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1.
A quantitative evaluation of nuclear Overhauser enhancements between slowly exchanging labile protons in a globular protein can be used to decide between correlated and uncorrelated exchange processes. The method appears to be useful for distinction of EX1 and EX2 mechanisms. Demonstrations are given with experiments on the basic pancreatic trypsin inhibitor.  相似文献   

2.
The effect of Ca2+ ion on structural fluctuation of a milk Ca2+-binding protein, α-lactalbumin, under native conditions was investigated by comparing hydrogen-exchange reactions of tryptophan residues in the apo-form without Ca2+ and in the holo-form at 1 mM CaCl2 at pH 7.0 in the presence of 0.1M Na+. The reactions were followed by measuring time-dependent absorption changes at 298–300 nm due to the 2H-1H exchange of the tryptophan imino protons and were found to be biphasic under all the conditions examined. Two of the four tryptophan protons are insensitive to Ca2+ concentration and show a relatively fast exchange rate. The other two protons are much more extensively protected (a protection degree of 103–105) and are markedly affected by the presence of Ca2+. Examinations of the temperature dependence and pH dependence of the individual exchange rates have been utilized for elucidating the exchange mechanism. The fast protons show a low activation energy reaction with so-called EX2 kinetics. The exchange reaction of the slow protons is accompanied by a high activation energy, and the exchange mechanism of the protons depended on the presence or absence of stabilizing Ca2+ ions—the EX1 kinetics for the apo-protein and the EX2 kinetics for the holo-protein at 1 mM Ca2+. The exchange reaction in the thermally unfolded state was also found to be biphasic, but the fast phase, which has an exchange rate in the fully exposed state, becomes predominant with decreasing temperature. By taking this fact and using a structural unfolding model of hydrogen exchange, the present results are fully consistent with thermodynamic parameters of the thermal transition and kinetic parameters of refolding reactions induced by concentration jumps of guanidine hydrochloride obtained in previous studies. It is demonstrated that the reaction of the slow protons in the native state is mediated by a transient global unfolding equivalent to the “thermal” unfolding under a native condition and that switching of the exchange mechanism from the EX1 to EX2 kinetics results from acceleration of the refolding rate with an increase in Ca2+ concentration. The transient global unfolding takes place even under a strongly native condition, e.g., at a temperature 20° below the beginning of the thermal transition.  相似文献   

3.
Atypical protein kinase Czeta suppresses migration of mouse melanoma cells.   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Mouse melanoma B16 F1 cells cultured in RPMI 1640 supplemented with the melanin precursors tyrosine and phenylalanine display increased melanin levels and elevated migration while down-regulating protein kinase C (PKC)zeta to low levels. Although control experiments rule out a direct role by melanin, PKCzeta down-regulation is shown to be a critical determinant of cell migration. Transfection of high-motility cells with either wild-type PKCzeta or its regulatory domain suppresses migration. Known to bind to the regulatory domain of PKCzeta, the proapoptotic protein prostate apoptosis response-4 (Par-4) coimmunoprecipitates with PKCzeta as a 47-kDa protein. Transfection of Par-4 (or its leucine zipper element) further suppresses migration of low-motility cells (which express high levels of PKCzeta), whereas high-motility cells (which express low levels of PKCzeta) are unaffected by Par-4 overexpression. It is proposed that in nonmetastatic cells, the PKCzeta Par-4 complex provides a brake on migration that is released by melanin precursors that initiate PKCzeta down-regulation. Elevation of PKCzeta in melanoma cells, or preventing its down-regulation through the dietary restriction of tyrosine and phenylalanine, may therefore control metastatic behavior.  相似文献   

