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1.
The Pseudomonas bacteriophage Pf3 is a long and narrow filament consisting of a covalently closed DNA single strand of 5833 bases sheathed by approximately 2500 copies of a 44-residue subunit. Ultraviolet resonance Raman spectra excited at 257, 244, 238, and 229 nm and off-resonance Raman spectra excited at 514.5 nm are reported for Pf3 in both H2O and D2O solutions. The key Raman bands are assigned to specific protein and DNA groups of the native virion assembly. The results are compared with proposed assembly models and Raman spectra recently reported for the isomorphous (class II) Pseudomonas phage Pf1 and the morphologically distinct (class I) coliphage fd [Wen, Z. Q., Overman, S. A., and Thomas, G. J. , Jr. (1997) Biochemistry 36, 7810-7820; Wen, Z. Q., Armstrong, A., and Thomas, G. J., Jr. (1999) Biochemistry 38, 3148-3156]. Surprisingly, deoxynucleosides of the packaged DNA genome of Pf3 adopt the same conformation (C3'-endo/anti) found for DNA packaged in the class I fd virion rather than that (C2'-endo/anti) associated with DNA in the isomorphous Pf1 virion. However, DNA base stacking in Pf3, as judged by Raman hypochromic effects, differs significantly from that occurring in either Pf1 or fd. Thus, the single-stranded DNA genomes of Pf3, Pf1, and fd are all organized differently within their respective capsids, implying that local subunit-DNA interactions may be important in determining the structure specific to each native assembly. The present study confirms a completely alpha-helical secondary structure for the Pf3 subunit and an unusual indolyl ring environment for the subunit tryptophan residue (Trp-38).  相似文献   

2.
Structural interpretation of the Raman spectra of filamentous bacteriophages is dependent upon reliable assignments for the numerous Raman vibrational bands contributed from coat protein and packaged DNA of the virion. To establish unambiguous assignments and facilitate structural conclusions derived from them, we have initiated a systematic study of filamentous bacteriophage Ff (fd, f1, M13) incorporating protein subunits with specifically deuterated amino-acid side chains. Here, we report and interpret the Raman spectra of fd virions which incorporate: (a) a single deuterio-tryptophan residue per coat protomer [fd(Wd5)], (b) ten deuterio-alanines per protomer [fd(10Ad3)], and (c) both deuterio-tryptophan and deuterio-alanine [fd(Wd5 + 10Ad3)]. The unambiguous assignment of coat protein Raman bands in normal and deuterated isotopomers of fd establishes the validity of earlier empirical assignments of many key Raman markers, including those of packaged ssDNA (Thomas et al., 1988). Present results confirm that deoxyguanosine residues of the packaged ssDNA molecule depart from the usual C2'-endo/anti conformation characteristic of protein-free DNA in aqueous solution, although C2'-endo/anti conformers of thymidine are not excluded by the data. The combined results obtained here on normal fd, and on fd incorporating deuterio-tryptophan [fd(Wd5) and fd(Wd5 + 10Ad3)], show also that the microenvironment of the single tryptophan residue per coat protomer (W26) can be clearly deduced as follows: (a) The indole 1-NH donor group of each protomer in fd forms a moderately strong hydrogen bond, most likely to a hydroxyl oxygen acceptor. (b) The planar indole ring exists in a hydrophilic environment. (c) The torsion angle describing the orientation of the indole ring (C3-C2 linkage) with respect to the side-chain (C alpha-C beta bond) is unusually large, i.e., magnitude of X2,1 approximately 120 degrees. With respect to alanine isotopomers, the present results show that alanine residues, and possibly other methyl-containing side chains, are significant contributors to the fd Raman spectrum. The present study provides new information on protomer side chains of fd and demonstrates a Raman methodology which should be generally useful for investigating single-site interactions and macromolecular conformations in other nucleoprotein assemblies.  相似文献   

