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1.
 Using a corrected molar extinction coefficient for yeast apo copper-zinc superoxide dismutase (CuZnSOD), we have confirmed that the metal binding properties of this protein in vitro differ greatly from those of the bovine and human CuZnSOD enzymes. Thus yeast apo CuZnSOD was found to bind only one Co2+ per protein dimer under the conditions in which the bovine and human CuZnSOD apoenzymes readily bind two per dimer. The spectroscopic properties characteristic of the two Cu2+ plus two Co2+ per dimer or four Cu2+ per dimer metal-substituted bovine apo CuZnSOD derivatives were obtained for the yeast apoprotein but by the addition of only half of the appropriate metals, i.e., one Cu2+ plus one Co2+ per dimer or two Cu2+ per dimer. This half-metallated yeast CuZnSOD has been characterized by UV-visible and EPR spectroscopy as well as by native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. We conclude that yeast apo CuZnSOD, unlike the bovine and human apoproteins, cannot be reconstituted fully with metal ions under the same conditions. Instead, only one subunit of the homodimer, the "normal" subunit, can be remetalled in a fashion reminiscent of the well-characterized bovine protein. The other "phantom" subunit is not competent to bind metals in this fashion. Furthermore, we have shown that CuZnSOD protein isolated from Saccharomyces cerevisiae that lacks the gene coding for the copper chaperone, Lys7p, contains only one metal ion, Zn2+, per protein dimer. The possibility that yeast CuZnSOD can exist in multiple conformational states may represent an increased propensity of the yeast protein to undergo changes that can occur in all CuZnSODs, and may have implications for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. Received: 8 June 1998 / Accepted: 9 September 1998  相似文献   

2.
The presence of the copper ion at the active site of human wild type copper-zinc superoxide dismutase (CuZnSOD) is essential to its ability to catalyze the disproportionation of superoxide into dioxygen and hydrogen peroxide. Wild type CuZnSOD and several of the mutants associated with familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (FALS) (Ala(4) --> Val, Gly(93) --> Ala, and Leu(38) --> Val) were expressed in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Purified metal-free (apoproteins) and various remetallated derivatives were analyzed by metal titrations monitored by UV-visible spectroscopy, histidine modification studies using diethylpyrocarbonate, and enzymatic activity measurements using pulse radiolysis. From these studies it was concluded that the FALS mutant CuZnSOD apoproteins, in direct contrast to the human wild type apoprotein, have lost their ability to partition and bind copper and zinc ions in their proper locations in vitro. Similar studies of the wild type and FALS mutant CuZnSOD holoenzymes in the "as isolated" metallation state showed abnormally low copper-to-zinc ratios, although all of the copper acquired was located at the native copper binding sites. Thus, the copper ions are properly directed to their native binding sites in vivo, presumably as a result of the action of the yeast copper chaperone Lys7p (yeast CCS). The loss of metal ion binding specificity of FALS mutant CuZnSODs in vitro may be related to their role in ALS.  相似文献   

3.
Yeast alcohol dehydrogenase, purified from baker's yeast under conditions which exclude contamination by extraneous metal ions, is homogeneous by analytical ultracentrifugation and disc gel electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate. The enzyme has a molecular weight of 149,000 as determined by ultracentrifugation time-lapse photography and exhibits specific activities of 430 to 480 U/mg. Zinc analysis by three independent, highly sensitive methods, i.e., atomic absorption spectrometry, atomic fluorescence spectrometry, and microwave-induced plasma emission spectrometry, demonstrates 4 g-atom of catalytically essential Zn per mole of enzyme. No other metal atoms are present in stoichiometrically significant quantities as assessed by emission spectrography. The Stoichiometry of coenzyme binding, 4 mol of NADH/mol of enzyme, is identical to that of zinc, consistent with one coenzyme binding site and one zinc atom per enzyme subunit. Conditions for exchange of the four catalytically essential zinc atoms with 65Zn have been developed. These atoms exchange identically under all conditions examined. The resultant radiolabeled enzyme, l(YADH)65Zn4], has the same metal content, specific enzymatic activity, and coenzyme binding properties as the native enzyme. The 65Zn of this enzyme serves to monitor the extent and site specificity of cobalt replacement. The fully cobalt-substituted enzyme, [(YADH)Co4], has a specific activity of 80 U/mg, 17% that of the Zn enzyme, and exhibits absorption and circular dichroic spectra which are consistent with coordination by one or more sulfur ligands in a distorted tetrahedral geometry.  相似文献   

