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1.
In addition to the annular or boundary lipids that surround the transmembrane surface of the potassium channel KcsA from Streptomyces lividans, x-ray crystallographic studies have detected one anionic lipid molecule bound at each protein-protein interface in the homotetrameric structure, at sites referred to as nonannular sites. The binding constant for phosphatidylglycerol at the nonannular sites has been determined using fluorescence quenching methods with a mutant of KcsA lacking the normal three lipid-exposed Trp residues. Binding is weak, with a binding constant of 0.42 ± 0.06 in units of mol fraction, implying that the nonannular sites will only be ∼70% occupied in bilayers of 100% phosphatidylglycerol. However, the nonannular sites show high selectivity for anionic lipids over zwitterionic lipids, and it is suggested that a change in packing at the protein-protein interface leads to a closing of the nonannular binding site in the unbound state. Increasing the anionic lipid content of the membrane leads to a large increase in open channel probability, from ∼2.5% in the presence of 25 mol % phosphatidylglycerol to ∼62% in 100 mol % phosphatidylglycerol. The relationship between open channel probability and phosphatidylglycerol content shows cooperativity. The data are consistent with a model in which three or four of the four nonannular sites in the KcsA homotetramer have to be occupied by anionic lipid for the channel to open. The conductance of the open channel increases with increasing concentration of anionic lipid, an effect possibly due to effects of anionic lipid on the concentration of K+ close to the membrane surface.  相似文献   

2.
Fluorescence quenching methods have been used to study interactions of anionic phospholipids with the potassium channel KcsA from Streptomyces lividans. Quenching of the Trp fluorescence of KcsA reconstituted into mixtures of dioleoylphosphatidylcholine (DOPC) and an anionic phospholipid with dibromostearoyl chains is more marked at low mole fractions of the brominated anionic phospholipid than is quenching in mixtures of dibromostearoylphosphatidylcholine and nonbrominated anionic lipid. The quenching data are consistent with two classes of binding site for lipid on KcsA, one set corresponding to annular binding sites around KcsA to which DOPC and two-chain anionic phospholipids bind with similar affinities, the other set (non-annular sites) corresponding to sites at which anionic phospholipids can bind but from which DOPC is either excluded or binds with very low affinity. The binding constant for tetraoleoylcardiolipin at the annular sites is significantly less than that for DOPC, being comparable to that for dioleoylphosphatidylethanolamine. Tetraoleoylcardiolipin binds with highest affinity to the non-annular sites, the affinity for dioleoylphosphatidylglycerol being the lowest. The affinity for dioleoylphosphatidylserine decreases at high ionic strength, suggesting that electrostatic interactions between the anionic phospholipid headgroup and positively charged residues on KcsA are important for binding at the non-annular site. The effect of ionic strength on the binding of phosphatidic acid is less marked than on phosphatidylserine. The value of the binding constant for the non-annular site depends on the extent of Trp fluorescence quenching following from binding at the non-annular site. It is suggested that the non-annular site to which binding is detected in the fluorescence quenching experiments corresponds to the binding site for phosphatidylglycerol detected at monomer-monomer interfaces in x-ray diffraction studies.  相似文献   

3.
Lipid binding to the potassium channel KcsA from Streptomyces lividans has been studied using quenching of the fluorescence of Trp residues by brominated phospholipids. It is shown that binding of phospholipids to nonannular lipid binding sites on KcsA, located one each at the four protein-protein interfaces in the tetrameric structure, is specific for anionic phospholipids, zwitterionic phosphatidylcholine being unable to bind at the sites. The binding constant for phosphatidylglycerol of 3.0 ± 0.7 mol fraction−1 means that in a membrane containing ~20 mol% phosphatidylglycerol, as in the Escherichia coli inner membrane, the nonannular sites will be ~37% occupied by phosphatidylglycerol. The binding constant for phosphatidic acid is similar to that for phosphatidylglycerol but binding constants for phosphatidylserine and cardiolipin are about double those for phosphatidylglycerol. Binding to annular sites around the circumference of the KcsA tetramer are different on the extracellular and intracellular faces of the membrane. On the extracellular face of the membrane the binding constants for anionic lipids are similar to those for phosphatidylcholine, the lack of specificity being consistent with the lack of any marked clusters of charged residues on KcsA close to the membrane on the extracellular side. In contrast, binding to annular sites on the intracellular side of the membrane shows a distinct structural specificity, with binding of phosphatidic acid and phosphatidylglycerol being stronger than binding of phosphatidylcholine, whereas binding constants for phosphatidylserine and cardiolipin are similar to that for phosphatidylcholine. It is suggested that this pattern of binding follows from the pattern of charge distribution on KcsA on the intracellular side of the membrane.  相似文献   

