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1.
The acetylation of insulin   总被引:10,自引:2,他引:8       下载免费PDF全文
The acetylation of the free amino groups of insulin was studied by reaction of the hormone with N-hydroxysuccinimide acetate at pH6.9 and 8.5. The products formed were separated by chromatography on DEAE-Sephadex and were characterized by isoelectric focusing, by end-group analysis, by the incorporation of [(3)H]acetyl groups in the molecule, and by treatment with trypsin that had been treated with 1-chloro-4-phenyl-3-toluene-p-sulphonamidobutan-2-one (;tosylphenylalanyl chloromethyl ketone'). Three monosubstituted products, two disubstituted products and one trisubstituted derivative were prepared. The alpha-amino groups of the terminal residues and the in-amino group of the lysine-B29 were the sites of reaction. Acetylation of any of the free amino groups did not affect the biological activity of insulin. It was demonstrated, however, that substitution at the glycine-A1 amino group by the larger residues, acetoacetyl or thiazolidinecarbonyl, produced a decrease in biological activity. Modification of the lysine-B29 or phenylalanine-B1 amino groups with these larger reagents did not affect the biological activity. Modification of the phenylalanine-B1 amino group by any of the three substituents resulted in a large decrease in the affinity of insulin for anti-insulin antibodies raised in the guinea pig. Modification of the other two amino groups did not affect the reaction with antibody. These observations are correlated with the tertiary structure of insulin.  相似文献   

2.
The amino groups of ribonuclease A (RNase-A) have been methylated with formaldehyde and borohydride to provide observable resonances for proton magnetic resonance (PMR) studies. Although enzymatic activity is lost, PMR difference spectroscopy and PMR studies of thermal denaturation show native conformation is largely preserved in methylated RNase-A. Resonances corresponding to the NH2-terminal alpha-amino and 10 xi-amino N-methyl groups are titrated at 220 MHz to obtain pK values. After correction for the effects of methylation, using values previously derived from model compound studies, a pK of 6.6 is found for the alpha-amino group, a pK of 8.6 for the xi-amino group of lysine-41 and pK values ranging from 10.6 to 11.2 for the other lysine xi-amino groups. Interactions between lysine-7 and lysine-41 or between the alpha-amino and xi-amino groups of lysine-1 have been proposed to account for deviations from simple titration behaviour. The correct continuities for the titration curves of the histidine H-2 proton resonances have been confirmed by selective deuteration of the H-2 protons. Titration curves for the H-2 proton resonances of histidine-12 and histidine-119 of methylated RNase-A show deviations from the titration curves for the native enzyme, indicating some alteration of the active-site conformation. In the presence of phosphate, titration curves for the H-2 proton resonances of histidine-12 and histidine-119 of methylated RNase-A indicate binding of phosphate at the active site, but these curves continue to show deviations from the titration behaviour of native RNase-A. The titration curve for the N-methyl resonance of lysine-41 is perturbed considerably by the presence of phosphate, which indicates a possible catalytic role for lysine-41.  相似文献   

3.
Insulin has proved difficult to study by nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy because of its complex aggregation behaviour in solution and its insolubility between pH 4 and 7. Now for the first time it has been possible to assign the 1H nuclear magnetic resonances of the H-2 histidine protons of residues B5 and B10 of bovine 2 Zn insulin and Zn-free insulin, and the B5 and A8 residues of hagfish insulin. As expected, the addition of Zn to Zn-free insulin causes virtually no change in the chemical shift or the rate of H-D exchange of the H-2 proton of histidine B5, which is not involved in Zn binding in the 2 Zn insulin hexamer. The rate of H-D exchange of the H-2 proton of histidine B10 is decreased markedly on Zn binding at this residue, but the chemical shift of the resonance remains virtually constant owing to the balancing of an upfield ring current shift of the ordered histidine residues by a downfield shift due to electron withdrawal from the ring nitrogen by the Zn binding.  相似文献   

4.
High-resolution proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and nuclear Overhauser effects for the low-field exchangeable proton resonances of human normal adult hemoglobin in aqueous solvents are being used to confirm and extend the assignments of these resonances to specific protons at the intersubunit interfaces of the molecule. Most of these exchangeable proton resonances of human normal adult hemoglobin have been found to be absent in the spectra of isolated alpha or beta subunits. This finding indicates that they are specific spectral markers for the quaternary structure of the hemoglobin tetramer. Based on the nuclear Overhauser effect results, we have assigned the exchangeable proton resonance at +7.4 ppm downfield from H2O to the hydrogen-bonded proton between alpha 103(G10)His and beta 108(G10)Asn at the alpha 1 beta 1 interface. The nuclear Overhauser effect results have also confirmed the assignments of the exchangeable proton resonances at +9.4 and +8.2 ppm downfield from H2O previously proposed by workers in this laboratory based on a comparison of human normal adult hemoglobin and appropriate mutant hemoglobins. This independent confirmation of previously proposed assignments is necessary in view of the possible long-range conformational effects of single amino-acid substitutions in mutant hemoglobin molecules.  相似文献   

