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1.
In order to define the conformational characteristics of a singular Ala14-Pro27 segment in myosin LC1, conformational calculations were performed using the Simplex algorithm of Nelder and Mead (Computer J. 7 (1965) 308–313) in the ACME program proposed by Tournarie (J. Appl. Cryst. 6 (1973) 309–346). The (Ala-Pro) n = 1 unit was assigned a given conformation x; the conformation energy was then minimized for n = 1 to n = 7 by adjusting structural parameters (angle values). Similarly, 13 different possible conformations were optimized and compared, showing that a (β2R)7 conformation is favored by about 20 kcal per mol over the next most probable conformation (C7R)7. In the β2R conformation, the (Ala-Pro)7 segment is a wide helix, 15 Å in length and 8.65 Å in diameter, while the C7R conformation results in a semi-extended structure of 25 Å long, with an approximate diameter of 6 Å. These characteristics are in agreement with available experimental data and putative functions of the LC1 N-terminus.  相似文献   

2.
Y Yamagata  K Kohda    K Tomita 《Nucleic acids research》1988,16(19):9307-9321
O6-Methylation of guanine residues in DNA can induce mutations by formation of base mispairing due to the deprotonation of N(1). The electronic, geometric and conformational properties of three N(9)-Substituted O6-methylguanine derivatives, O6-methyldeoxyguanosine (O6mdGuo), O6-methylguanosine (O6mGuo) and O6, 9-dimethylguanine (O6mdGua), were investigated by X-ray and/or NMR studies. O6mdGuo crystallizes in the monoclinic space group P2(1) with cell parameters a = 5.267(1), b = 19.109(2), c = 12.330(2) A, beta = 92.45(1) degrees, V = 1239.8(3) A3, z = 4 (two nucleosides per asymmetric unit), and O6mGua in the monoclinic space group P2(1)/n with cell parameters a = 10.729(2), b = 7.640(1) c = 10.216(1) A, beta = 92.17(2) degrees, V = 836.7(2) A3, z = 4. The geometry and conformation of O6-methylguanine moieties observed in both crystals and are very similar. Furthermore, the molecular dimensions of the O6methylguanine residue resemble more closely those of adenine than those of guanine. The methoxy group is coplanar with the purine ring, the methyl group being cis to N(1). The conformation of O6-methylguanine nucleosides is variable. The glycosidic conformation of O6mdGuo is anti for molecule (a) and high-anti for molecule (b) in the crystal, while that of O6mGuo is syn [Parthasarathy, R & Fridey, S. M. (1986) Carcinogenesis 7, 221-227]. The sugar ring pucker of O6mdGuo is C(2')-endo for molecule (a) and C(1')-exo for molecule (b). The C(4')-C(5') exocyclic bond conformation in O6mdGuo is gauche- for molecule (a) but trans for molecule (b), in contrast with gauche+ for O6mGuo. The hydrogen bonds exhibited by O6-methylguanine derivatives differ from those in guanine derivatives; the amino N(2) and ring N(3) and N(7) atoms of O6-methylguanine residues are involved in hydrogen bonding. 1H-NMR data for O6mdGuo and O6mdGuo reveal the predominance of a C(2')-endo type sugar puckering. In O6mdGuo, however, a contribution of a C(1')-exo sugar puckering is significant. The NOE data also indicate that O6mdGuo molecules exist with nearly equal population for anti (including high anti) and syn glycosidic conformations. These observations and their biological implications are discussed.  相似文献   