4.
Amide solvent exchange rates are regarded as a valuable source of information on structure/dynamics of unfolded (disordered) proteins. Proton-based saturation transfer experiments, normally used to measure solvent exchange, are known to meet some serious difficulties. The problems mainly arise from the need to (1) manipulate water magnetization and (2) discriminate between multiple magnetization transfer pathways that occur within the proton pool. Some of these issues are specific to unfolded proteins. For example, the compensation scheme used to cancel the Overhauser effect in the popular CLEANEX experiment is not designed for use with unfolded proteins. In this report we describe an alternative experimental strategy, where amide 15N is used as a probe of solvent exchange. The experiment is performed in 50% H2O–50% D2O solvent and is based on the (HACACO)NH pulse sequence. The resulting spectral map is fully equivalent to the conventional HSQC. To fulfill its purpose, the experiment monitors the conversion of deuterated species, 15ND, into protonated species, 15NH, as effected by the solvent exchange. Conceptually, this experiment is similar to EXSY which prompted the name of 15NH/D-SOLEXSY (SOLvent EXchange SpectroscopY). Of note, our experimental scheme, which relies on nitrogen rather than proton to monitor solvent exchange, is free of the complications described above. The developed pulse sequence was used to measure solvent exchange rates in the chemically denatured state of the drkN SH3 domain. The results were found to correlate well with the CLEANEX-PM data, r = 0.97, thus providing a measure of validation for both techniques. When the experimentally measured exchange rates are converted into protection factors, most of the values fall in the range 0.5–2, consistent with random-coil behavior. However, elevated values, ca. 5, are obtained for residues R38 and A39, as well as the side-chain indole of W36. This is surprising, given that high protection factors imply hydrogen bonding or hydrophobic burial not expected to occur in a chemically denatured state of a protein. We, therefore, hypothesized that elevated protection factors are an artefact arising from the calculation of the reference (random-coil) exchange rates. To confirm this hypothesis, we prepared samples of several short peptides derived from the sequence of the drkN SH3 domain; these samples were used to directly measure the reference exchange rates. The revised protection factors obtained in this manner proved to be close to 1.0. These results also have implications for the more compact unfolded state of drkN SH3, which appears to be fully permeable to water as well, with no manifestations of hydrophobic burial.  相似文献   

5.
Long pulse saturation recovery electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy is applied to the investigation of spin-labeled side chains placed along a regular helix extending from 128 to 135 in T4 lysozyme. Under an argon atmosphere, analysis of the exponential saturation recovery curves gives the spin-lattice relaxation rates of the nitroxides, which depend on the nitroxide side-chain dynamics. In the presence of the fast-relaxing paramagnetic reagents O(2) or NiEDDA, global analysis of the saturation recovery provides the spin-lattice relaxation rates as well as the Heisenberg exchange rates of the nitroxide with the reagents. As previously shown with power saturation methods, such exchange rates are direct measures of the solvent accessibility of the nitroxide side chains in the protein structure. The periodic dependence of the spin-lattice relaxation rates and the exchange rates along the 128-135 sequence reveal the presence of the helical structure, demonstrating the use of these parameters in structure determination. In general, multiple exponentials are required to fit the saturation recovery data, thus identifying multiple states of the side chain. In one case, multiple conformations detected in the spectrum are not evident in the saturation recovery, suggesting rapid exchange on the timescale of spin-lattice relaxation.  相似文献   

6.
This study reports the regulation of multiple xylanases produced by Myceliophthora sp. IMI 387099. Fructose was found to positively regulate the expression of multiple xylanase when used as sole carbon source. The xylanases (EX1 and EX2) of acidic pI were expressed in the presence of simple sugars (glucose, arabinose, and xylose), whereas xylanase of both acidic as well as basic pI (EX1, EX2, EX3, and EX5) were expressed in the presence of fructose, xylan, and combination of xylan and alcohol. The combination of fructose and xylan also led to expression of an additional xylanase (EX4). The positional isomer (iso-X4) was found to be the key transglycosylation product when cultures were grown in the presence of fructose and xylan. In the presence of alcohols, the higher expression of xylanase was ascribed to the synergistic effect of alkyl glycoside and other transglycosylation products present in the culture extracts.  相似文献   

