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1.
We previously reported the vanadyl hyperfine couplings of VO(2+)-ATP and VO(2+)-ADP complexes in the presence of the nitrogenase Fe protein from Klebsiella pneumoniae (Petersen et al. in Biochemistry 41:13253-13263, 2002). It was demonstrated that different VO(2+)-nucleotide coordination environments coexist and are distinguishable by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy. Here orientation-selective continuous-wave electron-nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) spectra have been investigated especially in the low-radio-frequency range in order to identify superhyperfine interactions with nuclei other than protons. Some of these resonances have been attributed to the presence of a strong interaction with a 31P nucleus although no resolvable superhyperfine structure due to 31P or other nuclei was detected in the EPR spectra. The superhyperfine coupling component is determined to be about 25 MHz. Such a 31P coupling is consistent with an interaction of the metal with phosphorus from a directly, equatorially coordinated nucleotide phosphate group(s). Additionally, novel more prominent 31P ENDOR signals are detected in the low-frequency region. Some of these correspond to a relatively weak 31P coupling. This coupling is present with ATP for all pH forms but is absent with ADP. The ENDOR resonances of these weakly coupled 31P are likely to originate from an interaction of the metal with a nucleotide phosphate group of the nucleoside triphosphate and are attributed to a phosphorus with axial characteristics. Another set of resonances, split about the nuclear Zeeman frequency of 23Na, was detected, suggesting that a monovalent Na+ ion is closely associated with the divalent metal-nucleotide binding site. Na+ replacement by K+ unambiguously confirmed that ENDORs at radio frequencies between 3.0 and 4.5 MHz arise from an interaction with Na+ ions. In contrast to the low-frequency 31P signal, these resonances are present in spectra with both ADP and ATP, and for both low- and neutral-pH forms, although slight differences are detected, showing that these are sensitive to the nucleotide and pH.  相似文献   

2.
The nitrogenase Fe-protein is the specific ATP-activated electron donor to the active site-containing nitrogenase MoFe-protein. It has been previously demonstrated that different VO(2+)-nucleotide coordination environments exist for the Fe-protein that depend on pH and are distinguishable by EPR spectroscopy. After having studied the nitrogenase 31P and 23Na superhyperfine structure for this system by electron nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) spectroscopy (Petersen et al. 2008 in J Biol Inorg Chem. doi:10.1007/s00775-008-0360-0), we here report on the 1H-interactions with the nucleotide-bound metal center after substitution of the natural diamagnetic metal Mg2+ with paramagnetic oxo-vanadium(IV). ENDOR spectra show a number of resonances arising from interactions of the VO2+ ion with protons. In the presence of reduced Fe-protein and VO2+ ADP, at least three sets of nonexchangeable protons are detected. At low pH the superhyperfine couplings of most of these are consistent with proton interactions originating from the nucleotide. There is no indication of 1H-resonances that exchange in D2O at neutral pH and could be assigned to inner-sphere hydroxyl coordination. Exchangeable hydroxyl protons in the inner coordination sphere with reduced Fe-protein are only found in the low pH form; based on their hyperfine tensor components these have been assigned to an axially coordinated hydroxyl water molecule. The pH-dependent alterations of the proton couplings that exchange in D2O suggest that they are partially caused by a rearrangement in the local hydroxyl coordination environment of the metal center. These rearrangements especially affect the apical metal position, where an axially coordinated water present at low pH is absent at neutral pH. Oxidation of the Fe-protein induced substantial changes in the electron-nucleus interactions. This indicates that the oxidation state of the iron-sulfur cluster has an important effect on the metal coordination environment at the nucleotide binding site of the Fe-protein. The distinct VO(2+)-nucleotide coordination structures with ADP and ATP and the redox state of the [4Fe-4S] cluster imply that VO2+ has a critical influence on the switch regions of the regulatory protein, and, taken together, this provides a plausible explanation for the inhibitory action of VO2+.  相似文献   

