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1.
Tyrosine 34 is a prominent and conserved residue in the active site of the manganese superoxide dismutases in organisms from bacteria to man. We have prepared the mutant containing the replacement Tyr 34 --> Phe (Y34F) in human manganese superoxide dismutase (hMnSOD) and crystallized it in two different crystal forms, orthorhombic and hexagonal. Crystal structures of hMnSOD Y34F have been solved to 1.9 A resolution in a hexagonal crystal form, denoted as Y34Fhex, and to 2.2 A resolution in an orthorhombic crystal form, denoted as Y34Fortho. Both crystal forms give structures that are closely superimposable with that of wild-type hMnSOD, with the phenyl rings of Tyr 34 in the wild type and Phe 34 in the mutant very similar in orientation. Therefore, in Y34F, a hydrogen-bonded relay that links the metal-bound hydroxyl to ordered solvent (Mn-OH to Gln 143 to Tyr 34 to H2O to His 30) is broken. Surprisingly, the loss of the Tyr 34 hydrogen bonds resulted in large increases in stability (measured by Tm), suggesting that the Tyr 34 hydroxyl does not play a role in stabilizing active-site architecture. The functional role of the side chain hydroxyl of Tyr 34 can be evaluated by comparison of the Y34F mutant with the wild-type hMnSOD. Both wild-type and Y34F had kcat/Km near 10(9) M-1 s-1, close to diffusion-controlled; however, Y34F showed kcat for maximal catalysis smaller by 10-fold than the wild type. In addition, the mutant Y34F was more susceptible to product inhibition by peroxide than the wild-type enzyme. This activity profile and the breaking of the hydrogen-bonding chain at the active site caused by the replacement Tyr 34 --> Phe suggest that Tyr 34 is a proton donor for O2* - reduction to H2O2 or is involved indirectly by orienting solvent or other residues for proton transfer. Up to 100 mM buffers in solution failed to enhance catalysis by either Y34F or the wild-type hMnSOD, suggesting that protonation from solution cannot enhance the release of the inhibiting bound peroxide ion, likely reflecting the enclosure of the active site by conserved residues as shown by the X-ray structures. The increased thermostability of the mutant Y34F and equal diffusion-controlled activity of Y34F and wild-type enzymes with normal superoxide levels suggest that evolutionary conservation of active-site residues in metalloenzymes reflects constraints from extreme rather than average cellular conditions. This new hypothesis that extreme rather than normal substrate concentrations are a powerful constraint on residue conservation may apply most strongly to enzyme defenses where the ability to meet extreme conditions directly affects cell survival.  相似文献   

2.
Crystal structures of human hexokinase I reveal identical binding sites for phosphate and the 6-phosphoryl group of glucose 6-phosphate in proximity to Gly87, Ser88, Thr232, and Ser415, a binding site for the pyranose moiety of glucose 6-phosphate in proximity to Asp84, Asp413, and Ser449, and a single salt link involving Arg801 between the N- and C-terminal halves. Purified wild-type and mutant enzymes (Asp84 --> Ala, Gly87 --> Tyr, Ser88 --> Ala, Thr232 --> Ala, Asp413 --> Ala, Ser415 --> Ala, Ser449 --> Ala, and Arg801 --> Ala) were studied by kinetics and circular dichroism spectroscopy. All eight mutant hexokinases have kcat and Km values for substrates similar to those of wild-type hexokinase I. Inhibition of wild-type enzyme by 1,5-anhydroglucitol 6-phosphate is consistent with a high affinity binding site (Ki = 50 microM) and a second, low affinity binding site (Kii = 0.7 mM). The mutations of Asp84, Gly87, and Thr232 listed above eliminate inhibition because of the low affinity site, but none of the eight mutations influence Ki of the high affinity site. Relief of 1,5-anhydroglucitol 6-phosphate inhibition by phosphate for Asp84 --> Ala, Ser88 --> Ala, Ser415 --> Ala, Ser449 --> Ala and Arg801 --> Ala mutant enzymes is substantially less than that of wild-type hexokinase and completely absent in the Gly87 --> Tyr and Thr232 --> Ala mutants. The results support several conclusions. (i) The phosphate regulatory site is at the N-terminal domain as identified in crystal structures. (ii) The glucose 6-phosphate binding site at the N-terminal domain is a low affinity site and not the high affinity site associated with potent product inhibition. (iii) Arg801 participates in the regulatory mechanism of hexokinase I.  相似文献   

