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1.
Hemerythrin‐like proteins have generally been studied for their ability to reversibly bind oxygen through their binuclear nonheme iron centers. However, in recent years, it has become increasingly evident that some members of the hemerythrin‐like superfamily also participate in many other biological processes. For instance, the binuclear nonheme iron site of YtfE, a hemerythrin‐like protein involved in the repair of iron centers in Escherichia coli, catalyzes the reduction of nitric oxide to nitrous oxide, and the human F‐box/LRR‐repeat protein 5, which contains a hemerythrin‐like domain, is involved in intracellular iron homeostasis. Furthermore, structural data on hemerythrin‐like domains from two proteins of unknown function, PF0695 from Pyrococcus furiosus and NMB1532 from Neisseria meningitidis, show that the cation‐binding sites, typical of hemerythrin, can be absent or be occupied by metal ions other than iron. To systematically investigate this functional and structural diversity of the hemerythrin‐like superfamily, we have collected hemerythrin‐like sequences from a database comprising fully sequenced proteomes and generated a cluster map based on their all‐against‐all pairwise sequence similarity. Our results show that the hemerythrin‐like superfamily comprises a large number of protein families which can be classified into three broad groups on the basis of their cation‐coordinating residues: (a) signal‐transduction and oxygen‐carrier hemerythrins (H‐HxxxE‐HxxxH‐HxxxxD); (b) hemerythrin‐like (H‐HxxxE‐H‐HxxxE); and, (c) metazoan F‐box proteins (H‐HExxE‐H‐HxxxE). Interestingly, all but two hemerythrin‐like families exhibit internal sequence and structural symmetry, suggesting that a duplication event may have led to the origin of the hemerythrin domain.  相似文献   

2.
The 400-MHz 1H NMR spectra of the subunit B2 of ribonucleotide reductase from Escherichia coli show paramagnetically shifted resonances at 24 ppm (exchangeable protons) and at 19 ppm (nonexchangeable protons). The protein contains an antiferromagnetically coupled dimeric iron center and a tyrosyl free radical. The paramagnetically shifted resonances must be due to the iron center, since they remain essentially unchanged in protein B2 with and without free radical. In analogy with recently published results for hemerythrin from Phascolopsis gouldii, which has a similar iron center, the 24-ppm resonance is suggested to arise from histidine ligands to the iron ions.  相似文献   

3.
We report the cDNA sequence of a leech hemerythrin. A cDNA was isolated from a Theromyzon tessulatum cDNA library and encodes a 120 amino acid protein of about 14 kDa. The predicted protein contains the hemerythrin signature sequence and the iron ligand residues previously identified in crystal structures of hemerythrin and myohemerythrin. The protein displayed the highest identity to myohemerythrin, a non-heme iron-binding protein described in sipunculids. Expression analysis indicated that the mRNA is widely expressed in leech and is stage specific in appearance, being absent after the two first blood meals, appearing after the last blood meal during the period preceding oogenesis and disappearing after egg laying.  相似文献   

4.
Resonance Raman spectra were observed for the oxy and azidomet forms of a cooperative hemerythrin (Hr) isolated from Lingula unguis and a noncooperative Hr from Siphonosoma cumanense. The O-O stretching frequency of the oxy derivative of the L. unguis Hr was lower in the high-affinity form generated at pH 7.6 than in the low-affinity form generated at pH 6.2, while that of the S. cumanense Hr did not change at those two pH values. The Fe-O-Fe symmetric stretching mode of L. unguis azidomet-Hr exhibited a frequency shift between pH 7.6 and 6.2, while that of S. cumanense was not shifted. However, the corresponding band of the oxy form did not show a pH-dependent frequency change. Therefore, it is noted that the azidomet form is not a suitable model for studying a mechanism of cooperativity, contrary to the structural similarity between the oxy and azidomet forms. The Fe-O2 as well as Fe-N3 stretching frequencies were found to have no relation with the oxygen affinity. Upon exchange of solvent from H2O to D2O, the O-O and Fe-O2 stretching modes of L. unguis Hr were shifted to higher and lower frequencies, respectively, and their magnitudes were the same for the high- and low-affinity forms. The same frequency shifts were observed for S. cumanense Hr.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
The first enzyme of the common aromatic biosynthetic pathway in Escherichia coli, the 3-deoxy-D-arabino-heptulosonate 7-phosphate synthase, contains iron as an integral part of the polypeptide chain, and the enzyme shows an absorption maximum around 350 nm (McCandliss, R.J., and Herrmann, K.M. (1978) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 75, 4810-4813). These two properties are also found in hemerythrin, the oxygen carrier of certain marine invertebrates. The amino acid sequence of residues 10 to 18 of the enzyme from E. coli, His-Ile-Thr-Asp-Glu-Gln-Val-Leu-Met, is highly homologous to the sequence of residues 54 to 62 of hemerythrin from Phascolopsis gouldii, His-Phe-Leu-Asn-Glu-Gln-Val-Leu-Met. His54 and Glu58 of hemerythrin have previously been identified through x-ray and protein sequence analysis as iron ligands. We suggest that residues 10 to 18 of the E. coli enzyme represent part of the iron binding fold in this protein, and that His10 and Glu14 are iron ligands.  相似文献   