3.
D C Harris 《Biochemistry》1977,16(3):560-564
Transferrin, the serum serum iron-transport protein which can bind two metal ions at physiologic pH, binds just one Fe3+, VO2+, or Cr3+ ion at pH 6.0. Fe3+ and VO2+ appear to be bound at the same site, designated A, based on electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectra of VO2+-transferrin and (Fe3+)1(VO2+)1-transferrin. The EPR spectra of (Cr3+)1(VO2+)1-transferrin and of (Cr3+), (FE3+)1-transferrin indicate that that Cr3+ is bound to site B at pH 6.0. Transferrin was labeled at site A with 59Fe at pH 6.0 and at site B with 55Fe at pH 7.5. When the pH of the resulting preparation was lowered to 6.3 and the dissociated iron was separated by gel filtration, about ten times as much 55Fe as 59Fe was lost. The same EPR and isotopic-labeling experiments showed that Fe3+ added to transferrin at pH 7.5 binds to site A with about 90% selectivity.  相似文献   

4.
G D Markham 《Biochemistry》1984,23(3):470-478
The structure of the divalent metal ion binding site of S-adenosylmethionine synthetase from Escherichia coli has been studied by using the vanadyl(IV) ion (VO2+) as probe. VO2+ binds at a single site per subunit in the presence or absence of substrates. Single turnover experiments measuring S-adenosylmethionine (AdoMet) formation from methionine and the ATP analogue 5'-adenylyl imidodiphosphate show that complexes containing VO2+ and either Mg2+ or Ca2+ as a second metal ion are catalytically active, while a complex containing VO2+ alone is inactive. Electron paramagnetic resonance spectra of the enzyme-VO2+ complex, as well as complexes also containing AdoMet or methionine, indicate the coordination of two water molecules and at least two protein ligands to the VO2+. In complexes with polyphosphate substrates or products (e.g., enzyme-VO2+-ATP-methionine, enzyme-VO2+-PPi-Mg2+), EPR spectral changes reveal ligand substitutions on the VO2+, and 8.5-G isotropic superhyperfine coupling to two 31P nuclei can be resolved. 17O superhyperfine coupling from [17O]pyrophosphate indicates coordination of two oxygen atoms of PPi to the VO2+ ion. Thus the polyphosphate compounds are bidentate ligands to the VO2+, demonstrating that the VO2+ binds at the active site and suggesting a catalytic role for the protein-bound metal ion.  相似文献   

5.
Chen W  Hu CY  Crampton DJ  Frasch WD 《Biochemistry》2000,39(31):9393-9400
Metal ligands of the VO(2+)-adenosine diphosphate (ADP) complex bound to high-affinity catalytic site 1 of chloroplast F(1) adenosine triphosphatase (CF(1) ATPase) were characterized by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy. This EPR spectrum contains two EPR species designated E and F not observed when VO(2+)-nucleotide is bound to site 3 of CF(1). Site-directed mutations betaE197C, betaE197D, and betaE197S in Chlamydomonas CF(1) impair ATP synthase and ATPase activity catalyzed by CF(1)F(o) and soluble CF(1), respectively, indicating that this residue is important for enzyme function. These mutations caused large changes in the (51)V hyperfine tensors of VO(2+)-nucleotide bound to site 1 but not to site 3. Mutations to the Walker homology B aspartate betaD262C, betaD262H, and betaD262T of Chlamydomonas CF(1) caused similar effects on the EPR spectrum of VO(2+)-ADP bound to site 1. These results indicate that the conversion of the low-affinity site 3 conformation to high-affinity site 1 involves the incorporation betaE197 and betaD262 as metal ligands.  相似文献   

