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1.
T Pan  G C King  J E Coleman 《Biochemistry》1989,28(22):8833-8839
Deuteriation of all aromatic protons of gene 32 protein (g32P) from phage T4, followed by selective introduction of specific protons, has allowed the precise identification of the number and magnitude of the chemical shift changes induced in the aromatic protons when g32P binds noncooperatively or cooperatively to nucleotides. Signals from five Tyr residues are shifted by binding of g32P to d(pA)8 or d(pA)40-60; however, the change from noncooperative, d(pA)8, to cooperative, d(pA)40-60, binding causes significant increases in the magnitudes of the shifts for only two of these Tyr signals. These two Tyr residues may interact directly with the nucleotide bases, while the shifts associated with the other three Tyr may be due to conformational changes in g32P upon ssDNA binding. Similar conclusions can be drawn for two of the six Phe residues whose protons undergo shifts upon nucleotide binding. Observation of selected proton signals allows for the first time detection by 1H NMR of changes in the proton signals from two Trp residues upon nucleotide binding. The side chains of two Tyr, one or two Phe, and one Trp are probably directly involved in nucleotide base-protein interactions. As assayed by the signals from the H2 and H8 protons of adenine, the bases of a bound nucleotide are undergoing a fast chemical exchange in the noncooperative mode of binding, but shift to slow exchange upon assuming the cooperative mode of ssDNA interaction. When bound to a polynucleotide, the A domain of g32P (residues 254-301) becomes more mobile, as reflected in sharpening of the 1H NMR signals from the A domain.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
5,6,7,8-Tetrahydrofolic acid. Conformation of the tetrahydropyrazine ring   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
It is suggested from analysis of proton spin-spin coupling constants that the tetrahydropyrazine ring of tetrahydrofolate is a roughly equal mixture of two half-chair conformations, one with the C-6 proton axial and the other with the C-6 proton equatorial. The chemical shifts and spin-spin coupling constants for the carbon-bound protons of (+/-)-L-, (-)-L-, and (-)-L-[6-2H] 5,6,7,8-tetrahydrofolate were measured at 25 degrees and at 300 MHZ. The resonances corresponding to the two C-7 protons in the deuterated compound constituted an AB quartet with JAB of 12 Hz and chemical shift difference of 92 Hz or 0.307 ppm; the C-7 protons are proposed to be a geminally coupled axial-equatorial pair whose rapid equilibration does not result in equivalence due to the adjacent chiral center at C-6. The spin-spin splitting in the C-7 resonances were 3.0 and 6.6 Hz for the low field and high field resonances, respectively, reflecting coupling to the C-6 proton. These coupling constants reflect the conformational equilibrium. The resonances assignable to C-9 protons are nearly equivalent in the 6-2H compound, but exhibit the resonances corresponding to a complex spin system in the 6-H compound.  相似文献   

3.
1. Proton magnetic resonance spectra at 270 MHz of polymyxin B, a cationic oligopeptide antibiotic, show the influence of the inorganic counteranion present in solution. 2. Hydrogen-deuterium exchange rates for the amide protons are of two types, depending on whether the anion is monovalent or polyvalent. Polyvalent anions catalyse the acid-catalysed reaction more than the monovalent anions. 3. The structure in solution was monitored using the proton signals of the amides, the phenylalanine aromatic protons, and the leucine methyl and gamma-CH protons in several polymyxin salts. The temperature coefficients of the chemical shifts of the N-H protons are used to identify two beta turns in the cyclic ring of polymyxin B. The variation in chemical shift of the N-H protons, the aromatic protons and the leucine protons are correlated with anionic size and electronegativity.  相似文献   

4.
5.
