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1.
This study examines the characteristics of binding of berberine to the human telomeric d[AG(3)(T(2)AG(3))(3)] quadruplex. By employing UV-visible spectroscopy, fluorescence spectroscopy and isothermal titration calorimetry, we found that the binding affinity of berberine to the human telomeric quadruplex is 10(6). The complete thermodynamic profile for berberine binding to the quadruplex, at 25 degrees C, shows a small negative enthalpy (DeltaH) of -1.7 kcal.mol(-1), an entropy change with TDeltaS of +6.5 kcal.mol(-1), and an overall favorable free energy (DeltaG) of -8.2 kcal.mol(-1) .Through the temperature dependence of DeltaH, we obtained a heat capacity (DeltaC(p)) of -94 (+/- 5) cal.mol(-1).K(-1). The osmotic stress method revealed that there is an uptake of 13 water molecules in the complex relative to the free reactants. Furthermore, the molecular modeling studies on different quadruplex-berberine complexes show that berberine stacking at the external G-quartet is mainly aided by the pi-pi interaction and the stabilization of the high negative charge density of O6 of guanines by the positively charged N7 of berberine. The theoretical heat capacity (DeltaC(p)) values for quadruplex-berberine models are -89 and -156 cal.mol(-1).K(-1).  相似文献   

2.
The peripheral subunit-binding domain (PSBD) of the dihydrolipoyl acetyltransferase (E2, EC 2.3.1.12) binds tightly but mutually exclusively to dihydrolipoyl dehydrogenase (E3, EC 1.8.1.4) and pyruvate decarboxylase (E1, EC 1.2.4.1) in the pyruvate dehydrogenase multienzyme complex of Bacillus stearothermophilus. Isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) experiments demonstrated that the enthalpies of binding (DeltaH degrees ) of both E3 and E1 with the PSBD varied with salt concentration, temperature, pH, and buffer composition. There is little significant difference in the free energies of binding (DeltaG degrees = -12.6 kcal/mol for E3 and = -12.9 kcal/mol for E1 at pH 7.4 and 25 degrees C). However, the association with E3 was characterized by a small, unfavorable enthalpy change (DeltaH degrees = +2.2 kcal/mol) and a large, positive entropy change (TDeltaS degrees = +14.8 kcal/mol), whereas that with E1 was accompanied by a favorable enthalpy change (DeltaH degrees = -8.4 kcal/mol) and a less positive entropy change (TDeltaS degrees = +4.5 kcal/mol). Values of DeltaC(p) of -316 cal/molK and -470 cal/molK were obtained for the binding of E3 and E1, respectively. The value for E3 was not compatible with the DeltaC(p) calculated from the nonpolar surface area buried in the crystal structure of the E3-PSBD complex. In this instance, a large negative DeltaC(p) is not indicative of a classical hydrophobic interaction. In differential scanning calorimetry experiments, the midpoint melting temperature (T(m)) of E3 increased from 91 degrees C to 97.1 degrees C when it was bound to PSBD, and that of E1 increased from 65.2 degrees C to 70.0 degrees C. These high T(m) values eliminate unfolding as a major source of the anomalous DeltaC(p) effects at the temperatures (10-37 degrees C) used for the ITC experiments.  相似文献   

3.
Anti-DNA antibodies play important roles in the pathogenesis of autoimmune diseases. They also represent a unique and relatively unexplored class of DNA-binding protein. Here, we present a study of conformational changes induced by DNA binding to an anti-ssDNA Fab known as DNA-1. Three crystal structures are reported: a complex of DNA-1 bound to dT3, and two structures of the ligand-free Fab. One of the ligand-free structures was determined from crystals exhibiting perfect hemihedral twinning, and the details of structure determination are provided. Unexpectedly, five residues (H97-H100A) in the apex of heavy chain complementarity-determining region 3 (HCDR3) are disordered in both ligand-free structures. Ligand binding also caused a 2-4A shift of the backbone of Tyr L92 and ordering of the L92 side-chain. In contrast, these residues are highly ordered in the Fab/dT3 complex, where Tyr H100 and Tyr H100A form intimate stacking interactions with DNA bases, and L92 forms the 5' end of the binding site. The structures suggest that HCDR3 is very flexible and adopts multiple conformations in the ligand-free state. These results are discussed in terms of induced fit and pre-existing equilibrium theories of ligand binding. Our results allow new interpretations of existing thermodynamic and mutagenesis data in terms of conformational entropy and the volume of conformational space accessible to HCDR3 in the ligand-free state. In the context of autoimmune disease, plasticity of the ligand-free antibody could provide a mechanism by which anti-DNA antibodies bind diverse host ligands, and thereby contribute to pathogenicity.  相似文献   