3.
To understand how chemical structure of beta-substituted alpha, beta-dehydroalanine (particularly size and pi conjugation of beta substituent) affects conformational property, x-ray crystallographic analysis was performed on Boc-Ala-Delta(Z) Nap-Val-OMe [Boc: t-butoxycarbonyl; Delta(Z) Nap: (Z)-beta-(1-naphthyl)dehydroalanine; OMe: methoxy] having the naphthyl group as a bulky beta substituent. Single crystals were grown by slow evaporation from an ethanol solution in the triclinic space group P1 with a = 9.528 (3) A, b = 12.410(4) A, c = 5.975(2) A, alpha = 96.77(3) degrees, beta = 102. 81(2) degrees, gamma = 88.74(3) degrees, V = 684.1(4) A3, and Z = 1. Phase determination was carried out by a direct method (SHELEXS), and the final structure was refined to R = 8.1% and R(w) = 9.0% for 1964 observed reflections. The bond lengths and bond angles of the Delta(Z)Nap residue, characterized by a sp(2) hybridized C(alpha) atom, did not differ from those of other dehydroresidues such as Delta(Z) Phe, Delta(Z) Leu, and DeltaVal essentially. The peptide backbone took a type II beta-turn conformation involving an intramolecular hydrogen bond between CO(Boc) and NH(Val), similar to di- or tripeptides containing a Delta(Z) Phe or Delta(Z) Leu residue in the second positions. Here the naphthyl group was found to be nonplanar [chi(2) = 55(1) degrees ] relative to the C(alpha)==C(beta)==C(gamma) plane. The nonplanarity was supported by conformational energy calculation. The molecular packing was stabilized by two kinds of intermolecular hydrogen bonds and van der Waals interactions. Naphthyl groups were arranged in a partially overlapped face-to-face orientation with a center-to-center distance of 5.97 A. For additional information, peptide Boc-(Ala-Delta(Z) Nap-Leu)(2)-OMe was synthesized and its solution conformation was investigated by (1)H-NMR spectroscopy. The hexapeptide showed the tendency to form a 3(10)-helical conformation in solution essentially. Conformational properties of Delta(Z) Nap residue, characterized by a type II beta-turn and 3(10)-helix, were supported by a conformational energy contour map of the Delta(Z)Nap residue.  相似文献   

4.
The crystal structure of human hemoglobin crosslinked between the Lysbeta82 residues has been determined at 2.30 A resolution. The crosslinking reaction was performed under oxy conditions using bis(3, 5-dibromosalicyl) fumarate; the modified hemoglobin has increased oxygen affinity and lacks cooperativity. Since the crystallization occurred under deoxy conditions, the resulting structure displays conformational characteristics of both the (oxy) R and the (deoxy) T-states. beta82XLHbA does not fully reach its T-state conformation due to the presence of the crosslink. The R-state-like characteristics of deoxy beta82XLHbA include the position of the distal Hisbeta63 (E7) residue, indicating a possible reason for the high oxygen affinity of this derivative. Other areas of the molecule, particularly those thought to be important in the allosteric transition, such as Tyrbeta145 (HC2) and the switch region involving Proalpha(1)44 (CD2), Thralpha(1)41 (C6) and Hisbeta(2)97 (FG4), are in intermediate positions between the R and T-states. Thus, the structure may represent a stabilized intermediate in the allosteric transition of hemoglobin.  相似文献   

5.
The 10-membered cyclotripeptide cyclo(-Me beta Ala-Phe-Pro) 3 and its diastereoisomer cyclo(-Me beta Ala-Phe-DPro-) 4 have been synthesized under mild cyclization conditions starting from linear precursors containing C-terminal proline. The crystal and molecular structure of the two models has been determined by X-ray crystallography. Analysis of the NMR spectra supported by NOE data clearly indicates that the conformations found in the crystals are retained in solution. Both cyclotripeptides exhibit a cis-cis-trans backbone conformation. The two tertiary peptide bonds, at the proline and Me beta Ala nitrogen atoms, adopt a cis conformation whereas the CO-NH junctions are trans in both the models. The deviations from planarity of the peptide units vary from delta omega values of ca. 18 degrees for the Pro-Me beta Ala and DPro-Me beta Ala bonds to ca. 7 degrees for Phe-Pro and Phe-DPro bonds. Relevant conformational details of 3 and 4, as revealed by X-ray and NMR analysis, are reported. Crystals of 3 are monoclinic: P2(1), a = 5.317(2), b = 17.059(6), c = 9.514(3) A, beta = 99.18(3), Z = 2. The final R and Rw are 0.054 and 0.071 respectively. Crystals of 4 are orthorhombic: P2(1)2(1)2(1), a = 8.797(2), b = 19.440(9), c = 21.605(10) A, Z = 8. The final R and Rw are 0.069 and 0.104 respectively.  相似文献   

