首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
We have used site-directed mutagenesis in combination with a battery of biophysical techniques to probe the stability and folding behavior of a small globular protein, the histidine-containing phosphocarrier protein (HPr). Specifically, the four phenylalanine residues (2, 22, 29, and 48) of the wild-type protein were individually replaced by single tryptophans, thus introducing site-specific probes for monitoring the behavior of the protein. The folding of the tryptophan mutants was investigated by NMR, DSC, CD, intrinsic fluorescence, fluorescence anisotropy, and fluorescence quenching. The heat-induced denaturation of all four mutants, and the GdnHCl-induced unfolding curves of F2W, F29W, and F48W, can be fitted adequately to a two-state model, in agreement with the observations for the wild-type protein. The GdnHCl unfolding transitions of F22W, however, showed the accumulation of an intermediate state at low concentrations of denaturant. Kinetic refolding studies of F2W, F29W, and F48W showed a major single phase, independent of the probe used (CD, fluorescence, and fluorescence anisotropy) and similar to that of the wild-type protein. In contrast, F22W showed two phases in the fluorescence experiments corresponding to the two phases previously observed in ANS binding studies of the wild-type protein [Van Nuland et al. (1998) Biochemistry 37, 622-637]. Residue 22 was found from NMR studies to be part of the binding interface on HPr for ANS. These observations indicate that the second slow phase reflects a local, rather than a global, rearrangement from a well-structured highly nativelike intermediate state to the fully folded native state that has less hydrophobic surface exposed to the solvent. The detection of the second slow phase by the use of selective labeling of different regions of the protein with fluorophores illustrates the need for an integrated approach in order to understand the intricate details of the folding reactions of even the simplest proteins.  相似文献   

2.
Goat alpha-lactalbumin (GLA) contains four tryptophan (Trp) residues. In order to obtain information on the fluorescence contribution of the individual Trp residues in native GLA, we recorded the fluorescence spectra of four GLA mutants, W26F, W60F, W104F, and W118F, in each of which a single Trp residue was replaced with phenylalanine (Phe). Comparison of the fluorescence spectra of the four mutants with that of wild-type GLA indicated that, in native GLA, three Trp residues (Trp60, Trp104, and Trp118) are strongly quenched and account for the partial indirect quenching of Trp26. As a consequence, the fluorescence of wild-type GLA and of the mutants W60F, W104F, and W118F mainly results from Trp26. An inspection of the crystal structure indicated that, in addition to the disulfide bonds that are in direct contact with the indole groups of Trp60 and Trp118, backbone peptide bonds that are in direct contact with the indole groups of Trp60, Trp104, and Trp118, contribute to the direct quenching effects. Interestingly, the lack of direct quenching of Trp26 explains why the cleavage of disulfide bonds by UV light is mediated more by the highly fluorescent Trp26 than by the less fluorescent Trp104 and Trp118.  相似文献   

3.
Multiple phases have been observed during the folding and unfolding of intestinal fatty acid binding protein (WT-IFABP) by stopped-flow fluorescence. Site-directed mutagenesis has been used to examine the role of each of the two tryptophans of this protein in these processes. The unfolding and refolding kinetics of the mutant protein containing only tryptophan 82 (W6Y-IFABP) showed that the tryptophan at this location was critical to the fluorescence signal changes observed throughout the unfolding reaction and early in the refolding reaction. However, the kinetic patterns of the mutant protein containing only tryptophan 6 (W82Y-IFABP) indicated that the tryptophan at this location participated in the fluorescence signal changes observed early in the unfolding reaction and late in the refolding reaction. Together, these data suggest that native-like structure was formed first in the vicinity of tryptophan 82, near the center of the hydrophobic core of this beta-sheet protein, prior to formation of native-like structure in the periphery of the protein.  相似文献   

