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1.
We report the observation of paramagnetically shifted (hyperfine) proton resonances from vertebrate mitochondrial [2Fe-2S] ferredoxins. The hyperfine signals of human, bovine, and chick [2Fe-2S] ferredoxins are described and compared with those of Anabaena 7120 vegetative ferredoxin, a plant-type [2Fe-2S] ferredoxin studied previously [Skjeldal, L., Westler, W. M., & Markley, J. L. (1990) Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 278, 482-485]. The hyperfine resonances of the three vertebrate ferredoxins were very similar to one another both in the oxidized state and in the reduced state, and slow (on the NMR scale) electron self-exchange was observed in partially reduced samples. For the oxidized vertebrate ferredoxins, hyperfine signals were observed downfield of the diamagnetic envelope from +13 to +50 ppm, and the general pattern of peaks and their anti-Curie temperature dependence are similar to those observed for the oxidized plant-type ferredoxins. For the reduced vertebrate ferredoxins, hyperfine signals were observed both upfield (-2 to -18 ppm) and downfield (+15 to +45 ppm), and all were found to exhibit Curie-type temperature dependence. This pattern and temperature dependence are distinctly different from those found with reduced plant-type ferredoxins which have signal centered around +120 ppm with Curie-type temperature dependence, assigned to cysteines which interact with Fe(III), and signals centered around +20 ppm with anti-Curie temperature dependence, assigned to cysteines which interact with Fe(II) [Dugad, L. B., La Mar, G. N., Banci, L., & Bertini, I. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 2263-2271].(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
The hyperfine-shifted 1H NMR resonances of oxidized and reduced Trichomonas vaginalis ferredoxin, a functionally unique [2Fe-2S] ferredoxin, have been studied. The oxidized protein spectrum displayed a pattern of six broad upfield-shifted resonances between 13 and 40 ppm with chemical shifts distinct from those of other [2Fe-2S] ferredoxins. All hyperfine 1H resonances of the oxidized ferredoxin displayed anti-Curie temperature dependences. Reduced T. vaginalis ferredoxin displayed hyperfine resonances both upfield and downfield of the diamagnetic region. These resonances showed Curie temperature dependences. Overall the hyperfine-shifted NMR spectrum of T. vaginalis ferredoxin, along with other spectroscopic properties, suggested different structural properties for the active center of oxidized hydrogenosomal ferredoxins from those of other [2Fe-2S] ferredoxins.  相似文献   

3.
Pink (reduced) uteroferrin exhibits well resolved paramagnetic NMR spectra with resonances ranging from 90 ppm downfield to 70 ppm upfield. The intensities of these signals depend on the degree of reduction and correlate well with the intensity of the EPR signals with gave = 1.74. Analyses of chemical shifts and the temperature dependence of the paramagnetically shifted resonances indicate that the Fe(III)-Fe(II) cluster in the reduced protein exhibits weak antiferromagnetic exchange coupling (-J approximately equal to 10 cm-1), in agreement with the estimate derived from the temperature dependence of the EPR signal intensity. Purple (oxidized) uteroferrin, on the other hand, exhibits no discernible paramagnetically shifted resonances, reflecting either strong antiferromagnetic coupling or an unfavorable electron spin-lattice relaxation time. Evans susceptibility comparisons between pink and purple uteroferrin show that the Fe(III)-Fe(III) cluster in the oxidized protein is more strongly coupled (-J greater than 40 cm-1). This value concurs with low temperature magnetic susceptibility measurements on both the porcine and splenic purple acid phosphatases. The isotropically shifted protons of tyrosine coordinated to the cluster are assigned by comparison with synthetic complexes. Tyrosine, earlier implicated as a ligand by resonance Raman spectroscopy, appears to coordinate only to the ferric site in pink uteroferrin. This is consistent with the relatively invariant extinction coefficients of uteroferrin in its oxidized and reduced forms and the ease of reduction of the nonchromophoric iron compared to its chromophoric partner. Other possible ligands to the cluster include histidine, suggested by the presence of downfield-shifted solvent-exchangeable resonances with appropriate isotropic shifts.  相似文献   