3.
Recoverin is a small calcium binding protein involved in regulation of the phototransduction cascade in retinal rod cells. It functions as a calcium sensor by undergoing a cooperative, ligand-dependent conformational change, resulting in the extrusion of the N-terminal myristoyl group from a hydrophobic pocket. To test the role of certain core residues in tuning this allosteric switch, we have made and characterized two mutants: W31K, which replaces Trp31 with Lys; and a double mutant, I52A/Y53A, in which Ile52 and Tyr53 are both replaced by Ala. These mutations decrease the hydrophobicity of the myristoyl binding pocket. They are thus expected to make sequestering of the myristoyl group less favorable and destabilize the Ca2+-free state. As predicted, the myristoylated forms of the mutants exhibit increased affinity for Ca2+, whether monitored by equilibrium binding of 45Ca2+ (Kd = 17.2, 7.9, and 8.1 microM for wild type, W31K, and I52A/Y53A, respectively) or by the change in tryptophan fluorescence associated with the conformational change (Kd = 17.9, 3.6, and 4.4 microM for wild type, W31K, and I52A/Y53A, respectively). The mutants also exhibit decreased cooperativity of binding (Hill coefficient = 1.2 and 1.0 for W31K and I52A/Y53A vs 1. 4 for wild type). Binding of the mutant proteins to rod outer segment membranes occurs at lower Ca2+ concentrations compared to wild-type protein (K1/2 = 5.6, 2.2, and 1.0 microM for wild type, W31K, and I52A/Y53A, respectively). The unmyristoylated forms of the mutants exhibit biphasic Ca2+ binding curves, nearly identical to that observed for wild type. The binding data for the two mutants can be explained by a concerted allosteric model in which the mutations affect only the equilibrium constant L between the two allosteric forms, T (the Ca2+-free form) and R (the Ca2+-bound form), without affecting the intrinsic binding constants for the two Ca2+ sites. Two-dimensional NMR spectra of the Ca2+-free forms of the mutants have been compared to the wild-type spectrum, whose peaks have been assigned to specific residues (1). Many resonances assigned to residues in the C-terminal domain (residues 100-202) in the wild-type spectrum are identical in the mutant spectra, suggesting that the backbone structure of the C-terminal domain is probably unchanged in both mutants. The N-terminal domain, in which both mutations are located, reveals in each case numerous changes of undetermined spatial extent.  相似文献   

4.
The enzymatic properties and the three-dimensional structure of spinach glycolate oxidase which has the active-site Tyr129 replaced by Phe (Y129F glycolate oxidase) has been studied. The structure of the mutant is unperturbed which facilitates interpretation of the biochemical data. Y129F glycolate oxidase has an absorbance spectrum with maxima at 364 and 450 nm (epsilon max = 11400 M-1 cm-1). The spectrum indicates that the flavin is in its normal protonated form, i.e. the Y129F mutant does not lower the pKa of the N(3) of oxidized flavin as does the wild-type enzyme [Macheroux, P., Massey, V., Thiele, D. J., and Volokita, M. (1991) Biochemistry 30, 4612-4619]. This was confirmed by a pH titration of Y129F glycolate oxidase which showed that the pKa is above pH 9. In contrast to wild-type glycolate oxidase, oxalate does not perturb the absorbance spectrum of Y129F glycolate oxidase. Moreover oxalate does not inhibit the enzymatic activity of the mutant enzyme. Typical features of wild-type glycolate oxidase that are related to a positively charged lysine side chain near the flavin N(1)-C(2 = O), such as stabilization of the anionic flavin semiquinone and formation of tight N(5)-sulfite adducts, are all conserved in the Y129F mutant protein. Y129F glycolate oxidase exhibited about 3.5% of the wild-type activity. The lower turnover number for the mutant of 0.74 s-1 versus 20 s-1 for the wild-type enzyme amounts to an increase of the energy of the transition state of about 7.8 kJ/mol. Steady-state analysis gave Km values of 1.5 mM and 7 microM for glycolate and oxygen, respectively. The Km for glycolate is slightly higher than that found for wild-type glycolate oxidase (1 mM) whereas the Km for oxygen is much lower. As was the case for wild-type glycolate oxidase, reduction was found to be the rate-limiting step in catalysis, with a rate of 0.63 s-1. The kinetic properties of Y129F glycolate oxidase provide evidence that the main function of the hydroxyl group of Tyr129 is the stabilization of the transition state.  相似文献   