6.
E V Scott  G Zon  L G Marzilli  W D Wilson 《Biochemistry》1988,27(20):7940-7951
One- and two-dimensional NMR studies on the oligomer dA1T2G3C4G5C6A7T8, with and without actinomycin D (ActD), were conducted. Analysis of the NMR data, particularly 2D NOE intensities, revealed that the free oligonucleotide is a duplex in a standard right-handed B form. At the ratio of 1 ActD/duplex (R = 1), 1D NMR studies indicate that two 1:1 unsymmetric complexes form in unequal proportions with the phenoxazone ring intercalated at a GpC site, in agreement with previous studies [Scott, E.V., Jones, R.L., Banville, D.L., Zon, G., Marzilli, L.G., & Wilson, W.D. (1988) Biochemistry 27, 915-923]. The 2D COSY data also confirm this interpretation since eight cytosine H6 to H5 and two ActD H8 to H7 cross-peaks are observed. At R = 2, both COSY and NOESY spectra confirm the formation of a unique 2:1 species with C2 symmetry. The oligomer remains in a right-handed duplex but undergoes extreme conformational changes both at and adjacent to the binding site. The deoxyribose conformation of T2, C4, and C6 shifts from primarily C2'-endo in the free duplex to an increased amount of C3'-endo in the 2:1 complex as revealed by the greater intensity of the base H6 to 3' NOE cross-peak relative to the intensity of the H6 to H2' NOE cross-peak. This conformational change widens the minor groove and should help alleviate the steric crowding of the ActD peptides. The orientation of the ActD molecules at R = 2 has the quinoid portion of the phenoxazone ring at the G3pC4 site and the benzenoid portion of the phenoxazone ring at the G5pC6 site on the basis of NOE cross-peaks from ActD H7 and H8 to G5H8 and C6H6. All base pairs retain Watson-Crick type H-bonding, unlike echinomycin complexes [e.g., Gao, X., & Patel, D.J. (1988) Biochemistry 27, 1744-1751] where Hoogsteen base pairs have been observed. In contrast to previous studies on ActD, we were able to distinguish the two peptide chains.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
A complex of the synthetic tetrasaccharide AGA*IM [GlcN, 6-SO3-alpha(1-4)-GlcA-beta(1-4)-GlcN,3, 6-SO3-alpha(1-4)-IdoA-alphaOMe] and the plasma protein antithrombin has been studied by NMR spectroscopy. 1H and 13C chemical shifts, three-bond proton-proton (3JH-H) and one-bond proton-carbon coupling constants (1JC-H) as well as transferred NOEs and rotating frame Overhauser effects (ROEs) were monitored as a function of the protein : ligand molar ratio and temperature. Considerable changes were observed at both 20 : 1 and 10 : 1 ratios (AGA*IM : antithrombin) in 1H as well as 13C chemical shifts. The largest changes in 1H chemical shifts, and the linewidths, were found for proton resonances (A1, A2, A6, A6', A1*, A2*, A3*, A4*) in GlcN, 6-SO3 and GlcN,3,6-SO3 units, indicating that both glucosamine residues are strongly involved in the binding process. The changes in the linewidths in the IdoA residue were considerably smaller than those in other residues, suggesting that the IdoA unit experienced different internal dynamics during the binding process. This observation was supported by measurements of 3JH-H and 1JC-H. The magnitude of the three-bond proton-proton couplings (3JH1-H2 = 2.51 Hz and 3JH4-H5 = 2.23 Hz) indicate that in the free state an equilibrium exists between 1C4 and 2S0 conformers in the ratio of approximately 75 : 25. The chair form appears the more favourable in the presence of antithrombin, as inferred from the magnitude of the coupling constants. In addition, two-dimensional NOESY and ROESY experiments in the free ligand, as well as transferred NOESY and ROESY spectra of the complex, were measured and interpreted using full relaxation and conformational exchange matrix analysis. The theoretical NOEs were computed using the geometry of the tetrasaccharide found in a Monte Carlo conformational search, and the three-dimensional structures of AGA*IM in both free and bound forms were derived. All monitored NMR variables, 1H and 13C chemical shifts, 1JC-H couplings and transferred NOEs, indicated that the changes in conformation at the glycosidic linkage GlcN, 6-SO3-alpha(1-4)-GlcA were induced by the presence of antithrombin and suggested that the receptor selected a conformer different from that in the free state. Such changes are compatible with the two-step model [Desai, U.R., Petitou, M., Bjork, I. & Olson, S. (1998) J. Biol. Chem. 273, 7478-7487] for the interaction of heparin-derived oligosaccharides with antithrombin, but with a minor extension: in the first step a low-affinity recognition complex between ligand and receptor is formed, accompanied by a conformational change in the tetrasaccharide, possibly creating a complementary three-dimensional structure to fit the protein-binding site. During the second step, as observed in a structurally similar pentasaccharide [Skinner, R., Abrahams, J.-P., Whisstock, J.C., Lesk, A.M., Carrell, R.W. & Wardell, M.R. (1997) J. Mol. Biol. 266, 601-609; Jin, L., Abrahams, J.-P., Skinner, R., Petitou, M., Pike, R. N. & Carrell, R.W. (1997) Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 94, 14683-14688], conformational changes in the binding site of the protein result in a latent conformation.  相似文献   

