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1.
We have studied mu-conotoxin (mu-CTX) block of rat skeletal muscle sodium channel (rSkM1) currents in which single amino acids within the pore (P-loop) were substituted with cysteine. Among 17 cysteine mutants expressed in Xenopus oocytes, 7 showed significant alterations in sensitivity to mu-CTX compared to wild-type rSkM1 channel (IC50 = 17.5 +/- 2.8 nM). E758C and D1241C were less sensitive to mu-CTX block (IC50 = 220 +/- 39 nM and 112 +/- 24 nM, respectively), whereas the tryptophan mutants W402C, W1239C, and W1531C showed enhanced mu-CTX sensitivity (IC50 = 1.9 +/- 0.1, 4.9 +/- 0.9, and 5.5 +/- 0.4 nM, respectively). D400C and Y401C also showed statistically significant yet modest (approximately twofold) changes in sensitivity to mu-CTX block compared to WT (p < 0.05). Application of the negatively charged, sulfhydryl-reactive compound methanethiosulfonate-ethylsulfonate (MTSES) enhanced the toxin sensitivity of D1241C (IC50 = 46.3 +/- 12 nM) while having little effect on E758C mutant channels (IC50 = 199.8 +/- 21.8 nM). On the other hand, the positively charged methanethiosulfonate-ethylammonium (MTSEA) completely abolished the mu-CTX sensitivity of E758C (IC50 > 1 microM) and increased the IC50 of D1241C by about threefold. Applications of MTSEA, MTSES, and the neutral MTSBN (benzyl methanethiosulfonate) to the tryptophan-to-cysteine mutants partially or fully restored the wild-type mu-CTX sensitivity, suggesting that the bulkiness of the tryptophan's indole group is a determinant of toxin binding. In support of this suggestion, the blocking IC50 of W1531A (7.5 +/- 1.3 nM) was similar to W1531C, whereas W1531Y showed reduced toxin sensitivity (14.6 +/- 3.5 nM) similar to that of the wild-type channel. Our results demonstrate that charge at positions 758 and 1241 are important for mu-CTX toxin binding and further suggest that the tryptophan residues within the pore in domains I, III, and IV negatively influence toxin-channel interaction.  相似文献   

2.
Two isoforms of voltage-dependent Na channels, cloned from rat skeletal muscle, were expressed in Xenopus oocytes. The currents of rSkM1 and rSkM2 differ functionally in 4 properties: (i) tetrodotoxin (TTX) sensitivity, (ii) mu-conotoxin (mu-CTX) sensitivity, (iii) amplitude of single channel currents, and (iv) rate of inactivation. rSkM1 is sensitive to both TTX and mu-CTX. rSkM2 is resistant to both toxins. Currents of rSkM1 have a higher single channel conductance and a slower rate of inactivation than those of rSkM2. We constructed (i) chimeras by interchanging domain 1 (D1) between the two isoforms, (ii) block mutations of 22 amino acids in length that interchanged parts of the loop between transmembrane segments S5 and S6 in both D1 and D4, and (iii) point mutations in the SS2 region of this loop in D1. The TTX sensitivity could be switched between the two isoforms by the exchange of a single amino acid, tyrosine-401 in rSkM1 and cysteine-374 in rSkM2 in SS2 of D1. By contrast most chimeras and point mutants had an intermediate sensitivity to mu-CTX when compared with the wild-type channels. The point mutant rSkM1 (Y401C) had an intermediate single-channel conductance between those of the wild-type isoforms, whereas rSkM2 (C374Y) had a slightly lower conductance than rSkM2. The rate of inactivation was found to be determined by multiple regions of the protein, since chimeras in which D1 was swapped had intermediate rates of inactivation compared with the wild-type isoforms.  相似文献   

