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1.
Visinin-like protein 1 (VILIP-1) belongs to the neuronal calcium sensor family of Ca(2+)-myristoyl switch proteins that regulate signal transduction in the brain and retina. Here we analyze Ca(2+) and Mg(2+) binding, characterize metal-induced conformational changes, and determine structural effects of myristoylation and dimerization. Mg(2+) binds functionally to VILIP-1 at EF3 (ΔH = +1.8 kcal/mol and K(D) = 20 μM). Unmyristoylated VILIP-1 binds two Ca(2+) sequentially at EF2 and EF3 (K(EF3) = 0.1 μM and K(EF2) = 1-4 μM), whereas myristoylated VILIP-1 binds two Ca(2+) with lower affinity (K(D) = 1.2 μM) and positive cooperativity (Hill slope = 1.5). NMR assignments and structural analysis indicate that Ca(2+)-free VILIP-1 contains a sequestered myristoyl group like that of recoverin. NMR resonances of the attached myristate exhibit Ca(2+)-dependent chemical shifts and NOE patterns consistent with Ca(2+)-induced extrusion of the myristate. VILIP-1 forms a dimer in solution independent of Ca(2+) and myristoylation. The dimerization site is composed of residues in EF4 and the loop region between EF3 and EF4, confirmed by mutagenesis. We present the structure of the VILIP-1 dimer and a Ca(2+)-myristoyl switch to provide structural insights into Ca(2+)-induced trafficking of nicotinic acetylcholine receptors.  相似文献   

2.
Hung HC  Chang GG  Yang Z  Tong L 《Biochemistry》2000,39(46):14095-14102
Pigeon liver malic enzyme was inhibited by lutetium ion through a slow-binding process, which resulted in a concave down tracing of the enzyme activity assay. The fast initial rates were independent of lutetium ion concentration, while the slow steady-state rates decreased with increasing Lu(3+) concentration. The observed rate constant for the transition from initial rate to steady-state rate, k(obs), exhibited saturation kinetics as a function of Lu(3+) concentration, suggesting the involvement of an isomerization process between two enzyme forms (R-form and T-form). The binding affinity of Lu(3+) to the R-form is weaker (K(d,Lu) = 14 microM) than that of Mn(2+) (K(m,Mn) = 1.89 microM); however, Lu(3+) has much tighter binding affinity with the T-form ( = 0.83 microM). Lu(3+) was shown to be a competitive inhibitor with respect to Mn(2+), which suggests that Lu(3+) and Mn(2+) are competing for the same metal binding site of the enzyme. These observations are in accordance with the available crystal structure information, which shows a distorted active site region of the Lu(3+)-containing enzyme. Other divalent cations, i.e., Fe(2+), Cu(2+), or Zn(2+), also act as time-dependent slow inhibitors for malic enzyme. The dynamic quenching constants of the intrinsic fluorescence for the metal-free and Lu(3+)-containing enzymes are quite different, indicating the conformational differences between the two enzyme forms. The secondary structure of these two enzyme forms, on the other hand, was not changed. The above results indicated that replacement of the catalytically essential Mn(2+) by other metal ions leads to a slow conformational change of the enzyme and consequently alters the geometry of the active site. The transformed enzyme conformation, however, is unfavorable for catalysis. Both the chemical nature of the metal ion and its correct coordination in the active site are essential for catalysis.  相似文献   

3.
Metal ion binding to human hemopexin   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Binding of divalent metal ions to human hemopexin (Hx) purified by a new protocol has been characterized by metal ion affinity chromatography and potentiometric titration in the presence and absence of bound protoheme IX. ApoHx was retained by variously charged metal affinity chelate resins in the following order: Ni(2+) > Cu(2+) > Co(2+) > Zn(2+) > Mn(2+). The Hx-heme complex exhibited similar behavior except the order of retention of the complex on Zn(2+)- and Co(2+)-charged columns was reversed. One-dimensional (1)H NMR of apoHx in the presence of Ni(2+) implicates at least two His residues and possibly an Asp, Glu, or Met residue in Ni(2+) binding. Potentiometric titrations establish that apoHx possesses more than two metal ion binding sites and that the capacity and/or affinity for metal ion binding is diminished when heme binds. For most metal ions that have been studied, potentiometric data did not fit to binding isotherms that assume one or two independent binding sites. For Mn(2+), however, these data were consistent with a high-affinity site [K(A) = (15 +/- 3) x 10(6) M(-)(1)] and a low-affinity site (K(A) 相似文献   