Crystal structures of eight peptide β-hairpins in the sequence Boc-Leu-Phe-Val-Xxx-Yyy-Leu-Phe-Val-OMe revealed that the Phe(2) and Phe(7) aromatic rings are in close spacial proximity, with the centroid-centroid distance (R(cen)) of 4.4-5.4 ? between the two phenyl rings. Proton NMR spectra in chloroform and methanol solution reveal a significant upfield shift of the Phe(7) C(δ,δ') H(2) protons (6.65-7.04 ppm). Specific assignments of the aromatic protons have been carried out in the peptide Boc-Leu-Phe-Val-(D)Pro-(L)Pro-Leu-Phe-Val-OMe (6). The anticipated ring current shifts have been estimated from the aromatic ring geometrics observed in crystals for all eight peptides. Only one of the C(δ,δ') H proton lies in the shielding zone with rapid ring flipping, resulting in averaging between the two extreme chemical shifts. An approximate estimate of the population of conformations, which resemble crystal state orientation, may be obtained. Key nuclear Overhauser effects (NOEs) between facing Phe side chains provide support for close similarity between the solid state and solution conformation. Temperature dependence of aromatic ring proton chemical shift and line widths for peptide 6 (Boc-Leu-Phe-Val-(D)Pro-(L)Pro-Leu-Phe-Val-OMe) and the control peptide Boc-Leu-Val-Val-(D)Pro-Gly-Leu-Phe-Val-OMe establish an enhanced barrier to ring flipping when the two Phe rings are in proximity. Modeling studies suggest that small, conformational adjustment about C(α)-C(β) (χ(1) ) and C(β)-C(γ) (χ(2) ) bonds of both the Phe residues may be required in order to permit unhindered, uncorrelated flipping of both the Phe rings. The maintenance of the specific aromatic ring orientation in organic solvents provides evidence for significant stabilizing interaction.  相似文献   

6.
R C Holz  M L Alvarez  W G Zumft  D M Dooley 《Biochemistry》1999,38(34):11164-11171
1H NMR spectra of the CuA center of N2OR from Pseudomonas stutzeri, and a mutant enzyme that contains only CuA, were recorded in both H2O- and D2O-buffered solution at pH 7.5. Several sharp, well-resolved hyperfine-shifted 1H NMR signals were observed in the 60 to -10 ppm chemical shift range. Comparison of the native and mutant N2OR spectra recorded in H2O-buffered solutions indicated that several additional signals are present in the native protein spectrum. These signals are attributed to a dinuclear copperII center. At least two of the observed hyperfine-shifted signals associated with the dinuclear center, those at 23.0 and 13.2 ppm, are lost upon replacement of H2O buffer with D2O buffer. These data indicate that at least two histidine residues are ligands of a dinuclear CuII center. Comparison of the mutant N2OR 1H NMR spectra recorded in H2O and D2O indicates that three signals, c (27.5 ppm), e (23.6 ppm), and i (12.4 ppm), are solvent exchangeable. The two most strongly downfield-shifted signals (c and e) are assigned to the two N epsilon 2H (N-H) protons of the coordinated histidine residues, while the remaining exchangeable signal is assigned to a backbone N-H proton in close proximity to the CuA cluster. Signal e was found to decrease in intensity as the temperature was increased, indicating that proton e resides on a more solvent-exposed histidine residue. One-dimensional nOe studies at pH 7.5 allowed the histidine ring protons to be definitively assigned, while the remaining signals were assigned by comparison to previously reported spectra from CuA centers. The temperature dependence of the observed hyperfine-shifted 1H NMR signals of mutant N2OR were recorded over the temperature range of 276-315 K. Both Curie and anti-Curie temperature dependencies are observed for sets of hyperfine-shifted protons. Signals a and h (cysteine protons) follow anti-Curie behavior (contact shift increases with increasing temperatures), while signals b-g, i, and j (histidine protons) follow Curie behavior (contact shift decreases with increasing temperatures). Fits of the temperature dependence of the observed hyperfine-shifted signals provided the energy separation (Delta EL) between the ground (2B3u) and excited (2B2u) states. The temperature data obtained for all of the observed hyperfine-shifted histidine ligand protons provided a Delta EL value of 62 +/- 35 cm-1. The temperature dependence of the observed cysteine C beta H and C alpha H protons (a and h) were fit in a separate experiment providing a Delta EL value of 585 +/- 125 cm-1. The differences between the Delta EL values determined by 1H NMR spectroscopy and those determined by EPR or MCD likely arise from coupling between relatively low-frequency vibrational states and the ground and excited electronic states.  相似文献   

7.