4.
Bolivar JH  East JM  Marsh D  Lee AG 《Biochemistry》2012,51(30):6010-6016
The state of aggregation of potassium channel KcsA was determined as a function of lipid:protein molar ratio in bilayer membranes of the zwitterionic lipid phosphatidylcholine (PC) and of the anionic lipid phosphatidylglycerol (PG). EPR (electron paramagnetic resonance) with spin-labeled phospholipids was used to determine the number of motionally restricted lipids per KcsA tetramer. Unexpectedly, this number decreased with a decreasing lipid:KcsA tetramer molar ratio in the range of 88:1 to 30:1, consistent with sharing of annular lipid shells and KcsA-KcsA contact at high mole fractions of protein. Fluorescence quenching experiments with brominated phospholipids showed a decrease in fluorescence quenching at low lipid:KcsA tetramer mole ratios, also consistent with KcsA-KcsA contact at high mole fractions of protein. The effects of low mole ratios of lipid seen in EPR and fluorescence quenching experiments were more marked in bilayers of PC than in bilayers of PG, suggesting stronger association of PG than PC with KcsA. This was confirmed by direct measurement of lipid association constants using spin-labeled phospholipids, showing higher association constants for all anionic lipids than for PC. The results show that the probability of contacts between KcsA tetramers will be very low at lipid:protein molar ratios that are typical of native biological membranes.  相似文献   

5.
O T Jones  M G McNamee 《Biochemistry》1988,27(7):2364-2374
Interactions between lipids and the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor from Torpedo californica have been measured in reconstituted membranes containing purified receptor and defined lipids. The ability of brominated lipids to partially quench the intrinsic fluorescence of the acetylcholine receptor has been exploited to monitor contacts between the protein and the surrounding lipid. Relative binding constants for lipid binding to the protein have been quantitatively determined by measuring quenching observed in mixtures of brominated and nonbrominated lipids by use of equilibrium exchange equations developed by London and Feigenson [London, E., & Feigenson, G. W. (1981) Biochemistry 20, 1939-1948] and by Simmonds et al. [Simmonds, A. C., Rooney, E. K., & Lee, A. G. (1984) Biochemistry 23, 1432-1441]. Dioleoylphosphatidylcholine and its dibromo derivative are the two principal lipids used in the reconstituted membranes to establish the quenching parameters. Competition studies between cholesterol and phosphatidylcholine indicate that cholesterol does not compete effectively for the phospholipid sites presumed to surround the membrane-embedded portions of the receptor (annular lipids). However, dibromocholesterol partially quenches the receptor and leads to additional quenching of receptor in pure dibromophosphatidylcholine membranes. The results are consistent with the presence of additional binding sites for cholesterol that are not accessible to phospholipids (nonannular sites). Similar results are obtained by using cholesterol hemisuccinate and its dibromo analogue, both of which can be introduced into membranes more easily than cholesterol because of their greater solubility in water. Fatty acids appear to compete for both annular and nonannular sites, and analysis of the quenching data suggests that there are 5-10 nonannular sites associated with the receptor. Cholesterol has been shown to play a critical role in both acetylcholine receptor structural stabilization and ion channel activity, and the results presented here provide additional information about cholesterol-receptor interactions.  相似文献   