5.
The solution structures of two human growth hormone releasing factor analogues, 27Leu45Gly-hGHRF(1-45)OH and 27Nle-hGHRF(1-29)NH2, are investigated by means of circular dichroism and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Using circular dichroism spectroscopy, it is shown that both peptides adopt ordered structures at low concentrations of trifluoroethanol (approximately 30%). Quantitative analysis of the circular dichroism spectra indicates that the same number of residues, approximately 23 to 25, are in a helical state in both peptides. Using two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance methods all proton resonances of the 27Nle-hGHRF(1-29)NH2 fragment are assigned and its secondary structure is determined from a qualitative interpretation of the nuclear Overhauser enhancement data. Two distinctive regions of alpha-helix are present extending from residues 6 to 13 and 16 to 29.  相似文献   

6.
The 1H nuclear magnetic resonance spectrum of tuna ferrocytochrome c has been studied and the resonances of all 49 amino acid methyl groups have been assigned to specific absorption lines. In comparison with resonance assignments in the ferricytochrome c spectrum, the secondary shifts of resonances of ferrocytochrome c are smaller and the identification of characteristic spin-systems from comparison of spectra from homologous proteins more difficult. For this reason, two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance exchange correlated spectroscopy has been used to correlate the assigned resonances of tuna ferricytochrome c with previously unassigned resonances of tuna ferrocytochrome c.  相似文献   

7.
Proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy at 250 MHz has been used to investigate the conformations of proximal histidyl residues of human normal adult hemoglobin, hemoglobin Kempsey [beta 99(G1) Asp leads to Asn], hemoglobin Osler [beta 145(HC2) Tyr leads to Asp], and hemoglobin McKees Rocks [beta 145(HC2) Tyr leads to Term] around neutral pH in H2O at 27 degrees C, all in the deoxy form. Two resonances that occur between 58 and 76 ppm downfield from the water proton signal have been assigned to the hyperfine shifted proximal histidyl NH-exchangeable protons of the alpha- and beta-chains of deoxyhemoglobin. These two resonances are sensitive to the quaternary state of hemoglobin, amino acid substitutions in the alpha 1 beta 2-subunit interface and in the carboxy-terminal region of the beta-chain, and the addition of organic phosphates. The experimental results show that there are differences in the heme pockets among these four hemoglobins studied. The structural and dynamic information derived from the hyperfine shifted proximal histidyl NH-exchangeable proton resonances complement that obtained from the ferrous hyperfine shifted and exchangeable proton resonances of deoxyhemoglobin over the spectral region from 5 to 20 ppm downfield from H2O. The relationship between these findings and Perutz's stereochemical mechanism for the cooperative oxygenation of hemoglobin is discussed.  相似文献   