6.
This study was undertaken to investigate the conformational states of the two metal sites in the human serum transferrin molecule. The 9.2 GHz electron paramagnetic resonance spectra of frozen solutions of divanadyl(IV) transferrin consist of a superposition of two sets of resonances, A and B, due to the magnetically nonequivalent binding environments of the VO2+ ion. Examination of the intensities of the A and B resonances as a function of pH from 6.0 to 10.7 reveals that they arise from two conformational states of the metal sites in which the geometrical arrangement and/or identity of one or more ligands in the first coordination sphere are different. From pH 7.5 to 9.0, the metal sites exist in A and B conformations but above pH 9.0 the A conformation. This transformation is coupled to the ionization of an apparently noncoordinating protein functional group with a pK - 10.0 +/- 0.1. Below pH 7.0, binding in the B conformation is rapidly lost, driven in part by the protonation of a functional group, possibly the anion, with a pK - 6.6 +/- 0.1. In 90% D2O, this pK is elevated to 7.8 +/- 0.1. At pH 6.0 in H2O, essentially one VO2+ ion remains bound to the protein with the metal site in the A conformation. Experiments with mixed VO2+ -Fe3+ transferrin complexes indicate that the same may be true of Fe3+. At pH 10.7, a new set of VO2+ resonances, labeled C, are observed; they possibly arise from a third conformation of the metal site. One bicarbonate or corbonate is required per VO2+ ion bound to the protein. 2.7 H+ are released per VO2+ bound in either the A or B conformations. The above results are discussed in terms of the "equivalence" and "nonequivalence" of the metal sites.  相似文献   

7.
The high-affinity metal-binding site of isolated F(1)-ATPase from beef heart mitochondria was studied by high-field (HF) continuous wave electron paramagnetic resonance (CW-EPR) and pulsed EPR spectroscopy, using Mn(II) as a paramagnetic probe. The protein F(1) was fully depleted of endogenous Mg(II) and nucleotides [stripped F(1) or MF1(0,0)] and loaded with stoichiometric Mn(II) and stoichiometric or excess amounts of ADP or adenosine 5'-(beta,gamma-imido)-triphosphate (AMPPNP). Mn(II) and nucleotides were added to MF1(0,0) either subsequently or together as preformed complexes. Metal-ADP inhibition kinetics analysis was performed showing that in all samples Mn(II) enters one catalytic site on a beta subunit. From the HF-EPR spectra, the zero-field splitting (ZFS) parameters of the various samples were obtained, showing that different metal-protein coordination symmetry is induced depending on the metal nucleotide addition order and the protein/metal/nucleotide molar ratios. The electron spin-echo envelope modulation (ESEEM) technique was used to obtain information on the interaction between Mn(II) and the (31)P nuclei of the metal-coordinated nucleotide. In the case of samples containing ADP, the measured (31)P hyperfine couplings clearly indicated coordination changes related to the metal nucleotide addition order and the protein/metal/nucleotide ratios. On the contrary, the samples with AMPPNP showed very similar ESEEM patterns, despite the remarkable differences present among their HF-EPR spectra. This fact has been attributed to changes in the metal-site coordination symmetry because of ligands not involving phosphate groups. The kinetic data showed that the divalent metal always induces in the catalytic site the high-affinity conformation, while EPR experiments in frozen solutions supported the occurrence of different precatalytic states when the metal and ADP are added to the protein sequentially or together as a preformed complex. The different states evolve to the same conformation, the metal(II)-ADP inhibited form, upon induction of the trisite catalytic activity. All our spectroscopic and kinetic data point to the active role of the divalent cation in creating a competent catalytic site upon binding to MF1, in accordance with previous evidence obtained for Escherichia coli and chloroplast F(1).  相似文献   

8.
Complexes of the oxocation of vanadyl(IV), VO2+, with pyruvate kinase from rabbit muscle have been investigated by steady-state kinetic assays and by EPR spectroscopy. Pyruvate kinase requires 2 eq of divalent cation for activity. VO2+ alone is a poor activator of the normal physiological reaction catalyzed by the enzyme and of the enzyme-catalyzed exchange of the methyl protons of pyruvate with solvent. VO2+ alone is, however, an activator of the enzyme-catalyzed phosphorylation of glycolate by ATP. VO2+ is more effective than Mg2+ in activation of the bicarbonate-dependent ATPase reaction of pyruvate kinase, and in the enzyme-catalyzed hydrolysis of phosphoenolpyruvate. EPR data show that VO2+ binds to the divalent cation site on the protein competitively with respect to Mg2+. The VO2+-enzyme complex has a high affinity for bicarbonate. Direct coordination of pyruvate, oxalate, and glycolate to the enzyme-bound VO2+ has been established by EPR measurements with specifically 17O-labeled forms of these compounds.  相似文献   