8.
Three cyclic disulfide analogs related to somatostatin, D-Phe(1)-cyclo(Cys(2)-Tyr(3)-D-Trp(4)-Lys(5)-Thr(6)-Xxx(7))-Thr(8)- NH2 (where Xxx = L-Pen 1; L-Cys 3; or D-Pen 4) were examined in DMSO-d6 by one- and two-dimensional proton n.m.r. spectroscopy in order to analyze the conformational influence of the position-7 residue on the 20-membered disulfide ring. From these studies it was concluded that all three analogs maintain a beta II' turn solution conformation for the core tetrapeptide -Tyr(3)-D-Trp(4)-Lys(5)-Thr(6)-. However, the disulfide conformation differs in the analogs, with 1 and 3 having a left-handed and 4 a right-handed disulfide chirality.  相似文献   

9.
It is noteworthy that the dehydro-Ala residue adopts an extended conformation that is different than those observed in dehydro-Phe, dehydro-Leu, and dehydro-Abu. The peptide N-Boc-L-Phe-dehydro-Ala-OCH3 (C18H24N2O5) was synthesized by the usual workup procedure and finally by converting N-Boc-L-Phe-L-Ser-OCH3 to N-Boc-L-Phe-dehydro-Ala- OCH3. It was crystallized from its solution in a methanol-water mixture at room temperature. The crystals belong to the monoclonic space group P2(1), with a = 9.577(1) A, b = 5.195(3) A, c = 19.563(3) A, beta = 94.67(5) degrees, V = 970.1(6) A3, Z = 2, dm = 1.201(5) Mg m-3, dc = 1.197(5) Mg m-3. The structure was determined using direct method procedures. It was refined by a full-matrix least-squares procedure to an R value of 0.048 for 1370 observed reflections. The C2 alpha-C2 beta distance is 1.327(8) A, while the bond angles N2-C2 alpha-C2' and C1'-N2-C2 alpha are 109.8(5) degrees and 127.8(5) degrees, respectively. The backbone adopts a nonspecific conformation with dehydro-Ala in a fully extended conformation with the following torsion angles: theta 1 = 175.2(4) degrees, omega 0 = 170.2(4) degrees, phi 1 = 135.8(5) degrees, psi 1 = -22.6(6) degrees, omega 1 = 168.5(5) degrees, phi 2 = -170.3(5) degrees, psi 2T = -178.6(5) degrees, theta T = 178.4(7) degrees. The rigid planar and trans conformation of dehydro-Ala forces Phe to adopt a strained conformation. The Boc group has a trans-trans conformation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
This study was designed to test the hypothesis that the corpus luteum of primate species consists of cell subpopulations that differ in physical characteristics, function, and regulation by endocrine and paracrine factors. The corpus luteum (n = 25) was removed from rhesus monkeys at the mid-luteal phase of the menstrual cycle (Days 7-8 after the surge of luteinizing hormone, LH) and enzymatically dispersed. Freshly dispersed cells were analyzed and sorted on the basis of their forward and 90 degrees light scatter (FLS and 90LS, respectively) properties using an EPICS C flow cytometer. Freshly dispersed and sorted cells were fixed, stained histochemically for the presence of 3 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (3 beta-HSD), and measured to determine their diameters. Freshly dispersed (MIX) and sorted cells from corpora lutea during the early (Days 4-5 after the LH surge; n = 4) and mid-luteal phases of the cycle were incubated in vitro and steroid production was assessed. The size