4.
We report the first stopped-flow fluorescence analysis of transition metal binding (Co(2+), Ni(2+), Cu(2+), and Zn(2+)) to the H-N-H endonuclease motif within colicin E9 (the E9 DNase). The H-N-H consensus forms the active site core of a number of endonuclease groups but is also structurally homologous to the so-called treble-clef motif, a ubiquitous zinc-binding motif found in a wide variety of metalloproteins. We find that all the transition metal ions tested bind via multistep mechanisms. Binding was further dissected for Ni(2+) and Zn(2+) ions through the use of E9 DNase single tryptophan mutants, which demonstrated that most steps reflect conformational rearrangements that occur after the bimolecular collision, many common to the two metals, while one appears specific to zinc. The kinetically derived equilibrium dissociation constants (K(d)) for transition metal binding to the E9 DNase agree with previously determined equilibrium measurements and so confirm the validity of the derived kinetic mechanisms. Zn(2+) binds tightest to the enzyme (K(d) approximately 10(-)(9) M) but does not support endonuclease activity, whereas the other metals (K(d) approximately 10(-)(6) M) are active in endonuclease assays implying that the additional step seen for Zn(2+) traps the enzyme in an inactive but high affinity state. Metal-induced conformational changes are likely to be a conserved feature of H-N-H/treble clef motif proteins since similar Zn(2+)-induced, multistep binding was observed for other colicin DNases. Moreover, they appear to be independent both of the conformational heterogeneity that is naturally present within the E9 DNase at equilibrium, as well as the conformational changes that accompany the binding of its cognate inhibitor protein Im9.  相似文献   

5.
Ramakrishnan B  Boeggeman E  Qasba PK 《Biochemistry》2004,43(39):12513-12522
Beta-1,4-galactosyltransferase (beta4Gal-T1) in the presence of manganese ion transfers galactose from UDP-galactose (UDP-Gal) to N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc) that is either free or linked to an oligosaccharide. Crystallographic studies on bovine beta4Gal-T1 have shown that the primary metal binding site is located in the hinge region of a long flexible loop, which upon Mn(2+) and UDP-Gal binding changes from an open to a closed conformation. This conformational change creates an oligosaccharide binding site in the enzyme. Neither UDP nor UDP analogues efficiently induce these conformational changes in the wild-type enzyme, thereby restricting the structural analysis of the acceptor binding site. The binding of Mn(2+) involves an uncommon coordination to the Sdelta atom of Met344; when it is mutated to His, the mutant M344H, in the presence of Mn(2+) and UDP-hexanolamine, readily changes to a closed conformation, facilitating the structural analysis of the enzyme bound with an oligosaccharide acceptor. Although the mutant M344H loses 98% of its Mn(2+)-dependent activity, it exhibits 25% of its activity in the presence of Mg(2+). The crystal structures of M344H-Gal-T1 in complex with either UDP-Gal.Mn(2+) or UDP-Gal.Mg(2+), determined at 2.3 A resolution, show that the mutant enzyme in these complexes is in a closed conformation, and the coordination stereochemistry of Mg(2+) is quite similar to that of Mn(2+). Although either Mn(2+) or Mg(2+), together with UDP-Gal, binds and changes the conformation of the M344H mutant to the closed one, it is the Mg(2+) complex that engages efficiently in catalyses. Thus, this property enabled us to crystallize the M344H mutant for the first time with the acceptor substrate chitobiose in the presence of UDP-hexanolamine and Mn(2+). The crystal structure determined at 2.3 A resolution reveals that the GlcNAc residue at the nonreducing end of chitobiose makes extensive hydrophobic interactions with the highly conserved Tyr286 residue.  相似文献   