4.
Chedad A  Van Dael H  Vanhooren A  Hanssens I 《Biochemistry》2005,44(46):15129-15138
Equilibrium circular dichroism and kinetic stopped-flow fluorescence studies on the stability and the folding kinetics of a set of Trp to Phe mutants of goat alpha-lactalbumin (GLA) were used to characterize the native, intermediate, and transition states of these constructs. GLA contains four tryptophan residues, three of which, Trp26, Trp104, and Trp118, are located in the alpha-domain, while the fourth, Trp60, is located in the beta-domain. Trp26, Trp60, and Trp104 are part of a hydrophobic cluster, whereas Trp118 is situated in a more flexible region near the C-terminal end of the protein. In each case, the mutation leads to a reduction in the overall stability, but only for W26F and W60F is an equilibrium intermediate observed in guanidine hydrochloride-induced unfolding experiments. In kinetic refolding experiments, however, for all samples a burst phase is observed, the amplitude of which depends on the specific mutation. Refolding and unfolding kinetics can adequately be described by a sequential three-state mechanism. phi value analysis showed that the local structure around Trp26, Trp60, and Trp104 is formed in the intermediate and in the transition state of the folding reaction, while around Trp118 no persistent native contacts are observed. From these findings, we conclude that, although hydrophobicity is a major driving force for folding, minor steric changes induced by point mutation can considerably influence the overall stability and the folding process of the protein.  相似文献   

5.
Single tryptophan mutants of the trp aporepressor, tryptophan 19-->phenylalanine (W19F) and tryptophan 99-->phenylalanine (W99F), were used in this study to resolve the individual steady-state and time-resolved fluorescence urea unfolding profiles of the two tryptophan residues in this highly intertwined, dimeric protein. The wild-type protein exhibits a large increase in fluorescence intensity and lifetime, as well as a large red shift in the steady-state fluorescence emission spectrum, upon unfolding by urea (Lane, A.N. & Jardetsky, O., 1987, Eur. J. Biochem. 164, 389-396; Gittelman, M.S. & Matthews, C.R., 1990, Biochemistry 29, 7011-7020; Fernando, T. & Royer, C.A., 1992, Biochemistry 31, 6683-6691). Unfolding of the W19F mutant demonstrated that Trp 99 undergoes a large increase in intensity and a red shift upon exposure to solvent. Lifetime studies revealed that the contribution of the dominant 0.5-ns component of this tryptophan tends toward zero with increasing urea, whereas the longer lifetime components increase in importance. This lifting of the quenching of Trp 99 may be due to disruption of the interaction between the two subunits upon denaturation, which abolishes the interaction of Trp 99 on one subunit with the amide quenching group of Asn 32 on the other subunit (Royer, C.A., 1992, Biophys. J. 63, 741-750). On the other hand, Trp 19 is quenched in response to unfolding in the W99F mutant. Exposure to solvent of Trp 19, which is buried at the hydrophobic dimer interface in the native protein, results in a large red shift of the average steady-state emission.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
Halohydrin dehalogenase (HheC) from Agrobacterium radiobacter AD1 is a homotetrameric protein containing four tryptophan residues per subunit. The fluorescence properties of the enzyme are strongly influenced by halide binding. To examine the role of the tryptophans (W139, W192, W238, and W249) in halide binding and catalysis, they were individually mutated to a phenylalanine. All mutations, except for W238F, influenced the enzymatic properties. Mutating W192 to phenylalanine inactivated the enzyme and led to dissociation into dimers and monomers. In the structure of HheC, residue W139 and residue W249 from the opposite subunit are close to the active site of the enzyme. Substitution of W139 mainly affected K(m) values with all tested substrates and reduced the enantiopreference for p-nitro-2-bromo-1-phenylethanol. Replacing W249 increased both k(cat) and K(m) values with all tested substrates except for the (S)-enantiomer of p-nitro-2-bromo-1-phenylethanol, for which k(cat) was 3-fold decreased, resulting in a 6-fold increase of the enantioselectivity. Fluorescence measurements revealed that in the ligand-free state the intrinsic protein fluorescence of mutant W139F is higher than that of the wild-type enzyme, while the fluorescence intensity of mutants W238F and W249F was lower. The fluorescence intensities of the W238F and W249F enzymes were increased when they were unfolded or when bromide was added, whereas the fluorescence of mutant W139F was not increased by unfolding or addition of bromide. These results demonstrate that the fluorescence of residues W238 and W249 is partially quenched in the folded ligand-free state, and that W139 is completely quenched and acts as an energy acceptor for the other tryptophan residues as well. Changes of the maximum fluorescence emission wavelength of the HheC variants and the results of acrylamide quenching experiments confirmed that bromide binding induces a local conformational change around the active site, resulting in residue W139 and the quencher group being separated.  相似文献   

