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1.
Inhibition of muscle force development by acidic pH is a well known phenomenon, yet the exact mechanism by which a decrease in pH inhibits the Ca2+-activated force in striated myofilaments remains poorly understood. Whether or not the deactivation by acidic pH involves direct competition between Ca2+ and protons for regulatory binding sites on fast skeletal troponin C (TnC) or whether other proteins in thin filament regulation are important remains unclear. We measured the effects of acidic pH on Ca2+-dependent fluorescent changes in TnC labeled with the probe danzylaziridine (Danz), which reports Ca2+ binding to the regulatory (Ca2+-specific) sites. Measurements were also made with TnCDanz complexed with the inhibitory Tn unit, TnI, and in the whole Tn complex. Our results show that a drop in pH from 7.0 to 6.5 is associated with a 1.6-fold increase in the midpoint for the relation between free Ca2+ and Ca2+ binding to the regulatory sites on TnCDanz. However, when TnCDanz was present in its complex with either TnI alone or with TnI-TnT, the increase in midpoint free Ca2+ was increased by 3.5-fold. We tested whether this potentiation in the effect of acidic pH on Ca2+ binding to TnC is due to a pH-induced alteration in the binding of TnI to TnC. A decrease in pH from 7.0 to 6.5 was associated with a halving of the affinity of TnI for TnC. We also probed the effect of acidic pH on TnI. This was done (i) by measuring the intrinsic fluorescence of tryptophan residues in TnI alone and (ii) by measuring fluorescence of TnI (in the Tn complex) labeled at Cys-133 with 5-iodoacetamidofluorescein. A drop in pH from 7.0 to 6.5 was associated with a 15% decrease in intrinsic fluorescence and with a 30% decrease in the fluorescence of the 5-iodoacetamidofluorescein probe. We conclude, therefore, that while protons and Ca2+ may directly affect Ca2+ binding to regulatory sites on fast skeletal TnC, the effect of acidic pH on TnC Ca2+ binding is amplified in the TnI-TnC and Tn complexes by a pH-related effect on the affinity of TnI for TnC.  相似文献   

2.
The Ca2+ binding component (TnC) of troponin has been selectively labeled with either a spin label, N-(1-oxyl-2,2,6,6-tetramethyl-4-piperidinyl) iodoacetamide, or with a fluorescent probe, S-mercuric-N-dansyl cysteine, presumably at its single cysteine residue (Cys-98) in order to probe the interactions of TnC with divalent metals and with other subunits of troponin. The modified protein has the same Ca2+ binding properties as native TnC (Potter, J. D., and Gergely, J. (1975) J. Biol. Chem. 250, 4628), viz. two Ca2+ binding sites at which Mg2+ appears to compete (Ca2+-Mg2+ sites, KCa = 2 X 10(7) M-1) and two sites at which Mg2+ does not compete (Ca2+-specific sites, KCa = 2 X 10(5) M-1). Either Ca2+ or Mg2+ alters the ESR spectrum of spin-labeled TnC in a manner that indicates a decrease in the mobility of the label, Ca2+ having a slightly greater effect. In systems containing both Ca2+ and Mg2+ the mobility of the spin label is identical with that in systems containing Ca2+ alone. The binding constants for Ca2+ and Mg2+ deduced from ESR spectral changes are 10(7) and 10(3) M-1, respectively, and the apparent affinity for Ca2+ decreases by about an order of magnitude on adding 2 mM Mg2+. Thus, the ESR spectral change is associated with binding of Ca2+ to one or both of the Ca2+-Mg2+ sites. Addition of Ca2+ to the binary complexes of spin-labeled TnC with either troponin T (TnT) or troponin I (TnI) produces greater reduction in the mobility of the spin label than in the case of spin-labeled TnC alone, and in the case of the complex with TnI the affinity for Ca2+ is increased by an order of magnitude. The fluorescence of dansyl (5-dimethylaminonaphthalene-1-sulfonyl)-labeled TnC is enhanced by Ca2+ binding to both high and low affinity sites with apparent binding constants of 2.6 X 10(7) M-1 and 2.9 X 10(5) M-1, respectively, calculated from the transition midpoints. The presence of 2 mM Mg2+, which produces no effect on dansyl fluorescence itself, in contrast to its effect on the spin label, shifts the high affinity constant to 2 X 10(6) M-1. Spectral changes produced by Ca2+ binding to the TnC-TnI complex furnish evidence that the affinity of TnC for Ca2+ is increased in the complex. The reactivity of Cys-98 to the labels and to 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) (Nbs2) is decreased by Ca2+ or Mg2+ both with native TnC and in 6 M urea. The reaction rate between Cys-98 and Nbs2 decreases to one-half the maximal value at a Ca2+ concentration that suggests binding to the Ca2+-Mg2+ sites. Formation of a binary complex between TnI and TnC reduces the rate of reaction, and there is a further reduction by Ca2+. The effect of Ca2+ takes place at concentrations that are 1 order of magnitude lower than in the case of TnC alone. These results suggest that the Ca2+ binding site adjacent to Cys-98 is one of the Ca2+-Mg2+ binding sites.  相似文献   