9.
The pancreas secretes primarily two types of metabolically important proteins: digestive enzymes and hormones. Lithostathine (LIT) is the only protein excreted from the pancreas that has no known digestive or hormonal activity. Human lithostathine is a 144-amino acid glycoprotein synthesized by the exocrine pancreas that has been implicated in various physiological functions, including inhibition of pancreatic stone formation. To better understand the physiological function of LIT, we expressed the recombinant LIT protein in Escherichia coli and measured its calcium binding properties by equilibrium dialysis and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy. Equilibrium dialysis with (45)Ca(2+) showed that LIT binds Ca(2+) with 1:1 stoichiometry. EPR studies using the divalent vanadyl (VO(2+)) ion as a paramagnetic substitute for Ca(2+) also showed that VO(2+) binds to LIT with a metal:protein binding stoichiometry of 1:1 and that VO(2+) competes with Ca(2+) in binding to LIT. Mutations of a cluster of acidic residues on the molecular surface (E30A, D31A, E33A, D37A, D72A, and D73A) resulted in almost complete loss (95-100%) of binding of Ca(2+) and VO(2+), showing that these residues are critical for calcium binding by LIT.  相似文献   

10.
11.
W Chen  W D Frasch 《Biochemistry》2001,40(25):7729-7735
Site-directed mutants Y317C, Y317E, Y317F, Y317G, and Y317K were made to the catch-loop tyrosine on the beta subunit of the chloroplast F(1)-ATPase in Chlamydomonas. EPR spectra of VO(2+)-ATP bound to site 3 of CF(1) from wild type and mutants were obtained. Every mutant changed the (51)V hyperfine parameters of the VO(2+) bound at this site in the catalytically active conformation of the enzyme but had no effect on these parameters in the form that predominates when the enzyme activity is latent. These results indicate that this residue is a ligand to the metal of the Mg(2+)-nucleotide complex that binds to the empty catalytic site. The mutations also decreased the k(cat) of the ATPase activity to a much greater extent than k(cat)/K(M). Thus, these mutations limit the rate of product (Mg(2+)-ADP and phosphate) release in the ATPase direction or, conversely, the initial binding of substrates in the ATP synthesis direction. On the basis of these observations, coordination of betaY317 by Mg(2+)-ADP that binds to the empty catalytic site provides a means by which substrate binding could trigger gamma subunit rotation and consequent conformation changes of beta subunits during ATP synthesis.  相似文献   

12.
Acetylene reduction by nitrogenase from Rhodospirillum rubrum, unlike that by other nitrogenases, was recently found by other investigators to require an activation of the iron protein of nitrogenase by an activating system comprising a chromatophore membrane component, adenosine 5'-triphosphate (ATP), and divalent metal ions. In an extension of this work, we observed that the same activating system was also required for nitrogenase-linked H(2) evolution. However, we found that, depending on their nitrogen nutrition regime, R. rubrum cells produced two forms of nitrogenase that differed in their Fe protein components. Cells whose nitrogen supply was totally exhausted before harvest yielded predominantly a form of nitrogenase (A) whose enzymatic activity was not governed by the activating system, whereas cells supplied up to harvest time with N(2) or glutamate yielded predominantly a form of nitrogenase (R) whose enzymatic activity was regulated by the activating system. An unexpected finding was the rapid (less than 10 min in some cases) intracellular conversion of nitrogenase A to nitrogenase R brought about by the addition to nitrogen-starved cells of glutamine, asparagine, or, particularly, ammonia. This finding suggests that mechanisms other than de novo protein synthesis were involved in the conversion of nitrogenase A to the R form. The molecular weights of the Fe protein and Mo-Fe protein components from nitrogenases A and R were the same. However, nitrogenase A appeared to be larger in size, because it had more Fe protein units per Mo-Fe protein than did nitrogenase R. A distinguishing property of the Fe protein from nitrogenase R was its ATP requirement. When combined with the Mo-Fe protein (from either nitrogenase A or nitrogenase R), the R form of Fe protein required a lower ATP concentration but bound or utilized more ATP molecules during acetylene reduction than did the A form of Fe protein. No differences between the Fe proteins from the two forms of nitrogenase were found in the electron paramagnetic resonance spectrum, midpoint oxidation-reduction potential, or sensitivity to iron chelators.  相似文献   

