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1.
A method for quantifying the affinity of proteins for specific metal ions has been developed. Both the stoichiometry and the binding constants of the protein-bound metal ion can be determined by titrating protein-bound metal ions with complexometric reagents and observing electrochemically the change in free metal ion concentration. The technique is limited to cases where the affinity of the macromolecule for the metal ion is less than or similar to the affinity of the complexometric reagent for the metal ion. The method has been employed successfully in the study of both Cu(II) and Ag(I) binding to the apoprotein of bovine cuprozinc superoxide dismutase.  相似文献   

2.
Copper ions are essential but also very toxic. Copper resistance in bacteria is based on export of the toxic ion, oxidation from Cu(I) to Cu(II), and sequestration by copper‐binding metal chaperones, which deliver copper ions to efflux systems or metal‐binding sites of copper‐requiring proteins. In their publication in this issue, Osman et al. ( 2013 ) demonstrate how tightly copper resistance, homeostasis and delivery pathways are interwoven in Salmonella enterica sv. Typhimurium. Copper is transported from the cytoplasm by the two P‐type ATPases CopA and GolT to the periplasm and transferred to SodCII by CueP, a periplasmic copper chaperone. When copper levels are higher, SodCII is also able to bind copper without the help of CueP. This scheme raises the question as to why copper ions present in the growth medium have to make the detour through the cytoplasm. The data presented in the publication by Osman et al. ( 2013 ) change our view of the cell biology of copper in enterobacteria.  相似文献   

3.
Methanobactin (mb) is a novel chromopeptide that appears to function as the extracellular component of a copper acquisition system in methanotrophic bacteria. To examine this potential physiological role, and to distinguish it from iron binding siderophores, the spectral (UV–visible absorption, circular dichroism, fluorescence, and X-ray photoelectron) and thermodynamic properties of metal binding by mb were examined. In the absence of Cu(II) or Cu(I), mb will bind Ag(I), Au(III), Co(II), Cd(II), Fe(III), Hg(II), Mn(II), Ni(II), Pb(II), U(VI), or Zn(II), but not Ba(II), Ca(II), La(II), Mg(II), and Sr(II). The results suggest metals such as Ag(I), Au(III), Hg(II), Pb(II) and possibly U(VI) are bound by a mechanism similar to Cu, whereas the coordination of Co(II), Cd(II), Fe(III), Mn(II), Ni(II) and Zn(II) by mb differs from Cu(II). Consistent with its role as a copper-binding compound or chalkophore, the binding constants of all the metals examined were less than those observed with Cu(II) and copper displaced other metals except Ag(I) and Au(III) bound to mb. However, the binding of different metals by mb suggests that methanotrophic activity also may play a role in either the solubilization or immobilization of many metals in situ.  相似文献   

4.
It was shown recently, that high affinity Cu(I) importer eukaryotic protein CTR1 can also transport in vitro abiogenic Ag(I) ions and anticancer drug cisplatin. At present, there is no rational explanation how CTR1 can transfer platinum group which is different by coordination properties from highly similar Cu(I) and Ag(I). To understand the phenomenon, we analyzed 25 sequences of chordate CTR1 proteins and found out the conserved patterns of organization of N-terminal extracellular part of CTR1 which is responsible for initial metal binding. Extracellular copper-binding motifs were qualified by their coordination properties. It was shown that the relative position of methionine- and histidine-rich copper-binding motifs predisposes the extracellular CTR1 region to binding of copper, silver, and cisplatin. Relation between the tissuespecific expression of the CTR1 gene, steady-state copper concentration, and silver and platinum accumulation in organs of mice in vivo were analyzed. Significant positive yet incomplete correlation was found to exist between these variables. Basing on structural and functional peculiarities of N-terminal part of CTR1 a hypothesis of coupled transport of copper and cisplatin has been suggested which avoids disagreement between CTR1-mediated cisplatin transport in vitro and irreversible binding of platinum to Met-rich peptides.  相似文献   