3.
The interactions between troponin subunits have been studied by intrinsic fluorescence and electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroscopy. The tryptophan fluorescence of troponin T (TnT) and troponin I (TnI) when complexed with troponin C (TnC) undergoes a Ca2+-dependent transition. The midpoints of such spectral changes occur at pCa approximately equal to 6, suggesting that the conformational change of TnT and TnI is induced by Ca2+ binding to the low-affinity sites of TnC. When TnC is labelled at Cys-98 with a maleimide spin probe (MSL), the spin signal is sensitive to Ca2+ binding to both the high and the low-affinity sites of TnC in the presence of either or both of the other two troponin subunits. Since Cys-98 is located in the vicinity of one of the high-affinity sites, these results are indicative of a long-range interaction between the two halves of the TnC molecule. Our earlier kinetic studies [Wang, C.-L. A., Leavis, P. C. & Gergely, J. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 9175-9177] have shown such interactions in TnC alone. Since the ESR spectral change associated with metal binding to the low-affinity sites is only observed when MSL-TnC is complexed with TnT and/or TnI, this long-range interaction within TnC appears to be mediated through the other troponin subunits.  相似文献   

4.
The Ca(2+)-dependence of structural changes in troponin-C (TnC) has been detected by monitoring the fluorescence from TnC labeled at Methionine-25, in the NH2-terminal domain, with danzylaziridine (TnC-DANZ) and then exchanged for endogenous TnC in glycerinated single fibers. The fluorescence-pCa relation obtained from fibers stretched to a sarcomere length greater than 4.0 microns evidenced two transitions: a small one, attributable to the binding of Ca2+ to the high affinity, Ca(2+)-Mg(2+)-binding sites of TnC; and a large one, attributable to the binding of Ca2+ to the low affinity, Ca(2+)-specific binding sites of TnC. In the fluorescence-pCa relation determined with fibers set to a sarcomere length of 2.4 microns, hence obtained in the presence of cycling cross-bridges, the large transition had the same Ca(2+)-dependence as did the development of tension. These results indicate that the NH2-terminal globular domain of TnC is modified by the binding of Ca2+ to sites located in both globular domains and that the structural changes in TnC resulting from the binding of Ca2+ to the low-affinity sites, but not to the high-affinity sites, are directly associated with the triggering of contraction.  相似文献   