6.
Bovine calmodulin analogues, spin-labeled at methionine and tyrosine residues, have been utilized in electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) studies designed to investigate calmodulin interactions with the antipsychotic drug trifluoperazine and the calmodulin-binding protein 3',5'-cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase. Trifluoperazine titrations of spin-labeled calmodulin analogues were carried out in the presence of Ca(II), Cd(II), and Tb(III). Similar experiments were performed with the phosphodiesterase in the presence of Ca(II), Cd(II), La(III), Tb(III), and Lu(III). EPR signals from the methionine-directed probe proved to be more sensitive to the binding of target molecules than signals from the tyrosine-directed probe, perhaps indicating that the spin-labeled methionine is at a site close to the target molecule binding site. While the binding of TFP, as monitored by EPR spectral changes in the methionine spin-labeled calmodulin, was in evidence with Ca(II), Cd(II), and all the lanthanides examined, no binding of phosphodiesterase to calmodulin could be detected in the presence of the lanthanide ions, perhaps due to inactivation of the phosphodiesterase by lanthanide ion binding. The abilities of the spin-labeled calmodulins to activate phosphodiesterase were also investigated. The spin-labeled tyrosine calmodulin was able to activate phosphodiesterase as well as native calmodulin, while a lower degree of activation was found when the spin-labeled methionine analogue was used.  相似文献   

7.
Three spin-labeled derivatives of stearic acid and two derivatives of palmitic acid have been used to study the structure of the strong fatty acid binding site of bovine serum albumin. The steroid and indole binding sites have been studied using spin-labeled derivatives of androstol and indole, respectively. Paramagnetic resonance and fluorescence quenching data suggest that the fatty acid, steroid, and indole binding sites may be identical. The mobility of the nitroxyl group at C-8 of palmitic acid bound to albumin at a 1:1 molar ratio is unaffected when the carboxyl group is esterified. When the nitroxyl group is located at C-5 on this acid its motion is detectably increased by esterification of the carboxyl group but the magnitude of this change is small. This result suggests that the carboxyl group may play a minor role in the binding of fatty acids to the strongest fatty acid binding site of albumin. When stearic acid derivatives bearing the nitroxide at C-5, C-12, and C-16 are bound to albumin at a ligand to albumin ratio of 1, the order of mobility at 0-30 degrees is C-16 greater than C-12 congruent to C-5. Although motion at the methyl terminus is always greater than at the COOH terminus in the range 0-60 degrees, a simple monotonic increase in chain motion between the two termini is not observed. Arrhenius plots of the motion parameters for these bound fatty acids show two abrupt changes in slope. The temperature ranges for these changes are 15-23 degrees and 38-45 degrees. These results suggest that when one mole of spin-labeled fatty acid is bound to albumin, the protein undergoes a conformational change in each of these temperature ranges.  相似文献   

8.
Regulation of ion conduction through the pore of a K+ channel takes place through the coordinated action of the activation gate at the bundle crossing of the inner helices and the inactivation gate located at the selectivity filter. The mechanism of allosteric coupling of these gates is of key interest. Here we report new insights into this allosteric coupling mechanism from studies on a W67F mutant of the KcsA channel. W67 is in the pore helix and is highly conserved in K+ channels. The KcsA W67F channel shows severely reduced inactivation and an enhanced rate of activation. We use continuous wave EPR spectroscopy to establish that the KcsA W67F channel shows an altered pH dependence of activation. Structural studies on the W67F channel provide the structures of two intermediate states: a pre- open state and a pre-inactivated state of the KcsA channel. These structures highlight key nodes in the allosteric pathway. The structure of the KcsA W67F channel with the activation gate open shows altered ion occupancy at the second ion binding site (S2) in the selectivity filter. This finding in combination with previous studies strongly support a requirement for ion occupancy at the S2 site for the channel to inactivate.  相似文献   