3.
The filamentous bacteriophage PH75, which infects the thermophile T. thermophilus, assembles in vivo at 70 degrees C and is stable to at least 90 degrees C. Although a high-resolution structure of PH75 is not available, the virion is known to comprise a closed single-stranded (ss) DNA circle of 6500 nucleotides sheathed by a capsid comprising 2700 copies of a 46-residue subunit (pVIII). Here, we employ Raman and UV-resonance Raman (UVRR) spectroscopy to identify structural details of the pVIII and DNA constituents of PH75 that may be related to the high thermostability of the native virion assembly. Analysis of the Raman amide I and amide III signatures reveals that the capsid subunit secondary structure is predominantly (87%) alpha-helical but contains a significant number of residues (6 +/- 1 or 13 +/- 3%) differing from the canonical alpha-helix. This minor structural component is not apparent in capsid subunits of the mesophilic filamentous phages, fd, Pf1, and Pf3, previously examined at similar spectral resolution. The Raman signature of PH75 also differs from those of fd, Pf1, and Pf3 by virtue of an unusual alanine marker (898 cm(-)(1) band), which is attributed to C(alpha)-H hydrogen-bond donation by subunit Ala residues. Because alanines of the PH75 subunit occur primarily within sXXXs motifs (where s is a small side chain, e.g. Gly, Ala, Ser), and because the occurrence of such motifs in alpha-helices is believed to thermostabilize interhelix associations via C(alpha)-H...O interactions [G. Kleiger et al. (2002) Biochemistry 41, 5990-5997], we propose that such hydrogen bonding may explain both the alanyl and amide I/III markers of PH75 capsid subunits and that C(alpha)-H...O interactions may serve as a significant source of virion thermostabilization. Raman and UVRR signatures of PH75 are also distinguished from those of fd, Pf1, and Pf3 by several marker bands that are indicative of hydrophilic Trp and Tyr environments, including hydrogen bonding interactions of aromatic ring substituents. These interactions are likewise proposed as contributors to the high thermostability of PH75 vis-a-vis fd, Pf1, and Pf3. Finally, PH75 is the only filamentous phage exhibiting UVRR markers diagnostic of a highly base-stacked ssDNA genome incorporating the low energy C2'-endo/anti deoxynucleoside conformation. The present results suggest that both intersubunit interactions and genome organization contribute to the enhanced thermostability of PH75 relative to mesophilic filamentous bacteriophages.  相似文献   

4.
The laser Raman spectra of filamentous viruses contain discrete bands which are assignable to molecular vibrations of the encapsidated, single-stranded DNA genomes and which are informative of their molecular conformations. Discrimination between Raman bands of the DNA and those of the coat proteins is facilitated by analysis of viruses containing deuterium-labeled amino acids. Specific DNA vibrational assignments are based upon previous studies of A-, B-, and Z-DNA oligonucleotide crystals of known structure [Thomas, G.J., Jr., & Wang, A.H.-J. (1988) in Nucleic Acids and Molecular Biology (Eckstein, F., & Lilley, D.M.J., Eds.) Vol. 2, Springer-Verlag, Berlin]. The present results show that canonical DNA structures are absent from six filamentous viruses: fd, If1, IKe, Pfl, Xf, and Pf3. The DNAs in three viruses of symmetry class I (fd, If1, IKe) contain very similar nucleoside sugar puckers and glycosyl torsions, deduced to be C3'-endo/anti. However, nucleoside conformations are not the same among the three class II viruses examined: Pf1 and Xf DNAs contain similar conformers, deduced to be C2'-endo/anti, whereas Pf3 DNA exhibits bands usually associated with C3'-endo/anti conformers. Conformation-sensitive Raman bands of the DNA 3'-C-O-P-O-C-5' groups show that in all class I viruses and in Pf1 the ssDNA backbones do not contain regularly ordered phosphodiester group geometries, like those found in ordered single- and double-stranded nucleic acids.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
The Pseudomonas bacteriophage Pf1 is a long ( approximately 2000 nm) and thin ( approximately 6.5 nm) filament consisting of a covalently closed, single-stranded DNA genome of 7349 nucleotides coated by 7350 copies of a 46-residue alpha-helical subunit. The coat subunits are arranged as a superhelix of C(1)()S(5.4)() symmetry (class II). Polarized Raman and polarized FTIR spectroscopy of oriented Pf1 fibers show that the packaged single-stranded DNA genome is ordered specifically with respect to the capsid superhelix. Bases are nonrandomly arranged along the capsid interior, deoxynucleosides are uniformly in the C2'-endo/anti conformation, and the average DNA phosphodioxy group (PO(2)(-)) is oriented so that the line connecting the oxygen atoms (O.O) forms an angle of 71 degrees +/- 5 degrees with the virion axis. Raman and infrared amide band polarizations show that the subunit alpha-helix axis is inclined at an average angle of 16 degrees +/- 4 degrees with respect to the virion axis. The alpha-helical symmetry of the capsid subunit is remarkably rigorous, resulting in splitting of Raman-active helix vibrational modes at 351, 445 and 1026 cm(-)(1) into apparent A-type and E(2)()-type symmetry pairs. The subunit tyrosines (Tyr 25 and Tyr 40) are oriented with phenoxyl rings packed relatively close to parallel to the virion axis. The Tyr 25 and Tyr 40 orientations of Pf1 are surprisingly close to those observed for Tyr 21 and Tyr 24 of the Ff virion (C(5)()S(2)() symmetry, class I), suggesting a preferred tyrosyl side chain conformation in packed alpha-helical subunits, irrespective of capsid symmetry. The polarized Raman spectra also provide information on the orientations of subunit alanine, valine, leucine and isoleucine side chains of the Pf1 virion.  相似文献   