4.
We express the effective Hamiltonian of an ion-binding site in a protein as a combination of the Hamiltonian of the ion-bound site in vacuum and the restraints of the protein on the site. The protein restraints are described by the quadratic elastic network model. The Hamiltonian of the ion-bound site in vacuum is approximated as a generalized Hessian around the minimum energy configuration. The resultant of the two quadratic Hamiltonians is cast into a pure quadratic form. In the canonical ensemble, the quadratic nature of the resultant Hamiltonian allows us to express analytically the excess free energy, enthalpy, and entropy of ion binding to the protein. The analytical expressions allow us to separate the roles of the dynamic restraints imposed by the protein on the binding site and the temperature-independent chemical effects in metal-ligand coordination. For the consensus zinc-finger peptide, relative to the aqueous phase, the calculated free energy of exchanging Zn2+ with Fe2+, Co2+, Ni2+, and Cd2+ are in agreement with experiments. The predicted excess enthalpy of ion exchange between Zn2+ and Co2+ also agrees with the available experimental estimate. The free energy of applying the protein restraints reveals that relative to Zn2+, the Co2+, and Cd2+-site clusters are more destabilized by the protein restraints. This leads to an experimentally testable hypothesis that a tetrahedral metal binding site with minimal protein restraints will be less selective for Zn2+ over Co2+ and Cd2+ compared to a zinc finger peptide. No appreciable change is expected for Fe2+ and Ni2+. The framework presented here may prove useful in protein engineering to tune metal selectivity.  相似文献   

5.
Streptomyces griseus aminopeptidase has been characterized to have a dinuclear active site and to follow a dinuclear hydrolytic mechanism by means of activity assay, optical, and NMR spectroscopy. A sequential binding of Co2+ to the dinuclear sites in 20 mM Mes buffer at pH 6.1 has also been established. The results from these studies suggest that the two metal sites have a five-coordination sphere, with at least one coordinated His each. A di-Cu2+-substituted derivative of the enzyme has been prepared which exhibits a 1H NMR spectrum with sharp hyperfine-shifted signals, again indicating the presence of a dinuclear active site. This 1H NMR spectrum with sharp hyperfine-shifted features represents a first of its kind for a di-Cu2+ center in metalloproteins. Received: 19 May 1997 / Accepted: 4 September 1997  相似文献   

6.
The peptidases in clan MH are known as cocatalytic zinc peptidases that have two zinc ions in the active site, but their metal preference has not been rigorously investigated. In this study, the molecular basis for metal preference is provided from the structural and biochemical analyses. Kinetic studies of Pseudomonas aeruginosa aspartyl aminopeptidase (PaAP) which belongs to peptidase family M18 in clan MH revealed that its peptidase activity is dependent on Co2+ rather than Zn2+: the kcat (s−1) values of PaAP were 0.006, 5.10 and 0.43 in no-metal, Co2+, and Zn2+ conditions, respectively. Consistently, addition of low concentrations of Co2+ to PaAP previously saturated with Zn2+ greatly enhanced the enzymatic activity, suggesting that Co2+ may be the physiologically relevant cocatalytic metal ion of PaAP. The crystal structures of PaAP complexes with Co2+ or Zn2+ commonly showed two metal ions in the active site coordinated with three conserved residues and a bicarbonate ion in a tetragonal geometry. However, Co2+- and Zn2+-bound structures showed no noticeable alterations relevant to differential effects of metal species, except the relative orientation of Glu-265, a general base in the active site. The characterization of mutant PaAP revealed that the first metal binding site is primarily responsible for metal preference. Similar to PaAP, Streptococcus pneumonia glutamyl aminopeptidase (SpGP), belonging to aminopeptidase family M42 in clan MH, also showed requirement for Co2+ for maximum activity. These results proposed that clan MH peptidases might be a cocatalytic cobalt peptidase rather than a zinc-dependent peptidase.  相似文献   