distribution of dispersed cells revealed four peaks that corresponded to small (10-15 microns in diameter) 3 beta-HSD-negative, and small, medium (16-20 microns), and large (greater than 20 microns) 3 beta-HSD-positive cells. Analysis of dispersed cells for FLS and 90LS demonstrated two continua (C alpha and C beta). C alpha contained single cells and cell clusters; 99.7 +/- 0.3% (n = 3) of the cells were less than or equal to 15 microns in diameter and 96.7 +/- 0.3% were 3 beta-HSD-negative. C alpha cells produced low levels of progesterone (0.2 +/- 0.1 ng/ml per 5 x 10(4) cells; n = 3) in vitro under basal conditions. C beta consisted of single cells from 10 microns to 40 microns in diameter and contained the lipid-filled and 3 beta-HSD-positive cells. Two regions (R1 and R3) of C beta were defined and their cells separated. In R1, 96 +/- 2% (n = 3) of the cells had diameters of less than or equal to 15 microns, whereas 82 +/- 4% (n = 3) of those in R3 were greater than or equal to 20 microns. Basal progesterone production by R3 cells from early luteal phase of the cycle was 12 times greater than that by R1 cells (n = 3 per group).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
2D NMR has been used to examine the structure and dynamics of a 12-mer DNA duplex, d(T(1)A(2)G(3)T(4)C(5)A(6)A(7)G(8)G(9)G(10)C(11)A(12))-d(T(13)G(14)C( 15)C(16)C(17)T(18)T(19)G(20)A(21)C(22)T(23)A(24)), containing a 10R adduct at dA(7) that corresponds to trans addition of the N(6)-amino group of dA(7) to (-)-(7S,8R,9R,10S)-7,8-dihydroxy-9, 10-epoxy-7,8,9,10-tetrahydrobenzo[a]pyrene [(-)-(S,R,R,S)-BP DE-2]. This DNA duplex contains the base sequence for the major dA mutational hot spot in the HPRT gene when Chinese hamster V79 cells are given low doses of the highly carcinogenic (+)-(R,S,S,R)-BP DE-2 enantiomer. NOE data indicate that the hydrocarbon is intercalated on the 5'-side of the modified base as has been seen previously for other oligonucleotides containing BP DE-2 (10R)-dA adducts. 2D chemical exchange-only experiments indicate dynamic behavior near the intercalation site especially at the 10R adducted dA, such that this base interconverts between the normal anti conformation and a less populated syn conformation. Ab initio molecular orbital chemical shift calculations of nucleotide and dinucleotide fragments in the syn and anti conformations support these conclusions. Although this DNA duplex containing a 10R dA adduct exhibits conformational flexibility as described, it is nevertheless more conformationally stable than the corresponding 10S adducted duplex corresponding to trans opening of the carcinogenic isomer (+)-(R,S,S, R)-BP DE-2, which was too dynamic to permit NMR structure determination. UV and imino proton NMR spectral observations indicated pronounced differences between these two diastereomeric 12-mer duplexes, consistent with conformational disorder at the adduct site and/or an equilibrium with a nonintercalated orientation of the hydrocarbon in the duplex containing the 10S adduct. The existence of conformational flexibility around adducts may be related to the occurrence of multiple mutagenic outcomes resulting from a single DE adduct.  相似文献   