5.
In thermolysin, tryptophan 115 seems to be at the S2 subsite. Trp-115 was replaced with tyrosine, phenylalanine, leucine, and valine during site-directed mutagenesis in order to evaluate the role of Trp-115 in the proteolytic activity of thermolysin. The mutant enzymes with Tyr-115 or Phe-115 had as much proteolytic activity as the wild-type enzyme, but the other two mutant enzymes had no activity. We found earlier that the substitution of Trp-115 with alanine, glutamic acid, lysine, and glutamine causes the enzyme to lose all activity, so an aromatic amino acid at position 115 seems to be essential for thermolysin.  相似文献   

6.
A core Y61F mutant of the gene 5 single-stranded DNA-binding protein (g5p) of f1 bacterial virus aggregated when expressed from a plasmid, but, after refolding in vitro, it behaved much like wild-type and may be a stability or folding mutant. Circular dichroism (CD) titrations showed the same cooperative polynucleotide binding modes for Y61F and wild-type g5p. There are n = 4 and n congruent with 2.5 modes for binding to poly[d(A)] at low ionic strengths, but n = 4, n = 3, and n congruent with 2-2.5 modes for binding to fd single-stranded viral DNA (fd ssDNA), where n is the number of nucleotides occluded by each bound g5p monomer in a given mode. Y61F g5p has slightly reduced affinity in the n = 4 mode. Electron microscopy showed that Y61F g5p forms left-handed nucleoprotein superhelices indistinguishable from wild-type. Progression from binding to fd ssDNA in the n = 4 to n = 3 to n congruent with 2-2.5 mode is accompanied by an increase in the number of helical turns, an increase from (7.7 +/- 0.3) to (9.5 +/- 0.3) to ( approximately 10-13) g5p dimers per turn, and a decrease in the number of DNA nucleotides per turn. From CD spectra for four of five possible Y --> F g5p mutants, we infer that the fifth tyrosine, Tyr 56, contributes strongly to the CD. Retention of a strong 229 nm CD band in all mutants indicates that all retain elements of the native structure. Spectra of Y26F, Y34F, and Y61F g5p imply limited mobility of the replacement Phe. Comparison of measured with calculated CD spectra also suggests limited mobility for Tyr 26 and Tyr 34 in g5p in solution, and provides new information that the g5p structure in solution may be dominated by Tyr 41 rotamers differing from that stabilized in the crystal.  相似文献   

7.
We have studied the role of a highly conserved tryptophan and other aromatic residues of the thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) receptor (TRH-R) that are predicted by computer modeling to form a hydrophobic cluster between transmembrane helix (TM)5 and TM6. The affinity of a mutant TRH-R, in which Trp279 was substituted by alanine (W279A TRH-R), for most tested agonists was higher than that of wild-type (WT) TRH-R, whereas its affinity for inverse agonists was diminished, suggesting that W279A TRH-R is constitutively active. We found that W279A TRH-R exhibited 3.9-fold more signaling activity than WT TRH-R in the absence of agonist. This increased basal activity was inhibited by the inverse agonist midazolam, confirming that the mutant receptor is constitutively active. Computer-simulated models of the unoccupied WT TRH-R, the TRH-occupied WT TRH-R, and various TRH-R mutants predict that a hydrophobic cluster of residues, including Trp279 (TM6), Tyr282, and Phe199 (TM5), constrains the receptor in an inactive conformation. In support of this model, we found that substitution of Phe199 by alanine or of Tyr282 by alanine or phenylalanine, but not of Tyr200 (by alanine or phenylalanine), resulted in a constitutively active receptor. We propose that a hydrophobic cluster including residues in TM5 and TM6 constrains the TRH-R in an inactive conformation via interhelical interactions. Disruption of these constraints by TRH binding or by mutation leads to changes in the relative positions of TM5 and TM6 and to the formation of an active form of TRH-R.  相似文献   