3.
mu-Conotoxin (mu-CTX) specifically occludes the pore of voltage-dependent Na(+) channels. In the rat skeletal muscle Na(+) channel (mu1), we examined the contribution of charged residues between the P loops and S6 in all four domains to mu-CTX block. Conversion of the negatively charged domain II (DII) residues Asp-762 and Glu-765 to cysteine increased the IC(50) for mu-CTX block by approximately 100-fold (wild-type = 22.3 +/- 7.0 nm; D762C = 2558 +/- 250 nm; E765C = 2020 +/- 379 nm). Restoration or reversal of charge by external modification of the cysteine-substituted channels with methanethiosulfonate reagents (methanethiosulfonate ethylsulfonate (MTSES) and methanethiosulfonate ethylammonium (MTSEA)) did not affect mu-CTX block (D762C: IC(50, MTSEA+) = 2165.1 +/- 250 nm; IC(50, MTSES-) = 2753.5 +/- 456.9 nm; E765C: IC(50, MTSEA+) = 2200.1 +/- 550.3 nm; IC(50, MTSES-) = 3248.1 +/- 2011.9 nm) compared with their unmodified counterparts. In contrast, the charge-conserving mutations D762E (IC(50) = 21.9 +/- 4.3 nm) and E765D (IC(50) = 22.0 +/- 7.0 nm) preserved wild-type blocking behavior, whereas the charge reversal mutants D762K (IC(50) = 4139.9 +/- 687.9 nm) and E765K (IC(50) = 4202.7 +/- 1088.0 nm) destabilized mu-CTX block even further, suggesting a prominent electrostatic component of the interactions between these DII residues and mu-CTX. Kinetic analysis of mu-CTX block reveals that the changes in toxin sensitivity are largely due to accelerated toxin dissociation (k(off)) rates with little changes in association (k(on)) rates. We conclude that the acidic residues at positions 762 and 765 are key determinants of mu-CTX block, primarily by virtue of their negative charge. The inability of the bulky MTSES or MTSEA side chain to modify mu-CTX sensitivity places steric constraints on the sites of toxin interaction.  相似文献   

4.
The α-subunit cDNAs encoding voltage-sensitive sodium channels of human heart (hH1) and rat skeletal muscle (rSkM1) have been expressed in the tsA201 mammalian cell line, in which inactivation properties appear to be normal in contrast to Xenopus oocytes. A series of rSkM1/hH1 chimeric sodium channels has been evaluated to identify the domains of the α-subunits that are responsible for a set of electrophysiological differences between hH1 and rSkM1, namely, midpoints and slope factors of steady-state activation and inactivation, inactivation kinetics and recovery from inactivation kinetics and their voltage-dependence. The phenotype of chimeric channels in which each hH1 domain was successively introduced into a rSkM1 α-subunit framework confirmed the following conclusions. (i) The D4 and or/C-ter. are responsible for the slow inactivation of hH1 sodium channels. (ii) Concerning the other differences between rSkM1 and hH1: steady-state activation and inactivation, kinetics of recovery from inactivation, the phenotypes are determined probably by more than one domain of the α-subunit. Received: 20 January 1998/Revised: 19 March 1998  相似文献   

5.
mu-Conotoxins (mu-CTX) are potent oligopeptide blockers of sodium channels. The best characterized forms of mu-CTX, GIIIA and GIIIB, have similar primary and three-dimensional structures and comparable potencies (IC(50) approximately 30 nM) for block of wild-type skeletal muscle Na(+) channels. The two toxins are thus considered to be indistinguishable by their target channels. We have found mutations in the domain II pore region (D762K and E765K) that decrease GIIIB blocking affinity approximately 200-fold, but reduce GIIIA affinity by only approximately 4-fold, compared with wild-type channels. Synthetic mu-CTX GIIIA mutants reveal that the critical residue for differential recognition is at position 14, the site of the only charge difference between the two toxin isoforms. Therefore, engineered Na(+) channels, but not wild-type channels, can discriminate between two highly homologous conotoxins. Latent specificity of toxin-channel interactions, such as that revealed here, is a principle worthy of exploitation in the design and construction of improved biosensors.  相似文献   

6.
Functional comparison of skeletal muscle (rSkM1) and cardiac (hH1) voltage-gated sodium channel isoforms expressed in Chinese hamster ovary cells showed rSkM1 half-activation (V(a)) and inactivation (V(i)) voltages 7 and 10 mV more depolarized than hH1 V(a) and V(i), respectively. Internal papain perfusion removed fast inactivation from each isoform and caused a 20-mV hyperpolarizing shift in hH1 V(a), with an insignificant change in rSkM1 V(a). Activation voltage of the inactivation-deficient hH1 mutant, hH1Q3, was nearly identical to wild-type hH1 V(a), both before and after papain treatment, with hH1Q3 V(a) also shifted by nearly 20 mV after internal papain perfusion. These data indicate that while papain removes both hH1 and rSkM1 inactivation, it has a second effect only on hH1 that causes a shift in activation voltage. Internal treatment with an antibody directed against the III-IV linker essentially mimicked papain treatment by removing some inactivation from each isoform and causing a 12-mV shift in hH1 V(a), while rSkM1 V(a) remained constant. This suggests that some channel segment within, near, or interacting with the III-IV linker is involved in establishing hH1 activation voltage. Together the data show that rSkM1 and hH1 activation mechanisms are different and are the first to suggest a role for a cytoplasmic structure in the voltage-dependent activation of cardiac sodium channels.  相似文献   