7.
NhaA, the main sodium-proton exchanger in the inner membrane of Escherichia coli, regulates the cytosolic concentrations of H+ and Na+. It is inactive at acidic pH, becomes active between pH 6 and pH 7, and reaches maximum activity at pH 8. By cryo-electron microscopy of two-dimensional crystals grown at pH 4 and incubated at higher pH, we identified two sequential conformational changes in the protein in response to pH or substrate ions. The first change is induced by a rise in pH from 6 to 7 and marks the transition from the inactive state to the pH-activated state. pH activation, which precedes the ion-induced conformational change, is accompanied by an overall expansion of the NhaA monomer and a local ordering of the N-terminus. The second conformational change is induced by the substrate ions Na+ and Li+ at pH above 7 and involves a 7-Å displacement of helix IVp. This movement would cause a charge imbalance at the ion-binding site that may trigger the release of the substrate ion and open a periplasmic exit channel.  相似文献   

8.
The voltage-gated proton channel Hv1 functions as a dimer, in which the intracellular C-terminal domain of the protein is responsible for the dimeric architecture and regulates proton permeability. Although it is well known that divalent metal ions have effect on the proton channel activity, the interaction of divalent metal ions with the channel in detail is not well elucidated. Herein, we investigated the interaction of divalent metal ions with the C-terminal domain of human Hv1 by CD spectra and fluorescence spectroscopy. The divalent metal ions binding induced an obvious conformational change at pH 7 and a pH-sensitive reduction of thermostability in the C-terminal domain. The interactions were further estimated by fluorescence spectroscopy experiments. There are at least two binding sites for divalent metal ions binding to the C-terminal domain of Hv1, either of which is close to His244 or His266 residue. The binding of Zn2+ to the two sites both enhanced the fluorescence of the protein at pH 7, whereas the binding of other divalent metal ions to the two sites all resulted fluorescence quenching. The orders of the strength of divalent metal ions binding to the two sites from strong to weak are both Co2+, Ca2+, Ni2+, Mg2+, and Mn2+. The strength of Ca2+, Co2+, Mg2+, Mn2+ and Ni2+ binding to the site close to His244 is stronger than that of these divalent metal ions binding to the site close to His266.  相似文献   

9.
Adamczyk M  Poznański J  Kopera E  Bal W 《FEBS letters》2007,581(7):1409-1416
UV spectroscopy demonstrated that chicken mononucleosomes bind Co(II) and Zn(II) ions at submicromolar concentrations in a tetrahedral mode, at a conserved zinc finger-like site, composed of Cys110 and His113 residues of both H3 molecules. Neither of these metal ions substituted for another, indicating a limited binding reversibility. Molecular modeling indicated that the tetrahedral site is formed by unhindered rotations around Calpha-Cbeta bonds in the side chains of the zinc binding residues. The resulting local rearrangement of the protein structure shields the bound metal ion from the solvent, explaining the observed lack of reversibility of the binding. Consequences of these findings for zinc homeostasis, metal toxicology and nucleosomal regulation are discussed.  相似文献   

10.
Mutations in copper-zinc superoxide dismutase (CuZnSOD) cause 25% of familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (FALS) cases. This paper examines one such mutant, H46R, which has no superoxide dismutase activity yet presumably retains the gain-of-function activity that leads to disease. We demonstrate that Cu(2+) does not bind to the copper-specific catalytic site of H46R CuZnSOD and that Cu(2+) competes with other metals for the zinc binding site. Most importantly, Cu(2+) was found to bind strongly to a surface residue near the dimer interface of H46R CuZnSOD. Cysteine was identified as the new binding site on the basis of multiple criteria including UV-vis spectroscopy, RR spectroscopy, and chemical derivatization. Cysteine 111 was pinpointed as the position of the reactive ligand by tryptic digestion of the modified protein and by mutational analysis. This solvent-exposed residue may play a role in the toxicity of this and other FALS CuZnSOD mutations. Furthermore, we propose that the two cysteine 111 residues, found on opposing subunits of the same dimeric enzyme, may provide a docking location for initial metal insertion during biosynthesis of wild-type CuZnSOD in vivo.  相似文献   

