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1.
 The paramagnetic 1H NMR spectra of the Co(II) and Ni(II) substituted forms of the type 1 blue copper protein (cupredoxin) amicyanin have been assigned. This is the first such analysis of a cupredoxin, which has a distorted tetrahedral active site with the ligands provided by two histidines, a cysteine and a methionine. The isotropic shifts of the resonances in these spectra are compared with those of Co(II) and Ni(II) azurin. A number of interesting similarities and differences are found. The coordination of the metal by the two equatorial histidine ligands is very similar in both proteins. The interaction between the introduced metal and the thiolate sulfur of the equatorial cysteine ligand is enhanced in the amicyanin derivatives. Resonances belonging to the weak axial methionine ligand exhibit much larger shifts in the amicyanin derivatives, indicative of shorter M(II)-S(Met) distances. The presence of shorter axial M(II)-S(Met) and equatorial M(II)-S(Cys) distances in both Co(II) and Ni(II) amicyanin is ascribed to the absence of a second axially interacting amino acid at the active site of this cupredoxin. Received: 2 February 1999 / Accepted: 19 May 1999  相似文献   

2.
J F Hall  L D Kanbi  R W Strange  S S Hasnain 《Biochemistry》1999,38(39):12675-12680
Type 1 Cu centers in cupredoxins, nitrite reductases, and multi-copper oxidases utilize the same trigonal core ligation to His-Cys-His, with a weak axial ligand generally provided by a Met sulfur. In azurin, an additional axial ligand, a carbonyl oxygen from a Gly, is present. The importance of these axial ligands and in particular the Met has been debated extensively in terms of their role in fine-tuning the redox potential, spectroscopic properties, and rack-induced or entatic state properties of the copper sites. Extensive site-directed mutagenesis of the Met ligand has been carried out in azurin, but the presence of an additional carbonyl oxygen axial ligand has made it difficult to interpret the effects of these substitutions. Here, the axial methionine ligand (Met148) in rusticyanin is replaced with Leu, Gln, Lys, and Glu to examine the effect on the redox potential, acid stability, and copper site geometry. The midpoint redox potential varies from 363 (Met148Lys) to 798 mV (Met148Leu). The acid stability of the oxidized proteins is reduced except for the Met148Gln mutant. The Gln mutant remains blue at all pH values between 2.8 and 8, and has a redox potential of 563 mV at pH 3.2. The optical and rhombic EPR properties of this mutant closely resemble those of stellacyanin, which has the lowest redox potential among single-type 1 copper proteins (185 mV). The Met148Lys mutant exhibits type 2 Cu EPR and optical spectra in this pH range. The Met148Glu mutant exhibits a type 2 Cu EPR spectrum above pH 3 and a mixture of type 1 and type 2 Cu spectra at lower pH. The Met148Leu mutant exhibits the highest redox potential ( approximately 800 mV at pH 3.2) which is similar to the values in fungal laccase and in the type 1 Cu site of ceruloplasmin where this axial ligand is also a Leu.  相似文献   

3.
 The reduction potentials of blue copper sites vary between 180 and about 1000 mV. It has been suggested that the reason for this variation is that the proteins constrain the distance between the copper ion and its axial ligands to different values. We have tested this suggestion by performing density functional B3LYP calculations on realistic models of the blue copper proteins, including solvent effects by the polarizable continuum method. Constraining the Cu-SMet bond length to values between 245 and 310 pm (the range encountered in crystal structures) change the reduction potential by less than 70 mV. Similarly, we have studied five typical blue copper proteins spanning the whole range of reduction potentials: stellacyanin, plastocyanin, azurin, rusticyanin, and ceruloplasmin. These studies included the methionine (or glutamine) ligand as well as the back-bone carbonyl oxygen group that is a ligand in azurin and is found at larger distances in the other proteins. The active-site models of these proteins show a variation in the reduction potential of about 140 mV, i.e., only a minor part of the range observed experimentally (800 mV). Consequently, we can conclude that the axial ligands have a small influence on the reduction potentials of the blue copper proteins. Instead, the large variation in the reduction potentials seems to arise mainly from variations in the solvent accessibility of the copper site and in the orientation of protein dipoles around the copper site. Received: 7 April 1999 / Accepted: 26 July 1999  相似文献   