5.
The interaction between azurin from Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Ag(I), Cu(II), Hg(II), was investigated as a function of protein state, i.e. apo-, reduced and oxidised azurin. Two different metal binding sites, characterized by two different spectroscopic absorbancies, were detected: one is accessible to Ag(I) and Cu(II) but not to Hg(II); the other one binds Ag(I) and Hg(II) but not copper. When added in stoichiometric amount, Ag(I) shows high affinity for the redox center of apo-azurin, to which it probably binds by the -SH group of Cys112; it can displace Cu(I) from reducedazurin, while it does not bind to the redox center of oxidizedazurin. Kinetic experiments show that Ag(I) binding to the reduced form is four times faster than binding to the apo-form. This result suggests that metal binding requires a conformational rearrangement of the active site of the azurin. Interaction of Ag(I) or Hg(II) ions to the second metal binding site, induces typical changes of UV spectrum and quenching of fluorescence emission.  相似文献   

6.
The Cus system of Escherichia coli aids in protection of cells from high concentrations of Ag(I) and Cu(I). The histidine kinase CusS of the CusRS two-component system functions as a Ag(I)/Cu(I)-responsive sensor kinase and is essential for induction of the genes encoding the CusCFBA efflux pump. In this study, we have examined the molecular features of the sensor domain of CusS in order to understand how a metal-responsive histidine kinase senses specific metal ions. We find that the predicted periplasmic sensor domain of CusS directly interacts with Ag(I) ions and undergoes a conformational change upon metal binding. Metal binding also enhances the tendency of the domain to dimerize. These findings suggest a model for activation of the histidine kinase through metal binding events in the periplasmic sensor domain.  相似文献   

7.
The interaction of proteins with immobilized transition-metal ions proceeds via mechanisms influenced by metal type and degree of coordination, variations in mobile phase constituents, and protein surface architecture at or near the metal binding site(s). The contributions each of these variables make toward the affinity of protein surfaces for immobilized metal ions remain empirical. We have used equilibrium binding analyses to evaluate the influence of pH and competitive binding reagents on the apparent equilibrium dissociation constant (Kd) and binding capacity of immobilized Cu(II) and Ni(II) ions for several model proteins of known three-dimensional structure. Linear Scatchard plots suggested that 8/13 of the proteins evaluated interacted with immobilized metal ions via a single class of operational (Kd = 10-700 microM) binding sites. Those proteins with the highest affinities for the immobilized Cu(II) ions (5/13) showed evidence of multiple, non-identical or nonindependent binding sites. The effects of altered metal type, pH, and concentration of competitive affinity reagents (e.g., imidazole, free metal ions) on the apparent Kd and binding capacity varied in magnitude for individual proteins. The presence of free Cu(II) ions did not detectably alter either the affinity or binding capacity of the proteins for immobilized Cu(II) ions. The expected relationship between the relative chromatographic elution sequence and calculated affinity constants was not entirely evident by evaluation under only one set of conditions. Our results demonstrate the utility of nonchromatographic equilibrium binding analyses for the quantitative evaluation of experimental variables affecting the relative affinity and capacity of immobilized metal ions for proteins. This approach affords the opportunity to improve understanding and to vary the contribution of interaction mechanisms involved.  相似文献   

8.
J R Casas-Finet  S Hu  D Hamer  R L Karpel 《Biochemistry》1992,31(28):6617-6626
N-terminal fragments of ACE1 protein spanning residues 1-122 or 1-110, termed ACE1(122*) and ACE1(110*), respectively, were investigated in regard to their metal- and double-stranded DNA-binding properties. Band mobility shift assays showed that binding to a specific oligonucleotide (termed UASc), containing two ACE1(122*) binding sites, requires the presence of Cu(I) or Ag(I) but does not occur in the presence of divalent metal ions. Both the Ag(I) and the Cu(I) forms of ACE1(122*) were characterized spectroscopically. The Tyr and metal cluster luminescence emission of Cu-ACE1(122*) was specifically quenched by the oligonucleotide UAScL, but not by an oligonucleotide of the same length and base composition but scrambled sequence. The room-temperature luminescence of Cu(I)-ACE1(122*) was assigned to a phosphorescence emission, on the basis of its long-lived luminescence of approximately 3.5 microseconds. We report the first observation of a Ag(I) metal cluster in solution for Ag(I)-ACE1(122*), which was found to exhibit a quantum yield and average luminescence lifetime that are ca. 6% of that of Cu(I)-ACE1(122*). The three-dimensional structure brought about by the binding of either metal ion appears to be very similar, since dynamic tyrosine fluorescence lifetime measurements, as well as circular dichroism spectra, were nearly identical for Cu- and Ag-ACE1(122*). Based on these results, we present a hypothetical model for the structure of the metal cluster in this class of proteins.  相似文献   