11.
α-Lactalbumin possesses multiple Zn2+ binding sites, with the strongest site having an affinity constant of 5×105 M?1 [Permyakovet al. (1991),J. Protein Chem. 100, 577]. The binding of zinc at secondary sites is accompanied by destabilization of the protein structure and progressive protein aggregation. This pronounced destabilization is reflected in a shift of the thermal denaturation transition temperature by more than 40°. The present work examines Co2+ binding to bovineα-lactalbumin, where for this analog of Zn2+, multiple binding sites were also found from spectrofluorimetric titrations. The strong site Co2+ binding constant was 1.3×106 M?1. However, in contrast to Zn2+ binding, Co2+ does not cause protein aggregation nor any significant thermal destabilization of the protein. Fluroescence energy transfer measurements between Tb3+ in the strong calcium site to Co2+ in the strong Zn2+ site gave a distance in the range of 14–18 Å, which was in excellent agreement with recent crystallographic data for humanα-lactalbumin [Renet al. (1993), J. Biol. Chem.268, 19292–19298] However, the X-ray structure did not identify the additional zinc sites found from earlier solution studies, presumably due to restrictive crystal packing interactions. The results from the current work confirm that the strong cobalt (zinc) site in solution is the same zinc site elucidated by X-ray crystallography.  相似文献   

12.
NhaA, the main sodium-proton exchanger in the inner membrane of Escherichia coli, regulates the cytosolic concentrations of H and Na. It is inactive at acidic pH, becomes active between pH 6 and pH 7, and reaches maximum activity at pH 8. By cryo-electron microscopy of two-dimensional crystals grown at pH 4 and incubated at higher pH, we identified two sequential conformational changes in the protein in response to pH or substrate ions. The first change is induced by a rise in pH from 6 to 7 and marks the transition from the inactive state to the pH-activated state. pH activation, which precedes the ion-induced conformational change, is accompanied by an overall expansion of the NhaA monomer and a local ordering of the N-terminus. The second conformational change is induced by the substrate ions Na and Li at pH above 7 and involves a 7-Å displacement of helix IVp. This movement would cause a charge imbalance at the ion-binding site that may trigger the release of the substrate ion and open a periplasmic exit channel.  相似文献   

13.
 We have selectively replaced the catalytic zinc of the catalytic domain of stromelysin-1 (SCD) with other transition metals. Dialysis of the enzyme against 2 mM 1,10-phenanthroline, 20 mM Hepes, pH 7.5 in the presence of 10 mM CaCl2 removes the catalytic zinc, leaving the structural zinc site intact. Dialysis with metal-free buffer followed by the new metal ion replaces the catalytic zinc forming a metal hybrid enzyme. Full incorporation of 1 mol Co2+, Ni2+, or Cd2+/mol enzyme is confirmed by atomic absorption spectrometry while the weaker binding Mn2+ yields a value of 0.4 mol Mn2+/mol enzyme after dialysis against 1 μM Mn2+. The activity of the monozinc enzyme is <10% while its activity is restored upon the addition of zinc and other transition metals. The k cat values for the Co2+, Mn2+, Cd2+, and Ni2+ enzymes are respectively 99%, 54%, 19%, and 17% of the value for the native enzyme, while the respective k cat/K m values are 36%, 29%, 7%, and 16% toward the fluorescent heptapeptide substrate, DnsPLALRAR. The zinc and metal hybrid SCD cleave DnsPLA↓LRAR, and DnsPLE↓LFAR, exclusively at one bond, while DnsPLA↓L↓WAR and DnsPLA↓L↓FAR are cleaved at two positions. The double cleavage of DnsPLALWAR and DnsPLALFAR catalyzed by SCD is in marked contrast to the close structurally related matrilysin. A notable feature of SCD catalysis is the different cleavage site specificity of the metal hybrids toward the A-L and L-W bonds of the DnsPLALWAR substrate. Thus the k cat values of the Co/Zn hybrid for the cleavage of the A-L bond in the DnsPLALRAR and DnsPLAWAR substrates are 5- and 8-fold greater than those for the Cd/Zn hybrid compared to a 140-fold difference for the corresponding k cat values for the L-W bond cleavage. These results imply that the catalytic metal of SCD is not only involved in catalysis but also influences the substrate specificity of the enzyme. Received: 30 December 1997 / Accepted: 23 February 1998  相似文献   