4.
Kozlov AG  Lohman TM 《Biochemistry》2006,45(16):5190-5205
We have previously shown that the linkage of temperature-dependent protonation and DNA base unstacking equilibria contribute significantly to both the negative enthalpy change (DeltaH(obs)) and the negative heat capacity change (DeltaC(p,obs)) for Escherichia coli SSB homotetramer binding to single-stranded (ss) DNA. Using isothermal titration calorimetry we have now examined DeltaH(obs) over a much wider temperature range (5-60 degrees C) and as a function of monovalent salt concentration and type for SSB binding to (dT)(70) under solution conditions that favor the fully wrapped (SSB)(65) complex (monovalent salt concentration >or=0.20 M). Over this wider temperature range we observe a strongly temperature-dependent DeltaC(p,obs). The DeltaH(obs) decreases as temperature increases from 5 to 35 degrees C (DeltaC(p,obs) <0) but then increases at higher temperatures up to 60 degrees C (DeltaC(p,obs) >0). Both salt concentration and anion type have large effects on DeltaH(obs) and DeltaC(p,obs). These observations can be explained by a model in which SSB protein can undergo a temperature- and salt-dependent conformational transition (below 35 degrees C), the midpoint of which shifts to higher temperature (above 35 degrees C) for SSB bound to ssDNA. Anions bind weakly to free SSB, with the preference Br(-) > Cl(-) > F(-), and these anions are then released upon binding ssDNA, affecting both DeltaH(obs) and DeltaC(p,obs). We conclude that the experimentally measured values of DeltaC(p,obs) for SSB binding to ssDNA cannot be explained solely on the basis of changes in accessible surface area (ASA) upon complex formation but rather result from a series of temperature-dependent equilibria (ion binding, protonation, and protein conformational changes) that are coupled to the SSB-ssDNA binding equilibrium. This is also likely true for many other protein-nucleic acid interactions.  相似文献   

5.
Isothermal titration calorimetry has been applied to characterize the thermodynamics of ligand binding to wild-type lactose permease (LacY) and a mutant (C154G) that strongly favors an inward facing conformation. The affinity of wild-type or mutant LacY for ligand and the change in free energy (DeltaG) upon binding are similar. However, with the wild type, the change in free energy upon binding is due primarily to an increase in the entropic free energy component (TDeltaS), whereas in marked contrast, an increase in enthalpy (DeltaH) is responsible for DeltaG in the mutant. Thus, wild-type LacY behaves as if there are multiple ligand-bound conformational states, whereas the mutant is severely restricted. The findings also indicate that the structure of the mutant represents a conformational intermediate in the overall transport cycle.  相似文献   

6.
The mechanism of recognition of proteins and peptides by antibodies and the factors determining binding affinity and specificity are mediated by essentially the same features. However, additional effects of the usually unfolded and flexible solution structure of peptide ligands have to be considered. In an earlier study we designed and optimized six peptides (pepI to pepVI) mimicking the discontinuous binding site of interleukin-10 for the anti-interleukin-10 monoclonal antibody (mab) CB/RS/1. Three of them were selected for analysis of their solution conformation by circular dichroism measurements. The peptides differ in the content of alpha-helices and in the inducibility of helical secondary structures by trifluoroethanol. These properties, however, do not correlate with the binding affinity. PepVI, a 32-mer cyclic epitope mimic, has the highest affinity to mab CB/RS/1 identified to date. CD difference spectroscopy suggests an increase of the alpha-helix content of pepVI with complex formation. Binding of pepVI to mab CB/RS/1 is characterized by a large negative, favorable binding enthalpy and a smaller unfavorable loss of entropy (DeltaH degrees = -16.4 kcal x mol(-1), TDeltaS degrees = -6.9 kcal x mol(-1)) resulting in DeltaG degrees = -9.5 kcal x mol(-1) at 25 degrees C as determined by isothermal titration calorimetry. Binding of pepVI is enthalpically driven over the entire temperature range studied (10-35 degrees C). Complex formation is not accompanied by proton uptake or release. A negative heat capacity change DeltaC(p) of -0.354 kcal x mol(-1) x K(-1) was determined from the temperature dependence of DeltaH degrees. The selection of protein mimics with the observed thermodynamic properties is promoted by the applied identification and iterative optimization procedure.  相似文献   

