首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 770 毫秒
1.
Conformational changes in the beta-subunit of the bovine brain Ca2+-binding protein S100b (S100-beta) accompanying Ca2+ binding were investigated by analysis of the spectroscopic properties of the single tyrosine residue (Tyr17 beta) and flow-dialysis binding experiments. S100-beta binds Ca2+ sequentially at two sites to change the conformation of the protein. The first Ca2+ ion binds to site II beta, a typical Ca2+-binding site in the C-terminal region, and it does not significantly perturb the proximal environment of Tyr17 beta. After the first site is occupied, another Ca2+ ion binds to the N-terminal Ca2+-binding site, I beta, and strengthens a hydrogen bond between Tyr17 beta and a neighbouring carboxylate acceptor group, which results in a large increase in the Tyr17 beta fluorescence spectrum half-width and a positive absorption and c.d. signal between 290 and 275 nm. Ca2+ binding to the S100b.Zn2+6 complex, studied by flow-dialysis and fluorescence measurements showed that, although Zn2+ ions increase the affinity of S100b protein for Ca2+, the Ca2+-binding sequence was not changed. Tb3+ (terbium ion) binding studies on the S100b.Zn2+6 complex proved that Tb3+ antagonizes only Ca2+ binding site II beta and confirmed the sequential occupation of Ca2+-binding sites on the S100b.Zn2+6 complex.  相似文献   

2.
An abnormal fluorescence emission of protein was observed in the 33-kDa protein which is one component of the three extrinsic proteins in spinach photosystem II particle (PS II). This protein contains one tryptophan and eight tyrosine residues, belonging to a "B type protein". It was found that the 33-kDa protein fluorescence is very different from most B type proteins containing both tryptophan and tyrosine residues. For most B type proteins studied so far, the fluorescence emission is dominated by the tryptophan emission, with the tyrosine emission hardly being detected when excited at 280 nm. However, for the present 33-kDa protein, both tyrosine and tryptophan fluorescence emissions were observed, the fluorescence emission being dominated by the tyrosine residue emission upon a 280 nm excitation. The maximum emission wavelength of the 33-kDa protein tryptophan fluorescence was at 317 nm, indicating that the single tryptophan residue is buried in a very strong hydrophobic region. Such a strong hydrophobic environment is rarely observed in proteins when using tryptophan fluorescence experiments. All parameters of the protein tryptophan fluorescence such as quantum yield, fluorescence decay, and absorption spectrum including the fourth derivative spectrum were explored both in the native and pressure-denatured forms.  相似文献   