4.
Stellacyanins are blue (type I) copper glycoproteins that differ from other members of the cupredoxin family in their spectroscopic and electron transfer properties. Until now, stellacyanins have eluded structure determination. Here we report the three-dimensional crystal structure of the 109 amino acid, non-glycosylated copper binding domain of recombinant cucumber stellacyanin refined to 1.6 A resolution. The crystallographic R-value for all 18,488 reflections (sigma > 0) between 50-1.6 A is 0.195. The overall fold is organized in two beta-sheets, both with four beta-stands. Two alpha-helices are found in loop regions between beta-strands. The beta-sheets form a beta-sandwich similar to those found in other cupredoxins, but some features differ from proteins such as plastocyanin and azurin in that the beta-barrel is more flattened, there is an extra N-terminal alpha-helix, and the copper binding site is much more solvent accessible. The presence of a disulfide bond at the copper binding end of the protein confirms that cucumber stellacyanin has a phytocyanin-like fold. The ligands to copper are two histidines, one cysteine, and one glutamine, the latter replacing the methionine typically found in mononuclear blue copper proteins. The Cu-Gln bond is one of the shortest axial ligand bond distances observed to date in structurally characterized type I copper proteins. The characteristic spectroscopic properties and electron transfer reactivity of stellacyanin, which differ significantly from those of other well-characterized cupredoxins, can be explained by its more exposed copper site, its distinctive amino acid ligand composition, and its nearly tetrahedral ligand geometry. Surface features on the cucumber stellacyanin molecule that could be involved in interactions with putative redox partners are discussed.  相似文献   

5.
Ma JK  Mathews FS  Davidson VL 《Biochemistry》2007,46(29):8561-8568
Mutation of the axial Met ligand of the type 1 copper site of amicyanin to Ala or Gln yielded M98A amicyanin, which exhibits typical axial type 1 ligation geometry but with a water molecule providing the axial ligand, and M98Q amicyanin, which exhibits significant rhombic distortion of the type 1 site (Carrell, C. J., Ma, J. K., Antholine, W. E., Hosler, J. P., Mathews, F. S., and Davidson, V. L. (2007) Biochemistry 46, 1900-1912). Despite the change of the axial ligand, the M98Q and M98A mutations had little effect on the redox potential of copper. The true electron transfer (ET) reactions from O-quinol methylamine dehydrogenase to oxidized native and mutant amicyanins revealed that the M98A mutation had little effect on kET, but the M98Q mutation reduced kET 45-fold. Thermodynamic analysis of the latter showed that the decrease in kET was due to an increase of 0.4 eV in the reorganization energy (lambda) associated with the ET reaction to M98Q amicyanin. No change in the experimentally determined electronic coupling or ET distance was observed, confirming that the mutation had not altered the rate-determining step for ET and that this was still a true ET reaction. The basis for the increased lambda is not the nature of the atom that provides the axial ligand because each uses an oxygen from Gln in M98Q amicyanin and from water in M98A amicyanin. Comparisons of the distance of the axial copper ligand from the equatorial plane that is formed by the other three copper ligands in isomorphous crystals of native and mutant amicyanins at atomic resolution indicate an increase in distance from 0.20 A in the native to 0.42 A in M98Q amicyanin and a slight decrease in distance for M98A amicyanin. This correlates with the rhombic distortion caused by the M98Q mutation that is clearly evident in the EPR and visible absorption spectra of the protein and suggests that the extent of rhombicity of the type 1 copper site influences the magnitude of lambda.  相似文献   

6.
A novel blue copper protein was constructed by replacing the C-terminal loop of amicyanin (Paracoccus versutus) by the homologous loop of rusticyanin. The C-terminal loop of both amicyanin and rusticyanin contains three (His, Cys, Met) of the four copper ligands. The amicyanin mutant exhibits all spectroscopic properties normally encountered for blue copper sites. The midpoint potential (369 mV) is the highest reported value for an amicyanin mutant. Cyclic voltammetry and NMR studies of the reduced form indicate that, in contrast to wild-type amicyanin and all amicyanin mutants described so far, the C-terminal histidine ligand does not protonate in the accessible pH range (pKa<4.5).  相似文献   