8.
Antibodies directed to the A2 domain of factor VIII (fVIII) are usually an important component of the polyclonal response in patients who have clinically significant inhibitory antibodies to fVIII. A major determinant of the A2 epitope has been located by homolog scanning mutagenesis using recombinant hybrid human/porcine fVIII molecules to a sequence bounded by Arg484-Ile508 (Healey, J. F. , Lubin, I. M., Nakai, H., Saenko, E. L., Hoyer, L. W., Scandella, D. , and Lollar, P. (1995) J. Biol. Chem. 270, 14505-14509). Within this region, human residues Arg484, Pro485, Tyr487, Ser488, Arg489, Pro492, Val495, Phe501, and Ile508 differ from porcine fVIII. We stably expressed in mammalian cells nine active B-domainless human fVIII molecules containing single alanine substitutions at these sites. Their inhibition by a murine anti-A2 monoclonal antibody, monoclonal antibody (mAb) 413, and by three A2-specific alloimmune and two A2-specific autoimmune human inhibitor plasmas was measured by the Bethesda assay. The inhibition of Arg484 --> Ala, Tyr487 --> Ala, Arg489 --> Ala, and Arg492 --> Ala by mAb413 was reduced by greater than 90% compared with wild-type, B-domainless human fVIII. mAb413 inhibited the most severely affected mutant, Arg489 --> Ala, 0.01% as well as wild-type fVIII. For all five patient plasmas, the Tyr487 --> Ala mutant displayed the greatest reduction in inhibition. The inhibition of the Tyr487 --> Ala mutant by these antibodies ranged from 10% to 20% that of wild-type fVIII. The inhibition of the Ser488 --> Ala, Arg489 --> Ala, Pro492 --> Ala, Val495 --> Ala, Phe501 --> Ala, and Ile508 --> Ala mutants by most of the plasmas also was significantly reduced. In contrast, the Arg484 --> Ala and Pro485 --> Ala mutants were relatively unaffected. Thus, although mAb413 binds to the same region as human A2 inhibitors, it recognizes a different set of amino acid side chains. The side chains recognized by human A2 inhibitors appear to be similar, despite the differing immune settings that give rise to fVIII alloantibodies and autoantibodies.  相似文献   

9.
The effects of solvent polarity, heavy atoms and sulphur-containing compounds on the fluorescence and phosphorescence of indole and tryptophan have been investigated. The low-temperature luminescence of a group of dipeptides containing tryptophan is also reported. The phosphorescence to fluorescence quantum yield ratio and the phosphorescence lifetime are shown to be particularly sensitive to environmental factors. The relevance of these results to the interpretation of protein luminescence spectra is briefly discussed.  相似文献   

10.
A previous study performed using steady state fluorescence has revealed the existence of residual structures surrounding the two tryptophan residues in an unfolded form of yeast phosphoglycerate kinase [Garcia, P., et al. (1995) Biochemistry 34, 397-404]. In this paper, we present a more detailed characterization of these residual structures, through the study of two single tryptophan-containing mutants of yPGK, W333F and W308Y. Denaturation experiments have first been performed at low temperatures to assess the nature of the interactions stabilizing these residual structures. On the other hand, the compactness and dynamics of the protein matrix were probed using tryptophan fluorescence quenching by acrylamide at various denaturant concentrations. Taking into consideration the changes in sample viscosity induced by addition of guanidinium chloride made feasible the use of this technique during the denaturation process. These different approaches have shown that the residual structures around tryptophan 308 are mainly stabilized by hydrophobic interactions and are more compact and less fluctuant than the ones surrounding tryptophan 333. Native and denatured yPGK have also been studied by time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy. In the native protein, tryptophan buried in the core, W333, is mainly associated with a lifetime close to 0.1 ns, whereas tryptophan that is partially accessible to the solvent, W308, has a lifetime close to 0. 5 ns. The time-resolved tryptophan fluorescence emission of wild-type yPGK can be accounted for quantitatively by the summed emissions of its two single tryptophan mutants. The significance of minor long lifetime components is discussed for the two tryptophan residues. This new assignment of fluorescent decay times has allowed for the detection of a folding intermediate in which the environment of tryptophan 333 is modified for denaturant concentrations lower than those for tryptophan 308.  相似文献   