13.
The kinetics and spectroscopic properties of the single polypeptide and proteolytically cleaved form of recombinant Fe(3+)Fe(2+) human purple acid phosphatase (recHPAP) exhibit significant differences, primarily due to a difference in pK(es,1) (the value of an acid dissociation constant of the ES complex). These differences are due to the presence or absence, respectively, of an interaction between an aspartate residue in an exposed loop of the protein and one or more active site residues. To further explore the origin of these differences, the ferrous ion of recHPAP has been replaced by zinc. Analysis of the reconstituted Fe(3+)Zn(2+)recHPAP reveals an unexpected catalytic activity versus pH profile, in that the optimal pH is 6.3, similar to that of the proteolytically cleaved form (6.5). Moreover, replacement of the ferrous ion by zinc increases the turnover number more than 10-fold; the pK(es) values are also shifted as expected for the change in the divalent metal ion. Although the EPR spectra of both single polypeptide and proteolytically cleaved Fe(3+)Zn(2+)-recHPAP are independent of pH over the range 4.5-6.2, the visible spectrum of Fe(3+)Zn(2+)-recHPAP is pH dependent. These results suggest that the properties and environment of the divalent metal are important in determining the catalytic properties of mammalian PAPs, and in particular that a solvent molecule coordinated to the divalent metal ion may play a critical role in the catalytic cycle of these enzymes.  相似文献   

14.
The coordination environments of two distinct metal sites on the bacterial photosynthetic reaction center (RC) protein were probed with pulsed electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy. For these studies, Cu2+ was bound specifically to a surface site on native Fe2+-containing RCs from Rhodobacter sphaeroides R-26 and to the native non-heme Fe site in biochemically Fe-removed RCs. The cw and pulsed EPR results clearly indicate two spectroscopically different Cu2+ environments. In the dark, the RCs with Cu2+ bound to the surface site exhibit an axially symmetric EPR spectrum with g(parallel) = 2.24, A(parallel) = 160 G, g(perpendicular) = 2.06, whereas the values g(parallel) = 2.31, A(parallel) = 143 G, and g(perpendicular) = 2.07 were observed when Cu(2+) was substituted in the Fe site. Examination of the light-induced spectral changes indicate that the surface Cu2+ is at least 23 A removed from the primary donor (P+) and reduced quinone acceptor (QA-). Electron spin-echo envelope modulation (ESEEM) spectra of these Cu-RC proteins have been obtained and provide the first direct solution structural information about the ligands in the surface metal site. From these pulsed EPR experiments, modulations were observed that are consistent with multiple weakly hyperfine coupled 14N nuclei in close proximity to Cu2+, indicating that two or more histidines ligate the Cu2+ at the surface site. Thus, metal and EPR analyses confirm that we have developed reliable methods for stoichiometrically and specifically binding Cu2+ to a surface site that is distinct from the well characterized Fe site and support the view that Cu2+ is bound at or near the Zn site that modulates electron transfer between the quinones QA and QB (QA-QB --> QAQB-) (Utschig, L. M., Ohigashi, Y., Thurnauer, M. C., and Tiede, D. M (1998) Biochemistry 37, 8278-8281) and proton uptake by QB- (Paddock, M. L., Graige, M. S., Feher, G., and Okamura, M. Y. (1999) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 96, 6183-6188). Detailed EPR spectroscopic characterization of these Cu2+-RCs will provide a means to investigate the role of local protein environments in modulating electron and proton transfer.  相似文献   

