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1.
The prion protein (PrP) is a metalloprotein with an unstructured region covering residues 60–91 that bind two to six Cu(II) ions cooperatively. Cu can bind to PrP regions C-terminally to the octarepeat region involving residues His111 and/or His96. In addition to Cu(II), PrP binds Zn(II), Mn(II) and Ni(II) with binding constants several orders of magnitudes lower than those determined for Cu. We used for the first time surface plasmon resonance (SPR) analysis to dissect metal binding to specific sites of PrP domains and to determine binding kinetics in real time. A biosensor assay was established to measure the binding of PrP-derived synthetic peptides and recombinant PrP to nitrilotriacetic acid chelated divalent metal ions. We have identified two separate binding regions for binding of Cu to PrP by SPR, one in the octarepeat region and the second provided by His96 and His111, of which His96 is more essential for Cu coordination. The octarepeat region at the N-terminus of PrP increases the affinity for Cu of the full-length protein by a factor of 2, indicating a cooperative effect. Since none of the synthetic peptides covering the octarepeat region bound to Mn and recombinant PrP lacking this sequence were able to bind Mn, we propose a conformational binding site for Mn involving residues 91–230. A novel low-affinity binding site for Co(II) was discovered between PrP residues 104 and 114, with residue His111 being the key amino acid for coordinating Co(II). His111 is essential for Co(II) binding, whereas His96 is more important than His111 for binding of Cu(II).  相似文献   

2.
Several reports have highlighted the interest of replacing Gly, a frequent amino acid within bioactive peptides, by azaGly (Agly) to improve their stability, activity or for the design of prodrugs. Because metal catalysis is increasingly used for tailoring peptide molecules, we have studied the stability of Agly peptides in the presence of metal ions. In this study, we show that Cu(II), unlike other metal ions such as Fe(II), Fe(III), Pd(II), or Pt(II), induces the cleavage of Agly peptides at room temperature and pH 7.3. The cleavage occurred in the absence of an anchoring His residue within the peptide but it was accelerated when this amino acid was present in the sequence. The influence of His residue on the cleavage rate was minimal when His and Agly were adjacent, whereas large effects were observed for distant His residues. The reaction between Cu(II) and Agly peptides induced the formation of Cu(I) species, which could be detected using bicinchoninic acid as a probe. The nature of products formed in this reaction allowed suggesting a mechanism for the Cu(II)‐induced cleavage of Agly peptides. Copyright © 2010 European Peptide Society and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

3.
Several lines of evidence have shown glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) to be physiological ligands of the prion protein (PrP), but the molecular and regulatory aspects of the interaction remain unknown. Using full-length recombinant prion protein and low molecular mass heparin and heparan sulfate as glycosaminoglycans, we have found that the interaction occurs with the formation of oligomeric complexes. Within the protein-glycosaminoglycan complexes, PrP exhibited an enhanced fluorescence emission and a reduced solvent exposure. The pH and ionic strength-dependence of the interaction reveals His residues as the main binding sites at acid pH. A synthetic peptide consisting of four octarepeats is able to reproduce the His-dependent binding of the protein, thus demonstrating the role of the octarepeats in the GAG interaction. Alternatively, PrP can bind GAGs through His-bound Cu(II). These Cu(II) bridges promote a tighter interaction, as shown by the increased resistance to ionic strength, to protease action, and to pH-induced cation release. Inspection of other cations shows that Zn(II) but not Ni(II) shares the interaction trend. Taken together, our data suggest that the octarepeat region constitutes a novel GAG-binding sequence and that His-bound Cu(II) may act as a cofactor for intermolecular recognition reactions, allowing the formation of PrP-Cu(II)-glycosaminoglycan assemblies that may be crucial entities in the PrP metabolism.  相似文献   