9.
10.
A CUA center engineered into Pseudomonas aeruginosa azurin was studied by metal substitution. Metal-binding properties were determined by electronic absorption (UV-vis) and electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (ESI-MS). The metal-binding site readily binds thiophilic metal ions, such as Hg(II), Ag(I), Cu(I), Cd(II), and Au(I). Harder metal ions, like Co(II), bind to apo-CuA-azurin only under basic conditions (pH 9.1-9.2). The results obtained from these studies indicate that two factors influence metal binding in CuA azurin: (1) the site favors metal combinations which produce an overall +3 charge, and (2) the site binds soft, thiophilic metal ions. The results demonstrate the remarkable ability of the CuA center to maintain valence delocalization of its native metal ions and to ensure redox accessibility of only one of the two redox couples (i.e., [Cu(1.5)...Cu(1.5)]<==> [Cu(I)...Cu(I)]) under physiological conditions. These findings may lead to the preparation of new metal ion derivatives and can serve as a basis for understanding this efficient electron transfer center.  相似文献   

11.
The animal byproduct, hen eggshell membrane (ESM), was evaluated for its ability to sorb gold ions (dicyanoaurate(I) and tetrachloroaurate(III)) from solutions and electroplating wastewater. The gold uptake was dependent on pH, temperature and co-ions present in the solutions, with pH 3.0 being the optimum value. The equilibrium data followed the Langmuir isotherm model with maximum capacities of 147 mg Au(I)/g dry weight and 618 mg Au(III)/g, respectively. Desorption of sorbed gold(I) with 0.1 mol/l NaOH resulted in no changes of the biosorbent gold uptake capacity through five consecutive sorption/desorption cycles. In column experiments, selective recovery of gold from electroplating wastewater containing various metal ions was noted. The affinity of metal sorption was in the order Au > Ag > Co > Cu > Pb > Ni > Zn.  相似文献   

12.
Cellular acquisition of copper in eukaryotic organisms is primarily accomplished through high-affinity copper transport proteins (Ctr). The extracellular N-terminal regions of both human and yeast Ctr1 contain multiple methionine residues organized in copper-binding Mets motifs. These motifs comprise combinations of methionine residues arranged in clusters of MXM and MXXM, where X can be one of several amino acids. Model peptides corresponding to 15 different Mets motifs were synthesized and determined to selectively bind Cu(I) and Ag(I), with no discernible affinity for divalent metal ions. These are rare examples of biological thioether-only metal binding sites. Effective dissociation constant (K D) values for the model Mets peptides and Cu(I) were determined by an ascorbic acid oxidation assay and validated through electrospray ionization mass spectrometry and range between 2 and 11 μM. Affinity appears to be independent of pH, the arrangement of the motif, and the composition of intervening amino acids, all of which reveal the generality and flexibility of the MX1–2MX1–2M domain. Circular dichroism spectroscopy, 1H-NMR spectroscopy, and X-ray absorption spectroscopy were also used to characterize the binding event. These results are intended to aid the development of the still unknown mechanism of copper transport across the cell membrane.  相似文献   

13.
Independence of the domains of metallothionein in metal binding   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Mammalian metallothionein is a low molecular weight protein with two metal-binding domains. To determine if metal binding in one domain affects binding in the other, we prepared peptides corresponding to the regions that enfold the two metal-thiolate clusters. Metal reconstitution studies of these peptides revealed stoichiometries of metal binding similar to those observed within the intact molecule. Thus, the alpha domain coordinates 4 Cd(II), 6 Cu(I), or 6 Ag(I) ions regardless of whether the domain is part of the total protein or is studied as a separate peptide. Likewise, the beta domain binds 3 Cd(II), 6 Cu(I), or 6 Ag(I) ions in both the intact protein and as a separate peptide. If cluster B in intact metallothionein is preformed with Cu(I) or Ag(I), cluster A saturates with either 4 mol eq of Cd(II) or 6 mol eq of Ag(I). Similarly, preformation of the A cluster with Cd(II) does not affect the binding of 6 Cu(I) ions in the B cluster. Therefore, the metal-dependent folding of the protein to create one cluster occurs independent of constraints or influences from the other domain. Formation of the protein with a tetrahedrally coordinated metal in one cluster and a trigonally coordinated metal in the other center is possible.  相似文献   