7.
The interaction of natural (alginic and fulvic acids) and synthetic (polyacrylic acid 2.0 kDa) polyelectrolytes with some protonated polyamines [diamines: ethylendiamine, 1,4-diaminobutane (or putrescine), 1,5-diaminopentane (or cadaverine); triamines: N-(3-aminopropyl)-1,4-diaminobutane (or spermidine), diethylenetriamine; tetramine: N,N'-bis(3-aminopropyl)-1,4-diaminobutane (or spermine); pentamine: tetraethylene-pentamine; hexamine: pentaethylenehexamine] was studied at T=25 degrees C by potentiometry and calorimetry. Measurements were performed without supporting electrolyte, in order to avoid interference, and results were reported at I=0 mol L(-)(1). For all the systems, the formation of (am)L(2)H(i) species was found (am=amine; L=polyelectrolyte; i=1...4, depending on the amine considered). The stability of polyanion-polyammonium cation complexes is always significant, and for high-charged polycations, we observe a stability comparable to that of strong metal complexes. For example, by considering the formation reaction (am)H(i)+2L=(am)L(2)H(i) we found log K(i)=6.0, 6.5 and 10.8 for i=1, 2 and 3, respectively, in the system alginate-spermidine. Low and positive formation DeltaH(degrees) values indicate that the main contribution to the stability is entropic in nature. The sequestering ability of polyelectrolytes toward amines was modelled by a sigmoid Boltzman type equation. Some empirical relationships between stability, charges and DeltaG(degrees) and TDeltaS(degrees) are reported. Mean values per salt bridge of formation thermodynamic parameters (DeltaX(degrees) (n)) are DeltaG(degrees) (n)=-5.8+/-0.4, DeltaH degrees (n)=0.7+/-0.5 and TDeltaS(degrees) (n)=6.5+/-0.5 kJmol(-)(1) for all the systems studied in this work.  相似文献   

8.
A G Kozlov  T M Lohman 《Biochemistry》1999,38(22):7388-7397
Isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) was used to test the hypothesis that the relatively small enthalpy change (DeltaHobs) and large negative heat capacity change (DeltaCp,obs) observed for the binding of the Escherichia coli SSB protein to single-stranded (ss) oligodeoxyadenylates result from the temperature-dependent adenine base unstacking equilibrium that is thermodynamically coupled to binding. We have determined DeltaH1,obs for the binding of 1 mole of each of dT(pT)34, dC(pC)34, and dA(pA)34 to the SSB tetramer (20 mM NaCl at pH 8.1). For dT(pT)34 and dC(pC)34, we found large, negative values for DeltaH1,obs of -75 +/- 1 and -85 +/- 2 kcal/mol at 25 degrees C, with DeltaCp,obs values of -540 +/- 20 and -570 +/- 30 cal mol-1 K-1 (7-50 degrees C), respectively. However, for SSB-dA(pA)34 binding, DeltaH1,obs is considerably less negative (-14 +/- 1 kcal/mol at 25 degrees C), even becoming positive at temperatures below 13 degrees C, and DeltaCp,obs is nearly twice as large in magnitude (-1180 +/- 40 cal mol-1 K-1). These very different thermodynamic properties for SSB-dA(pA)34 binding appear to result from the fact that the bases in dA(pA)34 are more stacked at any temperature than are the bases in dC(pC)34 or dT(pT)34 and that the bases become unstacked within the SSB-ssDNA complexes. Therefore, the DeltaCp,obs for SSB-ssDNA binding has multiple contributions, a major one being the coupling to binding of a temperature-dependent conformational change in the ssDNA, although SSB binding to unstacked ssDNA still has an "intrinsic" negative DeltaCp,0. In general, such temperature-dependent changes in the conformational "end states" of interacting macromolecules can contribute significantly to both DeltaCp,obs and DeltaHobs.  相似文献   