1H NMR (500 MHz) of gene 32 protein--oligonucleotide complexes   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
In concentrated solutions, gene 32 single-stranded DNA binding protein from bacteriophage T4 (gene 32P) forms oligomers with long rotational correlation times, rendering 1H NMR signals from most of the protons too broad to be detected. Small flexible N- and C-terminal domains are present, however, the protons of which give rise to sharp resonances. If the C-terminal A domain (48 residues) and the N-terminal B domain (21 residues) are removed, the resultant core protein of 232 residues (gene 32P) retains high affinity for ssDNA and remains a monomer in concentrated solution, and most of the proton resonances of the core protein can now be observed. Proton NMR spectra (500 MHz) of gene 32P and its complexes with ApA, d(pA)n (n = 2, 4, 6, 8, and 10), and d(pT)8 show that the resonances of a group of aromatic protons shift upfield upon oligonucleotide binding. Proton difference spectra show that the 1H resonances of at least one Phe, one Trp, and five Tyr residues are involved in the chemical shift changes observed with nucleotide binding. The number of aromatic protons involved and the magnitude of the shifts change with the length of the oligonucleotide until the shifts are only slightly different between the complexes with d(pA)8 and d(pA)10, suggesting that the binding groove accommodates approximately eight nucleotide bases. Many of the aromatic proton NMR shifts observed on oligonucleotide complex formation are similar to those observed for oligonucleotide complex formation with gene 5P of bacteriophage fd, although more aromatic residues are involved in the case of gene 32P.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
Both of the thiol groups of Megasphaera elsdenii flavodoxin have been cyanylated using 13C-enriched cyanide. This chemical modification increases the dissociation constant of the apoflavodoxin-flavin mononucleotide (FMN) complex from 0.4 nM to 2 microM. The thiocyanate carbons of the cyanylated cysteine residues in apoflavodoxin had 13C chemical shifts of 109.4 ppm and 112.2 ppm, which were replaced by signals at 115.5 ppm and 109.6 ppm when FMN was bound. The signals at 109.4 ppm and 112.2 ppm due to the cyanylated apoflavodoxin were unstable at 28 degrees C, and they were slowly replaced signals at 114.5 ppm and 115.3 ppm which are attributed to an inactive form of the apoprotein, which does not bind FMN. At alkaline pH values or after prolonged incubation at neutral pH, the signals at 114.5 ppm and 115.3 ppm were replaced by signals at approximately 171 ppm. On the basis of results obtained with model compounds, the signals at 171 ppm are assigned to the 2-imino carbon of the 2-iminothiazolidine ring formed by the cyclization of the appropriate thiocyanate group. After determining the chemical shift of the thiocyanate carbon of model compounds in a range of solvents, we conclude that the thiocyanate carbons will have a minimal chemical shift of approximately 109 ppm in apolar solvents which do not contain hydrogen bond donors. In water, a more polar hydrogen-bonding solvent, the chemical shift increases to approximately 115 ppm. We also conclude that the chemical shift of a thiocyanate carbon can be used as a probe of its molecular environment.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
P Gettins 《Biochemistry》1987,26(5):1391-1398
1H NMR has been used to characterize and compare the structures of antithrombin III from human, bovine, and porcine plasma as well as to investigate the interactions of each of these proteins with heparin fragments of defined length. The amino acid compositions of the three proteins are very similar, which is reflected in the gross features of their 1H NMR spectra. In addition, aromatic and methyl proton resonances in upfield-shifted positions appear to be common to all three proteins and suggest similar tertiary structures. Human antithrombin III has five histidine residues, bovine has six, and porcine has five. The C(2) proton from each of these residues gives a narrow resonance and titrates with pH; the pKa's are in the range 5.15-7.25. It is concluded that all