5.
The muscle thin filament protein troponin (Tn) regulates contraction of vertebrate striated muscle by conferring Ca2+ sensitivity to the interaction of actin and myosin. Troponin C (TnC), the Ca2+ binding subunit of Tn contains two homologous domains and four divalent cation binding sites. Two structural sites in the C-terminal domain of TnC bind either Ca2+ or Mg2+, and two regulatory sites in the N-terminal domain are specific for Ca2+. Interactions between TnC and the inhibitory Tn subunit troponin I (TnI) are of central importance to the Ca2+ regulation of muscle contraction and have been intensively studied. Much remains to be learned, however, due mainly to the lack of a three-dimensional structure for TnI. In particular, the role of amino acid residues near the C-terminus of TnI is not well understood. In this report, we prepared a mutant TnC which contains a single Trp-26 residue in the N-terminal, regulatory domain. We used fluorescence lifetime and quenching measurements to monitor Ca2+- and Mg2+-dependent changes in the environment of Trp-26 in isolated TnC, as well as in binary complexes of TnC with a Trp-free mutant of TnI or a truncated form of this mutant, TnI(1-159), which lacked the C-terminal 22 amino acid residues of TnI. We found that full-length TnI and TnI(1-159) affected Trp-26 similarly when all four binding sites of TnC were occupied by Ca2+. When the regulatory Ca2+-binding sites in the N-terminal domain of TnC were vacant and the structural sites in the C-terminal domain of were occupied by Mg2+, we found significant differences between full-length TnI and TnI(1-159) in their effect on Trp-26. Our results provide the first indica- tion that the C-terminus of TnI may play an important role in the regulation of vertebrate striated muscle through Ca2+-dependent interactions with the regula- tory domain of TnC.  相似文献   

6.
Glycerinated rabbit fast skeletal muscle fibers were chemically skinned with 1% Brij 35 and partially depleted of endogenous troponin C subunit (TnC) by exposure of the fibers to EDTA (Zot, H. G., and Potter, J. D. (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 257, 7678-7683). The TnC-depleted fibers exhibited a decrease in maximal tension that was mostly restored by readdition of TnC or by the addition of the fluorescent 5-dimethylaminonaphthalene-1-sulfonyl aziridine analogue, TnCDanz. TnCDanz is known to undergo an increase in fluorescence intensity when Ca2+ binds to the two low affinity Ca2+-specific regulatory sites of TnC. Steady-state fractional fluorescence and tension changes were measured simultaneously as a function of Ca2+. The Ca2+ sensitivity of the fluorescence curve was about 0.6 log unit greater than the tension curve. This difference in sensitivity could be explained if separate conformational states of TnC, brought about by Ca2+ binding to the Ca2+-specific sites, produce the fluorescence and tension changes. TnC-depleted fibers were also reconstituted with the fluorescent 2-[(4'-iodoacetamido)analino]naphthalene-6-sulfonic acid analogue, cardiac TnCIaans, which undergoes an increase in fluorescence intensity when Ca2+ binds to the single Ca2+- specific regulatory site. The steady-state fractional fluorescence and tension curves for fibers reconstituted with cardiac TnCIaans had nearly the same Ca2+ sensitivity. The steady-state fractional fluorescence of myofibrils reconstituted with TnCDanz was found to have a greater sensitivity to Ca2+ than the simultaneously measured ATPase. In all cases paired fractional fluorescence and activity curves tended to have parallel dependence on Ca2+. These procedures make it possible to study the Ca2+ binding properties of the Ca2+- specific sites in intact myofibrils and skinned fibers; the results presented suggest that the Ca2+ affinity of the Ca2+-specific sites of troponin are reduced in the thin filament compared to that of troponin in solution.  相似文献   

7.
We examined the tryptophan decay kinetics of sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase using frequency-domain fluorescence. Consistent with earlier reports on steady-state fluorescence intensity, our intensity decays reveal a reproducible and statistically significant 2% increase in the mean decay time due to calcium binding to specific sites involved in enzyme activation. This Ca2+ effect could not be eliminated with acrylamide quenching, which suggests a global effect of calcium on the Ca2+-ATPase, as opposed to a specific effect on a single water-accessible tryptophan residue. The tryptophan anisotropy decays indicate substantial rapid loss of anisotropy, which can be the result of either intramolecular energy transfer or a change in segmental flexibility of the ATPase protein. Energy transfer from tryptophan to TNP-ATP in the nucleotide binding domain, or to IEADANS on Cys-670 and -674, indicates that most tryptophan residues are 30 A or further away from these sites and that this distance is not decreased by Ca2+. In light of known structural features of the Ca2+-ATPase, the tryptophan fluorescence changes are attributed to stabilization of clustered transmembrane helices resulting from calcium binding.  相似文献   