7.
Harrison MD  Dennison C 《Proteins》2004,55(2):426-435
The cupredoxin domain of a putative type 1 blue copper protein (BCB) from Arabidopsis thaliana was overexpressed and purified. A recursive polymerase chain reaction method was used to synthesize an artificial coding region for the cupredoxin domain of horseradish stellacyanin (commonly known as umecyanin), prior to overexpression and purification. The recombinant proteins were refolded from inclusion bodies and reconstituted with copper, and their in vitro characteristics were studied. Recombinant umecyanin, which is nonglycosylated, has identical spectroscopic and redox properties to the native protein. The UV/Vis and EPR spectra of recombinant BCB and umecyanin demonstrate that they have comparable axial type 1 copper binding sites. Paramagnetic (1)H NMR spectroscopy highlights the similarity between the active site architectures of BCB and umecyanin. The reduction potential of recombinant BCB is 252 mV, compared to 293 mV for recombinant umecyanin. Identical pK(a) values of 9.7 are obtained for the alkaline transitions in both proteins. This study demonstrates that BCB is the A. thaliana stellacyanin and the results form the biochemical basis for a discussion of BCB function in the model vascular plant.  相似文献   

8.
The cDNAs encoding plantacyanin from spinach were isolated and characterized. In addition, four new cDNA sequences from Arabidopsis ESTs were identified that encode polypeptides resembling phytocyanins, plant-specific proteins constituting a distinct family of mononuclear blue copper proteins. One of them encodes plantacyanin from Arabidopsis, while three others, designated as uclacyanin 1, 2, and 3, encode protein precursors that are closely related to precursors of stellacyanins and a blue copper protein from pea pods. Comparative analyses with known phytocyanins allow further classification of these proteins into three distinct subfamilies designated as uclacyanins, stellacyanins, and plantacyanins. This specification is based on (1) their spectroscopic properties, (2) their glycosylation state, (3) the domain organization of their precursors, and (4) their copper-binding amino acids. The recombinant copper binding domain of Arabidopsis uclacyanin 1 was expressed, purified, and shown to bind a copper atom in a fashion known as "blue" or type 1. The mutant of cucumber stellacyanin in which the glutamine axial ligand was substituted by a methionine (Q99M) was purified and shown to possess spectroscopic properties similar to uclacyanin 1 rather than to plantacyanins. Its redox potential was determined by cyclic voltammetry to be +420 mV, a value that is significantly higher than that determined for the wild-type protein (+260 mV). The available structural data suggest that stellacyanins (and possibly other phytocyanins) might not be diffusible electron-transfer proteins participating in long-range electron-transfer processes. Conceivably, they are involved in redox reactions occurring during primary defense responses in plants and/or in lignin formation.  相似文献   

9.
Mutation of Pro94 to phenylalanine or alanine significantly alters the redox properties of the type I copper center of amicyanin. Each mutation increases the redox midpoint potential (E(m)) value by at least 140 mV and shifts the pK(a) for the pH dependence of the E(m) value to a more acidic value. Atomic resolution (0.99-1.1 A) structures of both the P94F and P94A amicyanin have been determined in the oxidized and reduced states. In each amicyanin mutant, an electron-withdrawing hydrogen bond to the copper-coordinating thiolate sulfur of Cys92 is introduced by movement of the amide nitrogens of Phe94 and Ala94 much closer to the thiolate sulfur than in wild-type amicyanin. This is the likely explanation for the much more positive E(m) values which result from each of these mutations. The observed decrease in the pK(a) value for the pH dependence of the E(m) value that is seen in the mutants seems to be correlated with steric hindrance to the rotation of the His95 copper ligand which results from the mutations. In wild-type amicyanin the His95 side chain undergoes a redox and pH-dependent conformational change which accounts for the pH dependence of the E(m) value of amicyanin. The reduced P94A amicyanin exhibits two alternate conformations with the positions of the copper 1.4 A apart. In one of these conformations, a water molecule appears to have replaced Met98 as a copper ligand. The relevance of these structures to the electron transfer properties of P94F and P94A amicyanin are also discussed.  相似文献   