histidines in each protein are surface residues with considerable independent mobility. The carbohydrate chains in each protein also give sharp resonances consistent with a surface location and motional flexibility. The 1H spectra are sensitive to heparin binding. Although heparin resonances obscure protein resonances in the region 3.2-6.0 ppm, difference spectra between antithrombin III with and without heparin show clear perturbation of a small number of aromatic and aliphatic protein protons. These resonances include those of histidine C(2) and C(4) protons, of 10-20 other aromatic protons, of a methyl group, and also of protons with chemical shifts similar to those of lysine and/or arginine side chains. For human antithrombin III, it was shown that heparin fragments 8, 10, and 16 sugar residues in length result in almost identical perturbations to the protein. In contrast, tetrasaccharide results in fewer perturbations.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
B J Lee  H Aiba  Y Kyogoku 《Biochemistry》1991,30(37):9047-9054
The identification and assignment of the proton magnetic resonances of some aliphatic and aromatic amino acid residues of cyclic AMP receptor protein (CRP) are reported. The signals of the leucine and valine residues at around 0 ppm were identified on the basis of intermolecular nuclear Overhauser effects, deuterium labeling, and partial proteolytic digestion. On the addition of cAMP, methyl proton signals due to Val-49 and three leucine residues were detected as upfield-shifted signals at around -0.2 ppm. These signals can be used as indicators of the proper binding of cAMP because they are not observed on the addition of cGMP or 2'-deoxy-cAMP. They are also not observed on cAMP binding to mutant CRP*5 (Ser-62-Phe), which can only be activated by a high concentration of cAMP, but they are observed on cAMP binding to other mutant CRP*s (four species), which can be activated by lower concentrations of cAMP. The resonance of some aromatic protons, i.e., C-2H of two tryptophans, C-2H and C-4H of six histidines, and C-2,6H and C-3,5H of six tyrosine residues in CRP, were assigned by means of deuterium labeling and NOE measurements. The 1H NMR spectrum of labeled CRP [Trp(ring-d5), Phe(ring-d5), and Tyr(3,5-d2)] showed good resolution in the aromatic region. The addition of cAMP to this CRP in D2O caused pronounced line broadening of resonances arising from the residues in the cAMP-binding domain, but the resonances of the DNA-binding domain were not affected.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
The effects of high dilution on the 1H Fourier transform NMR spectrum of native human insulin at pH* 8.0 and 9.3 have been examined at 500 MHz resolution. The dependence of the spectrum on concentration and comparison with the spectrum of a biologically highly potent monomeric insulin mutant (SerB9----Asp) establish that at 36 microM (pH* 9.3) or 18 microM (pH* 8) and no added buffer or salts, human insulin is monomeric. Under these conditions of dilution, ionic strength, and pH*, human insulin and the SerB9----Asp mutant exhibit nearly identical 1H NMR spectra. At higher concentrations (i.e. greater than 36 microM to 0.91 mM), native human insulin dimerizes, and this aggregation causes a change in insulin conformation. Although there are many changes in the spectrum, the TyrB26 ring H3,5 proton signals located at 6.63 ppm and the methyl signal located at 0.105 ppm (characteristics of monomeric insulin) are particularly distinct signatures of the conformation change that accompanies dimerization. Magnetization transfer experiments show that the 0.105 ppm methyl signal shifts downfield to a new position at 0.45 ppm. We conclude that the 0.105 ppm methyl signal is due to a conformation in which a Leu methyl group is centered over and in van der Waals contact with the ring of an aromatic side chain. Dimerization causes a conformation change that alters this interaction, thereby causing the downfield shift. Nuclear Overhauser studies indicate that the methyl group involved is located within a cluster of aromatic side chains and that the closest ring-methyl group interaction is with the ring of PheB24.  相似文献   

12.