15.
Recent evidence indicates that the prion protein (PrP) plays a role in copper metabolism in the central nervous system. The N-terminal region of human PrP contains four sequential copies of the highly conserved octarepeat sequence PHGGGWGQ spanning residues 60-91. This region selectively binds divalent copper ions (Cu(2+)) in vivo. To elucidate the specific mode and site of binding, we have studied a series of Cu(2+)-peptide complexes composed of 1-, 2-, and 4-octarepeats and several sub-octarepeat peptides, by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR, conventional X-band and low-frequency S-band) and circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy. At pH 7.45, two EPR active binding modes are observed where the dominant mode appears to involve coordination of three nitrogens and one oxygen to the copper ion, while in the minor mode two nitrogens and two oxygens coordinate. ESEEM spectra demonstrate that the histidine imidazole contributes one of these nitrogens. The truncated sequence HGGGW gives EPR and CD that are indistinguishable from the dominant binding mode observed for the multi-octarepeat sequences and may therefore comprise the fundamental Cu(2+) binding unit. Both EPR and CD titration experiments demonstrate rigorously a 1:1 Cu(2+)/octarepeat binding stoichiometry regardless of the number of octarepeats in a given peptide sequence. Detailed spin integration of the EPR signals demonstrates that all of the bound Cu(2+) is detected thereby ruling out strong exchange coupling that is often found when there is imidazolate bridging between paramagnetic metal centers. A model consistent with these data is proposed in which Cu(2+) is bound to the nitrogen of the histidine imidazole side chain and to two nitrogens from sequential glycine backbone amides.  相似文献   

16.
A purification procedure is described for the components of Bacillus polymyxa nitrogenase. The procedure requires the removal of interfering mucopolysaccharides before the two nitrogenase proteins can be purified by the methods used with other nitrogenase components. The highest specific activities obtained were 2750 nmol C2H4 formed . min-1 . mg-1 MoFe protein and 2521 nmol C2H4 formed . min-1 . mg-1 Fe protein. The MoFe protein has a molecular weight of 215 000 and contains 2 molybdenum atoms, 33 iron atoms and 21 atoms of acid-labile sulfur per protein molecule. The Fe protein contains 3.2 iron atoms and 3.6 acid-labile sulfur atoms per molecule of 55 500 molecular weight. Each Fe protein binds two ATP molecules. The EPR spectra are similar to those of other nitrogenase proteins. MgATP changes the EPR of the Fe protein from a rhombic to an axial-type signal.  相似文献   

17.
The Mg(2+) cofactor of the F(1)F(0) ATP synthase is required for the asymmetry of the catalytic sites that leads to the differences in affinity for nucleotides. Vanadyl (V(IV)=O)(2+) is a functional surrogate for Mg(2+) in the F(1)-ATPase. The (51)V-hyperfine parameters derived from EPR spectra of VO(2+) bound to specific sites on the enzyme provide a direct probe of the metal ligands at each site. Site-directed mutations of residues that serve as metal ligands were found to cause measurable changes in the (51)V-hyperfine parameters of the bound VO(2+), thereby providing a means by which metal ligands were identified in the functional enzyme in several conformations. At the low-affinity catalytic site comparable to beta(E) in mitochondrial F(1), activation of the chloroplast F(1)-ATPase activity induces a conformational change that inserts the P-loop threonine and catch-loop tyrosine hydroxyl groups into the metal coordination sphere thereby displacing an amino group and the Walker homology B aspartate. Kinetic evidence suggests that coordination of this tyrosine by the metal when the empty site binds substrate may provide an escapement mechanism that allows the gamma subunit to rotate and the conformation of the catalytic sites to change, thereby allowing rotation only when the catalytic sites are filled. In the high-affinity conformation analogous to the beta(DP) site of mitochondrial F(1), the catch-loop tyrosine has been displaced by carboxyl groups from the Walker homology B aspartate and from betaE197 in Chlamydomonas CF(1). Coordination of the metal by these carboxyl groups contributes significantly to the ability of the enzyme to bind the nucleotide with high affinity.  相似文献   