14.
We describe a computer program (Metal Search) that helps design tetrahedrally coordinated metal binding sites in proteins of known structure. The program takes as input the backbone coordinates of a protein and outputs lists of four residues that might form tetrahedral sites if wild-type amino acids were replaced by cysteine or histidine. The program also outputs the side chain dihedral angles of the amino acids and the coordinates of the predicted metal ion. The only function evaluated by Metal Search is the ability of side chains to meet simple geometric criteria for formation of a tetrahedral site, but these criteria are sufficient to produce a manageably small list that can then be evaluated by other means. The program has been used in the introduction of zinc binding sites in the designed four-helix bundle protein α 4 and in the B1 domain of streptococcal protein G, and in both cases the tetrahedral coordination of a bound metal ion has been confirmed1 (Klemba, M., Gardner, K. H., Marino, S., Clarke, N. D., and Regan, L., Nature: Structural Biology 2:368–373, 1995). © 1995 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

15.
Zn2+ is an essential transition metal required in trace amounts by all living organisms. However, metal excess is cytotoxic and leads to cell damage. Cells rely on transmembrane transporters, with the assistance of other proteins, to establish and maintain Zn2+ homeostasis. Metal coordination during transport is key to specific transport and unidirectional translocation without the backward release of free metal. The coordination details of Zn2+ at the transmembrane metal binding site responsible for transport have now been established. Escherichia coli ZntA is a well-characterized Zn2+-ATPase responsible for intracellular Zn2+ efflux. A truncated form of the protein lacking regulatory metal sites and retaining the transport site was constructed. Metrical parameters of the metal–ligand coordination geometry for the zinc bound isolated form were characterized using x-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS). Our data support a nearest neighbor ligand environment of (O/N)2S2 that is compatible with the proposed invariant metal coordinating residues present in the transmembrane region. This ligand identification and the calculated bond lengths support a tetrahedral coordination geometry for Zn2+ bound to the TM-MBS of P-type ATPase transporters.  相似文献   

16.
The addition of Mn2+, Zn2+, Co2+, Ca2+ or Pb2+ to apo-concanavalin A results in a slow conformational conversion of the protein to the active saccharide binding form. The rates of conversion are dependent upon the sample pH and identity of the ions which occupy the native transition metal and calcium ion sites yet the affinity of each metalloform for the fluorescent sugar, 4-methylumbelliferyl-α-D-mannopyranoside, is independent of these same parameters (above pH 5.6). EDTA quickly removes all metal ions from the active Mn2+ or Co2+-concanavalin A samples leaving a metastable metal free structure which retains its high saccharide affinity for several hours at room temperature. This form of apo-concanavalin A and the metallized derivatives have equally high saccharide binding affinities in 1M NaCL but the former dramatically loses its sugar affinity as the ionic strength is lowered.  相似文献   

17.
Metal ion activation of saccharide binding has been studied for concana-valin A near pH 7.0. Although two metal ions, a transition metal ion and a Ca2+ ion, can bind, both are not required. Ca2+ alone, Mn2+ alone, or Ca2+ with other transition metal ions can activate this lectin. Only one Ca2+ ion per subunit or only one Mn2+ per subunit is sufficient. Metal ion binding was studied by magnetic resonance techniques and direct binding assays. Saccharide binding activity was monitored by following the fluorescence of 4-methylumbelliferyl a-D-mannopyranoside. When Ca2+ binds to demetalized concanavalin A, the transition metal ion site is hindered. When Mn2+ alone binds to demetalized concanavalin A, saccharide binding activity is induced. A subsequent conformational change, not necessary for carbohydrate binding activity, covers the Mn2+.  相似文献   