6.
The filamentous virus PH75, which infects the thermophile Thermus thermophilus, consists of a closed DNA strand of 6500 nucleotides encapsidated by 2700 copies of a 46-residue coat subunit (pVIII). The PH75 virion is similar in composition to filamentous viruses infecting mesophilic bacteria but is distinguished by in vivo assembly at 70 degrees C and thermostability to at least 90 degrees C. Structural details of the PH75 assembly are not known, although a fiber X-ray diffraction based model suggests that capsid subunits are highly alpha-helical and organized with the same symmetry (class II) as in the mesophilic filamentous phages Pf1 and Pf3 [Pederson et al. (2001) J. Mol. Biol. 309, 401-421]. This is distinct from the symmetry (class I) of phages fd and M13. We have employed polarized Raman microspectroscopy to obtain further details of PH75 architecture. The spectra are interpreted in combination with known Raman tensors for modes of the pVIII main chain (amide I) and Trp and Tyr side chains to reveal the following structural features of PH75: (i) The average pVIII peptide group is oriented with greater displacement from the virion axis than peptide groups of fd, Pf1, or Pf3. The data correspond to an average helix tilt angle of 25 degrees in PH75 vs 16 degrees in fd, Pf1, and Pf3. (ii) The indolyl ring of Trp 37 in PH75 projects nearly equatorially from the subunit alpha-helix axis, in contrast to the more axial orientations for Trp 26 of fd and Trp 38 of Pf3. (iii) The phenolic rings of Tyr 15 and Tyr 39 project along the subunit helix axis, and one phenoxyl engages in hydrogen-bonding interaction that has no counterpart in either fd or Pf1 tyrosines. Also, in contrast to fd, Pf1, and Pf3, the packaged DNA genome of PH75 exhibits no Raman anisotropy, suggesting that DNA bases are not oriented unidirectionally within the nucleocapsid assembly. The structural findings are discussed in relation to intrasubunit and intersubunit interactions that may confer hyperthermostability to the PH75 virion. A refined molecular model is proposed for the PH75 capsid subunit.  相似文献   

7.
Ultraviolet resonance Raman (UVRR) spectra of H2O and D2O solutions of the nucleoside (dA, dG, dC, dT) and aromatic amino acid (Phe, Trp, Tyr) constituents of DNA viruses have been obtained with laser excitation wavelengths of 257, 244, 238, and 229 nm. Using the 981 cm−1 marker of Na2SO4 as an internal standard, Raman frequencies and scattering cross sections were evaluated for all prominent UVRR bands at each excitation wavelength. The results show that UVRR cross sections of both the nucleosides and amino acids are strongly dependent on excitation wavelength and constitute sensitive and selective probes of the residues. The results provide a library of UVRR marker bands for structural analysis of DNA viruses and other nucleoprotein assemblies. © 1998 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Biopoly 45: 247–256, 1998  相似文献   