3.
We purified to homogeneity rat brain S100b protein, which constitutes about 90% of the soluble S100 protein fraction. Purified rat S100b protein comigrates with bovine S100b protein in nondenaturant system electrophoresis but differs in its amino acid composition and in its electrophoretic mobility in urea-sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel with bovine S100b protein. The properties of the Ca2+ and Zn2+ binding sites on rat S100b protein were investigated by flow dialysis and by fluorometric titration, and the conformation of rat S100b in its metal-free form as well as in the presence of Ca2+ or Zn2+ was studied. The results were compared with those obtained for the bovine S100b protein. In the absence of KCl, rat brain S100b protein is characterized by two high-affinity Ca2+ binding sites with a KD of 2 X 10(-5) M and four lower affinity sites with KD about 10(-4) M. The calcium binding properties of rat S100b protein differ from bovine S100b only by the number of low-affinity calcium binding sites whereas similar Ca2+-induced conformational changes were observed for both proteins. In the presence of 120 mM KCl rat brain S100b protein bound two Zn2+-ions/mol of protein with a KD of 10(-7) M and four other with lower affinity (KD approximately equal to 10(-6) M). The occupancy of the two high-affinity Zn2+ binding sites was responsible for most of the Zn2+-induced conformational changes in the rat S100b protein. No increase in the tyrosine fluorescence quantum yield after Zn2+ binding to rat S100b was observed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
Physicochemical characterization of bovine retinal arrestin   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The native conformation of bovine retinal arrestin has been characterized by a variety of spectroscopic methods. The purified protein gives rise to a near uv absorption band centered at 279 nm which results from the absorbance of its 14 tyrosine and one tryptophan residue. The extinction coefficient for this absorption band was determined to be 38.64 mM-1, cm-1 using the tyrosinate-tyrosine difference spectrum method; this extinction coefficient is ca. 17% lower than the previously reported value, and provides estimates of protein concentration which are in good agreement with estimates from the Bradford colorimetric assay. When native arrestin is purified to homogeneity, it displays a fluorescence spectrum which is dominated by tyrosine emission with no discernible contribution from tryptophan. Observation of the tyrosine-like fluorescence is dependent on the purity and structural integrity of the protein. Denaturation of arrestin by guanidine hydrochloride results in a diminution of tyrosine fluorescence and the concomitant appearance of a second fluorescence maximum at ca. 340 nm, presumably due to the single tryptophan residue. Thermal denaturation of arrestin leads to a conformation characterized by a broad fluorescence band centered at ca. 325 nm. Study of the arrestin fluorescence spectrum as a function of temperature indicates that the thermal denaturation is well modeled as a two-state transition with a transition midpoint of 60 degrees C. Temperature-dependent far uv circular dichroism studies indicate that changes in secondary structure occur coincident with the change in fluorescence. Studies of the temperature dependence of arrestin binding to light-adapted phosphorylated rhodopsin shows a strong correlation between the fluorescence spectral features of arrestin and its ability to bind rhodopsin. These data suggest that the relative intensities of tyrosine and tryptophan fluorescence are sensitive to the structural integrity of the native (i.e., rhodopsin binding) state of arrestin, and can thus serve as useful markers of conformational transitions of this protein. The lack of tryptophan fluorescence for native arrestin suggests an unusual environment for this residue. Possible mechanisms for this tryptophan fluorescence quenching are discussed.  相似文献   

5.
A rapid separation method for bovine brain S100 alpha alpha, S100a, and S100b protein using fast protein liquid chromatography on a Mono Q column and its application in preparation of a large amount of S100 alpha alpha protein are described. The conformation of S100 alpha alpha in the metal-free forms as well as in the presence of calcium were studied by UV absorption, circular dichroism, intrinsic fluorescence, sulfhydryl reactivity, and interaction with a hydrophobic fluorescent probe. The alpha-subunit appears to have nearly identical conformation in S100 alpha alpha and S100a protein dimers. We also confirmed that only the alpha-subunit exposes hydrophobic domains to solvent in the presence of calcium and that cysteine residues exposed upon Ca2+ binding to S100 proteins correspond to Cys 85 alpha and Cys 84 beta. Incubation of S100a with calcium and KCl proved that calcium binding to the putative calcium-binding sites (site I alpha, I beta) triggers a time- and temperature-dependent conformational change in the protein structure which decreases the antagonistic effect of KCl on calcium binding to sites II alpha and II beta and provokes subunit exchanges between protein dimers and the emergence of S100 alpha alpha and S100b (beta beta) proteins. Dynamic fluorescence measurements showed that incubating calcium at high S100a protein concentrations (greater than 10(-5) M) induces an apparent slow dimer-monomer equilibrium which might result in total subunit dissociation at lower protein concentrations. The effect of acidic pH on subunit dissociation in S100a protein (Morero, R. D., and Weber, G. (1982) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 703, 231-240) arises from conformational changes in the protein structure that are similar to those induced by Ca2+ incubation.  相似文献   