6.
A Abbott  W J Ball 《Biochemistry》1992,31(45):11236-11243
Monoclonal antibody M7-PB-E9 binds the sheep kidney Na+,K(+)-ATPase alpha-subunit with high affinity (Kd = 3 nM) and inhibits enzyme turnover in competition with ATP, and, like ATP, in the presence of Mg2+, it stimulates the rate of ouabain binding [Ball, W. J. (1984) Biochemistry 23, 2275-2281]. In this study, covalent attachment of fluorescein 5'-isothiocyanate (FITC) at (or near) the enzyme's ATP binding site did not alter the antibody's affinity for alpha nor did bound antibody alter the anisotropy of (r = 0.36) or the solvent accessibility of iodide to bound FITC. Further, in its E1Na+ conformation (4 mM NaCl), the enzyme's affinity for the ATP congener eosin was unaltered by the bound antibody (Kd = 9 nM). In contrast, partial E2 conformations induced by KCl lowered eosin affinities (0.2 mM KCl, Kd = 28 nM; 0.4 mM, Kd = 86 nM), and M7-PB-E9 reduced these affinities further (Kd = 66 and 130 nM, respectively). By monitoring the fluorescence changes of the FITC-labeled enzyme, the antibody was found to assist several ligand-induced conformational transitions from E1 (E1Na+ or E1Tris) to E2 (E2K+, E2-P(i)Mg2+, or E2Mg2+.ouabain) states, and inhibit the E2K(+)-->E1Na+ transition. Antibody binding alone, however, did not appear to significantly alter enzyme conformation. The antibody therefore is not directed against the ATP site but binds to a region of alpha distinct from any ligand binding site and which plays an important role in the E1<-->E2 transitions.  相似文献   

7.
S100A3 is a unique member of the EF-hand superfamily of Ca(2+)-binding proteins. It binds Ca(2+) with poor affinity (K(d) = 4-35 mm) but Zn(2+) with exceptionally high affinity (K(d) = 4 nm). This high affinity for Zn(2+) is attributed to the unusual high Cys content of S100A3. The protein is highly expressed in fast proliferating hair root cells and astrocytoma pointing toward a function in cell cycle control. We determined the crystal structure of the protein at 1.7 A. The high resolution structure revealed a large distortion of the C-terminal canonical EF-hand, which most likely abolishes Ca(2+) binding. The crystal structure of S100A3 allows the prediction of one putative Zn(2+) binding site in the C terminus of each subunit of S100A3 involving Cys and His residues in the coordination of the metal ion. Zn(2+) binding induces a large conformational change in S100A3 perturbing the hydrophobic interface between two S100A3 subunits, as shown by size exclusion chromatography and CD spectroscopy.  相似文献   

8.
Apparent Ca(2+)-binding constant (K(app)) of Caenorhabditis elegans troponin C (CeTnC) was determined by a fluorescence titration method. The K(app) of the N-domain Ca(2+)-binding site of CeTnC was 7.9+/-1.6 x 10(5) M(-1) and that of the C-domain site was 1.2+/-0.6 x 10(6) M(-1), respectively. Mg(2+)-dependence of the K(app) showed that both Ca(2+)-binding sites did not bind competitively Mg(2+). The Ca(2+) dissociation rate constant (k(off)) of CeTnC was determined by the fluorescence stopped-flow method. The k(off) of the N-domain Ca(2+)-binding site of CeTnC was 703+/-208 s(-1) and that of the C-domain site was 286+/-33 s(-1), respectively. From these values we could calculate the Ca(2+)-binding rate constant (k(on)) as to be 5.6+/-2.8 x 10(8) M(-1) s(-1) for the N-domain site and 3.4+/-2.1 x 10(8) M(-1) s(-1) for the C-domain site, respectively. These results mean that all Ca(2+)-binding sites of CeTnC are low affinity, fast dissociating and Ca(2+)-specific sites. Evolutional function of TnC between vertebrate and invertebrate and biological functions of wild type and mutant CeTnCs are discussed.  相似文献   