9.
S I Chang  G G Hammes 《Biochemistry》1986,25(16):4661-4668
The spatial relationships between the four reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH) binding sites on chicken liver fatty acid synthase were explored with electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and spin-labeled analogues of NADP+. The analogues were prepared by reaction of NADP+ with 2,2,5,5-tetramethyl-1-oxy-3-pyrroline-3-carboxylic acid, with 1,1'-carbonyldiimidazole as the coupling reagent. Several esterification products were characterized, and the interaction of the N3' ester of NADP+ with the enzyme was examined in detail. Both 1H13, 14N and 2H13, 15N spin-labels were used: the EPR spectrum was simpler, and the sensitivity greater, for the latter. The spin-labeled NADP+ is a competitive inhibitor of NADPH in fatty acid synthesis, and an EPR titration of the enzyme with the modified NADP+ indicates four identical binding sites per enzyme molecule with a dissociation constant of 124 microM in 0.1 M potassium phosphate and 1 mM ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (pH 7.0) at 25 degrees C. The EPR spectra indicate the bound spin-label is immobilized relative to the unbound probe. No evidence for electron-electron interactions between bound spin-labels was found with the native enzyme, the enzyme dissociated into monomers, or the enzyme with the enoyl reductase sites blocked by labeling the enzyme with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate. Furthermore, the EPR spectrum of bound ligand was the same in all cases. This indicates that the bound spin-labels are at least 15 A apart, that the environment of the spin-label at all sites is similar, and that the environment is not altered by major structural changes in the enzyme.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and saturation transfer EPR (ST-EPR) spectroscopies were used to characterize the binding of spin-labeled fatty acid (SLFA) to bovine serum albumin (BSA). Association constants of three stearic acid derivatives labeled with a nitroxyl radical at C-5, C-12, or C-16 were estimated by EPR spectroscopy as the ratio of SLFA to BSA was increased from about 0 to 9. The values were compared to those for unmodified stearate. With all three SLFA, it was apparent that the nitroxyl residue modified the binding pattern. For SLFA:BSA ratios up to 1, which probably involves the site(s) on BSA most specific for long-chain FA, the C-16 derivative bound with an affinity similar to that of the natural FA. At higher ratios, the association constants for this SLFA were lower than those for stearate. The C-12 and C-5 derivatives showed only low-affinity binding relative to stearate. The spectral parameter, W, was constant for SLFA:BSA ratios between 0 and 1 in the case of C-16 compound, indicating physical homogeneity of the high-affinity binding site. At higher ratios, the spectra changed progressively, indicating inhomogeneity of the lower affinity binding sites although parallel changes in association constants were not observed. Changes in W due to Heisenberg spin exchange were ruled out. By examining the mobility profile of the bound SLFA by both EPR and ST-EPR techniques, it was shown that the nitroxyl group was maximally immobilized when attached near the center of the carbon chain of the bound SLFA.  相似文献   