The 1H NMR characteristics of the high-spin metmyoglobin from the mollusc Aplysia limacina have been investigated and compared with those of the myoglobin (Mb) from sperm whale. Aplysia metMb exhibits a normal acid----alkaline transition with pK approximately 7.8. In the acidic form, the heme methyl and meso proton resonances have been assigned by 1H NMR using samples reconstituted with selectively deuterated hemins and in the latter case by 2H NMR as well. On the basis of the methyl peak intensities and shift pattern, heme rotational disorder could be established in Aplysia Mb; approximately 20% of the protein exhibits a reversed heme orientation compared to that found in single crystals. Three meso proton resonances have been detected in the upfield region between -16 and -35 ppm, showing that the chemical shift of such protons can serve as a diagnostic probe for a pentacoordinated active site in hemoproteins, as previously shown to be the case in model compounds. The temperature dependence of the chemical shift of the meso proton signals deviates strongly from the T-1 Curie behavior, reflecting the presence of a thermally accessible Kramers doublet with significant S = 3/2 character. Nuclear Overhauser effect, NOE, measurements on Aplysia metMb have provided the assignment of individual heme alpha-propionate resonances and were used to infer spatial proximity among heme side chains. The hyperfine shift values for assigned resonances, the NOE connectivities, and the NOE magnitudes were combined to reach a qualitative picture of the rotational mobility and the orientation of the vinyl and propionate side chains of Aplysia metMb relative to sperm whale MbH2O.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
S Fujii  K Momoi  M Okamoto  T Yamano  T Okada  T Terasawa 《Biochemistry》1984,23(12):2558-2564
A new metabolite was produced from 18-hydroxydeoxycorticosterone by the cytochrome P-450(11) beta linked hydroxylase system purified from bovine adrenocortical mitochondria. It was identified as 18,19-dihydroxydeoxycorticosterone by chemical synthesis on the basis of high-performance liquid chromatography, gas chromatography-mass spectrometry, and proton nuclear magnetic resonance (1H NMR) spectroscopy, and detailed structural analysis of it was performed by 1H NMR spectroscopy. The methylene protons at the C-19 position of the steroid were nonequivalent and coupled with each other, having a coupling constant of 10.6 Hz. These protons had different coupling constants, 6.7 and 3.4 Hz, for the hydroxy proton at the C-19 position. Due to these couplings, the signals of the methylene protons were observed around 3.9 ppm as two double doublets. The methylene protons at the C-21 position were also nonequivalent, having a coupling constant of 11.1 Hz. Coupling constants between these methylene protons and the hydroxy proton at the C-21 position were 8.2 and 4.2 Hz, respectively. These results indicate that both hydroxymethyl groups at the C-19 and C-21 positions do not freely rotate in chloroform solution. The signals of hydroxy protons at the C-19 and C-21 positions were found at 1.25 and 1.87 ppm, respectively, by means of decoupling of the corresponding methylene protons. The hydroxy proton at the C-18 position was found to scarcely couple with any proton. This fact suggests that this hydroxy group is linked to the C-20 position, making a hemiketal bridge between the C-18 and the C-20.  相似文献   

14.