4.
This paper presents previously unobserved signals in the 1H NMR spectra of oxidized and reduced [2Fe-2S]-ferredoxin from Anabaena 7120 detected at 400, 500, and 600 MHz. The signals shifted to low field exhibited longitudinal relaxation (T1) values in the range of 100-400 microseconds and line widths in the range of 1-10 kHz (at 400 MHz), and the chemical shifts of all signals showed strong temperature dependence. Although the line widths were smaller at lower magnetic fields, the resolution was better at higher magnetic fields. In the oxidized state, a broad signal was detected at 37 ppm, which corresponds to at least 6 protons, and whose chemical shift exhibits positive temperature dependence. This signal also was found in oxidized ferredoxin reconstituted in 2H2O, which excludes the signal as arising from solvent-exchangeable amide protons. In the reduced state, four signals detected between 90 and 140 ppm exhibited negative temperature dependence. These consisted of two pairs of signals, each pair having one component with half the linewidth of the other. On the basis of their chemical shifts, linewidths, longitudinal relaxation properties, and temperature dependence we assigned these resonances to four of the beta hydrogens of the ligated cysteines. Two solvent-exchangeable hyperfine-shifted signals were found in the reduced state; these are located upfield of the diamagnetic region. The low-field hyperfine resonances of half-reduced ferredoxin in the presence of sodium dithionite showed a self electron transfer exchange rate that was slow on the NMR scale as observed earlier (Chan, T., and Markley, J. L. (1983) Biochemistry 22, 5982-5987), but the exchange rate was accelerated in the presence of methyl viologen.  相似文献   

5.
A NMR and magnetic susceptibility study of the oxidized and reduced states of three different oligomers (forms) of a [4Fe-4S] ferredoxin protein from Desulphovibrio gigas, FdI, FdI′, and FdII was carried out. FdI and FdI′ are different trimers and FdII a tetramer of the same basic subunit. A probable assignment of the contact shifted resonances is indicated. Since the temperature dependences of the contact shifted resonances associated with each [4Fe-4S] are not all similar a delocalized model for the spin densities on the 4Fe does not apply. The exchange rate between oxidized and reduced states is slow on the NMR time scale. The three oligomers are not magnetically equivalent. Using the “three state hypothesis” terminology it is shown that FdIox is predominantly in the C2? state and changes upon reduction into the C3? state, while FdIIox is in the C? state and changes into the C2? state. FdI′ does not easily fit into this classification. This study shows a similarity of magnetic behaviour between FdI and bacterial ferredoxins (e.g. Bacillus polymyxa) and between FdII and HiPIP from Chromatium sp.. The influence of the quaternary structure on the stabilization of the different oxidation states of ferredoxins as well as on their redox potentials is discussed.  相似文献   

6.
The proton magnetic resonance spectrum of a cobalt(II) derivative of Pseudomonasaeruginosa azurin is reported. The temperature dependence of 26 resonances is described together with a study of the pH1 titration behaviour over a range 4.7 to 9.3. A few resonances are observed shifted by more than 30 ppm from their diamagnetic positions. Of the remainder most extrapolate to the aliphatic region at T = ∞. Two lines are assigned to the C2 and C4 protons of a freely titrating histidine residue far from, and only slightly affected by, the Co(II) centre. A further two lines are assigned to the C2 hydrogen of protonated and deprotonated forms of a histidine residue in slow exchange with bulk aquaeous protons and closer to, but not bound to, the cobalt. The structure of the protein in the vicinity of the paramagnetic centre is found to be essentially insensitive to pH1 over the range 4.7 to 9.3.  相似文献   