9.
Protein ubiquitination involves a cascade of enzymatic steps where ubiquitin (Ub) is sequentially transferred as a thiolester intermediate from an E1 enzyme to an E2 enzyme and finally to the protein target with the help of a Ub-protein ligase. Protein ubiquitination brought about by the Ubc13-Mms2 (E2-E2) complex has a unique role in the cell, unrelated to protein degradation. The Mms2-Ubc13 heterodimer links Ub molecules to one another through an isopeptide bond between its own C-terminus and Lys-63 on another Ub. The role of Mms2 is to orient a target-bound Ub molecule such that its Lys-63 is proximal to the C-terminus of the Ub molecule that is covalently linked to the active site of Ubc13. To gain insight into the influence of protein dynamics on the affinity of Ub for Mms2, we have determined pico- to nanosecond time scale fluctuations of the main chain and methyl side chains of human Mms2 in the free and Ub-bound states using solution state (15)N and (2)H nuclear magnetic resonance relaxation measurements. Analysis of the relaxation data allows for a semiquantitative estimation of the conformational entropy change (TDeltaS(NMR)) for the main chain and side chain methyl groups of Mms2 upon binding Ub. The value of TDeltaS(NMR) for the main chain and side chain methyl groups of Mms2 is -8 +/- 2 and -2 +/- 2 kcal mol(-)(1), respectively. The experimental DeltaG(binding) for the Mms2.Ub complex is -6 kcal mol(-)(1). Estimation of DeltaG(binding) using an empirical structure-based approach that does not account for changes in main chain entropy yields a value of -17 +/- 2 kcal mol(-)(1). However, inclusion of TDeltaS(NMR) for the main chain of Mms2 increases the estimated DeltaG(binding) to -9 +/- 3 kcal mol(-)(1). Assuming that changes in Ub main chain dynamics contribute to TDeltaS(NMR) to the same extent as Mms2, the estimated DeltaG(binding) is further reduced to -1 +/- 4 kcal mol(-)(1), a value close to the experimental DeltaG(binding).  相似文献   

10.
M Yang  D Liu  D W Bolen 《Biochemistry》1999,38(34):11216-11222
This work determines the ratio of DeltaH(vH) /DeltaH(cal) for staphylococcal nuclease (SN) denaturation in guanidine hydrochloride (GdnHCl) to test whether GdnHCl-induced denaturation is two-state. Heats of mixing of SN as a function of [GdnHCl] were determined at pH 7.0 and 25 degrees C. The resulting plot of DeltaH(mix) vs [GdnHCl] exhibits a sigmoid shaped curve with linear pre- and post-denaturational base lines. Extending the pre- and post-denaturational lines to zero [GdnHCl] gives a calorimetric DeltaH (DeltaH(cal)) of 24.1 +/- 1.0 kcal/mol, for SN denaturation in the limit of zero GdnHCl concentration. Guanidine hydrochloride-induced denaturation Gibbs energy changes in the limit of zero denaturant concentration (DeltaG degrees (N)(-)(D)) at pH 7. 0 were determined for SN from fluorescence measurements at fixed temperatures over the range from 15 to 35 degrees C. Analysis of the resulting temperature-dependent DeltaG degrees (N)(-)(D) data defines a van't Hoff denaturation enthalpy change (DeltaH(vH)) of 26. 4 +/- 2.8 kcal/mol. The model-dependent van't Hoff DeltaH(vH) divided by the model-independent DeltaH(cal) gives a ratio of 1.1 +/- 0.1 for DeltaH(vH)/DeltaH(cal), a result that rules out the presence of thermodynamically important intermediate states in the GdnHCl-induced denaturation of SN. The likelihood that GdnHCl-induced SN denaturation involves a special type of two-state denaturation, known as a variable two-state process, is discussed in terms of the thermodynamic implications of the process.  相似文献   