D E Graves  M P Stone  T R Krugh 《Biochemistry》1985,24(26):7573-7581
One- and two-dimensional 400-MHz proton NMR experiments are used to examine the solution structure of the covalent adduct formed by the interaction of anthramycin methyl ether with the self-complementary deoxyoligonucleotide d(ATGCAT)2. The concentration dependence of chemical shifts and nuclear Overhauser enhancement (NOE) experiments are utilized to assign the adenine H2 protons within the minor groove for both free d(ATGCAT)2 and the adduct. These studies demonstrate that one of the four adenine H2 protons is in close proximity to the bound anthramycin and this results in its upfield shift of 0.3 ppm compared to the adenine H2 protons of the free duplex. Effects of the covalent attachment of anthramycin to the d(ATGCAT)2 duplex result in an increased shielding of selected deoxyribose protons located within the minor groove of the adduct, as demonstrated by two-dimensional autocorrelated (COSY) NMR techniques. Interactions between the protons of the covalently attached anthramycin and the d(ATGCAT)2 duplex are determined by utilizing two-dimensional NOE (NOESY) techniques. Analysis of these data reveals NOE cross-peaks between the anthramycin methyl, H6, and H7 protons with specific deoxyoligonucleotide protons within the minor groove, thus allowing the orientation of the drug within the minor groove to be determined. Nonselective inversion recovery (T1) relaxation experiments are used to probe the structural and dynamic properties of the anthramycin-d(ATGCAT)2 adduct. These data suggest that the binding of anthramycin alters the correlation time of the d(ATGCAT)2 duplex and stabilizes both of the internal A X T base pairs with respect to solvent exchange.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
Summary Hydroxyl groups of serine and threonine, and to some extent also tyrosine are usually located on or near the surface of proteins. NMR observations of the hydroxyl protons is therefore of interest to support investigations of the protein surface in solution, and knowledge of the hydroxyl NMR lines is indispensable as a reference for studies of protein hydration in solution. In this paper, solvent suppression schemes recently developed for observation of hydration water resonances were used to observe hydroxyl protons of serine, threonine and tyrosine in aqueous solutions of small model peptides and the protein basic pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (BPTI). The chemical shifts of the hydroxyl protons of serine and threonine were found to be between 5.4 and 6.2 ppm, with random-coil shifts at 4°C of 5.92 ppm and 5.88 ppm, respectively, and those of tyrosine between 9.6 and 10.1 ppm, with a random-coil shift of 9.78 ppm. Since these spectral regions are virtually free of other polypeptide1H NMR signals, cross peaks with the hydroxyl protons are usually well separated even in homonuclear two-dimensional1H NMR spectra. To illustrate the practical use of hydroxyl proton NMR in polypeptides, the conformations of the side-chain hydroxyl groups in BPTI were characterized by measurements of nuclear Overhauser effects and scalar coupling constants involving the hydroxyl protons. In addition, hydroxyl proton exchange rates were measured as a function of pH, where simple first-order rate processes were observed for both acid- and base-catalysed exchange of all but one of the hydroxyl-bearing residues in BPTI. For the conformations of the individual Ser, Thr and Tyr side chains characterized in the solution structure with the use of hydroxyl proton NMR, both exact coincidence and significant differences relative to the corresponding BPTI crystal structure data were observed.[/p]  相似文献   

16.
In the preceding paper in this journal, the major oligosaccharides obtained by endo-beta-galactosidase digestion of bovine corneal keratan sulphate were identified as a neutral disaccharide, GlcNAc beta 1-3Gal, and sulphated di-, tetra-, hexa-, octa- and decasaccharides based on the sequence (-3/4GlcNAc beta 1-3Gal beta 1-)n having 1, 3, 5, 7 and 9 sulphate groups, respectively. In the present study, these oligosaccharides have been analysed by 500-MHz 1H-NMR spectroscopy using spin-decoupling and two-dimensional correlated spectroscopy experiments. The NMR data confirm the beta-configuration of all the interglycosidic linkages and are consistent with an alternating sequence of----4GlcNAc and----3Gal, a non-reducing-end N-acetylglucosamine residue and a reducing-end galactose residue. The NMR data have also established that a sulphate group is linked to the C6 position of all sugar residues except the reducing-end galactose as follows: (Formula: see text). The signals of the protons attached to the sulphated carbon atoms show marked downfield shifts (approximately 0.4 ppm from equivalent protons of non-sulphated carbon atoms), while the protons at C5 vicinal to sulphated atoms show a change of 0.1-0.2 ppm and other protons of the sulphated monosaccharides show smaller changes in chemical shift (0.01-0.1 ppm). The proton at C4 of the non-sulphated reducing-end galactose linked at C3 also shows a significant change in chemical shift (0.03 ppm).  相似文献   

17.
