Cu(I)Cu(II)-CopK were defined, and structural changes associated with occupation of the Cu(II) site were demonstrated. In solution, monomeric Cu(I)Cu(II)-CopK features the previously elucidated Cu(I) site in Cu(I)-CopK, formed from four S(δ) atoms of Met28, -38, -44, and -54 (site 4S). Binding of Cu(I) to apo-CopK induces a conformational change that releases the C-terminal β-strand from the β-sandwich structure. In turn, this allows His70 and N-terminal residues to form a large loop that includes the Cu(II) binding site. In crystals, a polymeric form of Cu(I)Cu(II)-CopK displays a Cu(I) site defined by the S(δ) atoms of Met26, -38, and -54 (site 3S) and an exogenous ligand (modeled as H(2)O) and a Cu(II) site that bridges dimeric CopK molecules. The 3S Cu(I) binding mode observed in crystals was demonstrated in solution in protein variant M44L where site 4S is disabled. The intriguing copper binding chemistry of CopK provides molecular insight into Cu(I) transfer processes. The adaptable nature of the Cu(I) coordination sphere in methionine-rich clusters allows copper to be relayed between clusters during transport across membranes in molecular pumps such as CusA and Ctr1.  相似文献   

14.
A comparative study of thermodynamic and kinetic aspects of Cu(II) and Ni(II) binding at the N-terminal binding site of human and bovine serum albumins (HSA and BSA, respectively) and short peptide analogues was performed using potentiometry and spectroscopic techniques. It was found that while qualitative aspects of interaction (spectra and structures of complexes, order of reactions) could be reproduced, the quantitative parameters (stability and rate constants) could not. The N-terminal site in HSA is much more similar to BSA than to short peptides reproducing the HSA sequence. A very strong influence of phosphate ions on the kinetics of Ni(II) interaction was found. This study demonstrates the limitations of short peptide modelling of Cu(II) and Ni(II) transport by albumins.  相似文献   

15.
The absorption spectra of Ni(II) bound to the core histone tetramer, (H3-H4)2, of chicken erythrocytes in 500 mM NaCl + 100 mM phosphate (pH 7.4) were recorded. A charge transfer band was seen at 317 nm, characteristic of a bond between Ni(II) and the sulfur atom of Cys-110 of histone H3. The conditional affinity constants for Ni(II) binding at pH 7.4 for low and high Ni(II) saturation (log Kc = 4.26 +/- 0.02 and 5.26 +/- 0.11 M-1, respectively) were calculated from spectrophotometric titrations with the use of this band. The binding of Ni(II) to (H3-H4)2 is proposed to involve the Cys-110 and His-113 of different H3 molecules within the tetramer. The competition between histones and low-molecular-weight chelators for Ni(II) in the cell nucleus, histidine and glutathione, is discussed on the basis of the above results, indicating that histone H3 is very likely to bind Ni(II) dissolved intracellularly from phagocytosed particulate nickel compounds.  相似文献   

16.
T Miura  A Hori-i  H Mototani  H Takeuchi 《Biochemistry》1999,38(35):11560-11569
The cellular form of prion protein is a precursor of the infectious isoform, which causes fatal neurodegenerative diseases through intermolecular association. One of the characteristics of the prion protein is a high affinity for Cu(II) ions. The site of Cu(II) binding is considered to be the N-terminal region, where the octapeptide sequence PHGGGWGQ repeats 4 times in tandem. We have examined the Cu(II) binding mode of the octapeptide motif and its pH dependence by Raman and absorption spectroscopy. At neutral and basic pH, the single octapeptide PHGGGWGQ forms a 1:1 complex with Cu(II) by coordinating via the imidazole N pi atom of histidine together with two deprotonated main-chain amide nitrogens in the triglycine segment. A similar 1:1 complex is formed by each octapeptide unit in (PHGGGWGQ)2 and (PHGGGWGQ)4. Under weakly acidic conditions (pH approximately 6), however, the Cu(II)-amide- linkages are broken and the metal binding site of histidine switches from N pi to N tau to share a Cu(II) ion between two histidine residues of different peptide chains. The drastic change of the Cu(II) binding mode on going from neutral to weakly acidic conditions suggests that the micro-environmental pH in the brain cell regulates the Cu(II) affinity of the prion protein, which is supposed to undergo pH changes in the pathway from the cell surface to endosomes. The intermolecular His(N tau)-Cu(II)-His(N tau) bridge may be related to the aggregation of prion protein in the pathogenic form.  相似文献   