9.
Vitoc CI  Mukerji I 《Biochemistry》2011,50(9):1432-1441
The Escherichia coli protein HU is a non-sequence-specific DNA-binding protein that interacts with DNA primarily through electrostatic interactions. In addition to nonspecific binding to linear DNA, HU has been shown to bind with nanomolar affinity to discontinuous DNA substrates, such as repair and recombination intermediates. This work specifically examines the HU-four-way junction (4WJ) interaction using fluorescence spectroscopic methods. The conformation of the junction in the presence of different counterions was investigated by Fo?rster resonance energy transfer (FRET) measurements, which revealed an ion-type conformational dependence, where Na(+) yields the most stacked conformation followed by K(+) and Mg(2+). HU binding induces a greater degree of stacking in the Na(+)-stabilized and Mg(2+)-stabilized junctions but not the K(+)-stabilized junction, which is attributed to differences in the size of the ionic radii and potential differences in ion binding sites. Interestingly, junction conformation modulates binding affinity, where HU exhibits the lowest affinity for the Mg(2+)-stabilized form (24 μM(-1)), which is the least stacked conformation. Protein binding to a mixed population of open and stacked forms of the junction leads to nearly complete formation of a protein-stabilized stacked-X junction. These results strongly support a model in which HU binds to and stabilizes the stacked-X conformation.  相似文献   

10.
Family II inorganic pyrophosphatases (PPases) constitute a new evolutionary group of PPases, with a different fold and mechanism than the common family I enzyme; they are related to the "DHH" family of phosphoesterases. Biochemical studies have shown that Mn(2+) and Co(2+) preferentially activate family II PPases; Mg(2+) partially activates; and Zn(2+) can either activate or inhibit (Zyryanov et al., Biochemistry, 43, 14395-14402, accompanying paper in this issue). The three solved family II PPase structures did not explain the differences between the PPase families nor the metal ion differences described above. We therefore solved three new family II PPase structures: Bacillus subtilis PPase (Bs-PPase) dimer core bound to Mn(2+) at 1.3 A resolution, and, at 2.05 A resolution, metal-free Bs-PPase and Streptococcus gordonii (Sg-PPase) containing sulfate and Zn(2+). Comparison of the new and old structures of various family II PPases demonstrates why the family II enzyme prefers Mn(2+) or Co(2+), as an activator rather than Mg(2+). Both M1 and M2 undergo significant changes upon substrate binding, changing from five-coordinate to octahedral geometry. Mn(2+) and Co(2+), which readily adopt different coordination states and geometries, are thus favored. Combining our structures with biochemical data, we identified M2 as the high-affinity metal site. Zn(2+) activates in the M1 site, where octahedral geometry is not essential for catalysis, but inhibits in the M2 site, because it is unable to assume octahedral geometry but remains trigonal bipyramidal. Finally, we propose that Lys205-Gln81-Gln80 form a hydrophilic channel to speed product release from the active site.  相似文献   

11.
1. The protein fluorescence intensity of (Na+ + K+)-ATPase is enhanced following binding of K+ at low concentrations. The properties of the response suggest that one or a few tryptophan residues are affected by a conformational transition between the K-bound form E2 . (K) and a Na-bound form E1 . Na. 2. The rate of the conformational transition E2 . (K) leads to E . Na has been measured with a stopped-flow fluorimeter by exploiting the difference in fluorescence of the two states. In the absence of ATP the rate is very slow, but it is greatly accelerated by binding of ATP to a low affinity site. 3. Transient changes in tryptophan fluorescence accompany hydrolysis of ATP at low concentrations, in media containing Mg2+, Na+ and K+. The fluorescence response reflects interconversion between the initial enzyme conformation, E1 . Na and the steady-state turnover intermediate E2 . (K). 4. The phosphorylated intermediate, E2P can be detected by a fluorescence increase accompanying hydrolysis of ATP in media containing Mg2+ and Na+ but no K+. 5. The conformational states and reaction mechanism of the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase are discussed in the light of this work. The results permit a comparison of the behaviour of the enzyme at both low and high nucleotide concentrations.  相似文献   