8.
Although regulatory Ca2+-binding domains of calmodulin (CaM) and troponin C (TnC) are similar, it is interesting that agents that act as CaM antagonists appear to be TnC "agonists" in that they sensitize cardiac myofilaments to activation by Ca2+ (El-Saleh, S., and Solaro, R. J. (1987) Biophys. J. 51, 325 (abstr.). This indicates that the effects of agents that react with Ca2+-binding proteins may depend on protein-protein interactions involved in a particular Ca2+-dependent process. In experiments described here, we have explored this idea by testing effects of calmidazolium (CDZ), a potent calmodulin antagonist on striated muscle myofilaments regulated by cardiac TnC, skeletal TnC, and CaM. CDZ was shown to increase submaximal calcium activation of myofilament force and ATPase activity in both cardiac and skeletal muscle, but the effect was greater in the case of the cardiac preparations. In the presence of 10 microM CDZ, the free Ca2+ giving half-maximal activation was reduced to about 60% of the control value in the case of cardiac myofilaments. Analogous differential effects of CDZ were also seen in studies in which we measured direct effects of CDZ on Ca2+-dependent fluorescence changes of cardiac TnC and skeletal TnC labeled with probes reporting Ca2+ binding to the regulatory sites. Measurements were also done with myofibrillar preparations of psoas muscle in which the native skeletal TnC was removed and exchanged with cardiac TnC and CaM, both of which could substitute for skeletal TnC as a regulatory protein. CDZ was more effective in sensitizing Ca2+-dependent MgATPase activity of skeletal myofibrils containing CaM than in preparations containing the native TnC. However, CDZ was most effective in its Ca2+-sensitizing effect in the case of the preparations containing cardiac TnC. Our results indicate that effects of agents that bind to Ca2+-binding proteins depend not only on the particular variant, but also on the specific environment in which the Ca2+-binding proteins operate.  相似文献   

9.
Ca2+ regulation of vertebrate striated muscle contraction is initiated by conformational changes in the N-terminal, regulatory domain of the Ca2+-binding protein troponin C (TnC), altering the interaction of TnC with the other subunits of troponin complex, TnI and TnT. We have investigated the role of acidic amino acid residues in the N-terminal, regulatory domain of TnC in binding to the inhibitory region (residues 96-116) of TnI. We constructed three double mutants of TnC (E53A/E54A, E60A/E61A and E85A/D86A), in which pairs of acidic amino acid residues were replaced by neutral alanines, and measured their affinities for synthetic inhibitory peptides. These peptides had the same amino acid sequence as TnI segments 95-116, 95-119 or 95-124, except that the natural Phe-100 of TnI was replaced by a tryptophan residue. Significant Ca2+-dependent increases in the affinities of the two longer peptides, but not the shortest one, to TnC could be detected by changes in Trp fluorescence. In the presence of Ca2+, all the mutant TnCs showed about the same affinity as wild-type TnC for the inhibitory peptides. In the presence of Mg2+ and EGTA, the N-terminal, regulatory Ca2+-binding sites of TnC are unoccupied. Under these conditions, the affinity of TnC(E85A/D86A) for inhibitory peptides was about half that of wild-type TnC, while the other two mutants had about the same affinity. These results imply a Ca2+-dependent change in the interaction of TnC Glu-85 and/or Asp-86 with residues (117-124) on the C-terminal side of the inhibitory region of TnI. Since Glu-85 and/or Asp-86 of TnC have also been demonstrated to be involved in Ca2+-dependent regulation through interaction with TnT, this region of TnC must be critical for troponin function.  相似文献   