14.
A novel emissive tetra-naphthylmethylene pendant-armed macrocyclic ligand and a series of complexes with monovalent and divalent metal ions have been synthesized. Solid compounds have been isolated as mononuclear (Co(II), Cu(II) and Zn(II)) or dinuclear (Co(II), Ni(II), Cu(II), Zn(II), Cd(II) and Ag(I)), complexes, depending on the counterions used. The chemical and photophysical properties of the free ligand, the protonation behavior and its metal complexes have been investigated in solution. UV-Vis spectroscopy has revealed a 1:1 binding stoichiometry for Cu(II), Zn(II), Cd(II), Ni(II) and Co(II), and 2:1 molar ratio for Ag(I). In chloroform, the free ligand presents two emission bands related to the monomer naphthalene emission and a red-shifted band attibutable to an exciplex due to a charge transfer from the nitrogen lone electron pair to the excited chromophore. Upon protonation of the free amines or due to metal complexation, the exciplex band disappears. The crystal structure of [Ag2L(NO3)2] is also reported. The structure reveals that both metal ions are into the macrocyclic cavity in a distorted square plane {AgN3O} environment. Each Ag(I) atom interacts with two neighbouring amine nitrogen atoms, one pyridine nitrogen and one oxygen atom from a monodentate nitrate ion.  相似文献   

15.
About one-third of the existing proteins require metal ions as cofactors for their catalytic activities and structural complexities. While many of them bind only to a specific metal, others bind to multiple (different) metal ions. However, the exact mechanism of their metal preference has not been deduced to clarity. In this study, we used molecular dynamics (MD) simulations to investigate whether a cognate metal (bound to the structure) can be replaced with other similar metal ions. We have chosen seven different proteins (phospholipase A2, sucrose phosphatase, pyrazinamidase, cysteine dioxygenase (CDO), plastocyanin, monoclonal anti-CD4 antibody Q425, and synaptotagmin 1 C2B domain) bound to seven different divalent metal ions (Ca2+, Mg2+, Zn2+, Fe2+, Cu2+, Ba2+, and Sr2+, respectively). In total, 49 MD simulations each of 50 ns were performed and each trajectory was analyzed independently. Results demonstrate that in some cases, cognate metal ions can be exchanged with similar metal ions. On the contrary, some proteins show binding affinity specifically to their cognate metal ions. Surprisingly, two proteins CDO and plastocyanin which are known to bind Fe2+ and Cu2+, respectively, do not exhibit binding affinity to any metal ion. Furthermore, the study reveals that in some cases, the active site topology remains rigid even without cognate metals, whereas, some require them for their active site stability. Thus, it will be interesting to experimentally verify the accuracy of these observations obtained computationally. Moreover, the study can help in designing novel active sites for proteins to sequester metal ions particularly of toxic nature.  相似文献   

16.
Methanobactin (mb) is a novel chromopeptide that appears to function as the extracellular component of a copper acquisition system in methanotrophic bacteria. To examine this potential physiological role, and to distinguish it from iron binding siderophores, the spectral (UV–visible absorption, circular dichroism, fluorescence, and X-ray photoelectron) and thermodynamic properties of metal binding by mb were examined. In the absence of Cu(II) or Cu(I), mb will bind Ag(I), Au(III), Co(II), Cd(II), Fe(III), Hg(II), Mn(II), Ni(II), Pb(II), U(VI), or Zn(II), but not Ba(II), Ca(II), La(II), Mg(II), and Sr(II). The results suggest metals such as Ag(I), Au(III), Hg(II), Pb(II) and possibly U(VI) are bound by a mechanism similar to Cu, whereas the coordination of Co(II), Cd(II), Fe(III), Mn(II), Ni(II) and Zn(II) by mb differs from Cu(II). Consistent with its role as a copper-binding compound or chalkophore, the binding constants of all the metals examined were less than those observed with Cu(II) and copper displaced other metals except Ag(I) and Au(III) bound to mb. However, the binding of different metals by mb suggests that methanotrophic activity also may play a role in either the solubilization or immobilization of many metals in situ.  相似文献   