12.
Rotational resonance solid state nuclear magnetic resonance has been used to determine the relative orientation of the beta-ionone ring and the polyene chain of the chromophore 11-Z-retinylidene of rhodopsin in rod outer segment membranes from bovine retina. The bleached protein was regenerated with either 11-Z-[8,18-(13)C(2)]retinal or 11-Z-[8,16/17(13)C(2)]retinal, the latter having only one (13)C label at either of the chemically equivalent positions 16 and 17. Observation of (13)C selectively enriched in the ring methyl groups, C16/17, revealed alternative conformational states for the ring. Minor spectral components comprised around 26% of the chromophore. The major conformation (approximately 74%) has the chemical shift resolution required for measuring internuclear distances to (13)C in the retinal chain (C8) separately from each of these methyl groups. The resulting distance constraints, C8 to C16 and C17 (4.05 +/- 0.25 A) and from C8 to C18 (2.95 +/- 0.15 A), show that the major portion of retinylidene in rhodopsin has a twisted 6-s-cis conformation. The more precise distance measurement made here between C8 and C18 (2.95 A) predicts that the chain is twisted out-of-plane with respect to the ring by a modest amount (C5-C6-C7-C8 torsion angle = -28 +/- 7 degrees ).  相似文献   

13.
The synthesis and biological evaluation of penicillamine(6)-5-tert-butylproline(7)-oxytocin analogs and comparison with their proline(7)-oxytocin counterparts has led to the discovery of two potent oxytocin (OT) antagonists: [dPen(1),Pen(6)]-oxytocin (1, pA(2) = 8.22, EC(50) = 6.0 nM) and [dPen(1),Pen(6),5-tBuPro(7)]-oxytocin (2, pA(2) = 8.19, EC(50) = 6.5 nM). In an attempt to understand the conformational requirements for their biological activity, spectroscopic analyses of 1 and 2 were performed using (1)H NMR, laser Raman and CD techniques. In H(2)O, oxytocin analogs 1 and 2 exhibited cis-isomer populations of 7% and 35%, respectively. Measurement of the amide proton temperature coefficients revealed solvent shielded hydrogens for Gln(4) and Pen(6) in the major trans-conformer of 1 as well as for Gln(4) in the minor cis-conformer of 2. Few long-distance NOEs were observed, suggesting conformational averaging for analogs 1 and 2 in water; moreover, a lower barrier (16.6 +/- 0.2 kcal/mol) for isomerization of the amide N-terminal to 5-tBuPro(7) relative to OT was calculated from measuring the coalescence temperature of the Gly(9) backbone NH signals in the NMR spectra of 2. Observed bands in the Raman spectra of 1 and 2 correspond to C(beta)-S-S-C(beta) dihedral angles of +110-115 degrees and +/-90 degrees , respectively. In water, acetonitrile and methanol, the CD spectra for 1 exhibited a positive maximum around 236-239 nm; in trifluoroethanol, the spectra shifted and a negative maximum was observed at 240 nm. The CD spectra of 2 were unaffected by solvent changes and exhibited a negative maximum at 236-239 nm. The CD and Raman data both suggested that a conformation having a right-handed screw sense about the disulfide and a chi(CS-SC) dihedral angle value close to 115 degrees was favored for analog 1 in water, methanol and acetonitrile, but not trifluoroethanol, where a +/-90 degrees angle was favored. Analog 2 was more resilient to conformational change about the disulfide, and adopted a preferred disulfide geometry corresponding to a +/-90 degrees chi(CS-SC) dihedral angle. Monte Carlo conformational analysis of analogs 1 and 2 using distance restraints derived from NMR spectroscopy revealed two prominent conformational minima for analog 1 with disulfide geometries around +114 degrees and +116 degrees . Similar analysis of analog 2 revealed one conformational minimum with a disulfide geometry around +104 degrees . In sum, the conformation about the disulfide in [dPen(1),Pen(6)]-OT (1) was shown to be contingent on environment and in TFE, adopted a geometry similar to that of [dPen(1),Pen(6),5-tBuPro(7)]-OT (2) which appeared to be stabilized by hydrophobic interactions between the 5-tBuPro(7) (5R)-tert-butyl group, the Leu(8) isopropyl sidechain and the Pen(6)beta-methyl substituents. In light of the conformational rigidity of 2 about the disulfide bond, and the similar geometry adopted by 1 in TFE, a S-S dihedral angle close to +110 degrees may be a prerequisite for their binding at the receptor.  相似文献   

14.
A 569-base pair fragment encompassing the upstream regulatory region, the RNA initiation sites, and the initial part of the coding region of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae alcohol dehydrogenase II gene has been analyzed for the presence of sites which undergo conformational modification under torsional stress. Fine mapping of P1 and S1 endonuclease-sensitive sites was obtained on single topoisomers produced by in vitro ligation. It was shown that the upstream activator sequence, the TATA sequence, a region directly upstream to the RNA initiation sites, and several positions in the first segment of the transcribed region change conformation as a function of the applied torsional stress in a precisely coordinate fashion. The superhelical density optima for this coordinate modifications have been determined. Analysis of the conformational changes of the promoter sequence in several naturally occurring (Young, E. T., Williamson, V. M., Taguchi, A., Smith, M., Sledziewski, L., Russel, D., Osterman, J., Denis, C., Cox, D., and Beier, D., (1982) in Genetic Engineering of Microorganisms for Chemicals (Hollander, A., De Moss, R. D., Kaplan, S., Konisky, J., Savage, D., and Wolle, R. S., eds) pp. 335-361, Plenum Publishing Corp., New York) up-promoter constitutive mutants was performed. This analysis has shown that the conformation of functionally relevant sites changes as a function of sequence mutations that have taken place elsewhere; this shows that the conformational behavior of the whole promoter region is linked and suggests transmission in cis of topological effects in RNA polymerase II promoters.  相似文献   