12.
13.
Human brain S100b (beta beta) protein was purified using zinc-dependent affinity chromatography on phenyl-Sepharose. The calcium- and zinc-binding properties of the protein were studied by flow dialysis technique and the protein conformation both in the metal-free form and in the presence of Ca2+ or Zn2+ was investigated with ultraviolet spectroscopy, sulfhydryl reactivity and interaction with a hydrophobic fluorescence probe 6-(p-toluidino)naphthalene-2-sulfonic acid (TNS). Flow dialysis measurements of Ca2+ binding to human brain S100b (beta beta) protein revealed six Ca2+-binding sites which we assumed to represent three for each beta monomer, characterized by the macroscopic association constants K1 = 0.44 X 10(5) M-1; K2 = 0.1 X 10(5) M-1 and K3 = 0.08 X 10(5) M-1. In the presence of 120 mM KCl, the affinity of the protein for calcium is drastically reduced. Zinc-binding studies on human S100b protein showed that the protein bound two zinc ions per beta monomer, with macroscopic constants K1 = 4.47 X 10(7) M-1 and K2 = 0.1 X 10(7) M-1. Most of the Zn2+-induced conformational changes occurred after the binding of two zinc ions per mole of S100b protein. These results differ significantly from those for bovine protein and cast doubt on the conservation of the S100 structure during evolution. When calcium binding was studied in the presence of zinc, we noted an increase in the affinity of the protein for calcium, K1 = 4.4 X 10(5) M-1; K2 = 0.57 X 10(5) M-1; K3 = 0.023 X 10(5) M-1. These results indicated that the Ca2+- and Zn2+-binding sites on S100b protein are different and suggest that Zn2+ may regulate Ca2+ binding by increasing the affinity of the protein for calcium.  相似文献   

14.
Escherichia coli alkaline phosphatase exhibits maximal activity when Zn(2+) fills the M1 and M2 metal sites and Mg(2+) fills the M3 metal site. When other metals replace the zinc and magnesium, the catalytic efficiency is reduced by more than 5000-fold. Alkaline phosphatases from organisms such as Thermotoga maritima and Bacillus subtilis require cobalt for maximal activity and function poorly with zinc and magnesium. Previous studies have shown that the D153H alkaline phosphatase exhibited very little activity in the presence of cobalt, while the K328W and especially the D153H/K328W mutant enzymes can use cobalt for catalysis. To understand the structural basis for the altered metal specificity and the ability of the D153H/K328W enzyme to utilize cobalt for catalysis, we determined the structures of the inactive wild-type E. coli enzyme with cobalt (WT_Co) and the structure of the active D153H/K328W enzyme with cobalt (HW_Co). The structural data reveal differences in the metal coordination and in the strength of the interaction with the product phosphate (P(i)). Since release of P(i) is the slow step in the mechanism at alkaline pH, the enhanced binding of P(i) in the WT_Co structure explains the observed decrease in activity, while the weakened binding of P(i) in the HW_Co structure explains the observed increase in activity. These alterations in P(i) affinity are directly related to alterations in the coordination of the metals in the active site of the enzyme.  相似文献   

15.
Scholz O  Schubert P  Kintrup M  Hillen W 《Biochemistry》2000,39(35):10914-10920
We have examined anhydrotetracycline (atc) binding to Tet repressor (TetR) in dependence of the Mg(2+) concentration. Of all tc compounds tested so far, atc has the highest affinity for TetR, with a K(A) of 9.8 x 10(11) M(-1) in the presence of Mg(2+) and 6.5 x 10(7) M(-1) without Mg(2+). Thus, it binds TetR with 500-fold higher affinity than tc under both conditions. The Mg(2+)-free binding of atc to TetR leads to induction in vitro, demonstrating that the metal is not necessary to trigger the associated conformational change. To obtain more detailed information about Mg(2+)-free induction, we constructed and prepared to homogeneity four single-alanine substitution mutants of TetR. Three of them affect residues involved in contacting Mg(2+) (TetR H100A, E147A, and T103A), and one altered residue contacts tc TetR N82A. TetR H100A and E147A are induced by atc, with and without Mg(2+), showing 110-fold and 1000-fold decreased Mg(2+)-dependent and unchanged Mg(2+)-independent atc binding, respectively. Thus, the contacts of these residues to Mg(2+) are not necessary for induction. TetR N82A is not inducible under any of the conditions employed and shows an about 4000-fold decreased atc binding constant. The Mg(2+)-dependent affinity of TetR T103A for atc is only 400-fold reduced, but no induction with atc was observed. Thus, Thr103 must be essential for the conformational change associated with induction in the absence of Mg(2+).  相似文献   