8.
The conformations of the protein and nucleic acid backbones in the filamentous viruses fd and Pf1 are characterized by one- and two-dimensional solid-state NMR experiments on oriented virus solutions. Striking differences are observed between fd and Pf1 in both their protein and DNA structures. The coat proteins of fd and Pf1 are almost entirely alpha helical and in both viruses most of the helix is oriented parallel to the filament axis. fd coat protein is one stretch of alpha helix that is slightly slued about the filament axis. In Pf1 coat protein two distinct sections of alpha helix are present, the smaller of which is tilted with respect to the filament axis by about 20 degrees. The DNA backbone structure of fd is completely disordered. By contrast, the DNA backbone of Pf1 is uniformly oriented such that all of the phosphodiester groups have the O-P-O plane of the nonesterified oxygens approximately perpendicular to the filament axis.  相似文献   

9.
Virions of the Ff group of bacteriophages (fd, f1, M13) are morphologically identical filaments (approximately 6-nm diameter x approximately 880-nm length) in which a covalently closed, single-stranded DNA genome is sheathed by approximately 2700 copies of a 50-residue alpha-helical subunit (pVIII). Orientations of pVIII tyrosines (Tyr21 and Tyr24) with respect to the filament axis have been determined by Raman linear intensity difference (RLID) spectroscopy of flow-oriented mutant virions in which the tyrosines were independently mutated to methionine. The results show that the twofold axis of the phenolic ring (C1-C4 line) of Tyr21 is inclined at 39.5 +/- 1.4 degrees from the virion axis, and that of Tyr24 is inclined at 43.7 +/- 0.6 degrees. The orientation determined for the Tyr21 phenol ring is close to that of a structural model previously proposed on the basis of fiber x-ray diffraction results (Protein Data Bank, identification code 1IFJ). On the other hand, the orientation determined for the Tyr24 phenol ring differs from the diffraction-based model by a 40 degrees rotation about the Calpha-Cbeta bond. The RLID results also indicate that each tyrosine mutation does not greatly affect the orientation of either the remaining tyrosine or single tryptophan (Trp26) of pVIII. On the basis of these results, a refined model is proposed for the coat protein structure in Ff.  相似文献   

10.
Overman SA  Thomas GJ 《Biochemistry》1999,38(13):4018-4027
The study of filamentous virus structure by Raman spectroscopy requires accurate band assignments. In previous work, site- and residue-specific isotope substitutions were implemented to elucidate definitive assignments for Raman bands arising from vibrational modes of the alpha-helical coat protein main chain and aromatic side chains in the class I filamentous phage, fd [Overman, S. A., and Thomas, G. J., Jr. (1995) Biochemistry 34, 5440-5451; Overman, S. A., and Thomas, G. J., Jr. (1998) Biochemistry 37, 5654-5665]. Here, we extend the previous methods and expand the assignment scheme to identify Raman markers of nonaromatic side chains of the coat protein in the native fd assembly. This has been accomplished by Raman analysis of 11 different fd isotopomers selectively incorporating deuterium at specific sites in either alanine, aspartic acid, glutamic acid, glycine, isoleucine, leucine, lysine, serine, or valine residues of the coat protein. Raman markers are also identified for the corresponding deuterated side chains. In combination with previous assignments, the results provide a comprehensive understanding of coat protein contributions to the Raman signature of the fd virion and validate Raman markers assigned to the packaged single-stranded DNA genome. The findings described here show that nonaromatic side chains contribute prolifically to the fd Raman signature, that marker bands for specific nonaromatics differ in general from those observed in corresponding polypeptides and amino acids, and that the frequencies and intensities of many nonaromatic markers are sensitive to secondary and higher-order structures. Nonaromatic markers within the 1200-1400 cm-1 interval also interfere seriously with the diagnostic Raman amide III band that is normally exploited in secondary structure analysis. Implications of these findings for the assessment of protein conformation by Raman spectroscopy are considered.  相似文献   