10.
A large-scale preparation method for bovine brain 28-kDa cholecalcin-like protein is described. Flow dialysis binding studies revealed that the protein binds at least 3 mol of Ca2+/mol of protein. The protein undergoes conformational changes on binding calcium as shown by UV differential absorption spectroscopy, near and far UV circular dichroism, and intrinsic fluorescence. Circular dichroism (CD) studies in the far UV indicate an apparent increase in helical content in the presence of Ca2+. The effect of calcium on the protein structure is nearly maximum for 1 Ca2+ bound/protein molecule. UV differential absorption studies on the binding of the Ca2+ agonist Tb3+ and Tb3+ luminescence induced by energy Trp----Tb3+ transfer indicate that Tb3+ binds to two higher affinity Ca2+-binding sites. These sites are probably very close to the single Trp residue. Analysis of the fluorescence parameters of the single tryptophan residue in the apoprotein and its accessibility to ionic and neutral quenchers suggests that this residue is located in a highly hydrophobic domain on the protein surface.  相似文献   

11.
J E Van Eyk  C M Kay  R S Hodges 《Biochemistry》1991,30(41):9974-9981
The cardiac and skeletal TnI inhibitory regions have identical sequences except at position 110 which contains Pro in the skeletal sequence and Thr in the cardiac sequence. The effect of the synthetic TnI inhibitory peptides [skeletal TnI peptide (104-115), cardiac TnI peptide (137-148), and a single Gly-substituted analogue at position 110] on the secondary structure of skeletal and cardiac TnC was investigated. The biphasic increases in ellipticity and tyrosine fluorescence were analyzed to determine the Ca2+ binding constants for the high- and low-affinity Ca2+ binding sites of TnC. Importantly, the skeletal and cardiac TnI peptides altered Ca2+ binding at the low-affinity sites of TnC, but the magnitude and direction of the pCa shifts depended on whether the peptides were bound to skeletal or cardiac TnC. For example, binding of skeletal TnI peptide to skeletal TnC (monitored by CD) caused a pCa shift of +0.30 unit such that a lower Ca2+ concentration was required to fill sites I and II, while binding of this peptide to cardiac TnC caused a pCa shift of -0.35 unit such that a higher Ca2+ concentration was required to fill site II. This is the first report of the alteration at the low-affinity regulatory sites (located in the N-terminal domain) by the skeletal TnI inhibitory peptide, even though the primary peptide binding site is located in the C-terminal domain of TnC, a finding which strongly indicates that there is communication between the two halves of the TnC molecule.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
S T Ferreira 《Biochemistry》1989,28(26):10066-10072
The fluorescence properties of the single tryptophan residue in whiting parvalbumin were used to probe the dynamics of the protein matrix. Ca2+ binding caused a blue-shift in the emission (from lambda max = 339 to 315 nm) and a 2.5-fold increase in quantum yield. The fluorescence decay was nonexponential in both Ca2(+)-free and Ca2(+)-bound parvalbumin and was best described by Lorentzian lifetime distributions centered around two components: a major long-lived component at 2-5 ns and a small subnanosecond component. Raising the temperature from 8 to 45 degrees C resulted in a decrease in both the center (average) and width (dispersion) of the major lifetime distribution component, whereas the center, width, and fractional intensity of the fast component increased with temperature. Arrhenius activation energies of 1.3 and 0.3 kcal/mol were obtained in the absence and in the presence of Ca2+, respectively, from the temperature dependence of the center of the major lifetime distribution component. Direct anisotropy decay measurements of local tryptophan rotations yielded an activation energy of 2.3 kcal/mol in Ca2(+)-depleted parvalbumin and indicated a correlation between rotational rates and lifetime distribution parameters (center and width). Ca2+ binding produced a decrease in the width of the major lifetime distribution component and a decrease in tryptophan rotational mobility within the protein. There was a rough correlation between these two parameters with changes in Ca2+ and temperature, so that both measurements may be taken to indicate that the structure of Ca2(+)-bound parvalbumin was more rigid than in Ca2(+)-depleted parvalbumin.  相似文献   