18.
F Rusnak  L Yu  S Todorovic  P Mertz 《Biochemistry》1999,38(21):6943-6952
The interaction of bacteriophage lambda protein phosphatase with Mn2+ was studied using biochemical techniques and electron paramagnetic resonance spectrometry. Reconstitution of bacteriophage lambda protein phosphatase in the presence of excess MnCl2 followed by rapid desalting over a gel filtration column resulted in the retention of approximately 1 equiv of Mn2+ ion bound to the protein. This was determined by metal analyses and low-temperature EPR spectrometry, the latter of which provided evidence of a mononuclear high-spin Mn2+ ion in a ligand environment of oxygen and nitrogen atoms. The Mn2+-reconstituted enzyme exhibited negligible phosphatase activity in the absence of added MnCl2. The EPR spectrum of the mononuclear species disappeared upon the addition of a second equivalent of Mn2+ and was replaced by a spectrum attributed to an exchange-coupled (Mn2+)2 cluster. EPR spectra of the dinuclear (Mn2+)2 cluster were characterized by the presence of multiline features with a hyperfine splitting of 39 G. Temperature-dependent studies indicated that these features arose from an excited state. Titrations of the apoprotein with MnCl2 provided evidence of one Mn2+ binding site with a micromolar affinity and at least one additional Mn2+ site with a 100-fold lower affinity. The dependence of the phosphatase activity on Mn2+ concentration indicates that full enzyme activity probably requires occupation of both Mn2+ sites. These results are discussed in the context of divalent metal ion activation of this enzyme and possible roles for Mn2+ activation of other serine/threonine protein phosphatases.  相似文献   

19.
Imidazole glycerol phosphate dehydratase (IGPD) catalyses the dehydration of imidazole glycerol phosphate to imidazole acetol phosphate, an important late step in the biosynthesis of histidine. IGPD, isolated as a low molecular weight and inactive apo-form, assembles with specific divalent metal cations to form a catalytically active high molecular weight metalloenzyme. Oxo-vanadium ions also assemble the protein into, apparently, the same high molecular weight form but, uniquely, yield a protein without catalytic activity. The VO2+ derivative of IGPD has been investigated by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR), electron nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) and electron spin echo envelope modulation (ESEEM) spectroscopy. The spin Hamiltonian parameters indicate the presence of multiple 14N nuclei in the inner coordination sphere of VO2+ which is corroborated by ENDOR and ESEEM spectra showing resonances attributable to interactions with 14N nuclei. The isotropic superhyperfine coupling component of about 7 MHz determined by ENDOR is consistent with a nitrogen of coordinated histidine imidazole(s). The ESEEM Fourier-transform spectra further support the notion that the VO2+ substituted enzyme contains inner-sphere nitrogen ligands. The isotropic and anisotropic 14N superhyperfine coupling components are similar to those reported for other equatorially coordinated enzymatic histidine imidazole systems. ESEEM resonances from axial 14N ligands are discussed.  相似文献   

20.
Investigations of metal-substituted human lactoferrins by fluorescence, resonance Raman, and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy confirm the close similarity between lactoferrin and serum transferrin. As in the case of Fe(III)- and Cu(II)-transferrin, a significant quenching of apolactoferrin's intrinsic fluorescence is caused by the interaction of Fe(III), Cu(II), Cr(III), Mn(III), and Co(III) with specific metal binding sites. Laser excitation of these same metal-lactoferrins produces resonance Raman spectral features at ca. 1605, 1505, 1275, and 1175 cm-1. These bands are characteristic of tyrosinate coordination to the metal ions as has been observed previously for serum transferins and permit the principal absorption band (lambda max between 400 and 465 nm) in each of the metal-lactoferrins to be assigned to charge transfer between the metal ion and tyrosinate ligands. Furthermore, as in serum transferrin the two metal binding sites in lactoferrin can be distinguished by EPR spectroscopy, particularly with the Cr(III)-substituted protein. Only one of the two sites in lactoferrin allows displacement of Cr(III) by Fe(III). Lactoferrin is known to differ from serum transferrin in its enhanced affinity for iron. This is supported by kinetic studies which show that the rate of uptake of Fe(III) from Fe(III)--citrate is 10 times faster for apolactoferrin than for apotransferrin. Furthermore, the more pronounced conformational change which occurs upon metal binding to lactoferrin is corroborated by the production of additional EPR-detectable Cu(II) binding sites in Mn(III)-lactoferrin. The lower pH required for iron removal from lactoferrin causes some permanent change in the protein as judged by altered rates of Fe(III) uptake and altered EPR spectra in the presence of Cu(II). Thus, the common method of producing apolactoferrin by extensive dialysis against citric acid (pH 2) appears to have an adverse effect on the protein.  相似文献   

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