7.
D J Patel 《Biopolymers》1976,15(3):533-558
The Watson–Crick imino and amino exchangeable protons, the nonexchangeable base and sugar protons, and the backbone phosphates for d-CpG(pCpG)n, n = 1 and 2, have been monitored by high-resolution nmr spectroscopy in aqueous solution over the temperature range 0°–90°C. The temperature dependence of the chemical shifts of the tetramer and hexamer resonances is consistent with the formation of stable duplexes at low temperature in solution. Comparison of the spectral characteristics of the tetranucleotide with those of the hexanucleotide with temperature permits the differentiation and assignment of the cytosine proton resonances on base pairs located at the end of the helix from those in an interior position. There is fraying at the terminal base pairs in the tetranucleotide and hexanucleotide duplexes. The Watson–Crick ring imino protons exchange at a faster rate than the Watson–Crick side-chain amino protons, with exchange occurring by transient opening of the double helix. The structure of the d-CpG(pCpG)n double helices has been probed by proton relaxation time measurements, sugar proton coupling constants, and the proton chemical shift changes associated with the helix–coil transition. The experimental data support a structural model in solution, which incorporates an anti conformation about the glycosyl bonds, C(3) exo sugar ring pucker, and base overlap geometries similar to the B-DNA helix. Rotational correlation times of 1.7 and 0.9 × 10?9 sec have been computed for the hexanucleotide and tetranucleotide duplexes in 0.1 M salt, D2O, pH 6.25 at 27°C. The well-resolved 31P resonances for the internucleotide phosphates of the tetramer and hexamer sequences at superconducting fields shift upfield by 0.2–0.5 ppm on helix formation. These shifts reflect a conformational change about the ω,ω′ phosphodiester bonds from gauche-gauche in the duplex structure to a distribution of gauche-trans states in the coil structure. Significant differences are observed in the transition width and midpoint of the chemical shift versus temperature profiles plotted in differentiated form for the various base and sugar proton and internucleotide phosphorous resonances monitoring the d-CpG(pCpG)n helix–coil transition. The twofold symmetry of the d-CpGpCpG duplex is removed on complex formation with the antibiotic actinomycin-D. Two phosphorous resonances are shifted downfield by ~2.6 ppm and ~1.6 ppm on formation of the 1:2 Act-D:d-CpGpCpG complex in solution. Model studies on binding of the antibiotic to dinucleotides of varying sequence indicate that intercalation of the actinomycin-D occurs at the GpC site in the d-CpGpCpG duplex and that the magnitude of the downfield shifts reflects strain at the O-P-O backbone angles and hydrogen bonding between the phenoxazone and the phosphate oxygens. Actinomycin-D is known to bind to nucleic acids that exhibit a B-DNA conformation; this suggests that the d-CpG(pCpG)n duplexes exhibit a B-DNA conformation in solution.  相似文献   

8.
The assignment of the paramagnetically shifted resonances of the Fe(II)-bleomycin complex in D2O has been accomplished using the transfer of saturation method. A number of additional resonances arising from labile NH protons which are shifted by the metal ion are observed in the 1H spectrum of the complex in H2O. The temperature dependence of the chemical shifts is consistent with the formation of an isolated 1:1 complex, but does not obey either the Curie Law or the Curie-Weiss Law. The magnitude of the shifts suggests that the valeric acid hydroxyl (or carbonyl) group, the α-amino group, the imidazole Nπ, the carbamoyl oxygen, the pyrimidine N1 and/or the secondary amino group may be coordinated to the iron(II).  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
The B2 subunit of ribonucleotide reductase from Escherichia coli contains a stable tyrosyl free radical and an antiferromagnetically coupled dimeric iron center with high-spin ferric ions. The tyrosyl radical is an oxidized form of tyrosine-122. This study shows that the B2 protein has a fully reduced state, denoted reduced B2, characterized by a normal nonradical tyrosine-122 residue and a dimeric ferrous iron center. Reduced B2 can be formed either from active B2 by a three-electron reduction in the presence of suitable mediators or from apoB2 by addition of two equimolar amounts of ferrous ions in the absence of oxygen. The oxidized tyrosyl radical and the ferric iron center can be generated from reduced B2 by the admission of air. The tyrosyl radical can be selectively reduced by one-electron reduction in the presence of a suitable mediator, yielding metB2, a form that seems identical with the form resulting from treatment of active B2 with hydroxyurea. 1H NMR was used to characterize the paramagnetically shifted resonances associated with the reduced iron center. Prominent resonances were observed around 45 ppm (nonexchangeable with solvent) and 57 ppm (exchangeable with solvent) at 37 degrees C. From the temperature dependence of the chemical shifts of these resonances it was concluded that the ferrous ions in reduced B2 are only weakly, if at all, antiferromagnetically coupled. By comparison with data on the similar iron center of deoxyhemerythrin it is suggested that the 57 ppm resonance should be assigned to protons in histidine ligands of the iron center.  相似文献   