7.
Scorpion toxins interact with their target ion channels through multiple molecular contacts. Because a "gain of function" approach has never been described to evaluate the importance of the molecular contacts in defining toxin affinity, we experimentally examined whether increasing the molecular contacts between a toxin and an ion channel directly impacts toxin affinity. For this purpose, we focused on two scorpion peptides, the well-characterized maurotoxin with its variant Pi1-like disulfide bridging (MTX(Pi1)), used as a molecular template, and butantoxin (BuTX), used as an N-terminal domain provider. BuTX is found to be 60-fold less potent than MTX(Pi1) in blocking Kv1.2 (IC(50) values of 165 nM for BuTX versus 2.8 nM for MTX(Pi1)). Removal of its N-terminal domain (nine residues) further decreases BuTX affinity for Kv1.2 by 5.6-fold, which is in agreement with docking simulation data showing the importance of this domain in BuTX-Kv1.2 interaction. Transfer of the BuTX N-terminal domain to MTX(Pi1) results in a chimera with five disulfide bridges (BuTX-MTX(Pi1)) that exhibits 22-fold greater affinity for Kv1.2 than MTX(Pi1) itself, in spite of the lower affinity of BuTX as compared to MTX(Pi1). Docking experiments performed with the 3-D structure of BuTX-MTX(Pi1) in solution, as solved by (1)H-NMR, reveal that the N-terminal domain of BuTX participates in the increased affinity for Kv1.2 through additional molecular contacts. Altogether, the data indicate that acting on molecular contacts between a toxin and a channel is an efficient strategy to modulate toxin affinity.  相似文献   

8.
Li RA  Sato K  Kodama K  Kohno T  Xue T  Tomaselli GF  Marbán E 《FEBS letters》2002,511(1-3):159-164
mu-Conotoxin (mu-CTX) inhibits Na+ flux by obstructing the Na+ channel pore. Previous studies of mu-CTX have focused only on charged toxin residues, ignoring the neutral sites. Here we investigated the proximity between the C-terminal neutral alanine (A22) of mu-CTX and the Na+ channel pore by replacing it with the negatively charged glutamate. The analog A22E and wild-type (WT) mu-CTX exhibited identical nuclear magnetic resonance spectra except at the site of replacement, verifying that they have identical backbone structures. A22E significantly reduced mu-CTX affinity for WT mu1 Na+ channels (90-fold), as if the inserted glutamate repels the anionic pore receptor. We then looked for the interacting partner(s) of residue 22 by determining the potency of block of Y401K, Y401A, E758Q, D762K, D762A, E765K, E765A and D1241K channels by WT mu-CTX and A22E, followed by mutant cycle analysis to assess their individual couplings. Our results show that A22E interacts strongly with E765K from domain II (DII) (deltadeltaG=2.2 +/- 0.1 vs. <1 kcal/mol for others). We conclude that mu-CTX residue 22 closely associates with the DII pore in the toxin-bound channel complex. The approach taken may be further exploited to study the proximity of other neutral toxin residues with the Na+ channel pore.  相似文献   