7.
Q Ruan  K Ruan  C Balny  M Glaser  W W Mantulin 《Biochemistry》2001,40(48):14706-14714
Adenylate kinase (AKe) from E. coli is a small, single-chain, monomeric enzyme with no tryptophan and a single cysteine residue. We have constructed six single-Trp mutants of AKe to facilitate optical studies of these proteins and to specifically examine the interrelationship between their structure, function, dynamics, and folding reactions. In this study, the effects of hydrostatic pressure on the folding reactions of AKe were studied. The native structure of AKe was transformed to a non-native, yet pressure stable, conformation by hydrostatic pressure of about 300 MPa. This pressure lability of AKe is rather low for a monomeric protein and presumably may be attributed to substantial conformational flexibility and a correspondingly large volume change. The refolding of AKe after pressure-induced denaturation was reversible under ambient conditions. At low temperature (near 0 degrees C), the refolding process of pressure-exposed AKe mutants displayed a significant hysteresis. The observation of a slow refolding rate in the 193 region and a faster folding rate around the active site (86, 41, 73 regions) leads us to suggest that in the folding process, priority is afforded to functional regions. The slow structural return of the 193 region apparently does not hinder the more rapid return of enzymatic activity of AKe. Circular dichroism studies on the pressure-denatured Y193W mutant show that the secondary structure (calculated from far-UV spectra) returned at a rapid rate, but the tertiary structure alignment (calculated from near-UV spectra) around the 193 region occurred more slowly at rates comparable to those detected by fluorescence intensity. Denaturation of AKe mutants by guanidine hydrochloride and subsequent refolding experiments were also consistent with a much slower refolding process around the 193 region than near the active site. Fast refolding kinetic traces were observed in F86W, S41W, and A73W mutants using a fluorescence detection stopped-flow rapid mixing device, while only a slow kinetic trace was observed for Y193W. The results suggest that the differences in regional folding rates of AKe are not derived from the specific denaturation methods, but rather are inherent in the structural organization of the protein.  相似文献   

8.
Kinetic intermediates in protein folding are short-lived and therefore difficult to detect and to characterize. In the folding of polypeptide chains with incorrect isomers of Xaa-Pro peptide bonds the final rate-limiting transition to the native state is slow, since it is coupled to prolyl isomerization. Incorrect prolyl isomers thus act as effective traps for folding intermediates and allow their properties to be studied more easily. We employed this strategy to investigate the mechanism of slow folding of ribonuclease T1. In our experiments we use a mutant form of this protein with a single cis peptide bond at proline 39. During refolding, protein chains with an incorrect trans proline 39 can rapidly form extensive secondary structure. The CD signal in the amide region is regained within the dead-time of stopped-flow mixing (15 ms), indicating a fast formation of the single alpha-helix of ribonuclease T1. This step is correlated with partial formation of a hydrophobic core, because the fluorescence emission maximum of tryptophan 59 is shifted from 349 nm to 325 nm within less than a second. After about 20 s of refolding an intermediate is present that shows about 40% enzymatic activity compared to the completely refolded protein. In addition, the solvent accessibility of tryptophan 59 is drastically reduced in this intermediate and comparable to that of the native state as determined by acrylamide quenching of the tryptophan fluorescence. Activity and quenching measurements have long dead-times and therefore we do not know whether enzymatic activity and solvent accessibility also change in the time range of milliseconds. At this stage of folding at least part of the beta-sheet structure is already present, since it hosts the active site of the enzyme. The trans to cis isomerization of the tyrosine 38-proline 39 peptide bond in the intermediate and consequently the formation of native protein is very slow (tau = 6,500 s at pH 5.0 and 10 degrees C). It is accompanied by an additional increase in tryptophan fluorescence, by the development of the fine structure of the tryptophan emission spectrum, and by the regain of the full enzymatic activity. This indicates that the packing of the hydrophobic core, which involves both tryptophan 59 and proline 39, is optimized in this step. Apparently, refolding polypeptide chains with an incorrect prolyl isomer can very rapidly form partially folded intermediates with native-like properties.  相似文献   