11.
The effects of the solvent conditions (buffer pH 9, 8, or 7 or buffer pH 6.5 alone or mixed with 3.2% ethanol or 6.2% formamide) on the protein dynamics of horse apomyoglobin were investigated through tryptophan fluorescence quenching, spectra, and decay properties. Raising the pH (which induces discontinuous protein conformation changes) increases the structural fluctuations inside the hydrophobic A, G, and H helix core. Mixed solutions containing either 3.2% ethanol or 6.2% formamide (which redistribute water molecules on the protein surface) produce protein dynamics changes in the vicinity of the two Trp residues, without inducing particular constraints on these very residues. Formamide increases, in the same way, the polarity and the protein flexibility while ethanol reduces both. The present fluorescence work also shows that, whatever the outside solvent, the two Trp residues W7 and W14, embedded in the A, G, and H helix core, are equally and statistically reached by small molecules diffusing inside the protein matrix. Hydrogen-tritium exchange measurements on the protein in mixed solvents reveal that the dynamics of the A, G, and H helix cluster and of the B and E helixes are greatly influenced by the nature of the outside medium. A small amount of formamide in the buffer increases the protein fluctuations while an ethanol-water mixture reduces them. We suggest that the hydratation state of the protein surface could be the relevant parameter of the protein dynamics.  相似文献   

12.
Three-dimensional structures of cyclodextrin glucanotransferases (CGTases) have revealed that four aromatic residues, which are highly conserved among CGTases but not found in alpha-amylases, are located in the active center. To analyze the roles of these aromatic residues, Phe-183, Tyr-195, Phe-259, and Phe-283 of Bacillus sp. 1011 CGTase were replaced by site-directed mutagenesis, and the effects of this procedure were examined. Y195L-CGTase, in which Tyr-195 was replaced by a leucine residue, underwent a drastic change in its cyclization characteristics: it produced considerably more gamma-cyclodextrin than the wild-type enzyme and virtually no alpha-cyclodextrin. Y195L-CGTase had increased Km values for cyclodextrins, whereas the values for a linear maltooligosaccharide donor were insignificantly changed. Taken together with the structural information of CGTase crystals soaked with substrates, we propose that Tyr-195 plays an important role in the spiral binding of substrate. Replacing either Phe-183 or Phe-259 with leucine induced increased Km values for acceptors. Furthermore, the double mutant F183L/F259L-CGTase had considerably decreased cyclization efficiency, but the intermolecular transglycosylation activity remained normal. These results indicated that Phe-183 and Phe-259 are cooperatively involved in acceptor binding, and that they play a critical role in cyclization when the nonreducing end of amylose binds to the active center of CGTase. Replacing Phe-283 with a leucine residue induced a decrease in kcat and in affinity for acarbose, suggesting that Phe-283 is involved in transition-state stabilization.  相似文献   

13.
Previously, we reported that replacement of the region from the fifth transmembrane domain to the C-terminus of kappa-opioid receptor with the corresponding region of mu-opioid receptor gives high affinity for [D-Ala2, N-MePhe4, Gly-ol5]enkephalin (DAMGO), a mu-opioid receptor-selective ligand, to the resultant chimeric receptor, suggesting that the difference in the amino acid sequence within this region is critical for the discrimination between mu- and kappa-opioid receptors by DAMGO. In the present study, we constructed further six mu/kappa-chimeric receptors and revealed that at least two separate regions around the third extracellular loop are critical for the discrimination between mu- and kappa-opioid receptors by DAMGO. Furthermore, we constructed several mutant receptors by a site-directed mutagenesis technique and found that the difference between Glu297 of kappa-opioid receptor and Lys303 of mu-opioid receptor in one region, and the difference between Ser310, Tyr312 and Tyr313 of kappa-opioid receptor and Val316, Trp318 and His319 of mu-opioid receptor in the other region, are critical for the discrimination between these receptors by DAMGO. The mutant receptor, kappa (E297K + Y313H + Y312W + S310V), in which the Glu297, Ser310, Tyr312 and Tyr313 of kappa-opioid receptor were changed to Lys, Val, Trp and His, respectively, bound to DAMGO with high affinity (Kd = 8.7 +/- 1.2 nM) and efficiently mediated the inhibitory effect of DAMGO on intracellular cAMP accumulation. The present results showed that these four amino acid residues act as determinants for the discrimination between mu- and kappa-opioid receptors by DAMGO.  相似文献   