11.
Fatty acids as well as phencyclidine (PCP) inhibit the ion channel activity of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR) by a noncompetitive mechanism. However, the exact localization of the fatty acid binding sites is unknown and, thus, the noncompetitive inhibitory mechanism for these endogenous modulators remains to be elucidated. In an attempt to determine the location of the fatty acid binding sites, we study the mutually exclusive action between 5-doxylstearate (5-SASL), a derivative of the endogenous noncompetitive antagonist (NCA) stearic acid, and other exogenous NCAs. For this purpose, both equilibrium and competitive binding assays using fluorescent and radiolabeled ligands were performed on desensitized AChRs. More specifically, we determined: (i) the effect of 5-SASL on the binding of the exogenous NCA [(3)H]PCP; (ii) the effect of 5-SASL on the binding of either quinacrine or ethidium, two fluorescent NCAs from exogenous origin; and (iii) the PCP-induced displacement of quinacrine and ethidium from their respective high-affinity binding sites. Our first target (i) is carried out by measuring the [(3)H]PCP binding in the absence or in the presence of increasing concentrations of 5-SASL. We found that 5-SASL displaces PCP from its low-affinity binding sites. The low-affinity PCP binding sites were pharmacologically characterized by an apparent dissociation constant (K(d)) of 6.1 +/- 5.0 microM and a stoichiometry of 3.7 +/- 1.5 sites per AChR. The fact that 5-SASL increased the apparent K(d) without changing the number of sites per AChR is indicative of a mutually exclusive action. From these results, an apparent inhibition constant (K(i)) of 75 +/- 31 microM for 5-SASL was calculated. In addition, 5-SASL affected neither the apparent K(d) (0.46 +/- 0.37 microM) nor the stoichiometry (1.07 +/- 0.57 sites per AChR) of the high-affinity PCP binding site. The second objective (ii) is achieved by titrating either quinacrine or ethidium into AChR native membranes in the absence or in the presence of increasing concentrations of 5-SASL. These experiments showed that 5-SASL efficiently increased the apparent K(d) of quinacrine without perturbing the interaction of ethidium with its high-affinity locus. Considering that (a) 5-SASL effectively quenched the AChR-bound quinacrine fluorescence (H. R. Arias, Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1347, 9-22, 1997) and (b) fluorescence-quenching is a short-range process, it is possible to suggest that 5-SASL displaces quinacrine from its high-affinity binding site by a steric mechanism. In this regard, a K(i) of 38 +/- 5 microM for 5-SASL was calculated. Concerning the last objective (iii), AChR-bound quinacrine or ethidium was back titrated with PCP. Two PCP K(i) values were obtained by fitting the displacement plots by nonlinear regression with two components. The lowest K(i) values obtained for either quinacrine (0.86 +/- 0.37 microM) or ethidium (0. 29 +/- 0.23 microM) displacement from their respective high-affinity binding sites coincide with the previously determined high-affinity [(3)H]PCP K(d). In addition, the highest K(i) values obtained for either NCA displacement are in the same concentration range as the observed low-affinity [(3)H]PCP K(d). Taking into account all experimental data, we reached the following conclusions: (i) fatty acid molecules, or at least 5-SASL, sterically interact with both the PCP low-affinity and the quinacrine high-affinity binding sites; (ii) the low-affinity PCP binding sites, as well as the high-affinity quinacrine locus, are located at the nonannular lipid domain of the AChR; and, finally, (iii) fatty acid molecules are not accessible to the lumen of the ion channel, indicating an allosteric mode of action for fatty acids to inhibit ion flux. Thus, the 5-SASL, the quinacrine high-affinity, and the PCP low-affinity binding sites are all located at overlapping nonannular loci on the muscle-type AChR.  相似文献   

12.
Summary The Ca2+ binding site region of the Ca2+ — ATPase of skeletal muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum was labeled with several fluorescent analogs of dicyclohexylcarbodiimide. As has been shown by Chadwick and Thomas [1, 2], in the absence of Ca2+ in the medium, labeling with the naphthyl carbodiimide results in the inhibition of enzyme activity. Further, Ca2+ occupancy of the high affinity sites of the enzyme protects against incorporation into the site(s). The fluorescent carbodiimide has been used to determine the depth of the site of label incorporation relative to the aqueous-bilayer interfaces by quenching studies using spin-labeled fatty acid derivatives. The series of quenchers used have their spin-label moiety located at different positions along the fatty acid chain. It was found that after suitable correction for differences in partitioning of the various derivatives, the order of quenching efficiency was 16 - > 12- > 10- > 7- > 5-NS, indicating that the naphthyl moiety is near the center of the bilayer. In contrast, quenching with the aqueous-restricted I indicated that the label is accessible from the external milieu, likewise for a presumed aqueous quencher, acrylamide. The aqueous quenchers accessibilities were altered upon Ca2+ binding to the ATPase. Quenching of the intrinsic fluorescence with the x-NS derivatives indicates that the ATPase tryptophan residues are primarily localized at the aqueous-membrane interfaces, with the order of quenching being 5- > 7- > 10- > 12- > 16-NS. The trp residue(s) which changes its fluorescence upon Ca2+ binding is shown to be near the membrane surface.  相似文献   