8,9-Dihydro-8-(N7-guanyl-[d(ATCGAT)])-9-hydroxyaflatoxin B1.d(ATCGAT) and 8,9-dihydro-8-(N7-guanyl-[d(ATGCAT)])-9-hydroxyaflatoxin B1.8,9-dihydro-8-(N7-guanyl-[d(ATGCAT)])-9-hydroxyaflatoxin B1 were prepared by direct addition of afltoxin B1 8,9-epoxide to d(ATCGAT)2 and d(ATGCAT)2, respectively. In contrast to reaction of aflatoxin B1 8,9-epoxide with d(ATCGAT)2 which exhibits a limiting stoichiometry of 1:1 aflatoxin B1:d(ATCGAT)2 [Gopalakrishnan, S., Stone, M. P., & Harris, T. M. (1989) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 111, 7232-7239], reaction of aflatoxin B1 8,9-epoxide with d(ATGCAT)2 exhibits a limiting stoichiometry of 2:1 aflatoxin B1:d(ATGCAT)2. 1H NOE experiments, nonselective 1H T1 relaxation measurements, and 1H chemical shift perturbations demonstrate that in both modified oligodeoxynucleotides the aflatoxin moiety is intercalated above the 5'-face of the modified guanine. The oligodeoxynucleotides remain right-handed, and perturbation of the B-DNA structure is localized adjacent to the adducted guanine. Aflatoxin-oligodeoxynucleotide 1H NOEs are observed between aflatoxin and the 5'-neighbor base pair and include both the major groove and the minor groove. The aflatoxin methoxy and cyclopentenone ring protons face into the minor groove; the furofuran ring protons face into the major groove. No NOE is observed between the imino proton of the modified base pair and the imino proton of the 5'-neighbor base pair; sequential NOEs between nucleotide base and deoxyribose protons are interrupted in both oligodeoxynucleotide strands on the 5'-side of the modified guanine. The protons at C8 and C9 of the aflatoxin terminal furan ring exhibit slower spin-lattice relaxation as compared to other oligodeoxynucleotide protons, which supports the conclusion that they face into the major groove. Increased shielding is observed for aflatoxin protons; chemical shift perturbations of the oligodeoxynucleotide protons are confined to the immediate vicinity of the adducted base pair. The imidazole proton of the modified guanine exchanges with water and is observed at 9.75 ppm. The difference in reaction stoichiometry is consistent with an intercalated transition-state complex between aflatoxin B1 8,9-epoxide and B-DNA. Insertion of aflatoxin B1-8,9 epoxide above the 5'-face of guanine in d(ATCGAT)2 would prevent the binding of a second molecule of aflatoxin B1 8,9-epoxide. In contrast, two intercalation sites would be available with d(ATGCAT)2.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
The 270-MHz proton NMR spectra of cobrotoxin from Naja naja atra were observed in 2H2O solution. The pKa value (5.93) of His-32 is slightly lower than the pKa value (6.65) of the reference model of N-acetylhistidine methylamide, because of the electrostatic interaction with Arg-33 and Asp-31. The pKa value (5.3--5.4) of His-4 is appreciably low, because of the interaction with the positively charged guanidino group possibly of Arg-59. The hydrogen-deuterium exchange rates in 2H2O solution were measured of cobrotoxin and imidazole-bearing models. The second-order rate constants of N-acetylhistidine methylamide, N-acetylhistidine and imidazole acetic acid satisfy the Br?nsted relation. With reference to this Br?nsted relation, the imidazole ring of His-32 is confirmed to be exposed. The imidazole ring of His-4 is also exposed and the exchange rate is excessively promoted by the presence possibly of Arg-59 in the proximity. All the methyl proton resonances are assigned to amino-acid types, by conventional double-resonance method and more effectively by the spin-echo double-resonance method. Eight methyl proton resonances are identified as due to the gamma and/or delta-methyl groups of Val-46, Leu-1, Ile-50 and Ile-52 residues. The proximity of aromatic ring protons and methyl protons is elucidated by the analyses of nulcear Overhauser effect enhancements. The aromatic proton resonances of Trp-29 are affected by the ionizable groups of Asp-31, His-32 and Tyr-35. The methyl groups of Ile-50 are in the proximity to the aromatic ring of Trp-29 and the methyl groups of Ile-52 are in the proximity to Tyr-25. The highest-field methyl proton resonance is due to a threonine residue in the proximity to His-4. The appreciable temperature-dependent chemical shift of this methyl proton resonance suggests a temperature-dependent local conformational equilibrium around the His-4 residue of the first loop of the cobrotoxin molecule.  相似文献   

19.