15.
Rab GTPases function as regulatory components of an evolutionarily conserved machinery that mediates docking, priming, and fusion of vesicles with intracellular membranes. We have previously shown that the active conformation of Rab3A is stabilized by a substantial hydrophobic interface between the putative conformational switch regions (Dumas, J. J., Zhu, Z., Connolly, J. L., and Lambright, D. G. (1999) Structure 7, 413-423). A triad of invariant hydrophobic residues at this switch interface (Phe-59, Trp-76, and Tyr-91) represents a major interaction determinant between the switch regions of Rab3A and the Rab3A-specific effector Rabphilin3A (Ostermeier, C., and Brunger, A. T. (1999) Cell 96, 363-374). Here, we report the crystal structure of the active form of Rab5C, a prototypical endocytic Rab GTPase. As is true for Rab3A, the active conformation of Rab5C is stabilized by a hydrophobic interface between the switch regions. However, the conformation of the invariant hydrophobic triad (residues Phe-58, Trp-75, and Tyr-90 in Rab5C) is dramatically altered such that the resulting surface is noncomplementary to the switch interaction epitope of Rabphilin3A. This structural rearrangement reflects a set of nonconservative substitutions in the hydrophobic core between the central beta sheet and the alpha2 helix. These observations demonstrate that structural plasticity involving an invariant hydrophobic triad at the switch interface contributes to the mechanism by which effectors recognize distinct Rab subfamilies. Thus, the active conformation of the switch regions conveys information about the identity of a particular Rab GTPase as well as the state of the bound nucleotide.  相似文献   

16.
alpha-D-Glucose activates glucokinase (EC 2.7.1.1) on its binding to the active site by inducing a global hysteretic conformational change. Using intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence as a probe on the alpha-D-glucose induced conformational changes in the pancreatic isoform 1 of human glucokinase, key residues involved in the process were identified by site-directed mutagenesis. Single-site W-->F mutations enabled the assignment of the fluorescence enhancement (DeltaF/F(0)) mainly to W99 and W167 in flexible loop structures, but the biphasic time course of DeltaF/F(0) is variably influenced by all tryptophan residues. The human glucokinase-alpha-D-glucose association (K(d) = 4.8 +/- 0.1 mm at 25 degrees C) is driven by a favourable entropy change (DeltaS = 150 +/- 10 J.mol(-1).K(-1)). Although X-ray crystallographic studies have revealed the alpha-d-glucose binding residues in the closed state, the contact residues that make essential contributions to its binding to the super-open conformation remain unidentified. In the present study, we combined functional mutagenesis with structural dynamic analyses to identify residue contacts involved in the initial binding of alpha-d-glucose and conformational transitions. The mutations N204A, D205A or E256A/K in the L-domain resulted in enzyme forms that did not bind alpha-D-glucose at 200 mm and were essentially catalytically inactive. Our data support a molecular dynamic model in which a concerted binding of alpha-D-glucose to N204, N231 and E256 in the super-open conformation induces local torsional stresses at N204/D205 propagating towards a closed conformation, involving structural changes in the highly flexible interdomain connecting region II (R192-N204), helix 5 (V181-R191), helix 6 (D205-Y215) and the C-terminal helix 17 (R447-K460).  相似文献   

17.
A useful synthon to approach artificial phenylalanyl peptides in a [2 + 2 + 2] cycloaddition reaction, C(alpha,alpha)-dipropargylglycine (Dprg) is examined for its conformational preferences as a constrained residue. Crystal structure analysis and preliminary NMR results establish possible preference of the residue for folded (alpha) rather than extended (beta) region of the straight phi,psi conformational space. Boc-Dprg-L-Leu-OMe (1) displays two molecular conformations within the same crystallographic asymmetric unit, with Dprg in the alpha(R) or alpha(L) conformation, participating in a type I beta-turn or an alpha(L)-alpha(R)-type fold, in which Leu(2) assumes the alpha(R) conformation stereochemically favored for an L-chiral residue. Boc-Dprg-D-Val-L-Leu-OMe (2) displays a type I' beta-turn conformation in crystal, with both Dprg(1) and D-Val(2) assuming the alpha(L) conformation stereochemically favored for a D-chiral residue, with 4 --> 1 type hydrogen bond linking L-Leu(3) NH with Boc CO. NMR analysis using temperature variation, solvent titration, and a spin probe study suggests a fully solvent-exposed nature of Dprg NH, ruling out a fully extended C(5)-type conformation for this residue, and solvent sequestered nature of L-Leu(3) NH, suggesting possibility of a beta-turn due to Dprg assuming a folded conformation.  相似文献   