4.
Fusion of peptide‐based tags to recombinant proteins is currently one of the most used tools for protein production. Also, immobilized metal ion affinity chromatography (IMAC) has a huge application in protein purification, especially in research labs. The combination of expression systems of recombinant tagged proteins with this robust chromatographic system has become an efficient and rapid tool to produce milligram‐range amounts of proteins. IMAC‐Ni(II) columns have become the natural partners of 6xHis‐tagged proteins. The Ni(II) ion is considered as the best compromise of selectivity and affinity for purification of a recombinant His‐tagged protein. The palladium(II) ion is also able to bind to side chains of amino acids and form ternary complexes with iminodiacetic acid and free amino acids and other sulfur‐containing molecules. In this work, we evaluated two different cysteine‐ and histidine‐containing six amino acid tags linked to the N‐terminal group of green fluorescent protein (GFP) and studied the adsorption and elution conditions using novel eluents. Both cysteine‐containing tagged GFPs were able to bind to IMAC‐Pd(II) matrices and eluted successfully using a low concentration of thiourea solution. The IMAC‐Ni(II) system reaches less than 20% recovery of the cysteine‐containing tagged GFP from a crude homogenate of recombinant Escherichia coli, meanwhile the IMAC‐Pd(II) yields a recovery of 45% with a purification factor of 13. Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

5.
A new calculation method to determine microscopic protonation processes from CD spectra measured at different pH and Cu(II):ligand ratios was developed and used to give the relative binding strengths for the three histidines of hsPrP(84-114), a 31-mer polypeptide modeling the N-terminal copper(II) binding region of human (homo sapiens) prion protein. Mutants of hsPrP(84-114) with two or one histidyl residues have also been synthesized and their copper(II) complexes studied by CD spectroscopy. The 1-His models were analyzed first, and the molar CD spectra for the different coordination modes on the different histidines were calculated using the general computational program PSEQUAD. These spectra were deconvoluted into the sum of Gaussian curves and used as a first parameter set to calculate the molar spectra for the different coordination modes (3N and 4N coordination) and coordination positions (His85, His96 and His111) of the 2-His peptides. The calculation method therefore does not require the direct use of CD spectra measured in the smaller peptide models. This is a significant improvement over earlier calculation methods. In the same runs, the stepwise deprotonation pK(mic) values were refined and the pH-dependent distribution of copper(II) between the two histidines was determined. The results revealed the high, but different copper(II) binding affinities of the three separate histidines in the following order: His85 < His96His111. The calculation also showed that molar CD spectra which belong to the same coordination mode and coordination position in different ligands have very similar transition energies but different intensities. For this reason, direct transfer of molar CD spectra between different ligands may be a source of error, but the pK(mic) values and the copper(II) binding preferences are transferable from the 2-His peptides to the 3-His hsPrP(84-114).  相似文献   

6.
Srikanth R  Wilson J  Burns CS  Vachet RW 《Biochemistry》2008,47(35):9258-9268
While the Cu(II) binding sites of the prion protein have been well studied under Cu-saturation conditions, the identity of the residues involved in coordinating Cu(II) at low stoichiometries and the order in which the binding sites load with Cu(II) remain unresolved. In this study, we have used two mass spectrometry based methods to gather insight into Cu(II)-prion binding under different stoichiometric loadings of Cu(II). The first method uses metal-catalyzed oxidation reactions to site specifically modify the residues bound to Cu(II) in solution, and the second method determines Cu binding sites based on the protection of His from modification by diethyl pyrocarbonate when this residue binds Cu(II) in solution. For both methods, the residues that are labeled by these reactions can then be unambiguously identified using tandem mass spectrometry. Upon applying these two complementary methods to a construct of the prion protein that contains residues 23-28 and 57-98, several noteworthy observations are made. Coordination of Cu(II) by multiple His imidazoles is found at 1:1 and 1:2 PrP:Cu(II) ratios. Notably, there appear to be four to seven isomers of this multiple histidine coordination mode in the 1:1 complex. Furthermore, our data clearly show that His96 is the dominant Cu(II) binding ligand, as in every isomer His96 is bound to Cu(II). The individual octarepeat binding sites begin to fill at ratios of 1:3 PrP:Cu(II) with no clear preference for the order in which they load with Cu(II), although the His77 octarepeat appears to saturate last. The existence of several "degenerate" Cu binding modes at low PrP:Cu(II) ratios may allow it to more readily accept additional Cu(II) ions, thus allowing PrP to transition from a singly Cu(II) bound state to a multiply Cu(II) bound state as a function of cellular Cu(II) concentration.  相似文献   

7.
It is demonstrated that the Cu(II), Co(III) and Ni(II) complexes of a siderophore chelating drug desferal cleave DNA, in contrast to the corresponding Fe(II) complex which does not bring about DNA scission. Hydroxy radical scavengers inhibit the cleavage reaction.  相似文献   