8.
G Viggiano  N T Ho  C Ho 《Biochemistry》1979,18(23):5238-5247
The proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectrum of human adult deoxyhemoglobin in D2O in the region from 6 to 20 ppm downfield from the proton resonance of residual water shows a number of hyperfine shifted proton resonances that are due to groups on or near the alpha and beta hemes. The sensitivity of these resonances to the ligation of the heme groups and the assignment of these resonances to the alpha and beta chains provide an opportunity to investigate the cooperative oxygenation of an intact hemoglobin molecule in solution. By use of the nuclear magnetic resonance correlation spectroscopy technique, at least two resonances, one at approximately 18 ppm downfield from HDO due to the beta chain and the other at approximately 12 ppm due to the alpha chain, can be used to study the binding of oxygen to the alpha and beta chains of hemoglobin. The present results using approximately 12% hemoglobin concentration in 0.1 M Bistris buffer at pD 7 and 27 degrees C with and without organic phosphate show that there is no significant line broadening on oxygenation (from 0 to 50% saturation) to affect the determination of the intensities or areas of these resonances. It is found that the ratio of the intensity of the alpha-heme resonance at 12 ppm to that of the beta-heme resonance at 18 ppm is constant on oxygenation in the absence of organic phosphate but decreases in the presence of 2,3-diphosphoglycerate or inositol hexaphosphate, with the effect of the latter being the stronger. On oxygenation, the intensities of the alpha-heme resonance at 12 ppm and of the beta-heme resonance at 18 ppm decreases more than the total number of deoxy chains available as measured by the degree of O2 saturation of hemoglobin. This shows the sensitivity of these resonances to structural changes which are believed to occur in the unligated subunits upon the ligation of their neighbors in an intact tetrameric hemoglobin molecule. A comparison of the nuclear magnetic resonance data with the populations of the partially saturated hemoglobin tetramers (i.e., hemoglobin with one, two, or three oxygen molecules bound) leads to the conclusion that in the presence of organic phosphate the hemoglobin molecule with one oxygen bound maintains the beta-heme resonance at 18 ppm but not the alpha-heme resonance at 12 ppm. These resluts suggest that some cooperativity must exist in the deoxy quaternary structure of the hemoglobin molecule during the oxygenation process. Hence, these results are not consistent with the requirements of two-state concerted models for the oxygenation of hemoglobin. In addition, we have investigated the effect of D2O on the oxygenation of hemoglobin by measuring the oxygen dissociation curves of normal adult hemoglobin as a function of pH in D2O andH2O media. We have found that (1) the pH dependence of the oxygen equilibrium of hemoglobin (the Bohr effect) in higher pH in comparison to that in H2O medium and (2) the Hill coefficients are essentially the same in D2O and H2O media over the pH range from 6.0 to 8.2...  相似文献   

9.
In order to establish the conditions required for the observation of monomeric insulin in solution, a series of proton nuclear magnetic resonance studies of insulin in a variety of solvents was undertaken. Optimal spectra were recorded in trifluoroethanol- water mixtures in a 1:2 ratio. Using the sequential assignment approach the proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectrum of insulin was then assigned. Aspects of the structure of monomeric insulin in solution have been determined using the observed NOE cross peaks and slow exchange protons.  相似文献   

10.
High-resolution 270-MHz proton nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectra of the native two-zinc insulin hexamer at pH 9 have been obtained, and assignments of key resonances have been made. Spectra of zinc-free insulin titrated with Zn2+ are unchanged after the addition of 1 equiv of zinc per insulin hexamer, indicating that the conformation of the hexamer is fixed at this point and that the second zinc ion does not significantly change the conformation. Titration of the two-zinc insulin hexamer with anions high on the Hofmeister series such as SCN- causes marked changes in the NMR spectra which are interpreted as the result of major conformational changes to a new hexameric form of insulin having a twofold axis perpendicular to the threefold axis. Analysis of difference spectra indicates that this new hexamer (which should be capable of binding six zinc ions) binds 2 equiv of SCN- at two sites which are assumed to be identical and independent (K1 = 10(3), K2 = 2.5 X 10(2) M-1).  相似文献   

11.
Proton nuclear magnetic resonance studies have revealed several structural and dynamic properties of the glutamine-binding protein of Escherichia coli. When this protein binds L-glutamine, six low-field, exchangeable proton resonances appear in the region from +5.5 to +10 parts per million downfield from water (or +10.2 to +14.7 parts per million downfield from the methyl proton resonance of 2,2-dimethyl-2-silapentane-5-sulfonate). This suggests that the binding of L-glutamine induces specific conformational changes in the protein molecule, involving the formation of intermolecular and intramolecular hydrogen bonds between the glutamine-binding protein and L-glutamine, and within the protein molecule. The oxygen atom of the gamma-carbonyl group of L-glutamine is likely to be involved in the formation of an intermolecular hydrogen bond between the ligand and the binding protein. We have shown that at least one phenylalanine and one methyl-containing residue are spatially close to this intermolecular hydrogen-bonded proton. The intermolecular and intramolecular hydrogen-bonded protons of the ligand-protein complex undergo solvent exchange. The local conformations around these intermolecular and intramolecular hydrogen bonds are quite stable when subjected to pH and temperature variations. From these results, the utility of proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy for investigating such binding proteins has been shown, and a picture of the ligand-binding process can be drawn.  相似文献   

12.
E Tüchsen  P E Hansen 《Biochemistry》1988,27(23):8568-8576
The carbonyl region of the natural abundance 13C nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectrum of basic pancreatic trypsin inhibitor is examined, and 65 of the 66 expected signals are characterized at varying pH and temperature. Assignments are reported for over two-thirds of the signals, including those of all buried backbone amide groups with slow proton exchange and all side-chain carbonyl groups. This is the first extensively assigned carbonyl spectrum for any protein. A method for carbonyl resonance assignments utilizing amide proton exchange and isotope effects on nuclear shielding is described in detail. The assignments are made by establishing kinetic correlation between effects of amide proton exchange observed in the carbonyl 13C region with development of isotope effects and in the amide proton region with disappearance of preassigned resonances. Several aspects of protein structure and dynamics in solution may be investigated by carbonyl 13C NMR spectroscopy. Some effects of side-chain primary amide group hydrolysis are described. The main interest is on information about intramolecular hydrogen-bond energies and changes in the protein due to amino acid replacements by chemical modification or genetic engineering.  相似文献   