17.
Interactions of cadmium (Cd) ions with bovine serum albumin (BSA), bovine hepatic metallothionein (MT), calf thymus histone and deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA), and bovine hepatic chromatins were studied in the presence and absence of divalent zinc (Zn), copper (Cu), mercury (Hg), or lead (Pb) ions, using equilibrium dialysis at pH 7 and at 37°C. The BSA had 3.5 Cd-binding sites with an apparent affinity constant of 1×105. The other metal ions inhibited the binding by reducing the affinity constant and the number of Cd-binding sites in BSA. There were 6 high affinity and 13 low affinity Cd-binding sites in the MT. Zinc ions had poor efficacy in reducing the binding of Cd to the MT. However, the Cu2+ and Hg2+ ions inhibited the Cd binding to a considerable extent, the former ions being more potent in this respect. Histone did not bind Cd. There were two kinds of Cd-binding sites in DNA: One mole of Cd per four moles DNA-phosphorus at low affinity sites, and one mole of Cd per 6.7 moles DNA-phosphorus at high affinity sites. Their apparent association constants were 8.3×105 and 4.4×106 M, respectively. The other metal ions had inhibitory effects on the binding of Cd to DNA. Histone reduced the Cd-DNA interactions to only a minor extent. The other metal ions reduced the binding of Cd to DNA-histone complex to a small extent. Cadmium binds to the euchromatin (Euch), heterochromatin (Het), and Euch-Het mixture almost equally. The other metal ions reduced the binding maximally in Euch-Het followed next in order by Het and Euch. Cupric ions were the most potent inhibitors of the interactions of Cd with the nuclear materials.  相似文献   

18.
Elevated levels of copper or silver ions in the environment are an immediate threat to many organisms. Escherichia coli is able to resist the toxic effects of these ions through strictly limiting intracellular levels of Cu(I) and Ag(I). The CusCFBA system is one system in E. coli responsible for copper/silver tolerance. A key component of this system is the periplasmic copper/silver-binding protein, CusF. Here the X-ray structure and XAS data on the CusF-Ag(I) and CusF-Cu(I) complexes, respectively, are reported. In the CusF-Ag(I) structure, Ag(I) is coordinated by two methionines and a histidine, with a nearby tryptophan capping the metal site. EXAFS measurements on the CusF-Cu(I) complex show a similar environment for Cu(I). The arrangement of ligands effectively sequesters the metal from its periplasmic environment and thus may play a role in protecting the cell from the toxic ion.  相似文献   

19.
Copper is both an essential nutrient and a toxic element able to catalyze free radicals formation which damage lipids and proteins. Although the available copper redox species in aerobic environment is Cu(II), proteins that participate in metal homeostasis use Cu(I). With isolated Escherichia coli membranes, we have previously shown that electron flow through the respiratory chain promotes cupric ions reduction by NADH dehydrogenase-2 and quinones. Here, we determined Cu(II)-reductase activity by whole cells using strains deficient in these respiratory chain components. Measurements were done by the appearance of Cu(I) in the supernatants of cells exposed to sub-lethal Cu(II) concentrations. In the absence of quinones, the Cu(II)-reduction rate decreased ~70% in respect to the wild-type strain, while this diminution was about 85% in a strain lacking both NDH-2 and quinones. The decrease was ~10% in the absence of only NDH-2. In addition, we observed that quinone deficient strains failed to grow in media containing either excess or deficiency of copper, as we have described for NDH-2 deficient mutants. Thus, the Cu(II)-reduction by E. coli intact cells is mainly due to quinones and to a lesser extent to NDH-2, in a quinone-independent way. To our knowledge, this is the first in vivo demonstration of the involvement of E. coli respiratory components in the Cu(II)-reductase activity which contributes to the metal homeostasis.  相似文献   

20.
Summary The interaction between azurin and silver ions was investigated, by means of ultraviolet, fluorescence and atomic absorption spectroscopies, as a function of the redox state of the protein. The Ag(I) ion has a very low affinity for oxidized azurin. Interestingly, the affinity is much higher for reduced azurin; in this case Ag(I) completely displaces the Cu(I) ion from the native binding site. The effect is very specific for silver ions since other ions, such as Hg(II), Ni(II) and Cd(II), do not produce the same effect. Treatment of reduced and oxidized azurin with excess Ag(I) (2-8-fold stoichiometric) shows that there is a second binding site for silver ions on the protein which can also bind Cu(II) and Hg(II) with comparable affinities.  相似文献   

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