11.
Ribonuclease was purified from Aspergillus niger SA-13-20 to homogeneity level by using (NH(4))(2)SO(4) precipitation, DEAE-cellulose anion-exchange chromatography, ultrafiltration and Sephacryl HR-200 chromatography. The molecular weight and isoelectric point of the enzyme was 40.1kDa and 5.3, respectively. The pH- and temperature-dependent kinetic parameters were determined. The RNase showed the strongest affinity with RNA as the substrate, and the highest catalytic efficiency for hydrolysis of the substrate at pH 3.5 and 65 degrees C. It exhibited Michaelis-Menten Kinetics with k(cat) of 118.1s(-1) and K(m) of 57.0 microg ml(-1), respectively. Thermodynamic parameters for catalysis and thermal denaturation were also determined. Activation energy (E(a)) for catalysis of A. niger SA-13-20 RNase was 50.31 kJ mol(-1) and free energy (DeltaG(#)), enthalpy (DeltaH(#)) and entropy (DeltaS(#)) of activation for catalysis of the enzyme at 65 degrees C were 69.76, 47.50 and -65.83 Jmol(-1)K(-1), respectively. Activation energy (E(a,d)) for denaturation of the enzyme was 200.53 kJ mol(-1) and free energy (DeltaG(d)(#)), enthalpy (DeltaH(d)(#)) and entropy (DeltaS(d)(#)) of activation for denaturation of the enzyme at 45 degrees C were 79.18 kJ mol(-1), 197.88 and 373.09 Jmol(-1)K(-1), respectively.  相似文献   

12.
Human apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) endonuclease (hAPE) initiates the repair of an abasic site (AP site). To gain insight into the mechanisms of damage recognition of hAPE, we conducted surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy to study the thermodynamics and kinetics of its interaction with substrate DNA containing an abasic site (AP DNA). The affinity of hAPE binding toward DNA increased as much as 6-fold after replacing a single adenine (equilibrium dissociation constant, K(D), 5.3 nm) with an AP site (K(D), 0.87 nm). The enzyme-substrate complex formation appears to be thermodynamically stabilized and favored by a large change in Gibbs free energy, DeltaG degrees (-50 kJ/mol). The latter is supported by a high negative change in enthalpy, DeltaH degrees (-43 kJ/mol) and also positive change in entropy, DeltaS degrees (24 J/(K mol)), and thus the binding process is spontaneous at all temperatures. Analysis of kinetic parameters reveals small enthalpy of activation for association, DeltaH degrees++(ass) (-17 kJ/mol), and activation energy for association (E(a), -14 kJ/mol) when compared with the enthalpy of activation for dissociation, DeltaH degrees++(diss) (26 kJ/mol), and activation energy in the reverse direction (E(d), 28 kJ/mol). Furthermore, varying concentration of KCl showed an increase in binding affinity at low concentration but complete abrogation of the binding at higher concentration, implying the importance of hydrophobic, but predominantly ionic, forces in the Michaelis-Menten complex formation. Thus, low activation energy and the enthalpy of activation, which are perhaps a result of dipole-dipole interactions, play critical roles in AP site binding of APE.  相似文献   

13.
Energetic basis of molecular recognition in a DNA aptamer   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The thermal stability and ligand binding properties of the L-argininamide-binding DNA aptamer (5'-GATCGAAACGTAGCGCCTTCGATC-3') were studied by spectroscopic and calorimetric methods. Differential calorimetric studies showed that the uncomplexed aptamer melted in a two-state reaction with a melting temperature T(m)=50.2+/-0.2 degrees C and a folding enthalpy DeltaH(0)(fold)=-49.0+/-2.1 kcal mol(-1). These values agree with values of T(m)=49.6 degrees C and DeltaH(0)(fold)=-51.2 kcal mol(-1) predicted for a simple hairpin structure. Melting of the uncomplexed aptamer was dependent upon salt concentration, but independent of strand concentration. The T(m) of aptamer melting was found to increase as L-argininamide concentrations increased. Analysis of circular dichroism titration data using a single-site binding model resulted in the determination of a binding free energy DeltaG(0)(bind)=-5.1 kcal mol(-1). Isothermal titration calorimetry studies revealed an exothermic binding reaction with DeltaH(0)(bind)=-8.7 kcal mol(-1). Combination of enthalpy and free energy produce an unfavorable entropy of -TDeltaS(0)=+3.6 kcal mol(-1). A molar heat capacity change of -116 cal mol(-1) K(-1) was determined from calorimetric measurements at four temperatures over the range of 15-40 degrees C. Molecular dynamics simulations were used to explore the structures of the unligated and ligated aptamer structures. From the calculated changes in solvent accessible surface areas of these structures a molar heat capacity change of -125 cal mol(-1) K(-1) was calculated, a value in excellent agreement with the experimental value. The thermodynamic signature, along with the coupled CD spectral changes, suggest that the binding of L-argininamide to its DNA aptamer is an induced-fit process in which the binding of the ligand is thermodynamically coupled to a conformational ordering of the nucleic acid.  相似文献   