18.
Arabinosylcytosine (araC) is an important anticancer drug that has been shown to be misincorporated into DNA double helix. The incorporation of araC into DNA may have significant conformational consequences that could affect the function of DNA. In this paper, we present the high-resolution 3D structure of an araC-containing decamer d[CCAGGC(araC)TGG], as determined by X-ray diffraction analysis, and assess the possible DNA structural perturbation induced by araC. The modified decamer was crystallized in the monoclinic C2 (a = 31.97 A, b = 25.56 A, c = 34.62 A and beta = 114.50 degrees) space group, the same as that from d(CCAGGCCTGG) [Heinemann, U., & Alings, C. (1989) J. Mol. Biol. 210, 369]. The structure of the araC-containing decamer was solved by the molecular replacement method and refined by the constrained least-squares refinement procedure to obtain a final R factor of 0.187 using 2349 [greater than 2.0 sigma(F)] observed reflections to a resolution of 1.6 A. The overall conformation resembles that of the canonical decamer DNA structure, but with significant differences in regions close to the araC site. The O2' hydroxyl groups of the araC residues lie in the major groove of the helix, and they are in close contact with the C5 methyl and C6 H6 atoms of the thymine on the 3'-side. This creates a higher buckle in the araC7-G14 base pair (14 degrees), as compared to that found in the canonical decamer (9 degrees). This may slightly destabilize B-DNA. No direct intramolecular hydrogen bond is formed, in contrast to the situation when araC is incorporated into Z-DNA.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
The novel amide linked Angiotensin II potent cyclic analogue, c-[Sar1,Lys3,Glu5] ANG II 19 has been designed and synthesized in an attempt to test the aromatic ring clustering and the charge relay bioactive conformation we have recently suggested for ANG II. This constrained cyclic analogue was synthesized by connecting the Lys3 amino and Glu5 carboxyl side chain groups, and it was found to be potent in the rat uterus assay and in anesthetized rabbits. The central part of the molecule is fixed covalently in the conformation predicted according to the backbone bend conformational model proposed for Angiotensin II. The obtained results using a combination of 2D NMR, 1D NOE spectroscopy and molecular modeling revealed a similar Tyr4-Ile5-His6 bend, a His6-Pro7 trans configuration and a side chain aromatic ring cluster of the key aminoacids Tyr4, His6, Phe8 for c-[Sar1,Lys3,Glu5] ANG II as it has been found for ANG II (Matsoukas, J. H.; Hondrelis, J.; Keramida, M.; Mavromoustakos, T.; Markriyannis, A.; Yamdagni, R.; Wu, Q.; Moore, G. J. J. Biol. Chem. 1994, 269, 5303). Previous study of the conformational properties of the Angiotensin II type I antagonist [Hser(gamma-OMe)8] ANG II (Matsoukas, J. M.; Agelis, G.; Wahhab, A.; Hondrelis, J.; Panagiotopoulos. D.; Yamdagni, R.; Wu, Q.; Mavromoustakos, T.; Maia, H.; Ganter, R.; Moore, G. J. J. Med. Chem. 1995, 38, 4660) using 1-D NOE spectroscopy coupled with the present study of the same type of lead antagonist Sarilesin revealed that the Tyr4-Ile5-His6 bend, a conformational property found in Angiotensin II is not present in type I antagonists. The obtained results provide an important conformational difference between Angiotensin II agonists and type I antagonists. It appears that our synthetic attempt to further support our proposed model was successful and points out that the charge relay system and aromatic ring cluster are essential stereoelectronic features for Angiotensin II to exert its biological activity.  相似文献   

20.
One carbonyl oxygen of the cyclic hexapeptide cyclo(-Gly1-Pro2-Phe3-Val4-Phe5-Phe6-) (A) can be selectively exchanged with sulphur using Yokoyama's reagent. Surprisingly it was not the C=] of Gly1 but that of Phe5 which was substituted and cyclo(-Gly1-Pro2-Phe3-Val4-Phe5 psi [CS-NH]Phe6-) (B) was obtained. Thionation results in a conformational change of the peptide backbone although the C=O of Phe5 and the corresponding C=S are not involved in internal hydrogen bonds. Two isomers in slow exchange, containing a cis Gly1-Pro2 bond in a beta VIa-turn (minor) and a trans Gly-Pro bond in a beta II'-turn (major), were analyzed by restrained molecular dynamics in vacuo and in DMSO as well as using time dependent distance constraints. It is impossible to fit all experimental data to a static structure of each isomer. Interpreting the conflicting NOEs, local segment flexibility is found. MD simulations lead to a dynamic model for each structure with evidence of an equilibrium between a beta I- and beta II-turn about the Val4-Phe5 amide bond in both the cis and trans isomers. Additionally proton relaxation rates in the rotating frame (R1 rho) were measured to verify the assumption of this fast beta I/beta II equilibrium within each isomer. Significant contributions to R1 rho-rates from intramolecular motions were found for both isomers. Therefore it is possible to distinguish between at least four conformers interconverting on different time scales based on NMR data and MD refinement. This work shows that thionation is a useful modification of peptides for conformation-activity investigations.  相似文献   

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