10.
The crystal structure of an electron transfer complex of aromatic amine dehydrogenase (AADH) and azurin is presented. Electrons are transferred from the tryptophan tryptophylquinone (TTQ) cofactor of AADH to the type I copper of the cupredoxin azurin. This structure is compared with the complex of the TTQ-containing methylamine dehydrogenase (MADH) and the cupredoxin amicyanin. Despite significant similarities between the two quinoproteins and the two cupredoxins, each is specific for its respective partner and the ionic strength dependence and magnitude of the binding constant for each complex are quite different. The AADH-azurin interface is largely hydrophobic, covering approximately 500 A(2) of surface on each molecule, with one direct hydrogen bond linking them. The closest distance from TTQ to copper is 12.6 A compared with a distance of 9.3 A in the MADH-amicyanin complex. When the MADH-amicyanin complex is aligned with the AADH-azurin complex, the amicyanin lies on top of the azurin but is oriented quite differently. Although the copper atoms differ in position by approximately 4.7 A, the amicyanin bound to MADH appears to be rotated approximately 90 degrees from its aligned position with azurin. Comparison of the structures of the two complexes identifies features of the interface that dictate the specificity of the protein-protein interaction and determine the rate of interprotein electron transfer.  相似文献   

11.
Cobalt(II) amicyanin was prepared by replacing the copper of the type I copper protein amicyanin from Paracoccus denitrificans with cobalt. The structure of the protein and the metal center have been characterized by X-ray crystallography and paramagnetic NMR spectroscopy. The crystal structure indicates that Met98, which provides an axial sulfur ligand in native amicyanin, is no longer bound to the metal in cobalt(II) amicyanin and that a water molecule is recruited from solvent to form the fourth metal ligand. This results in a tetrahedral coordination geometry for the cobalt ion. NMR studies in solution also indicate that the side chain of the methionine residue interacts less strongly with the metal in P. denitrificans amicyanin than in Paracoccus versutus amicyanin. The cobalt(II) amicyanin crystal structure is different from that of cobalt-substituted azurin in which the carbonyl of a glycine residue provides this equivalent ligand. In cobalt(II) amicyanin that residue is a proline, for which the oxygen is structurally inaccessible, so that the water occupies the position held by the glycine carbonyl in cobalt(II) azurin. Such a metal coordination involving water has not previously been reported for a native or metal-substituted type I copper protein.  相似文献   

12.
The mutant (M150Q-NIR) replacing the Met150 ligand of the type 1 Cu center in Achromobacter cycloclastes nitrite reductase (AcNIR) with Gln has been physicochemically and functionally characterized. The electronic absorption and CD spectra of M150Q-NIR are similar to those of mavicyanin and stellacyanin having the 2His, Cys, and Gln ligands, but the EPR signal has an axial character, although their blue copper proteins show rhombic EPR signals. The mutant has about 80% catalytic activity of AcNIR. Moreover, the midpoint potential (E(1/2)) of M150Q-NIR is +113 mV vs. NHE at pH 7.0, being negatively shifted compared to that of AcNIR (+240 mV). Although the intermolecular electron-transfer process from Achromobacter cycloclastes pseudoazurin (pAz) to M150Q-NIR was not detected, the pAz mutant (M86Q-pAz) replacing the Met86 ligand with Gln transfers one electron to the NIR mutant with an intermolecular electron-transfer rate constant (k(ET)) of 2.3 x 10(5)M(-1)s(-1).  相似文献   