14.
Binding constant data K degrees (T) are commonly subjected to van't Hoff analysis to extract estimates of DeltaH degrees, DeltaS degrees, and DeltaCP degrees for the process in question. When such analyses employ unweighted least-squares fitting of lnK degrees to an appropriate function of the temperature T, they are tacitly assuming constant relative error in K degrees. When this assumption is correct, the statistical errors in DeltaG degrees, DeltaH degrees, DeltaS degrees, DeltaCP degrees, and the T-derivative of DeltaCP degrees (if determined) are all independent of the actual values of K degrees and can be computed from knowledge of just the T values at which K degrees is known and the percent error in K degrees. All of these statistical errors except that for the highest-order constant are functions of T, so they must normally be calculated using a form of the error propagation equation that is not widely known. However, this computation can be bypassed by defining DeltaH degrees as a polynomial in (T-T0), the coefficients of which thus become DeltaH degrees, DeltaCP degrees, and 1/2 dDeltaCP degrees/dT at T=T0. The errors in the key quantities can then be computed by just repeating the fit for different T0. Procedures for doing this are described for a representative data analysis program. Results of such calculations show that expanding the T range from 10-40 to 5-45 degrees C gives significant improvement in the precision of all quantities. DeltaG degrees is typically determined with standard error a factor of approximately 30 smaller than that for DeltaH degrees. Accordingly, the error in TDeltaS degrees is nearly identical to that in DeltaH degrees. For 4% error in K degrees, the T-derivative in DeltaCP degrees cannot be determined unless it is approximately 10 cal mol-1 K-2 or greater; and DeltaCP degrees must be approximately 50 cal mol-1 K-1. Since all errors scale with the data error and inversely with the square root of the number of data points, the present results for 4% error cover any other relative error and number of points, for the same approximate T structure of the data.  相似文献   

15.
Kozlov AG  Lohman TM 《Biochemistry》2002,41(19):6032-6044
We have examined the kinetic mechanism for binding of the homotetrameric Escherichia coliSSB protein to single-stranded oligodeoxynucleotides [(dT)(70) and (dT)(35)] under conditions that favor the formation of a fully wrapped ssDNA complex in which all four subunits interact with DNA. Under these conditions, a so-called (SSB)(65) complex is formed in which either one molecule of (dT)(70) or two molecules of (dT)(35) bind per tetramer. Stopped-flow studies monitoring quenching of the intrinsic SSB Trp fluorescence were used to examine the initial binding step. To examine the kinetics of ssDNA wrapping, we used a single-stranded oligodeoxythymidylate, (dT)(66), that was labeled on its 3'-end with a fluorescent donor (Cy3) and on its 5'-end with a fluorescent acceptor (Cy5). Formation of the fully wrapped structure was accompanied by extensive fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) from Cy3 to Cy5 since the two ends of (dT)(66) are in close proximity in the fully wrapped complex. Our results indicate that initial ssDNA binding to the tetramer is very rapid, with a bimolecular rate constant, k(1,app), of nearly 10(9) M(-1) s(-1) in the limit of low salt concentration (<0.2 M NaCl, pH 8.1, 25.0 degrees C), whereas the rate of dissociation is very low at all salt concentrations that were examined (20 mM to 2 M NaCl or NaBr). However, the rate of initial binding and the rate of formation of the fully wrapped complex are identical, indicating that the rate of wrapping of the ssDNA around the SSB tetramer is very rapid, with a lower limit rate of 700 s(-1). The implications of this rapid binding and wrapping reaction are discussed.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Kinesin motors move on microtubules by a mechanism that involves a large, ATP-triggered conformational change in which a mechanical element called the neck linker docks onto the catalytic core, making contacts with the core throughout its length. Here, we investigate the thermodynamic properties of this conformational change using electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy. We placed spin probes at several locations on the human kinesin neck linker and recorded EPR spectra in the presence of microtubules and either 5'-adenylylimidodiphosphate (AMPPNP) or ADP at temperatures of 4-30 degrees C. The free-energy change (DeltaG) associated with AMPPNP-induced docking of the neck linker onto the catalytic core is favorable but small, about 3 kJ/mol. In contrast, the favorable enthalpy change (DeltaH) and unfavorable entropy change (TDeltaS) are quite large, about 50 kJ/mol. A mutation in the neck linker, V331A/N332A, results in an unfavorable DeltaG for AMPPNP-induced zipping of the neck linker onto the core and causes motility defects. These results suggest that the kinesin neck linker folds onto the core from a more unstructured state, thereby paying a large entropic cost and gaining a large amount of enthalpy.  相似文献   