9.
S C Dudley  Jr  H Todt  G Lipkind    H A Fozzard 《Biophysical journal》1995,69(5):1657-1665
We describe a mutation in the outer vestibule region of the adult rat skeletal muscle voltage-gated Na+ channel (microliter) that dramatically alters binding of mu-conotoxin GIIIA (mu-CTX). Mutating the glutamate at position 758 to glutamine (E758Q) decreased mu-CTX binding affinity by 48-fold. Because the mutant channel showed both low tetrodotoxin (TTX) and mu-CTX affinities, these results suggested that mu-CTX bound to the outer vestibule and implied that the TTX- and mu-CTX-binding sites partially overlapped in this region. The mutation decreased the association rate of the toxin with little effect on the dissociation rate, suggesting that Glu-758 could be involved in electrostatic guidance of mu-CTX to its binding site. We propose a mechanism for mu-CTX block of the Na+ channel based on the analogy with saxitoxin (STX) and TTX, on the requirement of mu-CTX to have an arginine in position 13 to occlude the channel, and on this experimental result suggesting that mu-CTX binds in the outer vestibule. In this model, the guanidinium group of Arg-13 of the toxin interacts with two carboxyls known to be important for selectivity (Asp-400 and Glu-755), with the association rate of the toxin increased by interaction with Glu-758 of the channel.  相似文献   

10.
Mu-conotoxins (mu-CTXs) are Na+ channel-blocking, 22-amino acid peptides produced by the sea snail Conus geographus. Although K+ channel pore-blocking toxins show specific interactions with permeant ions and strong dependence on the ionic strength (mu), no such dependence has been reported for mu-CTX and Na+ channels. Such properties would offer insight into the binding and blocking mechanism of mu-CTX as well as functional and structural properties of the Na+ channel pore. Here we studied the effects of mu and permeant ion concentration ([Na+]) on mu-CTX block of rat skeletal muscle (mu1, Nav1.4) Na+ channels. Mu-CTX sensitivity of wild-type and E758Q channels increased significantly (by approximately 20-fold) when mu was lowered by substituting external Na+ with equimolar sucrose (from 140 to 35 mm Na+); however, toxin block was unaltered (p > 0.05) when mu was maintained by replacement of [Na+] with N-methyl-d-glucamine (NMG+), suggesting that the enhanced sensitivity at low mu was not due to reduction in [Na+]. Single-channel recordings identified the association rate constant, k(on), as the primary determinant of the changes in affinity (k(on) increased 40- and 333-fold for mu-CTX D2N/R13Q and D12N/R13Q, respectively, when symmetric 200 mm Na+ was reduced to 50 mm). In contrast, dissociation rates changed <2-fold for the same derivatives under the same conditions. Experiments with additional mu-CTX derivatives identified toxin residues Arg-1, Arg-13, and Lys-16 as important contributors to the sensitivity to external mu. Taken together, our findings indicate that mu-CTX block of Na+ channels depends critically on mu but not specifically on [Na+], contrasting with the known behavior of pore-blocking K+ channel toxins. These findings suggest that different degrees of ion interaction, underlying the fundamental conduction mechanisms of Na+ and K+ channels, are mirrored in ion interactions with pore-blocking toxins.  相似文献   

11.
Structural studies of receptor binding by cholera toxin mutants.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
The wide range of receptor binding affinities reported to result from mutations at residue Gly 33 of the cholera toxin B-pentamer (CTB) has been most puzzling. For instance, introduction of an aspartate at this position abolishes receptor binding, whereas substitution by arginine retains receptor affinity despite the larger side chain. We now report the structure determination and 2.3-A refinement of the CTB mutant Gly 33-->Arg complexed with the GM1 oligosaccharide, as well as the 2.2-A refinement of a Gly 33-->Asp mutant of the closely related Escherichia coli heat-labile enterotoxin B-pentamer (LTB). Two of the five receptor binding sites in the Gly 33-->Arg CTB mutant are occupied by bound GM1 oligosaccharide; two other sites are involved in a reciprocal toxin:toxin interaction; one site is unoccupied. We further report a higher resolution (2.0 A) determination and refinement of the wild-type CTB:GM1 oligosaccharide complex in which all five oligosaccharides are seen to be bound in essentially identical conformations. Saccharide conformation and binding interactions are very similar in both the CTB wild-type and Gly 33-->Arg mutant complexes. The protein conformation observed for the binding-deficient Gly 33-->Asp mutant of LTB does not differ substantially from that seen in the toxin:saccharide complexes. The critical nature of the side chain of residue 33 is apparently due to a limited range of subtle rearrangements available to both the toxin and the saccharide to accommodate receptor binding. The intermolecular interactions seen in the CTB (Gly 33-->Arg) complex with oligosaccharide suggest that the affinity of this mutant for the receptor is close to the self-affinity corresponding to the toxin:toxin binding interaction that has now been observed in crystal structures of three CTB mutants.  相似文献   