13.
The complete amino acid sequence of the blue copper protein amicyanin of Thiobacillus versutus, induced when the bacterium is grown on methylamine, has been determined as follows: QDKITVTSEKPVAAADVPADAVVVGIEKMKYLTPEVTIKAGETVYWVNGEVMPHNVA FKKGIVGEDAFRGEMMTKDQAYAITFNEAGSYDYFCTPHPFMRGKVIVE. The four copper ligand residues in this 106-residue-containing polypeptide chain are His54, Cys93, His96, and Met99. The Thiobacillus amicyanin is 52% similar to the amicyanin of Pseudomonas AM1, the only other copper protein known with the same spacing between the second histidine ligand and the methionine ligand. T. versutus amicyanin contains no cysteine bridge and is more closely related to the plant copper protein plastocyanin than to the bacterial copper protein azurin. Alignment of the two known amicyanin sequences with the consensus sequence of the plastocyanins and comparison with the known three-dimensional structure of poplar leaves plastocyanin reveals that the bacterial proteins have the same overall structure with two beta-sheets packed face to face. The major structural differences between the amicyanins and the plastocyanins appear to be located in two of the five loops that connect the six identified beta-strands of the amicyanins. The first of these two loops, connecting strands F and G, contains a ligand histidine and must have a different conformation from the same loop in the plastocyanins because it is shorter by two amino acids. Further differences occur in the loop connecting the strands D and E. This loop contains only 17 residues in amicyanin whereas the corresponding loop of plastocyanin contains 25 residues. Despite these differences the amicyanins appear much closer related to the plastocyanins than to the azurins. The present findings demonstrate that the occurrence of blue copper proteins with clearly plastocyanin-like features is not restricted to photosynthetic redox chains.  相似文献   

14.
The Phe114Pro mutation to the cupredoxin azurin (AZ) leads to a number of structural changes at the active site attributed to deletion of one of the hydrogen bonds to the Cys112 ligand, removal of the bulky phenyl group from the hydrophobic patch of the protein, and steric interactions made by the introduced Pro. The remaining hydrogen bond between the coordinating thiolate and the backbone amide of Asn47 is strengthened. At the type-1 copper site, the Cu(II)-O(Gly45) axial interaction decreases, while the metal moves out of the plane formed by the equatorial His46, Cys112, and His117 ligands, shortening the bond to the axially coordinating Met121. The resulting distorted tetrahedral geometry is distinct from the trigonal bipyramidal arrangement in the wild-type (WT) protein. The unique position of the main S(Cys) --> Cu(II) ligand-to-metal charge-transfer transition in AZ (628 nm) has shifted in the Phe114Pro variant to a value that is more typical for cupredoxins (599 nm). This probably occurs because of the removal of the Phe114-Cys112 hydrogen bond. The Phe114Pro mutation results in a 90 mV decrease in the reduction potential of AZ, and removal of the second hydrogen bond to the Cys ligand seems to be the major cause of this change. The C-terminal His117 ligand does not protonate in the reduced Phe114Pro AZ variant, which suggests that none of the structural features altered by the mutation are responsible for the absence of this effect in the WT protein. Upon reduction, the copper displaces further from the equatorial ligand plane and the Cu-S(Met121) bond length decreases. These changes are larger than those seen in the WT protein and contribute to the order of magnitude decrease in the intrinsic electron-transfer capabilities of the Phe114Pro variant.  相似文献   

15.
16.
Methylamine dehydrogenase (MADH) and azurin were purified from the periplasmic fraction of the methylamine-grown obligate methylotroph Methylobacillus flagellatus KT. The molecular mass of the purified azurin was 16.3 kDa, as measured by SDS-PAGE, or 13 920 Da as determined by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry. Azurin of M. flagellatus KT contained 1 copper atom per molecule and had an absorption maximum at 620 nm in the oxidized state. The redox potential of azurin measured at pH 7.0 by square-wave voltammetry was +275 mV versus normal hydrogen electrode. MADH reduced azurin in the presence of methylamine, indicating that this cupredoxin is likely to be the physiological electron acceptor for MADH in the electron transport chain of the methylotroph. A scheme of electron transport functioning in M. flagellatus KТ during methylamine oxidation is proposed.  相似文献   