18.
Bacterial allantoinase (ALLase) and dihydroorotase (DHOase) are members of the cyclic amidohydrolase family. ALLase and DHOase possess similar binuclear metal centers in the active site in which two metals are bridged by a post-translationally carboxylated lysine. In this study, we determined the effects of carboxylated lysine and metal binding on the activities of ALLase and DHOase. Although DHOase is a metalloenzyme, purified DHOase showed high activity without additional metal supplementation in a reaction mixture or bacterial culture. However, unlike DHOase, ALLase had no activity unless some specific metal ions were added to the reaction mixture or culture. Substituting the metal binding sites H59, H61, K146, H186, H242, or D315 with alanine completely abolished the activity of ALLase. However, the K146C, K146D and K146E mutants of ALLase were still active with about 1–6 % activity of the wild-type enzyme. These ALLase K146 mutants were found to have 1.4–1.7 mol metal per mole enzyme subunit, which may indicate that they still contained the binuclear metal center in the active site. The activity of the K146A mutant of the ALLase and the K103A mutant of DHOase can be chemically rescued by short-chain carboxylic acids, such as acetic, propionic, and butyric acids, but not by ethanol, propan-1-ol, and imidazole, in the presence of Co2+ or Mn2+ ions. However, the activity was still ~10-fold less than that of wild-type ALLase. Overall, these results indicated that the 20 natural basic amino acid residues were not sufficiently able to play the role of lysine. Accordingly, we proposed that during evolution, the post-translational modification of carboxylated lysine in the cyclic amidohydrolase family was selected for promoting binuclear metal center self-assembly and increasing the nucleophilicity of the hydroxide at the active site for enzyme catalysis. This kind of chemical rescue combined with site-directed mutagenesis may also be used to identify a binuclear metal center in the active site for other metalloenzymes.  相似文献   

19.
Many fluorescent proteins have been created to act as genetically encoded biosensors. With these sensors, changes in fluorescence report on chemical states in living cells. Transition metal ions such as copper, nickel, and zinc are crucial in many physiological and pathophysiological pathways. Here, we engineered a spectral series of optimized transition metal ion-binding fluorescent proteins that respond to metals with large changes in fluorescence intensity. These proteins can act as metal biosensors or imaging probes whose fluorescence can be tuned by metals. Each protein is uniquely modulated by four different metals (Cu2+, Ni2+, Co2+, and Zn2+). Crystallography revealed the geometry and location of metal binding to the engineered sites. When attached to the extracellular terminal of a membrane protein VAMP2, dimeric pairs of the sensors could be used in cells as ratiometric probes for transition metal ions. Thus, these engineered fluorescent proteins act as sensitive transition metal ion-responsive genetically encoded probes that span the visible spectrum.  相似文献   

20.
The Bombyx mori pheromone-binding protein (BmorPBP) undergoes a pH-dependent conformational transition from a form at basic pH, which contains an open cavity suitable for ligand binding (BmorPBPB), to a form at pH 4.5, where this cavity is occupied by an additional helix (BmorPBPA). This helix α7 is formed by the C-terminal dodecapeptide 131-142, which is flexibly disordered on the protein surface in BmorPBPB and in its complex with the pheromone bombykol. Previous work showed that the ligand-binding cavity cannot accommodate both bombykol and helix α7. Here we further investigated mechanistic aspects of the physiologically crucial ejection of the ligand at lower pH values by solution NMR studies of the variant protein BmorPBP(1-128), where the C-terminal helix-forming tetradecapeptide is removed. The NMR structure of the truncated protein at pH 6.5 corresponds closely to BmorPBPB. At pH 4.5, BmorPBP(1-128) maintains a B-type structure that is in a slow equilibrium, on the NMR chemical shift timescale, with a low-pH conformation for which a discrete set of 15N-1H correlation peaks is NMR unobservable. The full NMR spectrum was recovered upon readjusting the pH of the protein solution to 6.5. These data reveal dual roles for the C-terminal tetradecapeptide of BmorPBP in the mechanism of reversible pheromone binding and transport, where it governs dynamic equilibria between two locally different protein conformations at acidic pH and competes with the ligand for binding to the interior cavity.  相似文献   

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