7.
We develop a statistical mechanical theory for the mechanism of hydrogen exchange in globular proteins. Using the HP lattice model, we explore how the solvent accessibilities of chain monomers vary as proteins fluctuate from their stable native conformations. The model explains why hydrogen exchange appears to involve two mechanisms under different conditions of protein stability; (1) a “global unfolding” mechanism by which all protons exchange at a similar rate, approaching that of the denatured protein, and (2) a “stable-state” mechanism by which protons exchange at rates that can differ by many orders of magnitude. There has been some controversy about the stable-state mechanism: does exchange take place inside the protein by solvent penetration, or outside the protein by the local unfolding of a subregion? The present model indicates that the stable-state mechanism of exchange occurs through an ensemble of conformations, some of which may bear very little resemblance to the native structure. Although most fluctuations are small-amplitude motions involving solvent penetration or local unfolding, other fluctuations (the conformational distant relatives) can involve much larger transient excursions to completely different chain folds.  相似文献   

8.
We present the quantification of backbone amide hydrogen-deuterium exchange rates (HDX) for immobilized proteins. The experiments make use of the deuterium isotope effect on the amide nitrogen chemical shift, as well as on proton dilution by deuteration. We find that backbone amides in the microcrystalline α-spectrin SH3 domain exchange rather slowly with the solvent (with exchange rates negligible within the individual 15N–T 1 timescales). We observed chemical exchange for 6 residues with HDX exchange rates in the range from 0.2 to 5 s−1. Backbone amide 15N longitudinal relaxation times that we determined previously are not significantly affected for most residues, yielding no systematic artifacts upon quantification of backbone dynamics (Chevelkov et al. 2008b). Significant exchange was observed for the backbone amides of R21, S36 and K60, as well as for the sidechain amides of N38, N35 and for W41ε. These residues could not be fit in our previous motional analysis, demonstrating that amide proton chemical exchange needs to be considered in the analysis of protein dynamics in the solid-state, in case D2O is employed as a solvent for sample preparation. Due to the intrinsically long 15N relaxation times in the solid-state, the approach proposed here can expand the range of accessible HDX rates in the intermediate regime that is not accessible so far with exchange quench and MEXICO type experiments.  相似文献   

9.
The solvent exchange rates of the acetamido hydrogen of the 2-acetamido-2-deoxy-beta-D-glucopyranosyl unit of group A streptococcal polysaccharide dissolved in H2O have been measured and compared with the corresponding exchange rates in the solvated model compound 1-O-methyl-2-acetamido-2-deoxy-beta-D-glucopyranoside. Amide hydrogen exchange rates were measured at 25 degrees C over a wide pH range by a combination of two separate NMR techniques: the transfer of solvent saturation and the amide hydrogen saturation recovery NMR experiments. The data indicate that the acetamido hydrogen essentially exists in a solvated environment and that its contribution to the conformational stability of this polysaccharide through intramolecular hydrogen bonding is negligible.  相似文献   

10.
Abstract

The conformational properties of the tetrapeptide Ser1-Pro2-Phe3-Arg4, the C-terminal fragment of the nonapeptide hormone bradykinin, have been studied by circular dichroism and two-dimensional NMR techniques. Measurements of coupling constants, NH temperature dependence rates and nuclear Overhauser effects (performed with rotating frame nuclear Overhauser spectroscopy, ROESY) in H2O and CD3OH/D2O (80/20, v/v) reveal different conformations in the corresponding solvent. In aqueous solution the molecule exists in a random conformation or as an average of several conformations in rapid exchange. In CD3OH/D2O, however, the conformation is well-defined. The backbone of the peptide is extended, and the side-chains of Phe3 and Arg4 exhibit unusual rigidity for a peptide of this size. Evidently, the secondary structure is stabilized by a charge interaction between the guanidino group of Arg4 and the terminal carboxyl group, since experiments at various pH's show clearly that the definition of conformation decreases strongly upon protonation of the carboxyl function. A NH3 +(Ser1)-COO?(Arg4) salt bridge, as well as any form of turn stabilized by hydrogen bonds can be ruled out with certainty.  相似文献   