6.
K C Cho  J J Hopfield 《Biochemistry》1979,18(26):5826-5833
The molecular mechanism of hemoglobin cooperativity was studied kinetically by flash photolysis on mixed-state hemoglobins which consist of three ferrous carboxy subunits and one hybrid ferric subunit including fluoromet, azidomet, cyanatomet, and thiocyanatomet. The effects of conformational transitions on the hybrid subunit were detected by kinetic absorption spectroscopy after the CO was fully photodissociated from the binding sites by a large pulse of light from a tunable dye laser. The hemoglobin conformational transition rate was observed to depend on its state of ligation. At 22 degrees C, pH 7, and 0.1 M phosphate, the deoxy R yields T conformational change rate is 4 x 10(4)s-1. The rate decreases to 1.4 x 10(4)s-1 for singly ligated hemoglobin. The R yields T conformation change alters the energy separation between high- and low-spin states for azidomet, cyanatomet, and thiocyanatomet subunits by about 700, 300, and 300 cal/mol, respectively. There are two possible implications of this result: (1) the iron atom spin state is not the only major factor in the determination of its position with respect to the heme plane or (2) the change with conformation of the protein force exerted by the proximal histidine on the iron atom (for an iron to heme-plane displacement of less than 0.3 A) is less than 50% of that expected from simple models in which this motion is responsible for cooperativity.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Rubrerythrin is a non-heme iron dimeric protein isolated from the sulfate-reducing bacterium Desulfovibrio vulgaris. Each monomer has one mononuclear iron center similar to rubredoxin and one dinuclear metal center similar to hemerythrin or ribonucleotide reductase. The 1.88 A X-ray structure of the "as isolated" molecule and a uranyl heavy atom derivative have been solved by molecular replacement techniques. The resulting model of the native "as isolated" molecule, including 164 water molecules, has been refined giving a final R factor of 0.197 (R(free) = 0.255). The structure has the same general protein fold, domain structure, and dimeric interactions as previously found for rubrerythrin [1, 2], but it also has some interesting undetected differences at the metal centers. The refined model of the protein structure has a cis peptide between residues 78 and 79. The Fe-Cys4 center has a previously undetected strong seventh N-H...S hydrogen bond in addition to the six N-H...S bonds usually found in rubredoxin. The dinuclear metal center has a hexacoordinate Fe atom and a tetracoordinate Zn atom. Each metal is coordinated by a GluXXHis polypeptide chain segment. The Zn atom binds at a site distinctly different from that found in the structure of a diiron rubrerythrin. Difference electron density for the uranyl derivative shows an extremely large peak adjacent to and replacing the Zn atom, indicating that this particular site is capable of binding other atoms. This feature/ability may give rise to some of the confusing activities ascribed to this molecule.  相似文献   