6.
The possibility that isoaspartyl residues contribute to the substrate specificity of eucaryotic protein carboxyl methyltransferases and/or tyrosine protein kinases has been investigated with two synthetic oligopeptides, Lys-Gln-Val-Val-Asp/isoAsp-Ser-Ala-Tyr-Glu-Val-Ile-Lys, which correspond to amino acids 231-242 of lactate dehydrogenase. One version of the peptide contains the normal amino acid sequence of the chicken muscle M4 isozyme. The other version contains an isoaspartyl residue in position 235 in place of the normal aspartyl residue; i.e., Asp-235 is linked to Ser-236 via its side-chain beta-carboxyl group, rather than via the usual alpha-carboxyl linkage. The normal peptide corresponds to the sequence around Tyr-238 that is phosphorylated in Rous sarcoma virus infected chick embryo fibroblasts [Cooper, J. A., Esch, F. S., Taylor, S. S., & Hunter, T. (1984) J. Biol Chem. 259, 7835]. Using protein carboxyl methyltransferase purified from bovine brain, we found that the normal peptide did not serve as a methyl-accepting substrate but that the isopeptide served as an excellent substrate, exhibiting a stoichiometry of one methyl group per peptide and Km of 0.54 microM. With tyrosine protein kinase partially purified from normal rat spleen both peptides were found to serve as phosphate acceptors at Tyr-238, exhibiting Km values of 4.7 and 8.9 mM for the normal and isopeptide versions, respectively. These results support the idea that protein carboxyl methyltransferase selectively methylates the alpha-carboxyl group of atypical isoaspartyl residues. In contrast, the presence of isoaspartate had a modest negative effect on substrate activity for a tyrosine protein kinase from rat spleen.  相似文献   

7.
Molecular cloning of cDNA of S100 alpha subunit mRNA   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The primary structure of the bovine S-100 alpha mRNA on the basis of molecular cloning and sequence analysis of the cDNA are described. The sequence is composed of 532 bp which include the 282 bp of the complete coding region, 89 bp at the 5'-noncoding region, 161 bp at the 3'-noncoding region, polyadenylation signal, ATTAAA and poly(A) tail. Northern blot analysis shows that the size of S-100 alpha mRNA is about 700-800 bases long and a single mRNA occurs in bovine brain. Bovine brain contains both S100 alpha and beta subunits and their mRNAs. In contrast, the rat brain contains only S100 beta subunit and its mRNA.  相似文献   

8.
The structural dynamics of bovine erythrocyte Cu, Zn superoxide dismutase (BSOD) was studied by time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy. BSOD is a homodimer containing a single tyrosine residue (and no tryptophan) per subunit. Frequency-domain fluorometry revealed a heterogeneous fluorescence decay that could be described with a Lorentzian distribution of lifetimes. The lifetime distribution parameters (center and width) were markedly dependent on temperature. The distribution center (average lifetime) displayed Arrhenius behavior with an Ea of 4.2 kcal/mol, in contrast with an Ea of 7.4 kcal/mol for the single-exponential decay of L-tyrosine. This indicated that thermal quenching of tyrosine emission was not solely responsible for the effect of temperature on the lifetimes of BSOD. The distribution width was broad (1 ns at 8 degrees C) and decreased significantly at higher temperatures. Furthermore, the width of the lifetime distribution increased in parallel to increasing viscosity of the medium. The combined effects of temperature and viscosity on the fluorescence decay suggest the existence of multiple conformational substrates in BSOD that interconvert during the excited-state lifetime. Denaturation of BSOD by guanidine hydrochloride produced an increase in the lifetime distribution width, indicating a larger number of conformations probed by the tyrosine residue in the denatured state. The rotational mobility of the tyrosine in BSOD was also investigated. Analysis of fluorescence anisotropy decay data enabled resolution of two rotational correlation times. One correlation time corresponded to a fast (picosecond) rotation that contributed 62% of the anisotropy decay and likely reported local mobility of the tyrosine ring. The longer correlation time was 50% of the expected value for rotation of the whole (dimeric) BSOD molecule and appeared to reflect segmental motions in the protein in addition to overall tumbling. Comparison between rotational correlation times and fluorescence lifetimes of BSOD indicates that the heterogeneity in lifetimes does not arise from mobility of the tyrosine per se, but rather from dynamics of the protein matrix surrounding this residue which affect its fluorescence decay.  相似文献   