12.
mu-Conotoxins (mu-CTXs) specifically inhibit Na(+) flux by occluding the pore of voltage-gated Na(+) channels. Although the three-dimensional structures of mu-CTXs are well defined, the molecular configuration of the channel receptor is much less certain; even the fundamental question of whether the four homologous Na(+) channel domains are arranged in a clockwise or counter-clockwise configuration remains unanswered. Residues Asp(762) and Glu(765) from domain II and Asp(1241) from domain III of rat skeletal muscle Na(+) channels are known to be critical for mu-CTX binding. We probed toxin-channel interactions by determining the potency of block of wild-type, D762K, E765K, and D1241C channels by wild-type and point-mutated mu-CTXs (R1A, Q14D, K11A, K16A, and R19A). Individual interaction energies for different toxin-channel pairs were quantified from the half-blocking concentrations using mutant cycle analysis. We find that Asp(762) and Glu(765) interact strongly with Gln(14) and Arg(19) but not Arg(1) and that Asp(1241) is tightly coupled to Lys(16) but not Arg(1) or Lys(11). These newly identified toxin-channel interactions within adjacent domains, interpreted in light of the known asymmetric toxin structure, fix the orientation of the toxin with respect to the channel and reveal that the four internal domains of Na(+) channels are arranged in a clockwise configuration as viewed from the extracellular surface.  相似文献   

13.
mu-Conotoxins (mu-CTXs) block skeletal muscle Na(+) channels with an affinity 1-2 orders of magnitude higher than cardiac and brain Na(+) channels. Although a number of conserved pore residues are recognized as critical determinants of mu-CTX block, the molecular basis of isoform-specific toxin sensitivity remains unresolved. Sequence comparison of the domain II (DII) S5-S6 loops of rat skeletal muscle (mu1, Na(v)1.4), human heart (hh1, Na(v)1.5), and rat brain (rb1, Na(v)1.1) Na(+) channels reveals substantial divergence in their N-terminal S5-P linkers even though the P-S6 and C-terminal P segments are almost identical. We used Na(v)1.4 as the backbone and systematically converted these DII S5-P isoform variants to the corresponding residues in Na(v)1.1 and Na(v)1.5. The Na(v)1.4-->Na(v)1.5 variant substitutions V724R, C725S, A728S, D730S, and C731S (Na(v)1.4 numbering) reduced block of Na(v)1.4 by 4-, 86-, 12-, 185-, and 55-fold respectively, rendering the skeletal muscle isoform more "cardiac-like." Conversely, an Na(v)1.5--> Na(v)1.4 chimeric construct in which the Na(v)1.4 DII S5-P linker replaces the analogous segment in Na(v)1.5 showed enhanced mu-CTX block. However, these variant determinants are conserved between Na(v)1.1 and Na(v)1.4 and thus cannot explain their different sensitivities to mu-CTX. Comparison of their sequences reveals two variants at Na(v)1.4 positions 729 and 732: Ser and Asn in Na(v)1.4 compared with Thr and Lys in Na(v)1.1, respectively. The double mutation S729T/N732K rendered Na(v)1.4 more "brain-like" (30-fold downward arrow in block), and the converse mutation T925S/K928N in Na(v)1.1 reproduced the high affinity blocking phenotype of Na(v)1.4. We conclude that the DII S5-P linker, although lying outside the conventional ion-conducting pore, plays a prominent role in mu-CTX binding, thus shaping isoform-specific toxin sensitivity.  相似文献   

14.
mu-Conotoxin GIIIA (mu-CTX) is a high-affinity ligand for the outer vestibule of selected isoforms of the voltage-gated Na(+) channel. The detailed bases for the toxin's high affinity binding and isoform selectivity are unclear. The outer vestibule is lined by four pore-forming (P) loops, each with an acidic residue near the mouth of the vestibule. mu-CTX has seven positively charged residues that may interact with these acidic P-loop residues. Using pair-wise alanine replacement of charged toxin and channel residues, in conjunction with double mutant cycle analysis, we determined coupling energies for specific interactions between each P-loop acidic residue and selected toxin residues to systematically establish quantitative restraints on the toxin orientation in the outer vestibule. Xenopus oocytes were injected with the mutant or native Na(+) channel mRNA, and currents measured by two-electrode voltage clamp. Mutant cycle analysis revealed novel, strong, toxin-channel interactions between K9/E403, K11/D1241, K11/D1532, and R19/D1532. Experimentally determined coupling energies for interacting residue pairs provided restraints for molecular dynamics simulations of mu-CTX docking. Our simulations suggest a refined orientation of the toxin in the pore, with toxin basic side-chains playing key roles in high-affinity binding. This modeling also provides a set of testable predictions for toxin-channel interactions, hitherto not described, that may contribute to high-affinity binding and channel isoform selectivity.  相似文献   