9.
The resonance Raman spectrum of protein B2 of ribonucleotide reductase from Escherichia coli shows several features to its oxo-bridged binuclear iron center. A peak at 492 cm-1 is assigned to the symmetric stretch of the Fe-O-Fe moiety on the basis of its 13-cm-1 shift to lower energy upon 18O substitution. The 18O species shows an additional peak at 731 cm-1, which is a good candidate for the asymmetric stretch of the Fe-O-Fe moiety. Its exact location in the 16O species is obscured by the presence of a protein tryptophan vibration at 758 cm-1. A third resonance-enhanced peak at 598 cm-1 is identified as an Fe-OH vibration on the basis of its 24-cm-1 shift to lower energy in H2 18O, its 2-cm-1 shift to lower energy in D2O, and its pH-dependent intensity. A hydrogen-bonded mu-oxo bridge similar to that in hemerythrin is suggested by the unusually low frequency for the Fe-O-Fe symmetric stretch and the 3-cm-1 shift to higher energy of vs(Fe-O-Fe) in D2O. From the oxygen isotope dependence of vs(Fe-O-Fe), an Fe-O-Fe angle of 138 degrees can be calculated. This small angle suggests that the iron center consists of a tribridged core as in hemerythrin. A model for the binuclear iron center of ribonucleotide reductase is presented in which the hydroxide ligand sites provide an explanation for the half-of-sites reactivity of the enzyme.  相似文献   

10.
The complete amino acid sequence of muscle hemerythrin (myohemerythrin) from the sipunculid Themiste (syn. Dendrostomum) pyroides has been determined by analysis of tryptic, chymotryptic, and cyanogen bromide peptides. The primary structure of myohemerythrin differs substantially from that of coelomic hemerythrins of Phascolopsis (syn. Golfingia) gouldii and Themiste pyroides, the amino acid sequence of the muscle protein being only 46 and 45% homologous with the respective coelomic hemerythrins. The most extensive regions of homology between muscle and coelomic proteins occur near the terminii. These and other shorter regions of homology are interpreted in terms of the essential iron ligand residues of the active center.  相似文献   

11.
Chemical modification of all 18 car?yl groups in Golfingia gouldii hemerythrin was achieved using glycine methyl ester and 1-ethyl-3-dimethyl-aminopropylcarbodiimide. The absorption spectrum of the modified protein in the visible and near ultraviolet region was the same as that of unmodified hemerythrin, indicating that car?yl groups are not linked to iron in the active center. Modification of all 18 or as few as 8 car?yl groups resulted in dissociation of the octameric hemerythrin into monomers. Analysis of mixtures of octamer and monomer produced by partial modification suggest the involvement of one specific car?yl group in the observed dissociation reaction.  相似文献   

12.
The iron center in ribonucleotide reductase from Escherichia coli   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Ribonucleotide reductase from Escherichia coli consists of two nonidentical subunits, proteins B1 and B2. The active site is made up from both subunits. Protein B2 contains 2 iron atoms and a tyrosyl-free radical, which are essential for the enzymatic activity. The paramagnetic susceptibility of protein B2 has been measured over the temperature range 30-200 K. A deviation from the Curie law is observed at high temperatures, consistent with a structure of an antiferromagnetically coupled pair of high spin Fe(III) with an exchange coupling -J = 108(-20)+25 cm-1. Electronic spectra are resolved into components from the iron center and the radical. A band at 600 nm is clearly identified and shown to have contributions from both components. The electronic absorptions of the tyrosyl radical of protein B2 are closely similar to those reported for phenoxy radicals of tyrosine and tritertiary butyl phenol. Determinations by EPR of the amount of free radical suggest the possibility of more than one radical per active protein B2 molecule. Reconstitution of the active site from apoprotein B2 and Fe(II) is only observed in the presence of oxygen. With Fe(III), no reconstitution is obtained. The additional physical data on the iron center of protein B2 strengthen the analogy with oxidized forms of hemerythrin. The most likely structure is an antiferromagnetically coupled pair of high spin Fe(III), possibly with a bridging oxo-group.  相似文献   

13.
A recent report from this laboratory (Zhang, J.-H., Kurtz, D.M., Jr., Xia, Y.-M. and Debrunner, P.G. (1991) Biochemistry 30, 583-589) described a procedure for reconstitution of a functional di-iron site in the octameric, non-heme iron O2-carrying protein, hemerythrin by addition of ferrous salts to apoprotein, followed by slow dilution of the denaturant. Although the resulting protein contained its full complement of iron, i.e., 2 Fe per subunit, about 30% of the iron was found to remain ferrous under ambient O2, i.e., this iron was incapable of forming an O2 adduct. In this report a method is described for obtaining essentially fully functional hemerythrin by passage of the freshly reconstituted protein through an [oxy/30% non-functional----met----deoxy----oxy redox cycle. UV/vis absorption and 57Fe M?ssbauer spectroscopies show that little or no non-functional iron remains in the reconstituted oxyhemerythrin after the redox cycle. Quantitations of protein and diiron sites show that, during the first step of the redox cycle, the non-functional iron is converted to a form that is spectroscopically indistinguishable from that of native methemerythrin. Far-UV circular dichroism shows that the secondary structure of this reconstituted methemerythrin is essentially identical to that of native protein. Non-denaturing polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis shows that the size and charge of the native and reconstituted proteins before and after redox cycling are essentially identical. These results indicate that the non-functional iron is converted to a functional form by the redox cycling, and that the key step in this conversion is the [oxy/30% non-functional]----met transformation.  相似文献   