17.
A comparative investigation of the effects of cooling rate and solvent physicochemical properties on the structural heterogeneity of wild-type and disulfide bond depleted azurin (Cys3Ala/Cys26Ala) and of amicyanin has been performed by EPR spectroscopy and computer simulation. By describing the spectral features of the EPR spectra in terms of Gaussian distributions of the components of the g and A tensors of the spin Hamiltonian, we have shown that either the cooling rate or the solvent composition affect the structural heterogeneity of the proteins. Such a heterogeneity has been quantified by the standard deviations sigmag and sigmaA of the parallel components of the axially symmetric tensors. In particular, both parameters become smaller after the slow cooling cycle; such a reduction is more significant when glycerol is added as cosolvent to the protein solutions. The comparison of the deltag and sigmaA values found, for the copper proteins investigated, highlights that the reduction is more marked in the azurins compared to amicyanin and that the Cys3Ala/Cys26Ala azurin mutant has a structural heterogeneity lower than that shown by the wild-type protein. The remarkable similarity of the copper coordination sphere of the proteins suggests a more rigid structure of the azurin protein matrix in the absence of the disulfide bridge compared to wild-type azurin and of amicyanin with respect to both forms of azurin. The former result establishes an important role for the -SS- bond in modulating the flexibility of wild-type azurin.  相似文献   

18.
Amicyanin from Paracoccus denitrificans is a type 1 copper protein with three strong equatorial copper ligands provided by nitrogens of His53 and His95 and the sulfur of Cys92, with an additional weak axial ligand provided by the sulfur of Met98. Met98 was replaced with either Gln or Ala. As isolated, the M98A and M98Q mutant proteins contain zinc in the active site. The zinc is then removed and replaced with copper so that the copper-containing proteins may be studied. Each of the mutant amicyanins exhibits a marked decrease in thermal stability relative to that of native amicyanin, consistent with the weaker affinity for copper. Crystal structures were obtained for the oxidized and reduced forms of M98A and M98Q amicyanins at atomic resolution (相似文献   

19.
1. The copper protein mavicyanin has been isolated and purified from the green squash Cucurbita pepo medullosa. 2. Mavicyanin contains one type-1 copper/18000 Mr, which can be characterized by: intense absorption maximum at 600 nm (epsilon = 5000 M-1 cm-1/Cu, A280/A600 = 8.0 +/- 0.5, A600/A403 = 7.0 +/- 0.25, maximum of fluorescence emission at 335 nM. 3. In the oxidized state the copper of mavicyanin is 100% detectable by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR). Computer simulation of the rhombic EPR signal gives gz = 2.287, gy = 2.077, gx = 2.025, Az = 3.5 mT, Ay = 2.9 mT and Ax = 5.7 mT. 4. Like other simple type-1 copper proteins, such as stellacyanin, azurin or plastocyanin, mavicyanin is readily reduced by hydroquinone or L-ascorbic acid. Its midpoint potential E'm was determined to be + 285 mV. The reduced protein reacts rather slowly with dioxygen, but is rapidly reoxidized by ferricyanide.  相似文献   

20.
The copper binding site of amicyanin from Paracoccus denitrificans has been examined by resonance Raman spectroscopy. The pattern of vibrational modes is clearly similar to those of the blue copper proteins azurin and plastocyanin. Intense resonance-enhanced peaks are observed at 377, 392, and 430 cm-1 as well as weaker overtones and combination bands in the high frequency region. Most of the peaks below 500 cm-1 shift 0.5-1.5 cm-1 to lower energy when the protein is exposed to D2O. Based on the pattern of conserved amino acids, the axial type EPR spectrum, and the resonance Raman spectrum, it is proposed that the copper binding site in amicyanin contains a Cu(II) ion in a distorted trigonal planar geometry with one cysteine and two histidine ligands and an axial methionine ligand at a considerably longer distance. Furthermore, the presence of multiple intense Raman peaks in the 400 cm-1 region which are sensitive to deuterium substitution leads to the conclusion that the Cu-S stretch is coupled with internal ligand vibrational modes and that the sulfur of the cysteine ligand is likely to be hydrogen-bonded to the polypeptide backbone.  相似文献   

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