11.
Rose bengal sensitizes photoinactivation of lipoamide dehydrogenase from pig heart to a constant residual reductase activity resulting from specific destruction of histidine residues. The rate of sensitized photoinactivation is pH dependent and is associated with an ionizable group with pK 6.6 ± 0.2. All steady-state kinetic parameters are markedly reduced by photooxidation. Spectroscopic studies indicate the contribution of oxidized flavin/dithiol to the half-reduced form of the photooxidized enzyme. The proton magnetic resonance spectrum of lipoamide dehydrogenase shows resolved histidine C2 proton peak at δ9.18 ppm and a shoulder at δ9.23 ppm. The shoulder protons are eliminated by the sensitized photooxidation and shifted upfield on deprotonation. At high pH, the characteristic Faraday A term also disappears. These observations suggest that the essential histidine stabilizes the nascent thiolate via the ion pair formation to facilitate the reductase reaction catalyzed by lipoamide dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

12.
D J Patel  A E Tonelli 《Biopolymers》1974,13(10):1943-1964
The 300-MHz proton nmr spectra (between 11 and 14 ppm) of a series of double-stranded deoxy oligonucleotides of known sequence have been recorded in H2O solution. These resonances have been assigned to the G? N1H and T? N3H protons of specific base pairs from an evaluation of the temperature dependence of the ring NH linewidths and from the selective ring NH chemical shift changes on actinomycin-D binding. The deoxy oligonucleotides exist predominantly in the DNA-B conformation as evaluated from antibiotic binding studies. Ring-current calculations have been utilized to evaluate the up-field shifts of the G? N1H and T? N3H protons in Watson-Crick base pairs due to the ring currents from the pyrimidine and purine rings of nearest neighbor base pairs in regular DNA-B- and RNA-A-type helices. The perturbations on these up-field ring-current contributions that arise from twisting and tilting a base pair adjacent to the ring NH under study have been evaluated and found to change the calculated chemical shift by ±0.6 ppm for twist and tilt distortions of <30°C in a single adjacent base pair. A knowledge of the experimentally assigned ring NH chemical shifts of specific base pairs in known sequences of double-stranded deoxy oligonucleotides coupled with the ring-current tables for the DNA-B helical structure permit the assignment of 13.6 ± 0.1 ppm and 14.6 ± 0.2 ppm for the G? N1H proton of an isolated GC base pair and the T? N3H proton of an isolated AT base pair, respectively.  相似文献   

13.
A and FB. The g-tensor orientation of FA and FB is believed to be correlated to the preferential localization of the mixed-valence and equal-valence (ferrous) iron pairs in each [4Fe-4S]+ cluster. The preferential position of the mixed-valence and equal-valence pairs, in turn, can be inferred from the study of the temperature dependence of contact-shifted resonances by 1H NMR spectroscopy. For this, a sequence-specific assignment of these signals is required. The 1H NMR spectrum of reduced, unbound PsaC from Synechococcus sp. PCC 7002 at 280.4 K in 99% D2O solution shows 18 hyperfine-shifted resonances. The non-solvent-exchangeable, hyperfine-shifted resonances of reduced PsaC are clearly identified as belonging to the cysteines coordinating the clusters FA and FB by their downfield chemical shifts, by their temperature dependencies, and by their short T 1 relaxation times. The usual fast method of assigning the 1H NMR spectra of reduced [4Fe-4S] proteins through magnetization transfer from the oxidized to the reduced state was not feasible in the case of reduced PsaC. Therefore, a de novo self-consistent sequence-specific assignment of the hyperfine-shifted resonances was obtained based on dipolar connectivities from 1D NOE difference spectra and on longitudinal relaxation times using the X-ray structure of Clostridium acidi urici 2[4Fe-4S] cluster ferredoxin at 0.94 Å resolution as a model. The results clearly show the same sequence-specific distribution of Curie and anti-Curie cysteines for unbound, reduced PsaC as established for other [4Fe-4S]-containing proteins; therefore, the mixed-valence and equal-valence (ferrous) Fe-Fe pairs in FA and FB have the same preferential positions relative to the protein. The analysis reveals that the magnetic properties of the two [4Fe-4S] clusters are essentially indistinguishable in unbound PsaC, in contrast to the PsaC that is bound as a component of the PS I complex. Received: 1 February 2000 / Accepted: 20 March 2000  相似文献   