9.
The emission maximum of DPN-linked isocitrate dehydrogenase from bovine heart shifted from 316 nm to 324 nm as the excitation wavelength was varied from 265 nm to 300 nm. This shift was accompanied by a nonproportional change in fluorescence intensity. Comparisons of the emission spectra of model compounds in aqueous buffer at pH 7.07 and n-butanol showed that lowered solvent polarity led to a blue shift of the peak of free tryptophan without significant change of fluorescence intensity, whereas the fluorescence intensity of tyrosine amide increased markedly without change in emission maximum. The emission peak of mixtures of tryptophan and tyrosine amide shifted to shorter wavelengths as the proportion of tyrosine amide increased. The results suggest a major contribution of tyrosine to the overall fluorescence of the dehydrogenase. DPNH caused quenching and a blue shift of the protein fluorescence maximum when excited between 270 nm and 290 nm, indicating that the two tryptophan residues per subunit of enzyme are located in different microenvironments of the protein and that DPNH may interact preferentially with the residue emitting at the longer wavelength.  相似文献   

10.
The single tyrosine residue in both pig and cow intestinal Ca2+-binding proteins fluoresces at 303 nm although the crystal structure of the cow protein shows a hydrogen bond between the hydroxy group of the tyrosine and glutamate-38 [Szebenyi & Moffat (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 8761-8777]. The latter interaction suggests that tyrosinate fluorescence should dominate the emission spectra of these proteins. A fluorescence difference spectrum, produced by subtracting the spectrum of free tyrosine from the spectrum of the protein, gives a peak at 334 nm due to ionized tyrosine. That this component of the emission spectrum is not due to a tryptophan-containing contaminant is shown by its elimination when the protein is denatured by guanidine and when glutamate-38 is protonated. We conclude that, in solution, the tyrosine residue in this protein interacts occasionally with glutamate-38 but that a permanent hydrogen bond is not formed.  相似文献   

11.
Studies on the alpha-subunit of bovine brain S-100 protein.   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
A method is described for the rapid purification of both S-100 protein and calmodulin from crude bovine brain extracts by the use of a fluphenazine-Sepharose affinity column eluted stepwise with decreasing concentrations of free Ca2+. Protein containing only alpha-subunit was purified from preparations of S-100 protein by anion-exchange chromatography. This protein co-migrated with the alpha-subunit of S-100 protein on sodium dodecyl sulphate/urea/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis and had an amino acid composition identical with that previously reported for this subunit. The results of u.v.-absorption and fluorescence-emission spectroscopy indicate that the tryptophan residue of the purified alpha-subunit of S-100 protein undergoes a Ca2+-induced change in environment. Measurements of changes in tryptophan fluorescence with increasing Ca2+ concentrations suggest an apparent dissociation constant of the alpha-subunit for Ca2+ of 7 X 10(-5)M in the absence of K+. In the presence of 90mM-K+ this value is increased to 3.4 X 10(-4)M.  相似文献   

12.
The small subunit of iron-dependent ribonucleotide reductases contains a stable organic free radical, which is essential for enzyme activity and which is localized to a tyrosine residue. Tyrosine-122 in the B2 subunit of Escherichia coli ribonucleotide reductase has been changed into a phenylalanine. The mutation was introduced with oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis in an M13 recombinant and verified by DNA sequencing. Purified native and mutant B2 protein were found to have the same size, iron content and iron-related absorption spectrum. The sole difference observed is that the mutant protein lacks tyrosyl radical and enzymatic activity. These results identify Tyr122 of E. coli protein B2 as the tyrosyl radical residue. An expression vector was constructed for manipulation and expression of ribonucleotide reductase subunits. It contains the entire nrd operon with its own promoter in a 2.3-kb fragment from pBR322. Both the B1 and the B2 subunits were expressed at a 25-35 times higher level as compared to the host strain.  相似文献   

13.
Abstract: The tryptophan-containing subunit (α-subunit) of bovine brain S-100 protein was purified from a S -aminoethyl derivative of S-100a protein, and its amino acid sequence was determined. The α-subunit contained 93 residues, including one tryptophan, and had a molecular weight of 10,400. The sequence shows an extensive homology (58% identity) to the sequence of another "tryptophan-free" subunit (β-subunit) found in both S-100a and S-100b protein, and has a calcium binding site characteristic of the "E-F hand" proteins, such as calmodulin or troponin C. The tryptophan residue is located at position 90 which is presumably adjacent to the C-terminal end of the α-helix following the calcium binding loop, and thus appears likely to serve as a specific probe in structure-function studies of S-100a protein.  相似文献   