14.
Conclusive evidence is presented for an S = 1/2 spincoupled pair of high spin ferric and ferrous ions in the major reaction product of sulfide with the met form of the non-heme iron oxygen-carrying protein hemerythrin. Evidence for an analogous selenide derivative is also reported. M?ssbauer and EPR spectroscopy establish (a) the charge and spin states of the individual iron atoms in sulfidehemerythrin as Fe(III), S = 5/2, and Fe(II), S = 2, and (b) the existence of an antiferromagnetic exchange interaction that couples the two spins to a resultant spin S = 1/2. The combined M?ssbauer and EPR data confirm the correctness of the formulation first proposed for semi-methemerythrin by Harrington, P.C., de Waal, D.J.A., and Wilkins, R.G. ((1978) Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 191, 444-451) and furthermore show that a majority of the iron centers in the protein can be stabilized at this oxidation level. The results also demonstrate a new route to semi-methemerythrin. A titration of methemerythrin with selenide indicates that this derivative forms by a two step process consisting of first, reduction to the semi-met oxidation level by selenide and second, binding of selenide to either one or both irons.  相似文献   

15.
The structure of human lactoferrin has been refined crystallographically at 2.8 A (1 A = 0.1 nm) resolution using restrained least squares methods. The starting model was derived from a 3.2 A map phased by multiple isomorphous replacement with solvent flattening. Rebuilding during refinement made extensive use of these experimental phases, in combination with phases calculated from the partial model. The present model, which includes 681 of the 691 amino acid residues, two Fe3+, and two CO3(2-), gives an R factor of 0.206 for 17,266 observed reflections between 10 and 2.8 A resolution, with a root-mean-square deviation from standard bond lengths of 0.03 A. As a result of the refinement, two single-residue insertions and one 13-residue deletion have been made in the amino acid sequence, and details of the secondary structure and tertiary interactions have been clarified. The two lobes of the molecule, representing the N-terminal and C-terminal halves, have very similar folding, with a root-mean-square deviation, after superposition, of 1.32 A for 285 out of 330 C alpha atoms; the only major differences being in surface loops. Each lobe is subdivided into two dissimilar alpha/beta domains, one based on a six-stranded mixed beta-sheet, the other on a five-stranded mixed beta-sheet, with the iron site in the interdomain cleft. The two iron sites appear identical at the present resolution. Each iron atom is coordinated to four protein ligands, 2 Tyr, 1 Asp, 1 His, and the specific Co3(2-), which appears to bind to iron in a bidentate mode. The anion occupies a pocket between the iron and two positively charged groups on the protein, an arginine side-chain and the N terminus of helix 5, and may serve to neutralize this positive charge prior to iron binding. A large internal cavity, beyond the Arg side-chain, may account for the binding of larger anions as substitutes for CO3(2-). Residues on the other side of the iron site, near the interdomain crossover strands could provide secondary anion binding sites, and may explain the greater acid-stability of iron binding by lactoferrin, compared with serum transferrin. Interdomain and interlobe interactions, the roles of charged side-chains, heavy-atom binding sites, and the construction of the metal site in relation to the binding of different metals are also discussed.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Hemerythrins are oxygen-binding proteins found in the body fluids and tissues of certain invertebrates. Oxygen is bound at a nonheme iron centre consisting of two oxo-bridged iron atoms bound to a characteristic set of conserved histidine: aspartate and glutamate residues with the motifs H-HxxxE-HxxxH-HxxxxD. It has recently been demonstrated biochemically that two bacterial proteins bearing the same motifs do in fact possess similar iron centres and bind oxygen in the same way. The recent profusion of prokaryotic genomic sequence data has shown that proteins bearing hemerythrin motifs are present in a wide variety of bacteria, and a few archaea. Some of these are short proteins as in eukaryotes; others appear to consist of a hemerythrin domain fused to another domain, generally a putative signal transduction domain such as a methyl-accepting chemotaxis protein, a histidine kinase, or a GGDEF protein (cyclic di-GMP synthase). If, as initial evidence suggests, these are in fact hemerythrin-like oxygen-binding proteins, then their diversity in prokaryotes far exceeds that seen in eukaryotes. Here, a survey is presented of prokaryotic protein sequences bearing hemerythrin-like motifs, for which the designation 'bacteriohemerythrins' is proposed, and their functions are speculated.  相似文献   