11.
The filamentous bacteriophages fd, If1, IKe, Pf1, Xf and Pf3 in aqueous solutions of low, moderate and high ionic strength have been investigated as a function of temperature by laser Raman difference spectroscopy. By analogy with Raman spectra of model compounds and viruses of known structure, the data reveal the following structural features: the predominant secondary structure of the coat protein subunit in each virus is the alpha-helix, but the amount of alpha-helix differs from one virus to another, ranging from an estimated high of 100% in Pf1 to a low of approximately 50% in Xf. The molecular environment and intermolecular interactions of tyrosine, tryptophan and phenylalanine residues differ among the different viruses, as do the conformations of aliphatic amino acid side-chains. The foregoing features of coat protein structure are highly sensitive to changes in Na+ concentration, temperature or both. The backbones of A-DNA and B-DNA structures do not occur in any of the viruses, and unusual DNA structures are indicated for all six viruses. The alpha-helical protein subunits of Pf1, like those of Pf3 and Xf, can undergo reversible transitions to beta-sheet structures while retaining their association with DNA; yet fd, IKe and If1 do not undergo such transitions. Raman intensity changes with ionic strength or temperature suggest that transgauche rotations of aliphatic amino acid side-chains and stacking of aromatic side-chains are important structural variables in each virus.  相似文献   

12.
Tsuboi M  Suzuki M  Overman SA  Thomas GJ 《Biochemistry》2000,39(10):2677-2684
Raman spectra of oriented alpha-helical protein molecules exhibit a prominent band near 1340-1345 cm(-)(1), the intensity of which is highly sensitive to molecular orientation. Polarization of the 1340-1345 cm(-)(1) marker is evident in Raman spectra of alpha-helical poly-L-alanine (alphaPLA) and alpha-helical poly-gamma-benzyl-L-glutamate (alphaPBLG). Corresponding polarization is also observed in Raman spectra of the filamentous virus Pf1, which is an assembly of alpha-helical coat protein molecules. In alphaPLA and alphaPBLG, we assign the band to a normal mode of symmetry type E(2) and specifically to a vibration localized in the (O=C)-C(alpha)-H linkages of the main chain peptide group. Although strict helical symmetry does not apply to coat subunits of filamentous viruses, an approximate E(2)-type mode may be presumed to account for a corresponding Raman band of Pf1 and fd filamentous viruses. Spectroscopic studies of N-methylacetamide and isotopically-edited fd viruses support the present assignment of the 1340-1345 cm(-)(1) band. Polarization anisotropy indicates that this band may be exploited as a novel indicator of protein alpha-helix orientation. Application of this approach to the polarized Raman spectrum of Pf1 suggests that, on average, the axis of the alpha-helical coat protein subunit in the native virion structure forms an angle of 20 +/- 10 degrees with respect to the virion axis.  相似文献   

13.
UV resonance Raman (UVRR) spectroscopy is used to study the binding of biotin and 2-iminobiotin by streptavidin, and the results are compared to those previously obtained from the avidin-biotin complex and new data from the avidin-2-iminobiotin complex. UVRR difference spectroscopy using 244-nm excitation reveals changes to the tyrosine (Tyr) and tryptophan (Trp) residues of both proteins upon complex formation. Avidin has four Trp and only one Tyr residue, while streptavidin has eight Trp and six Tyr residues. The spectral changes observed in streptavidin upon the addition of biotin are similar to those observed for avidin. However, the intensity enhancements observed for the streptavidin Trp Raman bands are less than those observed with avidin. The changes observed in the streptavidin Tyr bands are similar to those observed for avidin and are assigned exclusively to the binding site Tyr 43 residue. The Trp and Tyr band changes are due to the exclusion of water and addition of biotin, resulting in a more hydrophobic environment for the binding site residues. The addition of 2-iminobiotin results in spectral changes to both the streptavidin and avidin Trp bands that are very similar to those observed upon the addition of biotin in each protein. The changes to the Tyr bands are very different than those observed with the addition of biotin, and similar spectral changes are observed in both streptavidin and avidin. This is attributable to hydrogen bond changes to the binding site Tyr residue in each protein, and the similar Tyr difference features in both proteins supports the exclusive assignment of the streptavidin Tyr difference features to the binding site Tyr 43.  相似文献   