18.
Galectin-3, with a wide tissue distribution and marked developmental regulation, provides significant insights into the progression of various disease and developmental stages. Recognized by its specificity for galactose, a detailed characterization of its sugar binding ability has been investigated by isothermal titration calorimetry. The results presented here complement well with the earlier studies utilizing hapten inhibition assays. Among the various lactose derivatives studied, A-tetrasaccharide emerged with the highest affinity for binding to galectin-3 combining site. This blood group saccharide exhibited a binding affinity 37-fold higher and a 102 kJ/mol more favorable change in enthalpy over lactose at 280 K indicating the existence of additional subsites for both the alpha1-3-linked N-acetylgalactosamine at the non-reducing end and the alpha1-2-linked L-fucosyl residue. The thermodynamic parameters evaluated for other ligands substantiate further the carbohydrate recognition domain to be part of an extended binding site. Binding thermodynamics of galectin-3 with the galactose derivatives are essentially enthalpically driven and exhibit compensatory changes in DeltaH degrees and TDeltaS owing to solvent reorganization.  相似文献   

19.
11F8 is a pathogenic monoclonal anti-ssDNA autoantibody isolated from a lupus prone mouse. Previous studies established that 11F8 is sequence-specific and identified the thermodynamic and kinetic basis for the specific recognition of ssDNA, and binding site mutations of a single-chain construct reveal that (Y32)LCDR1, (R31)HCDR1, (W33)HCDR1, (R98)HCDR3, (L97)HCDR3, and (Y100)HCDR3 are responsible for approximately 80% of the binding free energy. Here we evaluate the role of these residues along with a group of basic residues (K62, K64, R24, K52) within the context of the binding mechanism. Binding of 11F8 takes place in two steps. In the first step, the overall positive charge of the antigen binding site attracts the negatively charged DNA to form an encounter complex that is stabilized by two salt bridges and a hydrogen bond. The second step is a slow process in which minor conformational changes occur. During this step, aromatic side chains become desolvated, presumably through stacking interactions involving two thymine bases within the DNA recognition epitope. Although the stability of the complex arises primarily from interactions formed in the second step, sequence specificity results from interactions with residues involved in both steps. These studies also show that the way in which 11F8 achieves high affinity sequence-specific binding is more closely related to RNA binding proteins than those that bind DNA and point to strategies for disrupting DNA binding that could prove to be therapeutically useful.  相似文献   

20.
Isothermal titration calorimetry has been used to investigate the thermodynamic parameters of the binding of thymidine (dT) and ATP to herpes simplex virus type 1 thymidine kinase (HSV1 TK). Binding follows a sequential pathway in which dT binds first and ATP second. The free enzyme does not bind ATP, whose binding site becomes only accessible in the HSV1 TK.dT complex. At pH 7.5 and 25 degrees C, the binding constants are 1.9 x 10(5) m(-1) for dT and 3.9 x 10(6) m(-1) for ATP binding to the binary HSV1 TK.dT complex. Binding of both substrates is enthalpy-driven and opposed by a large negative entropy change. The heat capacity change (DeltaCp) obtained from DeltaH in the range of 10-25 degrees C is -360 cal K(-1) mol(-1) for dT binding and -140 cal K(-1) mol(-1) for ATP binding. These large DeltaCp values are incompatible with a rigid body binding model in which the dT and ATP binding sites pre-exist in the free enzyme. Values of DeltaCp and TDeltaS strongly indicate large scale conformational adaptation of the active site in sequential substrate binding. The conformational changes seem to be more pronounced in dT binding than in the subsequent ATP binding. Considering the crystal structure of the ternary HSV1 TK.dT.ATP complex, a large movement in the dT binding domain and a smaller but substantial movement in the LID domain are proposed to take place when the enzyme changes from the substrate-free, presumably more open and less ordered conformation to the closed and compact conformation of the ternary enzyme-substrate complex.  相似文献   

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