18.
Vibrational spectroscopic data were collected on the salt [C5H6N]2[Cl3FeOFeCl3] . C5H5N, which has previously been structurally characterized by X-ray crystallography. The modes associated with the oxo bridge were identified by experiments on the 18O-containing species. Spectra for the mu-16O complex contain Raman bands at 870, 458, and 203 cm-1 that shift to 826, 440, and 198 cm-1 in the mu-18O complex. These are respectively assigned to the asymmetric, symmetric, and angle deformations of the bent Fe-O-Fe moiety. A normal mode vibration analysis based on a simple valence force field for the Fe-O-Fe portion of the molecule provides surprisingly good agreement with these experimental frequencies and their assignments. The vibrational data for this simple inorganic complex confirm the assignment of a resonance Raman band around 500 cm-1 in the oxygen-carrying protein hemerythrin and enzyme ribonucleotide reductase as the symmetric stretch of an oxo bridge between two iron(III) centers.  相似文献   

19.
The complete polypeptide chain of rubrerythrin from the sulfate reducing bacterium Desulfovibrio vulgaris, strain Hildenborough NCIB 8303, was found by protein chemical techniques to consist of 191 residues and to have the amino acid sequence [sequence: see text] The C-terminal part of the protein (position 153----191) shows the typical sequence features of rubredoxin, a protein with a nonheme iron center also present in the same and other Desulfovibrio species. Based on the known three-dimensional structure of D. desulfuricans rubredoxin, we propose that the C-terminal part of rubrerythrin is folded in a similar way and suggest that the deletion of the extra 10 residues is compatible with the same basic rubredoxin-fold. After characterization of the C-terminal region, and in contrast to what could be expected from previously published spectroscopic analyses, the N-terminal region 1-152 of rubrerythrin appears to have no sequence similarity with the eukaryotic protein hemerythrin which is known to contain a binuclear iron center bound by 5 histidine ligands. However, the N-terminal region of rubrerythrin does contain 5 histidine residues but they are differently spaced along the peptide chain. We suggest that at least one of the 3 histidine residues located in the rubredoxin-like center of rubrerythrin may be liganded to one iron atom of the hemerythrin-like center. This paper is the first sequence report of a protein with pyrophosphatase activity although the physiological substrate for the rubrerythrin may be not inorganic pyrophosphate.  相似文献   

20.
Refined structure of porcine cytosolic adenylate kinase at 2.1 A resolution   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
The crystal structure of porcine cytosolic adenylate kinase has been established at 2.1 A resolution using a restrained least-squares refinement method. Based on 11,251 independent reflections of better than 10 A resolution, a final R-factor of 19.3% was obtained with a model obeying standard geometry within 0.026 A in bond lengths and 3.3 degrees in bond angles. In comparison with the previous structure at 3 A resolution, there is a significant improvement. The high resolution structure has been used to rationalize the strictly conserved residues in the adenylate kinase family. Among these is the glycine-rich loop, which forms a giant anion hole accommodating a sulfate ion which mimics a phosphoryl group of a substrate. Such a structure seems to occur in a large group of mononucleotide binding proteins. Moreover, a conserved cis-proline has been detected in the active center. A structural comparison with the complex between adenylate kinase from yeast and a substrate-analog at medium resolution indicates that this kinase performs appreciable mechanical movements during a catalytic cycle. The reported structure presumably represents an open form of the enzyme, similar to that in solution in the absence of substrates. However, since there are large intermolecular contacts in the crystal, some deviation from the solution structure has to be expected.  相似文献   

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