14.
In Rhodobacter capsulatus, we constructed a quadruple mutant that reversed a structural asymmetry that contributes to the functional asymmetry of the two quinone sites. In the photosynthetically incompetent quadruple mutant RQ, two acidic residues near QB, L212Glu and L213Asp, have been mutated to Ala; conversely, in the QA pocket, the symmetry-related residues M246Ala and M247Ala have been mutated to Glu and Asp. We have selected photocompetent phenotypic revertants (designated RQrev3 and RQrev4) that carry compensatory mutations in both the QA and QB pockets. Near QA, the M246Ala --> Glu mutation remains in both revertants, but M247Asp is replaced by Tyr in RQrev3 and by Ala in RQrev4. The engineered L212Ala and L213Ala substitutions remain in the QB site of both revertants but are accompanied by an additional electrostatic-type mutation. To probe the respective influences of the mutations occurring near the QA and QB sites on electron and proton transfer, we have constructed two additional types of strains. First, "half" revertants were constructed that couple the QB site of the revertants with a wild-type QA site. Second, the QA sites of the two revertants were linked with the L212Glu-L213Asp --> Ala-Ala mutations of the QB site. We have studied the electron and proton-transfer kinetics on the first and second flashes in reaction centers from these strains by flash-induced absorption spectroscopy. Our data demonstrate that substantial improvements of the proton-transfer capabilities occur in the strains carrying the M246Ala --> Glu + M247Ala --> Tyr mutations near QA. Interestingly, this is not observed when only the M246Ala --> Glu mutation is present in the QA pocket. We suggest that the M247Ala --> Tyr mutation in the QA pocket, or possibly the coupled M246Ala --> Glu + M247Ala --> Tyr mutations, accelerates the uptake and delivery of protons to the QB anions. The M247Tyr substitution may enable additional pathways for proton transfer that are located near QA.  相似文献   

15.
BACKGROUND: The rising number of vancomycin-resistant enterococci (VREs) is a major concern to modern medicine because vancomycin is currently the 'last resort' drug for life-threatening infections. The D-alanyl-D-X ligases (where X is an hydroxy or amino acid) of bacteria catalyze a critical step in bacterial cell-wall peptidoglycan assembly. In bacteria that produce glycopeptide antibiotics and in opportunistic pathogens, including VREs, D-, D-ligases serve as switches that confer antibiotic resistance on the bacteria themselves. Peptidoglycans in vancomycin-sensitive bacteria end in D-alanyl-D-alanine, whereas in vancomycin-resistant bacteria they end in D-alanyl-D-lactate or D-alanyl-D-serine. RESULTS: We demonstrate that the selective utilization of D-serine by the Enterococcus casseliflavus VanC2 ligase can be altered by mutagenesis of one of two residues identified by homology to the X-ray structure of the Escherichia coli D-alanyl-Dalanine ligase (DdlB). The Arg322-->Met (R322M) and Phe250-->Tyr (F250Y) ligase mutants show a 36-44-fold decrease in the use of D-serine, as well as broadened specificity for utilization of other D-amino acids in place of D-serine. The F250Y R322M double mutant is effectively disabled as a D-alanyl-D-serine ligase and retains 10% of the catalytic activity of wild-type D-alanyl-D-alanine ligases, reflecting a 6,000-fold switch to the D-alanyl-D-alanine peptide. Correspondingly, the Leu282-->Arg mutant of the wild-type E. coli DdlB produced a 560-fold switch towards D-alanyl-D-serine formation. CONCLUSIONS: Single-residue changes in the active-site regions of D-, D-ligases can cause substantial changes in recognition and activation of hydroxy or amino acids that have consequences for glycopeptide antibiotic efficacy. The observations reported here should provide an approach for combatting antibiotic-resistant bacteria.  相似文献   