8.
The coordination properties of cyclic octapeptides with multi-His motif: c(His-Gly-His-Xaa-His-Gly-His-Xaa) where Xaa = Asp or Lys, were investigated. The binding abilities of this peptides towards Cu(II) ions were studied by using different analytic methods as: potentiometry, spectroscopy and mass spectrometry. The obtained results show that the studied peptides in physiological related pH prefer formation of the species with the {4NIm} binding mode. The efficiency of Cu(II) binding depends on additional side chain groups Asp or Lys. Additionally the analysis of results for His containing cyclopeptides with different numbers of amino acid residues in cyclopeptide ring e.g. four, eight shows that in higher pH in both cases the binding by four amide nitrogens is not observed in the case of α-amino acid peptides.  相似文献   

9.
Glutathione transferase (GST) from octopus hepatopancreas was rapidly inactivated by micromolar concentration of Cu(II) in the presence of ascorbate at neutral pH and 0°C. Omitting the metal ion or ascorbate, or replacing the Cu(II) with Fe(II) did not result in any inactivation. Glutathione or the conjugation product of glutathione and 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene offered complete protection of the enzyme from Cu(II)-induced inactivation. 1-Chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene, however, did not provide any protection. The inactivation was time and Cu(II) concentration dependent. The dependence of inactivation rate on Cu(II) concentration displayed saturation kinetics, which suggests that the inactivation occurs in two steps with Cu(II) binding with the enzyme first (KdCu = 260 μM), then the locally generated free radicals modify the essential amino acid residues in the active center, which results in enzyme inactivation. The Cu(II)-ascorbate system is, thus, an affinity reagent for the octopus GST. The enzyme inactivation was demonstrated to be followed by protein cleavage. Native octopus GST has a subunit Mr of 24,000. The inactivated enzyme was cleaved at the C-terminal domain (domain II) of the enzyme molecule and resulted in the formation of peptide fragment of Mr 15,300, which has the identical N-terminal amino acid sequence as the native enzyme. The other half of the peptide with Mr approximately 7700 was visible in the gels only after silver staining, which also revealed a minor cleavage site, also located at the domain II, to produce peptide fragments of Mr approximately 11,300 and 8300. The oxygen carrier molecule in the cephalopods' blood is the copper-containing hemocyanin, which during turnover will release Cu(II). Our results indicate that Cu(II) catalyzes a site-specific oxidation of the essential amino acid residues at the C-terminus of GST causing enzyme inactivation. The modified-enzyme is then affinity cleaved at the putative metal binding site. The ability of octopus GST to bind with free Cu(II) may have important biological implications to enable cephalopods to avoid copper-induced cellular toxicity.  相似文献   

10.
Nickel(II) complexes of the peptide fragments of human prion protein containing histidyl residues both inside and outside the octarepeat domain have been studied by the combined application of potentiometric, UV-visible and circular dichroism spectroscopic methods. The imidazole-N donor atoms of histidyl residues are the exclusive metal binding sites below pH 7.5, but the formation of stable macrochelates was characteristic only for the peptide HuPrP(76-114) containing four histidyl residues. Yellow colored square planar complexes were obtained above pH 7.5-8 with the cooperative deprotonation of three amide nitrogens in the [Nim,N,N,N] coordination mode. It was found that the peptides can bind as many nickel(II) ions as the number of independent histidyl residues. All data supported that the complex formation processes of nickel(II) are very similar to those of copper(II), but with a significantly reduced stability for nickel(II), which shifts the complex formation reactions into the slightly alkaline pH range. The formation of coordination isomers was characteristic of the mononuclear complexes with a significant preference for the nickel(II) binding at the histidyl sites outside the octarepeat domain. The results obtained for the two-histidine fragments of the protein, HuPrP(91-115), HuPrP(76-114)H85A and HuPrP(84-114)H96A, made it possible to compare the binding ability of the His96 and His111 sites. These data reveal a significant difference in the nickel(II) and copper(II) binding sites of the peptides: His96 was found to predominate almost completely for nickel(II) ions, while the opposite order, but with comparable concentrations, was reported for copper(II).  相似文献   