14.
The reduced forms of cytochrome P-450cam and chloroperoxidase were examined by proton NMR spectroscopy. The pH and temperature dependences of the proton NMR spectra of both ferrous enzymes are reported. A series of alkyl mercaptide complexes of both synthetic and natural-derivative iron(II) porphyrins was also examined. The proton NMR spectra of these complexes facilitated the assignment of resonances due to the axial ligand in the model compounds on the basis of their isotropic shifts and multiplicities. Comparison of model compound data with that for the reduced enzymes supports assignment of the methylene protons for the axial cysteinate of ferrous cytochrome P-450cam and ferrous chloroperoxidase to proton NMR resonances at 279 and 200 ppm (pH 7.0, 298K), respectively. Differences in the active site structure of the two enzymes are further demonstrated by 15N-NMR spectroscopy of the cyanide complexes of the ferric forms.  相似文献   

15.
Pseudomonas putida and Azotobacter vinelandii ferredoxins each contain one [4Fe-4S] cluster and one [3Fe-4S] cluster. Their polypeptide chains are nearly identical, differing by only 15 residues out of a total of 106. T1 measurements and temperature dependence studies of the 1H NMR spectrum of each ferredoxin demonstrate that all six resolved downfield resonances are near an iron-sulfur center. The five most downfield resonances are shown to arise from protons on cysteinyl beta-carbons by incorporation of cysteine deuterated at the beta-carbon into cell protein. The sixth peak (10.5 ppm) is shown to be a non-cysteinyl proton. This peak resolves into two resonances of approximately equal intensity at temperatures below 15 degrees or above 25 degrees C. A nuclear Overhauser effect observed between the two downfield-most resonances of A. vinelandii ferredoxin indicates that they originate from a geminal pair of beta-cysteinyl protons. An Overhauser effect observed between the resonances at 22.3 and 15.7 ppm, in conjunction with other results, implies that the resonance at 22.3 ppm arises from a beta-proton on the 3Fe-center-bound Cys16, while the resonance at 15.7 ppm arises from Cys45 beta-proton, which is bound to the 4Fe center. The five most downfield resonances are pH-dependent. The sixth peak (10.5 ppm in P. putida ferredoxin) is pH-independent. Possible origins for the observed pH dependencies are discussed.  相似文献   

16.
Abstract

An examination of the 1H NMR assignments and exchange properties of the amino resonances of the self-complementary tetramer, d(CGCG) was undertaken with regard to buffer effects, transfer of saturation from the water resonance and temperature dependence of amino 1H line shape and chemical shift. The lack of buffer effect on visible exchangeable proton resonances is evidence for the stringent requirement for nucleo-base protonation at pH values below neutrality, which is greatly reduced in the helical state. For this reason, sharp resonances are observed for both Watson-Crick and non-Watson-Crick cytosine amino protons for base-paired regions. Considerations of monomeric exchange mechanisms for the cytosine and guanine amino protons formed the basis for successful assignment and isolation of their resonances in the helical state by presaturation of the water resonance at selected pH values. Preirradiation of the water resonance at pH <6 would isolate the guanine amino 1H resonances of any self-complementary oligonucleotide, to exploit its high sensitivity as a useful proble of helix ? coil premelting.  相似文献   

17.
In order to establish whether p.m.r. spectroscopy is useful for identifying Amadori- and Heyns-rearrangement products, the p.m.r. spectra at 220 MHz of 16 rearrangement products derived from d-glucose or d-fructose and amino acids have been investigated. At pH 3, the protons of the NCH2 group of N-substituted 1-amino-1-deoxy-d-fructose (Amadori-rearrangement products) resonate at δ 3.25–3.60 in D2O and are shifted upfield by 0.3–0.6 p.p.m. at pH 9. These protons exchange with deuterium. Also, in D2O there is an equilibrium of the acyclic, furanose, and pyranose structures, the last being favoured. At pH ? 7, the equilibrium is completely shifted to the β-pyranose form, which adopts exclusively the 2C5 conformation. At pH 3, the equilibrium favours the β-furanose form. At pH 3, H-1e and H-1a of N-substituted 2-amino-2-deoxy-d-glucoses (Heyns-rearrangement products) resonate at δ 5.55 and 5.04, respectively. At pH 9, the signal for H-2 is shifted upfield by 0.2–0.7 p.p.m. In D2O solution, these compounds exist as an equilibrium of α- and β-pyranose forms in the 4C1 conformation. The α anomer is stabilised by the amino acid group at position 2. At pH 3, the αβ-ratio is 2–4:1, and, at pH 9, 1.0–1.1:1.  相似文献   