14.
Nagai M  Aki M  Li R  Jin Y  Sakai H  Nagatomo S  Kitagawa T 《Biochemistry》2000,39(43):13093-13105
Heme structures of a natural mutant hemoglobin (Hb), Hb M Iwate [alpha87(F8)His-->Tyr], and protonation of its F8-Tyr were examined with the 244-nm excited UV resonance Raman (UVRR) and the 406.7- and 441.6-nm excited visible resonance Raman (RR) spectroscopy. It was clarified from the UVRR bands at 1605 and 1166 cm(-)(1) characteristic of tyrosinate that the tyrosine (F8) of the abnormal subunit in Hb M Iwate adopts a deprotonated form. UV Raman bands of other Tyr residues indicated that the protein takes the T-quaternary structure even in the met form. Although both hemes of alpha and beta subunits in metHb A take a six-coordinate (6c) high-spin structure, the 406.7-nm excited RR spectrum of metHb M Iwate indicated that the abnormal alpha subunit adopts a 5c high-spin structure. The present results and our previous observation of the nu(Fe)(-)(O(tyrosine)) Raman band [Nagai et al. (1989) Biochemistry 28, 2418-2422] have proved that F8-tyrosinate is covalently bound to Fe(III) heme in the alpha subunit of Hb M Iwate. As a result, peripheral groups of porphyrin ring, especially the vinyl and the propionate side chains, were so strongly influenced that the RR spectrum in the low-frequency region excited at 406.7 nm is distinctly changed from the normal pattern. When Hb M Iwate was fully reduced, the characteristic UVRR bands of tyrosinate disappeared and the Raman bands of tyrosine at 1620 (Y8a), 1207 (Y7a), and 1177 cm(-)(1) (Y9a) increased in intensity. Coordination of distal His(E7) to the Fe(II) heme in the reduced alpha subunit of Hb M Iwate was proved by the observation of the nu(Fe)(-)(His) RR band in the 441.6-nm excited RR spectrum at the same frequency as that of its isolated alpha chain. The effects of the distal-His coordination on the heme appeared as a distortion of the peripheral groups of heme. A possible mechanism for the formation of a Fe(III)-tyrosinate bond in Hb M Iwate is discussed.  相似文献   

15.
Wen ZQ  Thomas GJ 《Biochemistry》2000,39(1):146-152
The class II filamentous virus Pf3 packages a circular single-stranded DNA genome of approximately 5833 [corrected] nucleotides within a cylindrical capsid constructed from approximately 2500 [corrected] copies of a 44 residue alpha-helical subunit. The single tryptophan residue (Trp 38) of the capsid subunit is located within a basic C-terminal sequence (.R(+)WIK(+)AQFF). The local environment of Trp 38 in the native Pf3 assembly has been investigated using 229 nm excited ultraviolet-resonance Raman (UVRR) spectroscopy and fluorescence spectroscopy. Trp 38 exhibits an anomalous UVRR signature in Pf3, including structure-diagnostic Raman bands (763, 1228, 1370, and 1773 cm(-)(1)) that are greatly displaced from corresponding Raman markers observed in either detergent-disassembled Pf3, class I filamentous viruses, most globular proteins, or aqueous L-TRP. An unusual and highly quenched fluorescence spectrum is also observed for Trp 38. These distinctive UVRR and fluorescence signatures together reflect interactions of the Trp 38 side chain that are specific to the native PF3 assembly. The experimental results on PF3 and supporting spectroscopic data from other proteins of known three-dimensional structure favor a model in which pi electrons of the Trp 38 indolyl ring interact specifically with a basic side chain of the subunit C-terminal sequence. Residues Arg 37 AND Lys 40 are plausible candidates for the proposed cation-pi interaction of Trp 38. The present study suggests that raman spectroscopy may be a generally useful probe of interactions between the indolyl pi-electron system of tryptophan and electropositive groups in proteins and their assemblies.  相似文献   

16.
17.
A constrained, iterative Fourier deconvolution method is employed to enhance the resolution of Raman spectra of biological molecules for quantitative assessment of macromolecular secondary structures and hydrogen isotope exchange kinetics. In an application to the Pf1 filamentous bacterial virus, it is shown that the Raman amide I band contains no component other than that due to alpha-helix, indicating the virtual 100% helicity of coat proteins in the native virion. Comparative analysis of the amide I band of six filamentous phages (fd, If1, IKe, Pf1, Xf, and Pf3), all at the same experimental conditions, indicates that the subunit helix-percentage ranges from a high of 100% in Pf1 to a low of 71% in Xf. Deconvolution of amide I of Pf3 at elevated temperatures, for which an alpha-to-beta transition was previously reported (Thomas, G. J., Jr., and L. A. Day, 1981, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA., 78:2962-2966), allows quantitative evaluation of the contributions of both alpha-helix and beta-strand conformations to the structure of the thermally perturbed viral coat protein. Weak Raman lines of viral DNA bases and coat protein side chains, which are poorly resolved instrumentally, are also distinguished for all viruses by the deconvolution procedure. Application to the carbon-8 hydrogen isotope exchange reaction of a purine constituent of transfer RNA permits accurate determination of the exchange rate constant, which is in agreement with calculations based upon curve-fitting methods.  相似文献   