14.
Unfolding--refolding of Escherichia coli disulfide isomerase C (DsbC) induced by GdnHCl was studied by intrinsic fluorescence. Interpretation of experimental fluorescence data was done together with the analysis of protein 3D structure. It is shown that although Cys 141 is the next neighbour of a single tryptophan residue Trp 140, sulfur atoms of the disulfide bond Cys 141--Cys 163 are far apart from the indole ring and cannot quench its fluorescence, while the potential quenchers are Met 136 and His 170. It has been revealed that, though each subunit of DsbC contains eight tyrosine residues, only three tyrosine residues (Tyr 171, Tyr 38 and Tyr 52) contribute to the bulk fluorescence of the molecule. The character of intrinsic fluorescence intensity changes induced by GdnHCl (equilibrium and kinetic data), the character of parametric dependencies between fluorescence intensity recorded at 320 and 365 nm, and the existence of an isosbestic point of protein fluorescence spectra in solutions with different GdnHCl concentrations, allowed suggesting a one-step character of DsbC denaturation. The reversibility of this process is also shown.  相似文献   

15.
A low molecular mass protein which we term S100L was isolated from bovine lung. S100L possesses many of the properties of brain S100 such as self association, Ca++-binding (2 sites per subunit) with moderate affinity, and exposure of a hydrophobic site upon Ca++-saturation. Antibodies to brain S100 proteins, however, do not cross react with S100L. Tryptic peptides derived from S100L were sequenced revealing similarity to other members of the S100 family. Oligonucleotide probes based on these sequences were used to screen a cDNA library derived from a bovine kidney cell line (MDBK). A 562-nucleotide cDNA was sequenced and found to contain the complete coding region of S100L. The predicted amino acid sequence displays striking similarity, yet is clearly distinct from other members of the S100 protein family. Polyclonal and monoclonal antibodies were raised against S100L and used to determine the tissue and subcellular distribution of this molecule. The S100L protein is expressed at high levels in bovine kidney and lung tissue, low levels in brain and intestine, with intermediate levels in muscle. The MDBK cell line was found to contain both S100L and the calpactin light chain, another member of this protein family. S100L was not found associated with a higher molecular mass subunit in MDBK cells while the calpactin light chain was tightly bound to the calpactin heavy chain. Double label immunofluorescence microscopy confirmed the observation that the calpactin light chain and S100L have a different distribution in these cells.  相似文献   

16.
Tyrosine hydroxylase in bovine adrenal medulla was activated up to fourfold by incubation with low concentrations (15 micrograms/ml) of ribonucleic acids. At higher RNA concentrations, enzyme activity was inhibited. This interaction with RNA was exploited with the use of poly(A)-Sepharose and DNA-cellulose to effect a rapid purification of stable tyrosine hydroxylase from rat brain and bovine adrenal medulla in high yield (up to 58%). With the purified rat brain enzyme, RNA acted as an uncompetitive inhibitor, a concentration of 15 micrograms/ml lowering the Vmax of tyrosine hydroxylase from 1050 to 569 nmol min-1 mg-1 and lowering the Km for tyrosine from 6.1 to 3.6 microM. With the natural cofactor, tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4), two Km values were obtained, indicating the presence of two forms of the enzyme. Both Km values were decreased only slightly by RNA. The purified brain and adrenal enzymes both contained about 0.07 mol of phosphate/63,000-Da subunit; in both cases, cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase catalyzed the incorporation of an additional 0.8 mol of phosphate/subunit. The purified enzyme also contains ribonucleic acid, which comprises about 10% of the total mass and appears to be important for full activity.  相似文献   