18.
NMR studies of plastocyanin have centered on the ligands to the copper atom at the active site, particularly histidines-37 and -87. Heteronuclear (13C, 1H) J-connectivity spectroscopy has enabled cross assignment of 1H and 13C NMR resonances from the two copper-ligated histidines. In addition to providing assignments of the 13C resonances, the two-dimensional Fourier transform NMR results require the reversal of the original 1H NMR assignments to the ring protons of histidine-37. The line widths of the ring protons of histidine-87 are field-dependent leading to determination of the reduced lifetime of the proton on the Nδ atom (about 400 μs).  相似文献   

19.
We report proton magnetic resonance studies of a series of lysine oligopeptides in H2O solution. At pH 5 the protonated ε-amino groups are seen as broad resonances; the peptide NH proton resonances are split by spin–spin coupling with the Cα-H proton, and appear at positions which depend on position in the chain and on chain length. Assignments were made by the europium shift method, and we observed the expected effect of catalysis by the terminal —NH3+ of exchange of the adjacent peptide NH. Coupling constants and the temperature coefficient of chemical shift values were consistent with a non-hydrogen-bonded structure for the oligolysines. The rate and mechanism of NH hydrogen exchange were investigated by line-broadening measurements of the peptide protons as a function of pH. Exchange was found to be OH? catalyzed, with large differences in the rate depending on position in the chain. Preliminary studies of the complex between double-helical d(pA)3pGpC(pT)3 and tetra(L -lysine) were performed using 1H- and 31P-nmr techniques. Pmr spectra of the complex at pH values ranging from 3.98 to 8.15 showed very complicated patterns. Downfield shifts and reduction in exchange rates were observed for several tetra(L -lysine) protons. 31P-nmr spectra of the complex reveal an upfield shift of 1 ppm for 3′-5′ phosphate diester resonances on complexation. 31P T1 relaxation times change little on complex formation at low temperature but are altered at higher temperature.  相似文献   

20.
《Inorganica chimica acta》2001,312(1-2):67-73
Palladium(II) and platinum(II) complexes, [PdX(NS3 1Bu)]BPh4 (X=Cl, Br, I; NS3 1Bu=tris[2-(tert-butylthio)ethyl]amine) and [PtCl(NS3 1Bu)]BPh4, were prepared, and their structures were determined by X-ray analyses. The geometry around the palladium and platinum atoms is square planar. The NS3 1Bu ligand functions as a tridentate ligand and one sulfur atom is not coordinated to the metal. The 1H NMR spectrum of [PdCl(NS3 1Bu)]BPh4 in acetone-d6 exhibited a dynamic behavior. At 20°C the spectrum showed a singlet signal at 1.60 ppm that can be assigned to tert-butyl protons, whereas at −70°C three singlet signals were observed at 1.36, 1.61, and 1.70 ppm with an intensity ratio of 1: 0.25: 2. The signals at 1.36 and 1.70 ppm are assigned to the tert-butyl protons in the square-planar structure, and these signals are consistent with the X-ray structure. The signal at 1.61 ppm can be assigned to the tert-butyl protons in a trigonal-bipyramidal structure where the three tert-butyl groups are magnetically equivalent. Thus, we concluded that the coordination-site exchange occurred via a trigonal-bipyramidal intermediate. The square-planar and trigonal-bipyramidal species of [PdCl(NS3 1Bu)]BPh4 are in equilibrium in acetone-d6. The equilibrium was shifted toward the square-planar species on decreasing the temperature. The 1H NMR spectra for [PdX(NS3 1Bu)]BPh4 (X=Cl, Br, and I) were similar to one another at the same temperature, suggesting that the site-exchange process is insensitive to the kind of coexisting halogen ligand. The site exchange reaction of [PtCl(NS3 1Bu)]BPh4 seems to occur more slowly than that of the palladium(II) analogue.  相似文献   

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