Sequence-specific 1H and 13C NMR assignments have been made for residues that form the five-stranded parallel beta-sheet and the flavin mononucleotide (FMN) binding site of oxidized Anabaena 7120 flavodoxin. Interstrand nuclear Overhauser enhancements (NOEs) indicate that the beta-sheet arrangement is similar to that observed in the crystal structure of the 70% homologous long-chain flavodoxin from Anacystis nidulans [Smith et al. (1983) J. Mol. Biol. 165, 737-755]. A total of 62 NOEs were identified: 8 between protons of bound FMN, 29 between protons of the protein in the flavin binding site, and 25 between protons of bound FMN and protons of the protein. These constraints were used to determine the localized solution structure of the FMN binding site. The electronic environment and conformation of the protein-bound flavin isoalloxazine ring were investigated by determining 13C chemical shifts, one-bond 13C-13C and 15N-1H coupling constants, and three-bond 13C-1H coupling constants. The carbonyl edge of the flavin ring was found to be slightly polarized. The xylene ring was found to be nonplanar. Tyrosine 94, located adjacent to the flavin isoalloxazine ring, was shown to have a hindered aromatic ring flip rate.  相似文献   

20.
The effects of AMP, fructose 6-phosphate (Fru-6-P), fructose 2,6-bisphosphate (Fru-2,6-P2), and paramagnetic ions on the aromatic region of the proton nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectrum of rabbit liver fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase have been investigated at 300 MHz. Two well resolved peaks in this region of the NMR spectrum are assigned to the protons from the aromatic ring of a tyrosyl residue of the enzyme by chemical modification with tetranitromethane and by nuclear Overhauser effects. Nitration of the tyrosyl residue causes desensitization of the enzyme to AMP inhibition as well as the loss of activity. In the presence of AMP during the modifications, 1 tyrosyl residue could be protected, presumably the one observed by NMR. Binding of AMP, an allosteric inhibitor of the enzyme, to rabbit liver fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase leads to an upfield shift of the tyrosyl proton signals in the NMR spectrum. No chemical shift or line broadening could be detected in the presence of the paramagnetic manganous ion, Fru-2,6-P2, or Fru-6-P. The negative intramolecular nuclear Overhauser effect from the ribose H2' proton to the adenine H8 proton of AMP suggested that AMP binds to the enzyme with an anti conformation about the glycosidic bond. The failure to observe intermolecular nuclear Overhauser effects between the tyrosyl residue and the protons of AMP indicates that the distances between them are greater than 4 A. On the basis of these observations, it is suggested that the AMP-related tyrosyl residue may be close to the AMP binding site, but it is not directly involved in ligand binding. Rather, the protection of this tyrosyl residue by AMP as observed by chemical modification experiments may well be due to a conformational change that results from covalent modification of the enzyme.  相似文献   

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