16.
Protein engineering was used previously to convert maltose-binding protein (MBP) into a zinc biosensor. Zn(2+) binding by the engineered MBP was thought to require a large conformational change from "open" to "closed", similar to that observed when maltose is bound by the wild-type protein. We show that although this re-designed MBP molecule binds Zn(2+) with high affinity as previously reported, it does not adopt a closed conformation in solution as assessed by small-angle X-ray scattering. High-resolution crystallographic studies of the engineered Zn(2+)-binding MBP molecule demonstrate that Zn(2+) is coordinated by residues on the N-terminal lobe only, and therefore Zn(2+) binding does not require the protein to adopt a fully closed conformation. Additional crystallographic studies indicate that this unexpected Zn(2+) binding site can also coordinate Cu(2+) and Ni(2+) with only subtle changes in the overall conformation of the protein. This work illustrates that the energetic barrier to domain closure, which normally functions to maintain MBP in an open concentration in the absence of ligand, is not easily overcome by protein design. A comparison to the mechanism of maltose-induced domain rearrangement is discussed.  相似文献   

17.
Cu and Zn have been shown to accumulate in the brains of Alzheimer's disease patients. We have previously reported that Cu(2+) and Zn(2+) bind amyloid beta (Abeta), explaining their enrichment in plaque pathology. Here we detail the stoichiometries and binding affinities of multiple cooperative Cu(2+)-binding sites on synthetic Abeta1-40 and Abeta1-42. We have developed a ligand displacement technique (competitive metal capture analysis) that uses metal-chelator complexes to evaluate metal ion binding to Abeta, a notoriously self-aggregating peptide. This analysis indicated that there is a very-high-affinity Cu(2+)-binding site on Abeta1-42 (log K(app) = 17.2) that mediates peptide precipitation and that the tendency of this peptide to self-aggregate in aqueous solutions is due to the presence of trace Cu(2+) contamination (customarily approximately 0.1 microM). In contrast, Abeta1-40 has much lower affinity for Cu(2+) at this site (estimated log K(app) = 10.3), explaining why this peptide is less self-aggregating. The greater Cu(2+)-binding affinity of Abeta1-42 compared with Abeta1-40 is associated with significantly diminished negative cooperativity. The role of trace metal contamination in inducing Abeta precipitation was confirmed by the demonstration that Abeta peptide (10 microM) remained soluble for 5 days only in the presence of high-affinity Cu(2+)-selective chelators.  相似文献   