13.
The 1H NMR spectrum of the glycopeptide antineoplastic antibiotic bleomycin has been examined in D2O solution (Fourier transform nuclear magnetic resonance, 270 MHZ) and in H2O solution (correlation nuclear magnetic resonance, 250 MHZ). Resonances have been assigned to specific hydrogens of the two most abundant congeners, bleomycin-A2 (BLM-A2) and bleomycin-B2 (BLM-B2), on the basis of (1) homonuclear spin decoupling, (2) comparison of the spectra of BLM-A2, BLM-B2, fragments of these antibiotics, and the related antibiotic phleomycin, and (3) the pH dependence of chemical shifts. Resonance assignments are presented for all the CH protons of BLM-A2 and BLM-B2 except for the saccharide groups, for which only the anomeric proton assignments are given. All of the NH protons have been identified with specific resonances except for the two primary amide groups, which yield four well-resolved peaks, whose specific assignment was not attempted. This study serves as a basis for future investigations of the conformation of bleomycin and its interaction with metals and nucleic acids.  相似文献   

14.
R T Clubb  V Thanabal  C Osborne  G Wagner 《Biochemistry》1991,30(31):7718-7730
Proton and nitrogen-15 sequence-specific nuclear magnetic resonance assignments have been determined for recombinant oxidized flavodoxin from Anacystis nidulans (169 residues, Mr 19,048). Assignments were obtained by using 15N-1H heteronuclear three-dimensional (3D) NMR spectroscopy on a uniformly nitrogen-15 enriched sample of the protein, pH 6.6, at 30 degrees C. For 165 residues, the backbone and a large fraction of the side-chain proton resonances have been assigned. Medium- and long-range NOE's have been used to characterize the secondary structure. In solution, flavodoxin consists of a five-stranded parallel beta sheet involving residues 3-9, 31-37, 49-56, 81-89, 114-117, and 141-144. Medium-range NOE's indicate the presence of several helices. Several 15N and 1H resonances of the flavin mononucleotide (FMN) prosthetic group have been assigned. The FMN-binding site has been investigated by using polypeptide-FMN NOE's.  相似文献   

15.
T E Booth  T T Sakai  J D Glickson 《Biochemistry》1983,22(18):4211-4217
The binding of bleomycin A2 to poly(deoxyadenylylthymidylic acid) [poly(dA-dT)] has been monitored by proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. This study includes an analysis of the effects of temperature, ionic strength, and pH. Sites of drug-nucleic acid interaction have been delineated on the basis of chemical shift perturbations of drug and nucleic acid resonances. The data indicate that the binding of the antibiotic occurs with partial intercalation of the aromatic bithiazole group and immobilization of the cationic dimethylsulfonium group. This complex dissociates as the nucleic acid is denatured to the single-stranded form. The absence of significant pH effects suggests that the N terminus of bleomycin A2, which contains the titratable groups, does not contribute to the interaction of the drug molecule with poly(dA-dT). The problems associated with assigning a specific geometry to the drug-nucleic acid complex are discussed.  相似文献   

16.
The 1H, 13C, and 15N high field nuclear magnetic resonance spectra of the cyclic peptide viomycin have been fully assigned using homo- and heteronuclear double resonance experiments and pH effects. In addition it is shown how the two- and three-bond H-D isotope effects upon carbonyl resonances may assist in their assignment. The resistance to exchange with solvent water of the amide proton involved in the transannular hydrogen bond is observed directly in the 1H spectra, via the isotope effect on a carbonyl resonance in the 13C spectra, and via the one-bond 1H couppling in the 15N spectra.  相似文献   