13.
R J Froud  J M East  O T Jones  A G Lee 《Biochemistry》1986,25(23):7544-7552
The ATPase activity of the (Ca2+-Mg2+)-ATPase reconstituted into bilayers of phosphatidylcholines depends on the fatty acyl chain length of the phospholipids. It is shown that the fluorescence response to Ca2+ of the ATPase modified with fluorescein isothiocyanate is also dependent on phospholipid structure and is interpreted in terms of a change in the equilibrium between two forms of the ATPase, E1 and E2. A kinetic scheme for the ATPase is presented in which ATPase activity is markedly dependent on the rate of the transition between two phosphorylated forms of the ATPase, E1'PCa2 and E2'PCa2, and it is postulated that changing the phospholipid structure changes this rate. The rate of dephosphorylation of the ATPase and the ATP dependence of the E1'PCa2-E2'PCa2 transition are also lipid dependent. Binding of oleyl alcohol causes large, lipid-dependent changes in ATPase activity, and these are interpreted in terms of changes in the rates of these same steps. Oleylamine, which has been shown to bind more strongly at annular sites than at nonannular sites, inhibits ATPase activity irrespective of lipid structure, whereas fatty acids, which bind less strongly at annular sites, only inhibit at high concentrations. Methyl oleate, which binds more strongly at nonannular sites than at annular sites, causes marked stimulation for the ATPase reconstituted with short-chain lipids.  相似文献   

14.
Solutions of vanadate were controlled through concentration and pH adjustment to give specific compositions of mono- and oligovanadates. By monitoring the EPR spectrum of iodoacetamide spin-labeled ATPase, it is shown that decavanadate and the oligovanadate species present at neutral pH exhibit behavior typical of a substrate analogue. This is seen in terms of Ca2+ binding site affinity (microM), outward Ca2+ site orientation, and conformational effects on the enzyme normally associated with enzyme activation. In contrast, monovanadates exhibit behavior identical to that observed with Pi, with one exception: the vanadoenzyme is stable to Ca2+ in the concentration range of high affinity binding at the vanadate concentrations used here (200 microM). It is further demonstrated that Ca2+ binding in the 100 microM range directly induces enzyme devanadation of the monovanadate enzyme complex through Ca2+ binding to internal sites. Extensive array formation of dimeric ATPase units is found only with decavanadate in the absence of Ca2+, and then stoichiometric amounts are sufficient. Electron micrographs of dimeric arrays show evidence of increased penetration into the lipid bilayer, including freeze-fracture replicas which show evidence of corresponding "pits" in the inner leaflet of the bilayer. In turn, EPR spectra provide a means of following vanadate binding to the ATPase per se, as well as monitoring Ca2+-induced changes in the vanadoenzyme conformation, as only binding to specific sites on the enzyme affect the EPR spectrum.  相似文献   

15.
Quenching of anthracycline fluorescence by a series of spin-labeled fatty acids was used to probe the transverse location of the drug in phosphatidylcholine bilayers in the form of small unilamellar vesicles. Stern-Volmer plots of the quenching data indicate that the fluorophore moiety of the anthracycline is intercalated into the hydrocarbon region of the bilayer, with deeper penetration observed in fluid-phase than in solid-phase vesicles. 31P-NMR parameters (T1 and nuclear Overhauser enhancement (NOE] are unaffected by the presence of drug, consistent with a binding site removed from the interfacial region. Comparison of intensity (F0/F) plots with lifetime (tau 0/tau) data shows that the predominant mechanism of anthracycline quenching by membrane-bound nitroxides is static. Since the membrane-bound drug is also accessible to quenching by I-, the binding site in the membrane must create a channel which is accessible to solvent. Two other fluorescent probes, 12-(9-anthroyloxy)stearate (12-AS) and diphenylhexatriene (DPH), were employed to confirm the results obtained with the anthracyclines, giving quenching data representative of their location in the bilayer.  相似文献   

16.
There is increasing evidence to support the notion that membrane proteins, instead of being isolated components floating in a fluid lipid environment, can be assembled into supramolecular complexes that take part in a variety of cooperative cellular functions. The interplay between lipid-protein and protein-protein interactions is expected to be a determinant factor in the assembly and dynamics of such membrane complexes. Here we report on a role of anionic phospholipids in determining the extent of clustering of KcsA, a model potassium channel. Assembly/disassembly of channel clusters occurs, at least partly, as a consequence of competing lipid-protein and protein-protein interactions at nonannular lipid binding sites on the channel surface and brings about profound changes in the gating properties of the channel. Our results suggest that these latter effects of anionic lipids are mediated via the Trp67–Glu71–Asp80 inactivation triad within the channel structure and its bearing on the selectivity filter.  相似文献   