11.
The hypothesis that application of exogenous glycine betaine (GBEX) may attenuate the effects of mild water deficit in leaf gas exchange and lipid peroxidation in Carapa guianensis was examined. For this reason, 110-d old plants were sprayed with 0, 25, and 50 mM GBEX and then subjected to two watering regimes. In the first, irrigation was continuously performed to maintain the soil near to field capacity (watered plants). In the second, irrigation was withheld and water deficit resulted from progressive evapotranspiration (water-stressed plants). Treatment comparisons were assessed when predawn leaflet water potential (Ψpd) of stressed plants reached ?1.28 ± 0.34 MPa. Regardless of the watering regime, significant (P<0.05) increases in foliar glycine betaine (GBLeaf) concentration were observed in response to increasing GBEX; however, such increases were more expressive in stressed plants. The net photosynthetic rate, stomatal conductance to water vapor, and intercellular to ambient CO2 concentration ratio were significantly lower in water-stressed plants independently of GBEX concentration sprayed on leaves. The application of 25 and 50 mM GBEX caused significant (P<0.05) increases in ascorbate peroxidase (APX) activity in stressed plants, while significant (P<0.05) increases in catalase activity was observed just in the stressed plants treated with 50 mM GBEX. Malondialdehyde concentrations did not differ between watered and stressed plants regardless of GBEX concentration. In conclusion, C. guianensis was able to incorporate GBEX through their leaves and the resulting increases in GBLeaf attenuated lipid peroxidation in stressed plants through positive modulation of APX and CAT activities.  相似文献   

12.
The N-terminal domain of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-1 glycoprotein 41,000 (FP; residues 1–23; NH2-AVGIGALFLGFLGAAGSTMGARS-CONH2) is involved in the fusion and cytolytic processes underlying viral-cell infection. Here, we use circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy, along with electrospray ionization (ESI) mass spectrometry and tandem (MS/MS) mass spectrometry during the course of hydrogen/deuterium exchange, to probe the local conformations of this synthetic peptide in two membrane mimics. Since amino acids that participate in defined secondary structure (i.e., α-helix or β-sheet) exchange amido hydrogens more slowly than residues in random structures, deuterium exchange was combined with CD spectroscopy to map conformations to specific residues. For FP suspended in the highly structure-promoting solvent hexafluoroisopropanol (HFIP), CD spectra indicated high α-helix and disordered structures, whereas ESI and MS/MS mass spectrometry indicated that residues 5–15 were α-helical and 16–23 were disordered. For FP suspended in the less structure-promoting solvent trifluoroethanol (TFE), CD spectra showed lower α-helix, with ESI and MS/MS mass spectrometry indicating that only residues 9–15 participated in the α-helix. These results compare favorably with previous two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance studies on the same peptide. Proteins Suppl. 2:38–49, 1998. © 1998 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

13.
Tritium exchange was used as a probe of transfer RNA structure in experiments with unfractionated tRNA (tRNAUnfrac and homogeneous tRNA3Leu from bakers' yeast. Exchange kinetics were measured over a range of ionic conditions that vary in ability to stabilize the secondary and tertiary structure of tRNA. The native conformations of both samples show the same kinetics of exchange. The kinetics for tRNA3Leu trapped in a denatured state in a “native” solvent are much faster, reflecting the conformation and not the ionic medium. In 0.1 M-Na+, where tRNA3Leu is denatured, the kinetics for tRNAUnfrac are intermediate between those for native and denatured tRNA3Leu, suggesting that in this solvent at 0 °C some tRNAs are denatured whereas other are still native. Upon further lowering of Na+ concentration, tRNAUnfrac shows increasingly faster exchange, suggesting complete electrostatic denaturation of the tertiary structure of all the tRNAs in the sample, and even disruption of secondary structure.Extrapolation of the essentially linear early-time kinetics to zero time provides minimal estimates of the number of slowly exchanging hydrogens. For native tRNA3Leu the number is 111±2 hydrogens, whereas for the trapped denatured conformation it is only 95±2. This difference reflects a smaller number of hydrogen-bonded bases in the denatured conformation. In 1 M-Na+, 101±2 slowly exchanging hydrogens are found for the native tRNA3Leu conformation, suggesting an incompletely formed native structure. For native tRNAUnfrac the comparable number is 101±3. These numbers of slowly exchanging hydrogens in the native conformations are consistent with tertiary structural hydrogen-bonding. Furthermore, this tertiary structure must be responsible for the slower exchange by native tRNA. The observed numbers of exchangeable hydrogens provide a basis for comparison of hydrogen-bonding interactions in native and denatured tRNA conformations.The mechanism of renaturation was also investigated, using tritium exchange as a monitor of perturbation of base pairing during the transition. When tRNAUnfrac in low Na+ is renatured by addition of Mg2+ during tritium exchangeout, a burst of exchange or “spillage” of tritium is detected. This suggests that a fraction of the base pairs of the rapidly renaturing tRNAs in the mixture is disrupted during renaturation. In that event, and by analogy with tRNA3Leu, part of the base-pairing arrangement of the denatured conformations may not be preserved in the native state; and if the native conformation includes the full “cloverleaf” pattern of secondary structure, that pattern may not be intact in some denatured conformations.  相似文献   