17.
Metal binding to serum albumins is examined by oxidative protein-cleavage chemistry, and relative affinities of multiple metal ions to particular sites on these proteins were identified using a fast and reliable chemical footprinting approach. Fe(ii) and Cu(ii), for example, mediate protein cleavage at their respective binding sites on serum albumins, in the presence of hydrogen peroxide and ascorbate. This metal-mediated protein-cleavge reaction is used to evaluate the binding of metal ions, Na(+), Mg(2+), Ca(2+), Al(3+), Cr(3+), Mn(2+), Co(2+), Ni(2+), Zn(2+), Cd(2+), Hg(2+), Pb(2+), and Ce(3+) to albumins, and the relative affinities (selectivities) of the metal ions are rapidly evaluated by examining the extent of inhibition of protein cleavage. Four distinct systems Fe(II)/BSA, Cu(II)/BSA, Fe(II)/HSA and Cu(II)/HSA are examined using the above strategy. This metallomics approach is novel, even though the cleavage of serum albumins by Fe(II)/Cu(II) has been reported previously by this laboratory and many others. The protein cleavage products were analyzed by SDS PAGE, and the intensities of the product bands quantified to evaluate the extent of inhibition of the cleavage and thereby evaluate the relative binding affinities of specific metal ions to particular sites on albumins. The data show that Co(II) and Cr(III) showed the highest degree of inhibition, across the table, followed by Mn(II) and Ce(III). Alakali metal ions and alkaline earth metal ions showed very poor affinity for these metal sites on albumins. Thus, metal binding profiles for particular sites on proteins can be obtained quickly and accurately, using the metallomics approach.  相似文献   

18.
The N-terminal metal binding extension of the Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase from Haemophilus ducreyi is constituted by a histidine-rich region followed by a methione-rich sequence which shows high similarity with protein motifs involved in the binding of Cu(I). X-ray absorption spectroscopy experiments selectively carried out with peptides corresponding to the two metal binding regions indicate that both sequences can bind either Cu(II) or Cu(I). However, competition experiments demonstrate that Cu(II) is preferred by histidine residues belonging to the first half of the motif, while the methionine-rich region preferentially binds Cu(I) via the interaction with three methionine sulfur atoms. Moreover, we have observed that the rate of copper transfer from the peptides to the active site of a copper-free form of the Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase mutant lacking the N-terminal extension depends on the copper oxidation state and on the residues involved in metal binding, histidine residues being critically important for the efficient transfer. Differences in the enzyme reactivation rates in the presence of mixtures of the two peptides when compared to those obtained with the single peptides suggest that the two halves of the N-terminal domain functionally interact during the process of copper transfer, possibly through subtle modifications of the copper coordination environment.  相似文献   

19.
Human serum albumin (HSA) is the most abundant protein of blood serum, involved in the transport of metal ions, including Co(II). Using circular dichroism spectroscopic titrations we characterized three distinct Co(II) binding sites in HSA. Applying Cu(II), Ni(II) and Cd(II) ions as competitors we determined that these sites are identical with three binding sites known for other metal ions. We ordered these sites according to their binding affinities as cadmium site B (CdB) > multi-metal binding site (MBS) > N-terminal binding site (NTS). Using isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) we confirmed the presence of these three binding sites and determined their conditional binding constants at pH 7.4 as 9 ± 5, 1.1 ± 0.5, and 0.9 ± 0.3 × 104 M−1, respectively. The impact of these results on the albumin cobalt binding (ACB) clinical assay for myocardial ischemia is discussed.  相似文献   

20.
The reactions of cis- and trans-dichlorodiammineplatinum(II) (cis- and trans-DDP) with albumin and two plasma proteinase inhibitors were compared. Reaction with alpha 2-macroglobulin (alpha 2M) resulted in subunit crosslinking and loss of proteinase binding activity. The reaction also modified a receptor recognition site present on each alpha 2M subunit. While more trans-DDP was incorporated into alpha 2M than cis-DDP, cis-DDP was more effective at blocking receptor recognition, alpha 1-proteinase inhibitor was also inactivated by reaction with either cis- or trans-DDP. These reactions resulted in binding of platinum to methionine-358 at the reactive center of this inhibitor. Trans-DDP, however, was less selective and also bound to the single cysteine residue (Cys-232) of alpha 1PI. Reaction of albumin with cis-DDP resulted in incorporation of about 1 mol platinum per mol protein, and this platinum modified the single cysteine (Cys-34) in the molecule. Albumin incorporated twice as much trans-DDP, but the binding did not involve cysteine-34. In general, reactions of cis-DDP with proteins appear to be more selective than those observed for modification with the trans isomer.  相似文献   

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