17.
The activity of the potassium channel KcsA is tightly regulated through the interactions of anionic lipids with high-affinity non-annular lipid binding sites located at the interface between the channel's subunits. Here we present solid-state phosphorous NMR studies that resolve the negatively charged lipid phosphatidylglycerol within the non-annular lipid-binding site. Perturbations in chemical shift observed upon the binding of phosphatidylglycerol are indicative of the interaction of positively charged sidechains within the non-annular binding site and the negatively charged lipid headgroup. Site directed mutagenesis studies have attributed these charge interactions to R64 and R89. Functionally the removal of the positive charges from R64 and R89 appears to act synergistically to reduce the probability of channel opening.  相似文献   

18.
Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations have been used to unmask details of specific interactions of anionic phospholipids with intersubunit binding sites on the surface of the bacterial potassium channel KcsA. Crystallographic data on a diacyl glycerol fragment at this site were used to model phosphatidylethanolamine (PE), or phosphatidylglycerol (PG), or phosphatidic acid (PA) at the intersubunit binding sites. Each of these models of a KcsA-lipid complex was embedded in phosphatidyl choline bilayer and explored in a 20 ns MD simulation. H-bond analysis revealed that in terms of lipid-protein interactions PA > PG > PE and revealed how anionic lipids (PG and PA) bind to a site provided by two key arginine residues (R(64) and R(89)) at the interface between adjacent subunits. A 27 ns simulation was performed in which KcsA (without any lipids initially modeled at the R(64)/R(89) sites) was embedded in a PE/PG bilayer. There was a progressive specific increase over the course of the simulation in the number of H-bonds of PG with KcsA. Furthermore, two specific PG binding events at R(64)/R(89) sites were observed. The phosphate oxygen atoms of bound PG formed H-bonds to the guanidinium group of R(89), whereas the terminal glycerol H-bonded to R(64). Overall, this study suggests that simulations can help identify and characterize sites for specific lipid interactions on a membrane protein surface.  相似文献   

19.
Ion permeation and selectivity, key features in ion channel function, are believed to arise from a complex ensemble of energetic and kinetic variables. Here we evaluate the contribution of pore cation binding to ion permeation and selectivity features of KcsA, a model potassium channel. For this, we used E71A and M96V KcsA mutants in which the equilibrium between conductive and nonconductive conformations of the channel is differently shifted. E71A KcsA is a noninactivating channel mutant. Binding of K(+) to this mutant reveals a single set of low-affinity K(+) binding sites, similar to that seen in the binding of K(+) to wild-type KcsA that produces a conductive, low-affinity complex. This seems consistent with the observed K(+) permeation in E71A. Nonetheless, the E71A mutant retains K(+) selectivity, which cannot be explained on the basis of just its low affinity for this ion. At variance, M96V KcsA is a rapidly inactivating mutant that has lost selectivity for K(+) and also conducts Na(+). Here, low-affinity binding and high-affinity binding of both cations are detected, seemingly in agreement with both being permeating species in this mutant channel. In conclusion, binding of the ion to the channel protein seemingly explains certain gating, ion selectivity, and permeation properties. Ion binding stabilizes greatly the channel and, depending upon ion type and concentration, leads to different conformations and ion binding affinities. High-affinity states guarantee binding of specific ions and mediate ion selectivity but are nonconductive. Conversely, low-affinity states would not discriminate well among different ions but allow permeation to occur.  相似文献   

20.
The hydrophobic interaction between spin-labelled stearic acid and spectrin was studied by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and fluorescence quenching. The results are quantitatively interpreted in terms of two types of binding site on spectrin. A comparison between the results of the EPR and fluorescence experiments show the drawback of the fluorescence method in binding studies.  相似文献   

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