14.
The exchange rate of the indole nitrogen proton with solvent water protons was measured as a function of pH and temperature for tryptophan, N-methyl tryptophan, glycyl tryptophan, tryptophanamide, tryptophylglycine, and tryptophylglycyl glycine. The nmr observation was by long-pulse Fourier transform methods, and kinetics were inferred from saturation recovery, H2O transfer of saturation, and linewidth. There are observable differences between the rates of these compounds, but all are describable within a factor of two by specific acid and base-catalyzed rates kH = 100 and kOH = 108 1/mol-sec at 27°C. It is concluded that this behaviour is representative of this proton on the indole side chain in a random-chain peptide exposed to water.  相似文献   

15.
Cholesterol binding to G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) and modulation of their activities in membranes is a fundamental issue for understanding their function. Despite the identification of cholesterol binding sites in high-resolution x-ray structures of the β2 adrenergic receptor (β2AR) and other GPCRs, the binding affinity of cholesterol for this receptor and exchange rates between the free and bound cholesterol remain unknown. In this study we report the existence of two classes of cholesterol binding sites in β2AR. By analyzing the β2AR unfolding temperature in lipidic cubic phase (LCP) as a function of cholesterol concentration we observed high-affinity cooperative binding of cholesterol with sub-nM affinity constant. In contrast, saturation transfer difference (STD) NMR experiments revealed the existence of a second class of cholesterol binding sites, in fast exchange on the STD NMR timescale. Titration of the STD signal as a function of cholesterol concentration provided a lower limit of 100 mM for their dissociation constant. However, these binding sites are specific for both cholesterol and β2AR, as shown with control experiments using ergosterol and a control membrane protein (KpOmpA). We postulate that this specificity is mediated by the high-affinity bound cholesterol molecules and propose the formation of transient cholesterol clusters around the high-affinity binding sites.  相似文献   

16.
The crystal structure of the model tripeptide Boc-Aib-Gly-Leu-OMe ( 1 ) reveals two independent molecules in the asymmetric unit that adopt “enantiomeric” type I and type I′ β-turn conformations with the Aib and Gly residues occupying the corner (i + 1 and i + 2) positions. 13C cross polarization and magic angle sample spinning spectra in the solid state also support the coexistence of two conformational species. 13C-nmr in CDCl3 establishes the presence of a single species or rapid exchange between conformations. 400 MHz 1H-nmr provides evidence for conformational exchange involving a major and minor species, with β-turn conformations supported by the low solvent exposure of Leu(3) NH and the observation of NiH ↔ Ni+1H nuclear Overhauser effects. CD bands in the region 190–230 nm are positive, supporting a major population of type I′ β-turns. The isomeric peptide, Boc-Gly-Leu-Aib-OMe ( 2 ), adopts an “open” type II′ β-turn conformation in crystals. Solid state and solution nmr support population of a single conformational species. Chiral perturbation introduced outside the folded region of peptides may provide a means of modulating screw sense in achiral sequences. © 1998 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Biopoly 45: 191–202, 1998  相似文献   

17.
The kinetics of the hydrogen-deuterium exchange reaction in a stable ATPase (TF1) from a thermophilic bacterium PS3 was followed by infrared absorption measurements. The rates of the hydrogen-deuterium exchange reactions decreased in following order; free form, TF1·ADP, TF1·ATP and TF1·AMP-P(NH)P. TF1 does not dissociate into subunits even in the absence of nucleotides, thus differences in exchange likely reflect differences in conformations of subunits. These results indicate that the structure is most restricted when ATP or AMP-P(NH)P is bound to the enzyme.  相似文献   