11.
In an approach toward artificial ribonucleases, novel RNA cleaving systems were constructed that contained two terpyridine.Cu(II) residues. The first antisense system used tandem Cu(II) complex--2'-O-methyloligonucleotide 5'- and 3'-conjugates to cleave an RNA substrate. The second system, which will be described in a future paper, contained two contiguous Cu(II) complex residues at an internal site of a 2'-O-methyloligonucleotide. We found that the first system rapidly cleaved RNA with high site-specificity. Based on these results, we expect the second system to also show efficient RNA cleavage.  相似文献   

12.
Cu(II) binding to the alpha prion protein (alphaPrP) can be both intramolecular and intermolecular. X-ray absorption spectroscopy at the copper K-edge has been used to explore the site geometry under each binding mode using both insoluble polymeric Cu(II).alphaBoPrP-(24-242) (bovine PrP) complexes and soluble Cu(II) complexes of peptides containing one, two, and four copies of the octarepeat. Analysis of the extended region of the spectra using a multiple scattering approach revealed two types of sites differing in the number of His residues in the first coordination shell of Cu(II). Peptides containing one and two-octarepeat copies in sub-stoichiometric Cu(II) complexes showed the direct binding of a single His in accord with crystallographic intra-repeat geometry. Alternatively, the polymeric Cu(II).alphaBoPrP-(24-242) complex and Cu(II) in its soluble complex with a four-octarepeat peptide at half-site-occupancy showed Cu(II) directly bound to two His residues, consistent with an inter-repeat binding mode. Increasing the Cu(II) site occupancy from 0.5 to 0.75 in the peptide containing four octarepeats resulted in spectral features that are intermediate to those of the inter- and intra-repeat modes. The transition from His-Cu-His (inter-repeat) to Cu-His (intra-repeat) on increasing Cu(II) saturation offers a structural basis for the positive cooperativity of the cation binding process and explains the capacity of alphaPrP to participate in Cu(II)-mediated intermolecular interactions.  相似文献   

13.
Novel chiral Schiff base ligands (R)/(S)‐2‐amino‐3‐(((1‐hydroxypropan‐2‐yl)imino)methyl)‐4H‐chromen‐4‐one (L1 and L2) derived from 2‐amino‐3‐formylchromone and (R/S)‐2‐amino‐1‐propanol and their Cu(II)/Zn(II) complexes ( R1 , S1 , R2 , and S2 ) were synthesized. The complexes were characterized by elemental analysis, infrared (IR), hydrogen (1H) and carbon (13C) nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), electrospray ionization‐mass spectra (ESI‐MS), and molar conductance measurements. The DNA binding studies of the complexes with calf thymus were carried out by employing different biophysical methods and molecular docking studies that revealed that complexes R1 and S1 prefers the guanine–cytosine‐rich region, whereas R2 and S2 prefers the adenine–thymine residues in the major groove of DNA. The relative trend in Kb values followed the order R1 S1 R2 S2 . This observation together with the findings of circular dichroic and fluorescence studies revealed maximal potential of (R)‐enantiomeric form of complexes to bind DNA. Furthermore, the absorption studies with mononucleotides were also monitored to examine the base‐specific interactions of the complexes that revealed a higher propensity of Cu(II) complexes for guanosine‐5′‐monophosphate disodium salt, whereas Zn(II) complexes preferentially bind to thymidine‐5′‐monophosphate disodium salt. The cleavage activity of R1 and R2 with pBR322 plasmid DNA was examined by gel electrophoresis that revealed that they are good DNA cleavage agents; nevertheless, R1 proved to show better DNA cleavage ability. Topoisomerase II inhibitory activity of complex R1 revealed that the complex inhibits topoisomerase II catalytic activity at a very low concentration (25 μM). Furthermore, in vitro antitumor activity of complexes R1 and S1 were screened against human carcinoma cell lines of different histological origin. Chirality 24:977–986, 2012. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