18.
Raman spectra of poly(dG-dC) . poly(dG-dC) in D2O solutions of high (4.0M NaCl) and low-salt (0.1M NaCl) exhibit differences due to different nucleotide conformations and secondary structures of Z and B-DNA. Characteristic carbonyl modes in the 1600-1700 cm-1 region also reflect differences in base pair hydrogen bonding of the respective GC complexes. Comparison with A-DNA confirms the uniqueness of C = O stretching frequencies in each of the three DNA secondary structures. Most useful for qualitative identification of B, Z and A-DNA structures are the intense Raman lines of the phosphodiester backbone in the 750-850 cm-1 region. A conformation-sensitive guanine mode, which yields Raman lines near 682, 668, or 625 cm-1 in B (C2'-endo, anti), A (C3'-endo, anti) or Z (C3'-endo, syn) structures, respectively, is the most useful for quantitative analysis. In D2O, the guanine line of Z-DNA is shifted to 615 cm-1, permitting its detection even in the presence of proteins.  相似文献   

19.
The Raman spectrum of the isometric bacteriophage phi X174 contains a number of well-resolved bands which have been assigned unambiguously to proteins of the capsid or to the single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) genome. Additional Raman bands of protein and DNA, which are partially overlapped in the spectrum of virus, have been resolution enhanced by Fourier deconvolution to permit improved semiquantitative measurement of spectral intensities and frequencies for structural conclusions. Raman conformation markers indicate that the ssDNA molecule within the capsid contains nucleosides of C2'-endo sugar pucker and anti-glycoside bond orientation, but the nucleic acid backbone lacks the geometry characteristic of B-form DNA. The Raman profile of encapsidated phi X DNA indicates a backbone more similar to heat-denatured DNA than to DNA containing hairpinlike secondary structure. This finding suggests limited interbase interactions in the packaged genome, which is presumably the result of constraints imposed by the viral capsid. Thus, the extensive pairing and stacking of bases indicated by Raman profiles from ssRNA viruses are not evident for the phi X174 chromosome. Overall, the proteins of the virion contain extensive beta-sheet and irregular secondary structures. Fourier deconvolution of the Raman amide I band provides an estimate of the percentage of total beta-sheet structure (approximately 60%) in all proteins of the virion. The amide III region of the spectrum confirms that beta-sheet and irregular domains are the predominant protein secondary structures. Samples of phi X174 concentrated for Raman spectroscopy by either ultracentrifugation or ultrafiltration exhibit nearly identical Raman spectra, indicating that either method can be employed to prepare intact virus without significant loss of DNA or protein components.  相似文献   

20.
Src homology 3 (SH3) domains are small noncatalytic protein modules capable of mediating protein-protein interactions. We previously demonstrated that the association of a ligand peptide RLP1 (RKLPPRPSK) causes environmental and structural changes of Trp55 and some of seven Tyr residues in the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) SH3 domain by circular dichroism (CD) and 235-nm excited UV resonance Raman (UVRR) spectroscopies [Okishio, N., et al. (2000) Biopolymers 57, 208-217]. In this work, the affected Tyr residues were identified as Tyr12, Tyr14, and Tyr73 by the CD analysis of a series of mutants, in which every single Tyr residue was replaced by a Phe residue. Among these three residues, Tyr14 was found to be a main contributor to the UVRR spectral change upon the RLP1 binding. Interestingly, CD and UVRR analyses revealed that RLP1 associates with the Y14F and Y14H mutants in different ways. These results suggest that Tyr14 plays a crucial role in the ligand recognition, and the amino acid substitution at Tyr14 affects the mode of PI3K SH3-ligand interaction. Our findings give an insight into how SH3 domains can produce diversity and specificity to transduce signaling within cells.  相似文献   

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