13.
Interactions of Ca2+ binding proteins, pike (Esox lucius) parvalbumins pI 4.2 and 5.0, and bovine and human alpha-lactalbumins, with dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine vesicles were studied by means of scanning microcalorimetry and intrinsic tyrosine and tryptophan fluorescence methods. The interactions of pike parvalbumins are modulated by Ca2+ and Mg2+ binding to the protein and induce some changes in the physical properties of both the proteins and liposomes. Liposomes increased thermal stability of Ca2+-loaded parvalbumin and decreased thermal stability of both Mg2+-loaded and metal-free protein. The interaction of parvalbumin with liposomes affects the phase transition from gel to liquid-crystalline state in liposomes. Ca2+-loaded alpha-lactalbumin interacts with liposomes in its native state while the metal-free protein binds to the liposomes mainly in its thermally denatured state. The results of the microcalorimetric and spectrofluorometric studies are supported by data obtained by means of gel-chromatography on Sepharose 4B. It may be suggested that these metal-modulated interactions of Ca2+-binding proteins with membranes have some functional significance.  相似文献   

14.
The fluorescence titration curve of skeletal muscle troponin containing TnI with 2-[4'-iodoacetamido)anilino)naphthalene-6-sulfonic acid-labeled Cys-48 and/or Cys-64 was composed of two transition curves. One transition occurred at the pCa region higher than 8.0, and the other between pCa 8.0 and 6.0. The transition at the lower pCa region had a midpoint of pCa 6.85, and the midpoint did not depend on Mg2+. The time course of the fluorescence change subsequent to the rapid pCa-jump of the solution was biphasic. The fast phase was due to the transition at the lower pCa region, and the rate constant of the process was characteristic of the conformational change of the protein induced by Ca2+ binding to the low affinity Ca2+-binding sites of TnC. The slow phase was from the transition at the higher pCa region, and its rate constant was characteristic of the conformational change of the protein induced by Ca2+ binding to the high affinity Ca2+-binding sites of TnC. Therefore we can conclude that the fluorescence probe bound to Cys-48 and/or Cys-64 of TnI detects the conformational change of the Tn complex induced by Ca2+ binding to both the low and high affinity Ca2+-binding sites of TnC. The fluorescence probe bound to Cys-133 of TnI or Met residues of TnT detected the conformational change of the Tn complex induced by Ca2+ binding to the low affinity Ca2+-binding sites of TnC.  相似文献   

15.
The Ca2+-binding component of troponin (TnC) and its proteolytic fragments containing Ca2+-binding sites I-III (TH1) or sites III and IV (TR2C) have been labeled with the fluorescent probes dansylaziridine (DANZ) at methionine 25 or 5-(iodoacetamidoethyl)amino-naphthalene-1-sulfonic acid (AEDANS) at cysteine-98. These probes report binding of Ca2+ to the low and high affinity sites, respectively. Fluorescence changes as a function of [Ca2+] were measured for the free peptides, their complexes with troponin I + troponin T, and these complexes bound to actin-tropomyosin in the presence of Mg2+ and ATP with and without myosin. An apparent Hill coefficient of 1.0-1.1 has been obtained for the Ca2+-induced fluorescence changes in TnC, its fragments, and their ternary complexes regardless of the label used. When a ternary complex containing appropriately labeled TnC or its fragment is bound to the actin-tropomyosin complex, the Hill coefficient for the titration of the low affinity sites increases to 1.5-1.6 and further increases to greater than 2 in the presence of myosin. To interpret the apparent Hill coefficients, we used a model containing two binding sites and a single reporter of the conformational change. Hill coefficients between 1.0 and 1.2 can be obtained for the fluorescence change without true cooperativity in metal binding, depending on the mechanism of the fluorescence change; i.e. the contribution of the singly or doubly occupied species to the fluorescence change. A Hill coefficient between 1.2 and 2, however, always indicates cooperativity in binding independently of the mechanism. Thus, our finding that fluorescence titrations of Ca2+ binding to TnCDANZ bound to actin-tropomyosin exhibit a Hill coefficient of 1.5 in the absence of myosin and 2.4 in its presence indicates the existence of true positive cooperativity in metal binding to sites I and II. No cooperativity was observed for AEDANS-labeled complexes that reflect Ca2+-binding to the high affinity sites. Plots of the Ca2+ dependence of myosin ATPase activity activated by actin-tropomyosin in the presence of any of the troponin complexes used had apparent Hill coefficients of approximately 4. The higher value suggests cooperative interactions in the activation of ATPase beyond those involved in Ca2+-binding to the Ca2+-specific sites.  相似文献   