9.
Plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 harbors four tryptophan residues at positions 86, 139, 175, and 262. To investigate the contribution of each tryptophan residue to the total fluorescence and to reveal the mutual interactions of the tryptophan residues and interactions with the other amino acids, 15 mutants in which tryptophan residues have been replaced by phenylalanines were constructed, purified, and characterized. Conformational distribution analysis revealed that the tryptophan mutants have a similar conformational distribution pattern as wild-type plasminogen activator inhibitor 1. Mutants in which tryptophan residue 175 was replaced by a phenylalanine displayed an increased functional half-life of the active conformation, whereas the functional half-life of mutants in which tryptophan residue 262 was replaced by a phenylalanine was substantially decreased. Comparative analysis of the fluorescence lifetimes, the extinction coefficients, and the quantum yields of the individual tryptophan residues demonstrates that tryptophan residue 262 gives the highest contribution to the total fluorescence. The other tryptophan residues have a very low quantum yield. In the wild-type protein, the fluorescence of all tryptophan residues is partially quenched as compared to the mutants that contain single tryptophan residues, due to conformational effects. The fluorescence of tryptophan residue 262 is very likely also partially quenched by energy transfer to tryptophan residue 175.  相似文献   

10.
Phosphorylation of Ser40 in the regulatory domain of tyrosine hydroxylase activates the enzyme by increasing the rate constant for dissociation of inhibitory catecholamines from the active site by 3 orders of magnitude. To probe the changes in the structure of the N-terminal domain upon phosphorylation, individual phenylalanine residues at positions 14, 34, and 74 were replaced with tryptophan in a form of the protein in which the endogenous tryptophans had all been mutated to phenylalanine (W(3)F TyrH). The steady-state fluorescence anisotropy of F74W W(3)F TyrH was unaffected by phosphorylation, but the anisotropies of both F14W and F34W W(3)F TyrH increased significantly upon phosphorylation. The fluorescence of the single tryptophan residue at position 74 was less readily quenched by acrylamide than those at the other two positions; fluorescence increased the rate constant for quenching of the residues at positions 14 and 34 but did not affect that for the residue at position 74. Frequency domain analyses were consistent with phosphorylation having no effect on the amplitude of the rotational motion of the indole ring at position 74, resulting in a small increase in the rotational motion of the residue at position 14 and resulting in a larger increase in the rotational motion of the residue at position 34. These results are consistent with the local environment at position 74 being unaffected by phosphorylation, that at position 34 becoming much more flexible upon phosphorylation, and that at position 14 becoming slightly more flexible upon phosphorylation. The results support a model in which phosphorylation at Ser40 at the N-terminus of the regulatory domain causes a conformational change to a more open conformation in which the N-terminus of the protein no longer inhibits dissociation of a bound catecholamine from the active site.  相似文献   

11.
Human gammaD crystallin (HgammaD-Crys), a major component of the human eye lens, is a 173-residue, primarily beta-sheet protein, associated with juvenile and mature-onset cataracts. HgammaD-Crys has four tryptophans, with two in each of the homologous Greek key domains, which are conserved throughout the gamma-crystallin family. HgammaD-Crys exhibits native-state fluorescence quenching, despite the absence of ligands or cofactors. The tryptophan absorption and fluorescence quenching may influence the lens response to ultraviolet light or the protection of the retina from ambient ultraviolet damage. To provide fluorescence reporters for each quadrant of the protein, triple mutants, each containing three tryptophan-to-phenylalanine substitutions and one native tryptophan, have been constructed and expressed. Trp 42-only and Trp 130-only exhibited fluorescence quenching between the native and denatured states typical of globular proteins, whereas Trp 68-only and Trp 156-only retained the anomalous quenching pattern of wild-type HgammaD-Crys. The three-dimensional structure of HgammaD-Crys shows Tyr/Tyr/His aromatic cages surrounding Trp 68 and Trp 156 that may be the source of the native-state quenching. During equilibrium refolding/unfolding at 37 degrees C, the tryptophan fluorescence signals indicated that domain I (W42-only and W68-only) unfolded at lower concentrations of GdnHCl than domain II (W130-only and W156-only). Kinetic analysis of both the unfolding and refolding of the triple-mutant tryptophan proteins identified an intermediate along the HgammaD-Crys folding pathway with domain I unfolded and domain II intact. This species is a candidate for the partially folded intermediate in the in vitro aggregation pathway of HgammaD-Crys.  相似文献   