17.
The oxidized and hydroquinone forms of synthetic 8 alpha-N-imidazolylriboflavin have been investigated by proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy at 360 MHz. Proton resonances due to the imidazole ring, isoalloxazine ring, and ribityl side chain have been assigned on the basis of two-dimensional 1H-1H correlated spectra (COSY), selective decoupling, and nuclear Overhauser effect difference spectra and by comparison of computer-simulated with experimental spectra. The effect of pH on the imidazolyl resonances shows a pKa for the unsubstituted imidazole nitrogen of 6.0 +/- 0.1 for the oxidized form and a value of 7.0 +/- 0.1 for the reduced form, in good agreement with the values obtained from oxidation-reduction potential data in a previous paper [Williamson, G., & Edmondson, D. E. (1985) Biochemistry 24, 7790-7797]. Slow exchange of the flavin 8 alpha-methylene and imidazolyl C(2) protons was observed at pH 6.1 but not at pH values below 4.0 for the oxidized form of the flavin. The reduced form, but not the oxidized form, of the flavin exhibits geminal coupling of the 8 alpha-methylene protons and of the C(1') methylene protons of the ribityl side chain. The magnetic nonequivalence of the protons of these two methylene groups is suggested to result from intermolecular association of the reduced flavin in aqueous solutions at the concentrations required for the spectral experiments.  相似文献   

18.
M Chien  A P Grollman  S B Horwitz 《Biochemistry》1977,16(16):2641-2647
The interaction of bleomycin A2 with DNA has been examined by fluorescence spectroscopy and proton magnetic resonance techniques. Fluorescence bands observed at 353 and 405 nm in the spectrum of bleomycin were assigned to the bithiazole and 4-aminopyrimidine rings, respectively. Quenching of bithiazole fluorescence by DNA was used to determine apparent equilibrium constants for the complex which, in 2.5 mM tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane buffer, pH 8.4, are 1.2 X 10(5) M-1 for bleomycin and 1.4 X 10(5) M-1 for tripeptide S, a partial acid hydrolysis product of the antibiotic. Uner these conditions, one molecule of bleomycin binds for every five to six base pairs in DNA. In the proton magnetic resonance spectrum of bleomycin, resonances emanating from the bithiazole rings and dimethylsulfonium groups are preferentially broadened and reduced in intensity in the presence of DNA, suggesting that these moieties bind most tightly to the polymer.  相似文献   

19.
Histidine-binding protein J of Salmonella typhimurium has been chosen as a model system for a proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopic investigation of binding protein-ligand interaction. This interaction is involved in the recognition step of the osmotic shock-sensitive active transport systems. When J protein binds L-histidine, four new, low-field, exchangeable proton resonances appear in the region +7 to +12 parts per million downfield from the water proton resonance (or +11.7 to +16.7 parts per million downfield from the methyl proton resonance of 2,2-dimethyl-2-silapentane-5-sulfonate). Due to their chemical shift range and other properties, they indicate the formation of both intra- and intermolecular hydrogen bonds. Experiments with 15N-labeled compounds confirm this conclusion. The specificity of the hydrogen-bond formation is demonstrated by observing the effects of substrate analogs, temperature, pH, and mutations on the exchangeable proton resonances. Proton-proton nuclear Overhauser effect measurements suggest that two of these exchangeable proton resonances (at +7.2 and +10.6 parts per million from H2O) are most likely from intramolecular hydrogen-bonded protons, while the other two (at +7.1 and +9.5 parts per million from H2O) are intermolecular hydrogen bonds. Our finding of L-histidine-induced hydrogen-bond formation in histidine-binding protein J in the solution state is an excellent demonstration of the production of specific conformational changes in a periplasmic binding protein upon binding of ligand.  相似文献   

20.
Separation of ovotransferrin into C-terminal (OTf/2C) and N-terminal (OTf/2N) half-molecules has made possible the resolution of all expected histidinyl C(2)H resonances by proton nuclear magnetic resonance at 250 MHz. The chemical shift of many of the resonances decreases with increasing pH, allowing construction of titration curves, whereas a few resonances fail to titrate. On formation of the GaIIIOTf/2(C2O4) ternary complexes, two of the low-field C(2)H resonances in each half-molecule fail to titrate. This behavior implicates the imidazole groups giving rise to these resonances as ligands to the bound metal ion. A third C(2)H resonance in each half-molecule undergoes a marked reduction in pK'a on formation of the ternary complex. The imidazole group displaying this resonance is implicated in a proton-relay scheme involved in binding the synergistic anion, oxalate, and a water of hydration on the bound metal ion. The titration curves for the various imidazole resonances have been fit to a four-parameter equation involving estimation of the pK'a, the limiting chemical shift values, and a Hill constant n. Hill constants of less than 1 can be rationalized by correcting the titration curve for the charge Z on the protein as a function of pH and the work function w. The titration curve for the imidazole group in OTf/2C involved in the proton-relay scheme shows a value for n greater than 1, which suggests positive cooperativity in the titration of this residue. The basis for this behavior cannot be rationalized at this time.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

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