15.
Binding of 125I-labelled tetanus toxin to rat brain membranes in 25 mM-Tris/acetate, pH 6.0, was saturable and there was a single class of high-affinity site (KD 0.26-1.14 nM) present in high abundance (Bmax. 0.9-1.89 nmol/mg). The sites were largely resistant to proteolysis and heating but were markedly sensitive to neuraminidase. Trisialogangliosides were effective inhibitors of toxin binding (IC50 10 nM) and trisialogangliosides inserted into membranes lacking a toxin receptor were able to bind toxin with high affinity (KD 2.6 nM). The results are consistent with previous studies and the hypothesis that di- and trisialogangliosides act as the primary receptor for tetanus toxin under these conditions. In contrast, when toxin binding was assayed in Krebs-Ringer buffer, pH 7.4, binding was greatly reduced, was non-saturable and competition binding studies showed evidence for a small number of high-affinity sites (KD 0.42 nM, Bmax. 0.90 pmol/mg) and a larger number of low-affinity sites (KD 146 nM, Bmax. 179 pmol/mg). Treatment of membranes with proteinases, heat, and neuraminidase markedly reduced binding. Trisialogangliosides were poor inhibitors of toxin binding (IC50 11.0 microM), and trisialogangliosides inserted into membranes bound toxin with low affinity. The results suggest that in physiological buffers tetanus toxin binds with high affinity to a protein receptor, and that gangliosides represent only a low-affinity site.  相似文献   

16.
Binding of a panel of eight monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) with the C domain of angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) to human testicular ACE (tACE) (corresponding to the C domain of the somatic enzyme) was studied and the inhibition of the enzyme by the mAb 4E3 was found. The dissociation constants of complexes of two mAbs, IB8 and 2H9, with tACE were 2.3 +/- 0.4 and 2.5 +/- 0.4 nM, respectively, for recombinant tACE and 1.6 +/- 0.3 nM for spermatozoid tACE. Competition parameters of mAb binding with tACE were obtained and analyzed. As a result, the eight mAbs were divided into three groups, whose binding epitopes did not overlap: (1) 1E10, 2B11, 2H9, 3F11, and 4E3; (2) 1B8 and 3F10; and (3) IB3. A diagram demonstrating mAb competitive binding with tACE was proposed. Comparative analysis of mAb binding to human and chimpanzee ACE was carried out, which resulted in revealing of two amino acid residues, Lys677 and Pro730, responsible for binding of three antibodies, 1E10, 1B8, and 3F10. It was found by mutation of Asp616 located close to Lys677 that the mAb binding epitope 1E10 contains Asp616 and Lys677, whereas mAbs 1B8 and 3F10 contain Pro730.  相似文献   

17.
The four stereoisomers of mesoridazine were synthesized and evaluated in D2, 5-HT1A, 5-HT2A, 5-HT2C, D1, and D3 receptor binding and functional assays. Two isomers demonstrated potent D2 receptor binding (Ki < 3 nM) and functional antagonism (IC50 < or = 10 nM) activities. These two isomers also showed moderate affinity for the 5-HT2A and D3 receptors. A third isomer was devoid of significant D2 receptor binding, but did have moderate affinity for the 5-HT2A and D3 receptors. The fourth isomer demonstrated poor affinity for all the receptors tested. Most significantly, the stereochemistry of the sulfoxide moiety played a dominant role in the observed structure-activity relationship (SAR).  相似文献   