17.
Unfolding-refolding of Escherichia coli DsbC, a homodimeric molecule, induced by GdnHCl was studied by intrinsic fluorescence. Interpretation of experimental fluorescence data was done together with the analysis of protein 3D structure. It is shown that although Cys 141 is the next neighbor of the single tryptophan residue (Trp 140), the sulfur atoms of the disulfide bond Cys 141-Cys 163 are far apart from the indole ring and cannot quench its fluorescence, while the potential quenchers are Met 136 and His 170. It was revealed that though each subunit of DsbC contains eight tyrosine residues, only three tyrosine residues (Tyr 171, Tyr 38, and Tyr 52) contribute to the bulk fluorescence of the molecule. The character of intrinsic fluorescence intensity changes induced by GdnHCl (equilibrium and kinetic data) and its parametric representation, the existence of an isosbestic point of fluorescence spectra at different GdnHCl concentrations, allowed suggesting a one-step character of DsbC denaturation and its reversibility.  相似文献   

18.
The calcium-binding protein S100P has been found to be associated with human prostate cancer. We have overexpressed S100P in Escherichia coli using a T7 expression system. A rapid two-step procedure for the isolation of overexpressed S100P leads to a preparation of >95% pure protein with a yield of approximately 150 mg per liter of culture. The structural integrity of recombinant S100P was analyzed using CD and fluorescence spectroscopic techniques. The far-UV CD shows that secondary structure of recombinant S100P consists predominantly of a-helical structure. Both near-UV CD and tyrosine fluorescence spectra show that aromatic residues are involved in the formation of a specific, well packed structure, indicating that the recombinant S100P protein adopts a compact folded conformation. Ca2+ has a profound effect on S100P structure. Near-UV CD and fluorescence intensity of both internal (tyrosine) and external (ANS) probes suggest significant structural rearrangements in the tertiary structure of the molecule. The similarity of far-UV CD spectrum of S100P in the presence and in the absence of Ca2+ suggests that Ca2+ binding has only minor effects on secondary structure.  相似文献   

19.
Three S100 protein species (S100a, S100b, S100a') have been purified from bovine brain using a modification of standard preparative methods. A higher yield for each protein was obtained at the last separation step. Characterization by urea/sodium dodecyl sulfate/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, UV absorption spectra, and fluorescence parameters provided evidence of a new tryptophan-containing S100 protein called S100a', which exhibits, as S100a and S100b, the properties of a Ca2+ binding protein.  相似文献   

20.
A novel member of the S100 protein family, present in human placenta, has been characterized by protein sequencing, cDNA cloning, and analysis of Ca(2+)-binding properties. Since the placenta protein of 95 amino acid residues shares about 50% sequence identity with the brain S100 proteins alpha and beta, we proposed the name S100P. The cDNA was expressed in Escherichia coli and recombinant S100P was purified in high yield. S100P is a homodimer and has two functional EF hands/polypeptide chain. The low-affinity site (Kd = 800 microM), which, in analogy to S100 beta, seems to involve the N-terminal EF hand, can be followed by the Ca(2+)-dependent decrease in tyrosine fluorescence. The high-affinity site, provided by the C-terminal EF hand, influences the reactivity of the sole cysteine which is located in the C-terminal extension (Cys85). Binding to the high-affinity site (Kd = 1.6 microM) can be monitored by fluorescence spectroscopy of S100P labelled at Cys85 with 6-proprionyl-2-dimethylaminonaphthalene (Prodan). The Prodan fluorescence shows a Ca(2+)-dependent red shift of the maximum emission wavelength from 485 nm to 502 nm, which is accompanied by an approximately twofold loss in integrated fluorescence intensity. This indicates that Cys85 becomes more exposed to the solvent in Ca(2+)-bound S100P, making this region of the molecule, the so-called C-terminal extension, an ideal candidate for a putative Ca(2+)-dependent interaction with a cellular target. In p11, a different member of the S100 family, the C-terminal extension which contains a corresponding cysteine (Cys82 in p11), is involved in a Ca(2+)-independent complex formation with the protein ligand annexin II. The combined results support the hypothesis that S100 proteins interact in general with their targets after a Ca(2+)-dependent conformational change which involves hydrophobic residues of the C-terminal extension.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号