12.
The solvent accessibilities to the tryptophanyl microenvironments of wild type sperm whale apomyoglobin (apoMb) and two mutants (W7F and W14F) containing a single tryptophan are measured by fluorescence quenching studies. The results are compared to those relative to horse apoMb. In the wild type sperm whale protein, no difference is noticed in the solvent accessibility of the two indole residues, as documented by the values of the Stern-Volmer constants. By contrast, the two tryptophan residues of horse apoMb are exposed to the solvent in a different way, thus indicating that some local conformational differences exist between the two homologous proteins in solution. The single W --> F substitution at either position 7 or 14 determines local conformational changes that increase the accessibility of the remaining indole residue but do not affect the overall architecture of the protein molecule.  相似文献   

13.
FtsZ, the master coordinator of bacterial cell division, assembles into filaments in the presence of nucleotide. FtsZ from Streptococcus pneumoniae bears two tryptophan residues (W294 and W378) in its amino acid sequence. The tryptophan fluorescence of FtsZ increases during the assembly of FtsZ. We hypothesized that this increase in the fluorescence intensity was due to the change in the environment of one or both tryptophan residues. To examine this, we constructed two mutants (W294F and W378F) of FtsZ by individually replacing tryptophan with phenylalanine. The mutants displayed similar secondary structures, GTPase activity, and polymerization ability as the wild type FtsZ. During the polymerization, only one tryptophan (W294) showed an increase in its fluorescence intensity. Using time‐correlated single‐photon counting, the fluorescence lifetime of W294 was found to be significantly higher than W378, indicating that W294 was more buried in the structure than W378. The lifetime of W294 further increased during polymer formation, while that of W378 remained unchanged. Fluorescence quenching experiment suggested that the solvent exposure of W294 reduced during the polymerization of FtsZ. W294 is located near the T‐7 loop of the protein, a region important for the monomer‐monomer interaction during the formation of a protofilament. The results indicated that the region around W294 of S. pneumoniae FtsZ undergoes a conformational switch during polymerization as seen for FtsZ from other bacteria.  相似文献   

14.
Actin contains four tryptophan residues, W79, W86, W340, and W356, all located in subdomain 1 of the protein. Replacement of each of these residues with either tyrosine (W79Y and W356Y) or phenylalanine (W86F and W340F) generated viable proteins in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, which, when purified, allowed the analysis of the contribution of these residues to the overall tryptophan fluorescence of actin. The sum of the relative contributions of these tryptophans was found to account for the intrinsic fluorescence of wild-type actin, indicating that energy transfer between the tryptophans is not the main determinant of their quantum yield, and that these mutations induce little conformational change to the protein. This was borne out by virtually identical polymerization rates and similar myosin interactions of each of the mutants and the wild-type actin. In addition, these mutants allowed the dissection of the microenvironment of each tryptophan as actin undergoes conformational changes upon metal cation exchange and polymerization. Based on the relative tryptophan contributions determined from single mutants, a triple mutant of yeast actin (W79) was generated that showed small intrinsic fluorescence and should be useful for studies of actin interactions with actin-binding proteins.  相似文献   