14.
Chitosan (CS) gel beads were prepared by using phase inversion and precipitation technique. The gel beads could bind copper (II), by which Cu (II) ion-immobilized chitosan gel beads (CS-Cu2+ gel beads) were prepared, and the amount of the immobilized Cu (II) was about 35 mg/g when the CS gel beads were incubated in 150 ppm cupric sulfate solution. The CS-Cu2+ gel beads could selectively adsorb histidine (His) from the mixed solution containing His and tryptophan (Trp); and the selective coefficient which was defined as the adsorbed amount ratio of His to Trp was about 8.0 at the pH value of 7.4. The effect of the pH value on the amino acid adsorption was also studied. In order to investigate the relationship of the amino acid adsorption and protein adsorption, the adsorbed amounts for IgG and albumin were determined; and the results indicated that the CS-Cu2+ gel beads could adsorb a larger amount of IgG than albumin due to the larger amount of the exposed residual His. The study provided a sorbent and a method to selectively remove His and IgG.  相似文献   

15.
Complexes of the type [M(bssdh)]Cl and [M(dspdh)]Cl, where M = Co(II), Ni(II), Cu(II), Zn(II) and Cd(II); Hbssdh = benzil salicylaldehyde succinic acid dihydrazone, Hdspdh = diacetyl salicylaldehyde phthalic acid dihydrazone have been synthesized and characterized with the help of elemental analyses, electrical conductance, magnetic susceptibility measurements, electronic, ESR and IR spectra and X–ray diffraction studies. Magnetic moment values and electronic spectral transitions indicate a spin free octahedral structure for Co(II), Ni(II) and Cu(II) complexes. IR spectral studies suggest that both the ligands behave as monobasic hexadentate ligands coordinating through three > C = O, two > C = N– and a phenolate group to the metal. ESR spectra of Cu(II) complexes are axial type and suggest as the ground state. X–ray powder diffraction parameters for [Co(bssdh)]Cl and [Co(dspdh)]Cl complexes correspond to an orthorhombic crystal lattice. The ligands as well as their metal complexes show a significant antifungal and antibacterial activity against various fungi and bacteria. The metal complexes are more active than the parent ligands.  相似文献   

16.
The copper(II) complex of 3,5-diisopropylsalicylate is a lipophilic water-insoluble binuclear complex, Cu(II) (3,5-DIPS) , that has attracted interest because of a wide range of pharmacological activities. This study was undertaken to examine bonding interactions between the complex and human serum albumin (HSA) to help elucidate the mode of transport of the complex in vivo. Electron paramagnetic resonance, numerical magnetic resonance and UV-visible absorption spectroscopic studies were performed using 200 M aqueous solutions (pH 7.5) of HSA to which had been added up to three molar equivalents of CuCl , CuSO , or Cu(II) (3,5-DIPS). Both EPR and UV-visible spectra demonstrated the presence of more than one copper bonding site on HSA, and proton NMR spectra showed that the 3,5-DIPS ligand is also bonded to HSA. These results indicate that there is no observable direct coordination of the ligand to copper in the presence of HSA, and that the majority of the copper and 3,5-DIPS bond to HSA at separate sites. Addition of solid Cu(II) (3,5-DIPS) to HSA at pH 7.5 similarly resulted in spectra that suggest that there are no ternary Cu(II)(3,5-DIPS), Cu(II)(3,5-DIPS) , or Cu(II) (3,5-DIPS) complexes formed with HSA. It is concluded that any ternary complexes formed in the presence of HSA are below the spectroscopic detection limits and represent less than 5% of the total copper. © Rapid Science 1998.  相似文献   

17.
DNA-binding properties of novel binulear copper(II) complex [Cu(2)(Dmbiim)(4)(H(2)O)(2)](ClO(4))(4).6H(2)O, where Dmbiim = 1,1'-Dimethyl-2,2'-biimidazole are investigated using electronic absorption spectroscopy, fluorescence spectroscopy, viscosity measurement and voltammetry. The results show that the copper(II) complex interacts with DNA through minor groove binding. The interaction between the complex and DNA has also been investigated by gel electrophoresis, interestingly, we found that the copper(II) complex can cleave circular plasmid pBR322 DNA efficiently in the presence of AH(2) (ascorbic acid) at pH 8.0 and 37 degrees C.  相似文献   