16.
The calcium-induced conformational changes of the 108-amino acid residue proteins, cod III parvalbumin and oncomodulin, were compared using tryptophan as a sensitive spectroscopic probe. As native oncomodulin is devoid of tryptophan, site-specific mutagenesis was performed to create a mutant protein in which tryptophan was placed in the identical position (residue 102) as the single tryptophan residue in cod III parvalbumin. The results showed that in the region probed by tryptophan-102, cod III parvalbumin experienced significantly greater changes in conformation upon decalcification compared to the oncomodulin mutant, F102W. Addition of 1 eq of Ca2+ produced greater than 90% of the total fluorescence response in F102W, while in cod III parvalbumin, only 74% of the total was observed. Cod III parvalbumin displayed a negligible response upon Mg2+ addition. In contrast, F102W did respond to Mg2+, but the response was considerably less when compared to Ca2+ addition. Time-resolved fluorescence showed that the tryptophan in both proteins existed in at least two conformational states in the presence of Ca2+ and at least three conformational states in its absence. Comparison with quantum yield measurements indicated that the local electronic environment of the tryptophan was significantly different in the two proteins. Collectively, these results demonstrate that both cod III parvalbumin and oncomodulin undergo Ca2(+)-specific conformational changes. However, oncomodulin is distinct from cod III parvalbumin in terms of the electronic environment of the hydrophobic core, the magnitude of the Ca2(+)-induced conformational changes, and the number of calcium ions required to modulate the major conformational changes.  相似文献   

17.
Troponin I (TnI) from rabbit white skeletal muscle was labeled at cysteines 48 and 64 with the fluorescent reagent N-(1-pyrene)maleimide. The fluorescence spectra of pyrene-labeled TnI (pyr-TnI) exhibit peaks characteristic of pyrene in its monomeric form and an additional peak resulting from formation of excited dimers (excimers), indicating that the labeled cysteines are close together. Formation of a pyr-TnI-TnC complex in the absence of Ca2+ has little effect on the spectrum, but when Ca2+ is bound to the low-affinity sites of TnC there is a substantial decrease in excimer and a corresponding increase in monomer fluorescence. The involvement of the low-affinity sites in the Ca2+-induced effect is consistent with the fact that Mg2+ has no effect on pyrene fluorescence. On rapid mixing of the pyr-TnI-TnC complex with Ca2+ in a stopped-flow apparatus, most of the excimer decrease is complete within the instrumental dead time, indicating a rate constant k greater than 350 s-1, which is comparable to that of the conformational change in TnC resulting from Ca2+ binding to the low-affinity sites. Rapid mixing of the Mg2-TnC-pyr-TnI complex with Ca2+ yields similar results, suggesting that the type of metal ion present at the high-affinity sites has little, if any, effect on the probe. It has been suggested previously that Cys 48 and 64 are located in a TnT-binding region of TnI (Chong P.C.S. and Hodges, R.S. (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 255, 3757). Our results suggest that a Ca2+-induced structural change in the TnI-binding region of TnC could be transmitted to TnT by affecting the TnT-binding region of TnI as part of the chain of events in the regulation of muscle contraction.  相似文献   