15.
MARCKS-related protein (MRP) is a peripheral membrane protein whose binding to membranes is mediated by the N-terminal myristoyl moiety and a central, highly basic effector domain. MRP mediates cross-talk between protein kinase C and calmodulin and is thought to link the actin cytoskeleton to the plasma membrane. Since MRP contains no tryptophan residues, we mutated a phenylalanine in the effector domain to tryptophan (MRP F93W) and used fluorescence spectroscopy to monitor binding of the protein to phospholipid vesicles. We report in detail the evaluation procedure necessary to extract quantitative information from the raw data. The spectra of MRP F93W obtained in the presence of increasing amounts of lipid crossed at an isosbestic point, indicating a simple transition between two states: free and membrane-bound protein. The change in fluorescence toward values typical of a more hydrophobic environment was used to quantify membrane binding. The partition coefficient agreed well with values obtained previously by other methods. To study the interaction of the N-terminus of MRP with membranes, a tryptophan residue was also introduced at position 4 (MRP S4W). Our data suggest that only the myristoylated N-terminus interacted with liposomes. These results demonstrate the versatility of site-directed incorporation of tryptophan residues to study protein-membrane interactions.  相似文献   

16.
Time-resolved and steady-state fluorescence have been used to resolve the heterogeneous emission of single-tryptophan-containing mutants of Trp repressors W19F and W99F into components. Using iodide as the quencher, the fluorescence-quenching-resolved spectra (FQRS) have been obtained The FQRS method shows that the fluorescence emission of Trp99 can be resolved into two component spectra characterized by maxima of fluorescence emission at 338 and 328 nm. The redder component is exposed to the solvent and participates in about 21% of the total fluorescence emission of TrpR W19F. The second component is inacessible to iodide, but is quenched by acrylamide. The tryptophan residue 19 present in TrpR W99F can be resolved into two component spectra using the FQRS method and iodide as a quencher. Both components of Trp19 exhibit similar maxima of emission at 322–324 nm and both are quenchable by iodide. The component more quenchable by iodide participates in about 38% of the total TrpR W99F emission. The fluorescence lifetime measurements as a function of iodide concentration support the existence of two classes of Trp99 and Trp19 in the Trp repressor. Our results suggest that the Trp aporepressor can exist in the ground state in two distinct conformational states which differ in the microenvironment of the Trp residues.Abbreviations TrpR tryptophan aporepressor fromE. coli - TrpR W19F TrpR mutant with phenylalanine substituted for tryptophan at position 19 - TrpR W99F TrpR mutant with phenylalanine substituted for tryptophan at position 99 - FQRS fluorescence-quenching-resolved spectra - FPLC fast protein liquid chromatography  相似文献   

17.
The kinetics of quenching by N-bromosuccinamide of the fluorescence of tryptophan residues in various proteins and peptides were studied using the stopped-flow technique. Human serum albumin, which has a single tryptophan residue located in a hydrophobic fold, showed biphasic kinetics; one component was second order and the other first order, the rate for the latter component being independent of the concentration of quencher. Bovine serum albumin, which has in addition a tryptophan residue at the surface of the molecule, showed triphasic kinetics; two components corresponded to those for human serum albumin, and there was a faster second-order component resulting from the surface tryptophan. It is concluded that reaction with the buried tryptophan involves the initial second-order formation of a complex in which the quencher is located at the mouth of a hydrophobic fold, and that this is followed by a first-order conformational change which allows interaction to occur between the quencher and the tryptophan. The kinetics of lysozyme fluorescence quenching at pH 5.4 showed two relaxations whose rates were proportional to the N-bromosuccinamide concentration. The results of kinetic and titration experiments suggest that a molecule of lysozyme contains at least two groups of tryptophan residues of significantly different reactivities. The faster component probably reflects the bromination of the tryptophan residues at the active site. An octapeptide consisting of residues 22 to 29 of glucagon showed essentially the same quenching kinetics as glucagon itself, and Leu-Trp-Met showed the same behavior as Gly-Trp-Gly. The results indicate that quenching by N-bromosuccinamide provides a useful indication of the accessibility of tryptophan residues, and that side reactions do not significantly affect the kinetics.  相似文献   