18.
COMMD1 (copper metabolism gene MURR1 (mouse U2af1-rs1 region1) domain) belongs to a family of multifunctional proteins that inhibit nuclear factor NF-kappaB. COMMD1 was implicated as a regulator of copper metabolism by the discovery that a deletion of exon 2 of COMMD1 causes copper toxicosis in Bedlington terriers. Here, we report the detailed characterization and specific copper binding properties of purified recombinant human COMMD1 as well as that of the exon 2 product, COMMD(61-154). By using various techniques including native-PAGE, EPR, UV-visible electronic absorption, intrinsic fluorescence spectroscopies as well as DEPC modification of histidines, we demonstrate that COMMD1 specifically binds copper as Cu(II) in 1:1 stoichiometry and does not bind other divalent metals. Moreover, the exon 2 product, COMMD(61-154), alone was able to bind Cu(II) as well as the wild type protein, with a stoichiometry of 1 mol of Cu(II) per protein monomer. The protection of DEPC modification of COMMD1 by Cu(II) implied that Cu(II) binding involves His residues. Further investigation by DEPC modification of COMMD(61-154) and subsequent MALDI MS mapping and MS/MS sequencing identified the protection of His101 and His134 residues in the presence of Cu(II). Fluorescence studies of single point mutants of the full-length protein revealed the involvement of M110 in addition to H134 in direct Cu(II) binding. Taken together, the data provide insight into the function of COMMD1 and especially COMMD(61-154), a product of exon 2 that is deleted in terriers affected by copper toxicosis, as a regulator of copper homeostasis.  相似文献   

19.
Previous studies revealed that Mn(II) is accumulated in cultured glial cells to concentrations far above those present in whole brain or in culture medium. The data indicated that Mn(II) moves across the plasma membrane into the cytoplasm by facilitated diffusion or counter-ion transport with Ca(II), then into mitochondria by active transport. The fact that 1–10 M Mn(II) ions activate brain glutamine synthetase makes important the regulation of Mn(II) transport in the CNS. Since Cu(II) and Zn(II) caused significant changes in the accumulation of Mn(II) by glia, the mechanisms by which these ions alter the uptake and efflux of Mn(II) ions has been investigated systematically under chemically defined conditions. The kinetics of [54MN]-Mn(II) uptake and efflux were determined and compared under four different sets of conditions: no adducts, Cu(II) or Zn(II) added externally, and with cells preloaded with Cu(II) or Zn(II) in the presence and absence of external added metal ions. Zn(II) ions inhibit the initial velocity of Mn(II) uptake, increase total Mn(II) accumulated, but do not alter the rate or extent Mn(II) efflux. Cu(II) ions increase both the initial velocity and the net Mn(II) accumulated by glia, with little effect on rate or extent of Mn(II) efflux. These results predict that increases in Cu(II) or Zn(II) levels may also increase the steady-state levels of Mn(II) in the cytoplasmic fraction of glial cells, which may in turn alter the activity of Mn(II)-sensitive enzymes in this cell compartment.  相似文献   

20.
Metal binding to serum albumins is examined by oxidative protein-cleavage chemistry, and relative affinities of multiple metal ions to particular sites on these proteins were identified using a fast and reliable chemical footprinting approach. Fe(ii) and Cu(ii), for example, mediate protein cleavage at their respective binding sites on serum albumins, in the presence of hydrogen peroxide and ascorbate. This metal-mediated protein-cleavge reaction is used to evaluate the binding of metal ions, Na(+), Mg(2+), Ca(2+), Al(3+), Cr(3+), Mn(2+), Co(2+), Ni(2+), Zn(2+), Cd(2+), Hg(2+), Pb(2+), and Ce(3+) to albumins, and the relative affinities (selectivities) of the metal ions are rapidly evaluated by examining the extent of inhibition of protein cleavage. Four distinct systems Fe(II)/BSA, Cu(II)/BSA, Fe(II)/HSA and Cu(II)/HSA are examined using the above strategy. This metallomics approach is novel, even though the cleavage of serum albumins by Fe(II)/Cu(II) has been reported previously by this laboratory and many others. The protein cleavage products were analyzed by SDS PAGE, and the intensities of the product bands quantified to evaluate the extent of inhibition of the cleavage and thereby evaluate the relative binding affinities of specific metal ions to particular sites on albumins. The data show that Co(II) and Cr(III) showed the highest degree of inhibition, across the table, followed by Mn(II) and Ce(III). Alakali metal ions and alkaline earth metal ions showed very poor affinity for these metal sites on albumins. Thus, metal binding profiles for particular sites on proteins can be obtained quickly and accurately, using the metallomics approach.  相似文献   

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