18.
Mutant forms of aromatase cytochrome P-450 bearing modifications of amino acid residues Pro308 and Asp309 and expressed in transfected Chinese hamster ovary cells were subjected to kinetic analysis and inhibition studies. The Km for androstenedione for expressed wild type (11.0 +/- 0.3 nM SEM, n = 3) increased 4-, 25- and 31-fold for mutants Pro308Phe, Asp309Asn and Asp309Ala, respectively. There were significant differences in sensitivity among wild type and mutants to highly selective inhibitors of estrogen biosynthesis. 4-Hydroxyandrostenedione (4-OHA) a strong inhibitor of wild type aromatase activity (IC50 = 21 nM and Ki = 10 nM), was even more effective against mutant Pro308Phe (IC50 = 13 nM and Ki = 2.8 nM), but inhibition of mutants Asp309Asn and Asp309Ala was considerably less (IC50 = 345 and 330 nM and Ki = 55 and 79 nM, respectively). Expressed wild type aromatase and Pro308Phe aromatase were strongly inhibited by CGS 16949A (IC50 = 4.0 and 4.6 nM, respectively) whereas mutants Asp309Asn and Asp309Ala were markedly less sensitive (IC50 = 140 and 150 nM, respectively). CGS 18320B produced similar inhibition. Kinetic analyses produced Ki = 0.4 nM for CGS 16949A inhibition of wild type versus 1.1, 37 and 58 nM, respectively, against Pro308Phe, Asp309Asn and Asp309Ala. The results demonstrate significant changes in function resulting from single amino acid modifications of the aromatase enzyme. Our data indicate that mutation in Asp309 creates a major distortion in the substrate binding site, rendering the enzyme much less efficient for androstenedione aromatization. The substitution of Pro308 with Phe produces weaker affinity for androstenedione in the substrate pocket, but this alteration favors 4-OHA binding. Similarly, mutant Pro308Phe exhibits a slightly greater sensitivity to inhibition by CGS 18320B than does the wild type. These results indicate that residues Pro308 and Asp309 play critical roles in determining substrate specificity and catalytic capability in aromatase.  相似文献   

19.
The binding sites of dendrotoxin I, mast cell degranulating peptide, and beta-bungarotoxin are thought to be associated with neuronal K+ channels. The different binding sites seem to reside on the same molecular assembly as each toxin can allosterically inhibit the binding of the others. Affinity chromatography on a beta-BTX Aca 22 affinity column has shown that there is an heterogeneous population of dendrotoxin I binding proteins. Two subtypes were separated: DTXI binding proteins with low affinity for beta-BTX (60-70% of total) and DTXI binding proteins with high affinity for beta-BTX (30-40% of total). Binding of 125I-DTXI and 125I-MCD to the former subtype is inhibited by beta-BTX with a low affinity (IC50 = 560 nM), while inhibition at the latter subtype occurs with a high affinity (IC50 = 10-16 nM). The DTXI binding subtype with low affinity for beta-BTX contains most (85-90%) of the binding sites for 125I-MCD.  相似文献   

20.
Src homology-2 (SH2) domains are noncatalytic motifs containing approximately 100 amino acid residues that are involved in intracellular signal transduction. The phosphotyrosine-containing tetrapeptide pTyr-Glu-Glu-Ile (pYEEI) binds to Src SH2 domain with high affinity (K(d)=100 nM). The development of five classes of tetrapeptides as inhibitors for the Src SH2 domain is described. Peptides were prepared via solid-phase peptide synthesis and tested for affinity to Src SH2 domain using a fluorescence polarization based assay. All of the N-terminal substituted pYEEI derivatives (class II) presented binding affinity (IC(50)=of 2.7-8.6 microM) comparable to pYEEI (IC(50)=6.5 microM) in this assay. C-Terminal substituted pYEEI derivatives (class III) showed a lower binding affinity with IC(50) values of 34-41 microM. Amino-substituted phenylalanine derivatives (class IV) showed weak binding affinities (IC(50)=16-153 microM). Other substitutions on phenyl ring (class I) or the replacement of the phenyl ring with other cyclic groups (class V) dramatically decreased the binding of tetrapeptides to Src SH2 (IC(50)>100 microM). The ability of pYEEI and several of the tetrapeptides to inhibit the growth of cancer cells were assessed in a cell-based proliferation assay in human embryonic kidney (HEK) 293 tumor cells. The binding affinity of several of tested compounds against Src SH2 domain correlates with antiproliferative activity in 293T cells. None of the compounds showed any significant antifungal activity against Candida albicans ATCC 14053 at the maximum tested concentration of 10 microM. Overall, these results provided the structure-activity relationships for some FEEI and YEEI derivatives designed as Src SH2 domain inhibitors.  相似文献   

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