18.
The motor protein myosin binds actin and ATP, producing work by causing relative translation of the proteins while transducing ATP free energy. Smooth muscle myosin has one of four heavy chains encoded by the MYH11 gene that differ at the C-terminus and in the active site for ATPase due to alternate splicing. A seven-amino-acid active site insert in phasic muscle myosin is absent from the tonic isoform. Fluorescence increase in the nucleotide sensitive tryptophan (NST) accompanies nucleotide binding and hydrolysis in several myosin isoforms implying it results from a common origin within the motor. A wild-type tonic myosin (smA) construct of the enzymatic head domain (subfragment 1 or S1) has seven tryptophan residues and nucleotide-induced fluorescence enhancement like other myosins. Three smA mutants probe the molecular basis for the fluorescence enhancement. W506+ contains one tryptophan at position 506 homologous to the NST in other myosins. W506F has the native tryptophans except phenylalanine replaces W506, and W506+(Y499F) is W506+ with phenylalanine replacing Y499. W506+ lacks nucleotide-induced fluorescence enhancement probably eliminating W506 as the NST. W506F has impaired ATPase activity but retains nucleotide-induced fluorescence enhancement. Y499F replacement in W506+ partially rescues nucleotide sensitivity demonstrating the role of Y499 as an NST facilitator. The exceptional response of W506 to active site conformation opens the possibility that phasic and tonic isoforms differ in how influences from active site ATPase propagate through the protein network.  相似文献   

19.
Single tryptophan mutant proteins of a catalytically active domain III recombinant protein (PE24) from Pseudomonas aeruginosa exotoxin A were prepared by site-directed mutagenesis. The binding of the dinucleotide substrate, NAD+, to the PE24 active site was studied by exploiting intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence for the wild-type, single Trp, and tryptophan-deficient mutant proteins. Various approaches were used to study the substrate binding process, including dynamic quenching, CD spectroscopy, steady-state fluorescence emission analysis, NAD+-glycohydrolase activity, NAD+ binding analysis, protein denaturation experiments, fluorescence lifetime analysis, steady-state anisotropy measurement, stopped flow fluorescence spectroscopy, and quantum yield determination. It was found that the conservative replacement of tryptophan residues with phenylalanine had little or no effect on the folded stability and enzyme activity of the PE24 protein. Dynamic quenching experiments indicated that when bound to the active site of the enzyme, the NAD+ substrate protected Trp-558 from solvent to a large extent but had no effect on the degree of solvent exposure for tryptophans 417 and 466. Also, upon substrate binding, the anisotropy of the Trp-417(W466F/W558F) protein showed the largest increase, followed by Trp-466(W417F/W558F), and there was no effect on Trp-558(W417F/W466F). Furthermore, the intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence exhibited the highest degree of substrate-induced quenching for the wild-type protein, followed in decreasing order by Trp-417(W466F/W558F), Trp-558(W417F/W466F), and Trp-466(W417F/W558F). These data provide evidence for a structural rearrangement in the enzyme domain near Trp-417 invoked by the binding of the NAD+ substrate.  相似文献   

20.
Site-directed mutagenesis on human cytidine deaminase (CDA) was employed to mutate specifically two highly conserved phenylalanine residues, F36 and F137, to tryptophan; at the same time, the unique tryptophan residue present in the sequence at position 113 was mutated to phenylalanine. These double mutations were performed in order to have for each protein a single tryptophan signal for fluorescence studies relative to position 36 or 137. The mutant enzymes thus obtained, W113F, F36W/W113F and F137W/W113F, showed by circular dicroism and thermal stability an overall structure not greatly affected by the mutations. The titration of Trp residues by N-bromosuccinimide (NBS) suggested that residue W113 of the wild-type CDA and W36 of mutant F36W/W113F are buried in the tertiary structure of the enzyme, whereas the residue W137 of mutant F137W/W113F is located near the surface of the molecule. Kinetic experiments and equilibrium experiments with FZEB showed that the residue W113 seems not to be part of the active site of the enzyme whereas the Phe/Trp substitution in F36W/W113F and F137W/W113F mutant enzymes had a negative effect on substrate binding and catalysis, suggesting that F137 and F36 of the wild-type CDA are involved in a stabilizing interaction between ligand and enzyme.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号