18.
Cross-saturation experiments allow the identification of the contact residues of large protein complexes (MW>50 K) more rigorously than conventional NMR approaches which involve chemical shift perturbations and hydrogen-deuterium exchange experiments [Takahashi et al. (2000) Nat. Struct. Biol., 7, 220–223]. In the amide proton-based cross-saturation experiment, the combined use of high deuteration levels for non-exchangeable protons of the ligand protein and a solvent with a low concentration of 1H2O greatly enhanced the selectivity of the intermolecular cross-saturation phenomenon. Unfortunately, experimental limitations caused losses in sensitivity. Furthermore, since main chain amide protons are not generally exposed to solvent, the efficiency of the saturation transfer directed to the main chain amide protons is not very high. Here we propose an alternative cross-saturation experiment which utilizes the methyl protons of the side chains of the ligand protein. Owing to the fast internal rotation along the methyl axis, we theoretically and experimentally demonstrated the enhanced efficiency of this approach. The methyl-utilizing cross-saturation experiment has clear advantages in sensitivity and saturation transfer efficiency over the amide proton-based approach. Electronic supplementary material Electronic supplementary material is available for this article at and accessible for authorised users.  相似文献   

19.
Chemical exchange saturation transfer (CEST) experiments are becoming increasingly popular for investigating biomolecular exchange dynamics with rates on the order of approximately 50–500 s?1 and a rich toolkit of different methods has emerged over the past few years. Typically, experiments are based on the evolution of longitudinal magnetization, or in some cases two-spin order, during a fixed CEST relaxation delay, with the same class of magnetization prepared at the start and selected at end of the CEST period. Here we present a pair of TROSY-based pulse schemes for recording amide and methyl 1H CEST profiles where longitudinal magnetization at the start evolves to produce two-spin order that is then selected at the completion of the CEST element. This selection process subtracts out contributions from 1H–1H cross-relaxation on the fly that would otherwise complicate analysis of the data. It also obviates the need to record spin-state selective CEST profiles as an alternative to eliminating NOE effects, leading to significant improvements in sensitivity. The utility of the approach is demonstrated on a sample of a cavity mutant of T4 lysozyme that undergoes chemical exchange between conformations where the cavity is free and occupied.  相似文献   

20.
This research utilized tower‐based eddy covariance to quantify the trends in net ecosystem mass (CO2 and H2O vapor) and energy exchange of important land‐cover types of NW Mato Grosso during the March–December 2002 seasonal transition. Measurements were made in a mature transitional (ecotonal) tropical forest near Sinop, Mato Grosso, and a cattle pasture near Cotriguaçú, Mato Grosso, located 500 km WNW of Sinop. Pasture net ecosystem CO2 exchange (NEE) was considerably more variable than the forest NEE over the seasonal transition, and the pasture had significantly higher rates of maximum gross primary production in every season except the dry–wet season transition (September–October). The pasture also had significantly higher rates of whole‐ecosystem dark respiration than the forest during the wetter times of the year. Average (±95% CI) rates of total daily NEE during the March–December 2002 measurement period were 26±15 mmol m?2 day?1 for the forest (positive values indicate net CO2 loss by the ecosystem) and ?38±26 mmol m?2 day?1 for the pasture. While both ecosystems partitioned more net radiation (Rn) into latent heat flux (Le), the forest had significantly higher rates of Le and lower rates of sensible heat flux (H) than the pasture; a trend that became more extreme during the onset of the dry season. Large differences in pasture and forest mass and energy exchange occurred even though seasonal variations in micrometeorology (air temperature, humidity, and radiation) were relatively similar for both ecosystems. While the short measurement period and lack of spatial replication limit the ability to generalize these results to pasture and forest regions of the Amazon Basin, these results suggest important differences in the magnitude and seasonal variation of NEE and energy partitioning for pasture and transitional tropical forest.  相似文献   

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