18.
Fluorescence titration curves of 2-[4'-iodoacetamido)anilino)naphthalene-6-sulfonic acid-labeled troponin (IAANS-labeled Tn) and troponin-1-anilinonaphthalene-8-sulfonic acid (Tn-ANS) complex indicated that the fluorescent moiety, IAANS or ANS, detects conformational change of troponin I (TnI) or Tn due to the Ca2+ binding or removal reaction with the low affinity Ca2+-binding sites of troponin C (TnC) component. A fluorescence stopped-flow study showed that the kinetic behavior of IAANS-labeled Tn reflects a change in state of the TnI component induced by the Ca2+ binding or removal reaction with the low affinity Ca2+-binding sites of TnC component. The state change of TnI induced by the Ca2+ binding was complete within the instrumental dead time. On the other hand, that induced by the Ca2+ removal had a rate constant of around 13 s-1. ANS, which is noncovalently bound to Tn, reflects the kinetic properties of both the TnI component and the low affinity Ca2+-binding region of TnC component. The fluorescence intensity change of ANS induced by Ca2+ binding to the low affinity Ca2+-binding sites of TnC was complete within the instrumental dead time, while that induced by the Ca2+ removal from the same sites was biphasic. The rate constants of the biphasic process were found to be 62 +/- 7 s-1 and 16 +/- 4 s-1. The former value corresponds to the rate constant of the Ca2+ removal reaction from the low affinity Ca2+-binding sites of TnC component, and the latter value to the rate constant observed in the case of IAANS-labeled Tn. Based on these experimental results and on the discussion in our previous paper (Iio, T. & Kondo, H. (1981) J. Biochem. 90, 163-175), we have refined the two-way information-transfer mechanism which we previously proposed in order to explain the biological function of Tn.  相似文献   

19.
Interactions of the calcium binding proteins, parvalbumin from cod muscles, alpha-lactalbumin from cow milk and calmodulin from bovine brain, with Cu2+ and Zn2+ ions have been studied by intrinsic fluorescence and microcalorimetry methods. It was revealed that parvalbumin binds one Cu2+ ion per molecule with association constant from 10(5) to 10(6) M-1. Zn2+ ions seem to compete for the same site which does not coincide with the two Ca2+ and Mg2+ binding sites. alpha-Lactalbumin contains from 2 to 4 Cu2+ and Zn2+ binding sites, the number and affinities of which depend on Ca2+ concentration. Calmodulin has similar Cu2+ and Zn2+ binding sites. The binding of Cu2+ and Zn2+ ions to parvalbumin and alpha-lactalbumin changes the shape and position of their thermal denaturation transitions. The results obtained together with the literature data show that the ability to interact with Cu2+ and Zn2+ ions is a property inherent to many calcium-binding proteins, which may play a physiological role for some of them.  相似文献   

20.
The rate constant of the conformational change of skeletal troponin C (TnC) induced by the Ca2+ binding reaction with the high-affinity Ca2+-binding sites was determined in the presence of Mg2+ by the fluorescence stopped-flow method in 0.1 M KCl, 50 mM Na-cacodylate-HCl pH 7.0 at 20 degrees C. The [MgCl2] dependence of the rate constants of the observed biphasic conformational change leveled off at the high [MgCl2] region: the rate constants were 60 +/- 9 s-1 and 8 +/- 2 s-1, respectively. These values are larger than the rate constants of the biphasic fluorescence intensity change of TnC induced by Mg2+ removal reaction at the high-affinity Ca2+-binding sites (37 +/- 7 s-1 and 3.0 +/- 0.6 s-1) under the same experimental conditions. These results suggest that the Ca2+-Mg2+ exchange reaction at the high-affinity Ca2+-binding sites is faster than the resultant conformational change accompanying the fluorescence intensity change. Based on these results, we also reexamine the molecular kinetic mechanism of the conformational change of the protein induced by the Mg2+ binding or removal reaction with the high affinity Ca2+-binding sites of skeletal TnC.  相似文献   

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