18.
The kinetic mechanism of yeast inorganic pyrophosphatase (PPase) was examined by carrying out initial velocity studies. Ca2+ and Rh(H2O)4(methylenediphosphonate) (Rh(H2O)4PCP) were used as dead-end inhibitors to study the order of binding of Cr(H2O)4PP to the substrate site and Mg2+ to the "low affinity" activator site on the enzyme. Competitive inhibition was observed for Ca2+ vs Mg2+ (Kis = 0.93 +/- 0.03 mM), for Rh(H2O)4PCP vs Cr(H2O)4PP (Kis = 0.25 +/- 0.07 mM), and for RH(H2O)4PCP vs Mg2+ (Kis = 0.38 +/- 0.03 mM). Uncompetitive inhibition was observed for Ca2+ vs Cr(H2O)4PP (Kii = 0.49 +/- 0.01). On the basis of these results a rapid equilibrium ordered mechanism in which Cr(H2O)4PP binding precedes Mg2+ ion binding is proposed. The inert substrate analog, Mg(imidodiphosphate) (MgPNP) was shown to induce Mg2+ inhibition of the PPase-catalyzed hydrolysis of MgPP. The Mg2+ inhibition observed was competitive vs MgPP and partial. These results suggest that Mg2+/MgPNP release from the enzyme occurs in preferred rather than strict order and that the Mg2+/MgPP-binding steps are at steady state. Zn2+, Co2+, and Mn2+ (but not Mg2+) displayed activator inhibition of the PPase-catalyzed hydrolysis of PPi (this study) and of Cr(H2O)4PP (W.B. Knight, S. Fitts, and D. Dunaway-Mariano, (1981) Biochemistry 20, 4079). These findings suggest that cofactor release from the low affinity cofactor site on the enzyme must precede product release and that Zn2+, Mn2+, and Co2+ (but not Mg2+) have high affinities for the cofactor sites on both the PPase.M.MPP and PPase.M.M(P)2 complexes. The role of the metal cofactor in determining PPase substrate specificity was briefly explored by testing the ability of the Mg2+ complex of tripolyphosphate (PPPi) (a substrate for the Zn2+-activated enzyme but not the Mg2+-activated enzyme) to induce Mg2+ inhibition of PPase-catalyzed hydrolysis of MgPP. MgPPP was shown to be as effective as MgPNP in inducing competitive Mg2+ inhibition (vs MgPP). This result suggests that the low affinity Mg2+ cofactor-binding site present in the enzyme-MgPP complex is maintained in the enzyme-MgPPP complex. Thus, failure of Mg2+ to bind to the enzyme-MgPPP complex was ruled out as a possible explanation for the failure of the Mg2+-activated enzyme to catalyze the hydrolysis of MgPPP.  相似文献   

19.
Cytosolic D-ribulose-5-phosphate 3-epimerase from rice was crystallized after EDTA treatment and structurally elucidated by X-ray diffraction to 1.9A resolution. A prominent Zn(2+) site at the active center was established in a soaking experiment. The structure was compared with that of the EDTA-treated crystalline enzyme from the chloroplasts of potato plant leaves showing some structural differences, in particular the "closed" state of a strongly conserved mobile loop covering the substrate at its putative binding site. The previous proposal for the active center was confirmed and the most likely substrate binding position and conformation was derived from the locations of the bound zinc and sulfate ions and of three water molecules. Assuming that the bound zinc ion is an integral part of the enzyme, a reaction mechanism involving a well-stabilized cis-enediolate intermediate is suggested.  相似文献   

20.
We have examined the influence of monovalent and divalent cations on the secondary structure of bovine alpha-lactalbumin at neutral pH using Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy. Our present studies are based on previously reported amide I' component band assignments for this protein [Prestrelski, S. J., Byler, D. M., & Thompson, M. P. (1991) Int. J. Pept. Protein Res. 37, 508-512]. The results indicate that upon dissolution, alpha-lactalbumin undergoes a small, but significant, time-dependent conformational change, regardless of the ions present. Additionally, these studies provide the first quantitative measure of the well-known secondary structural change which accompanies calcium binding. Results indicate that removal of Ca2+ from holo alpha-lactalbumin results in local unfolding of the Ca(2+)-binding loop; the spectra indicate that approximately 16% of the backbone chain changes from a rigid coordination complex to an unordered loop. We have also examined the effects of binding of several other metal ions. Our studies have revealed that binding of Mn2+ to apo alpha-lactalbumin (Ca(2+)-free), while inducing a small, but significant, conformational change, does not cause the alpha-lactalbumin backbone conformation to change to that of the holo (Ca(2+)-bound) form as characterized by infrared spectroscopy. Similar changes to those induced by Mn2+ are observed upon binding of Na+ to apo alpha-lactalbumin, and furthermore, even at very high concentrations (0.2 M), Na+ does not stabilize a structure similar to the holo form. Binding of Zn2+ to the apo form of alpha-lactalbumin does not result in significant backbone conformational changes, suggesting a rigid Zn(2+)-binding site.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

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