16.
In the present study we examine the role of transmembrane aromatic residues of the delta-opioid receptor in ligand recognition. Three-dimensional computer modeling of the receptor allowed to identify an aromatic pocket within the helices bundle which spans transmembrane domains (Tms) III to VII and consists of tyrosine, phenylalanine, and tryptophan residues. Their contribution to opioid binding was assessed by single amino acid replacement: Y129F and Y129A (Tm III), W173A (Tm IV), F218A and F222A (Tm V), W274A (Tm VI), and Y308F (Tm VII). Scatchard analysis shows that mutant receptors, transfected into COS cells, are expressed at levels comparable with that of the wild-type receptor. Binding properties of a set of representative opioids were examined. Mutations at position 129 most dramatically affected the binding of all tested ligands (up to 430-fold decrease of deltorphin II binding at Y129A), with distinct implication of the hydroxyl group and the aromatic ring, depending on the ligand under study. Affinity of most ligands was also reduced at Y308F mutant (up to 10-fold). Tryptophan residues seemed implicated in the recognition of specific ligand classes, with reduced binding for endogenous peptides at W173A mutant (up to 40-fold) and for nonselective alkaloids at W274A mutant (up to 65-fold). Phenylalanine residues in Tm V appeared poorly involved in opioid binding as compared with other aromatic amino acids examined. Generally, the binding of highly selective delta ligands (TIPPpsi, naltrindole, and BW373U86) was weakly modified by these mutations. Noticeably, TIPPpsi binding was enhanced at W274A receptor by 5-fold. Conclusions from our study are: (i) aromatic amino acid residues identified by the model contribute to ligand recognition, with a preponderant role of Y129; (ii) these residues, which are conserved across opioid receptor subtypes, may be part of a general opioid binding domain; (iii) each ligand-receptor interaction is unique, as demonstrated by the specific binding pattern observed for each tested opioid compound.  相似文献   

17.
Phenyl-deuterated tyrosine (Tyr-d4) and indole-deuterated tryptophan (Trp-d5) have been selectively incorporated into hemoglobin (Hb) by expressing the gene in auxotrophic strains of Escherichia coli. Ultraviolet resonance Raman (UVRR) spectra, using 229-nm excitation, show that difference features characteristic of the Hb quaternary R --> T transition are not perturbed by the incorporation of the isotopes. All the UVRR bands between 800 and 1700 cm-1 are assigned to either Tyr or Trp except for the 1511 cm-1 band, which had been thought to arise from the Trp 2 x W18 overtone. This band does not shift upon Trp or Tyr labeling but does shift 5 cm-1 in D2O, suggesting assignment to a histidine (His) residue. Its intensification in the T-state is consistent with His protonation. The alpha- and beta-subunits were selectively labeled, by reconstitution of labeled subunits with unlabeled subunits, to make isotope hybrids. Selective Tyr labeling identified the alpha subunits as the locus of the Y8a upshift observed in Hb, supporting the previous inference that this shift is associated with the T-state H-bond involving the interfacial Tyr alpha42 [Rodgers, Su, Subramaniam, & Spiro (1992) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 114, 3697]. Selective Trp labeling showed the Trp alpha14 contributions to the T - R difference spectrum to be negligible and confirmed Trp beta37 as the locus of the W3 difference signal, and probably of the remaining Trp signals as well. The observed downshift of W17 and upshift of Wd5 in the T-state are consistent with a stronger T-state H-bond between Trp beta37 and Asp alpha94; the resulting excitation profile red shift accounts for the dominance of the Trp beta37 contribution to the T - R difference UVRR spectrum.  相似文献   

18.
We have studied mu-conotoxin (mu-CTX) block of rat skeletal muscle sodium channel (rSkM1) currents in which single amino acids within the pore (P-loop) were substituted with cysteine. Among 17 cysteine mutants expressed in Xenopus oocytes, 7 showed significant alterations in sensitivity to mu-CTX compared to wild-type rSkM1 channel (IC50 = 17.5 +/- 2.8 nM). E758C and D1241C were less sensitive to mu-CTX block (IC50 = 220 +/- 39 nM and 112 +/- 24 nM, respectively), whereas the tryptophan mutants W402C, W1239C, and W1531C showed enhanced mu-CTX sensitivity (IC50 = 1.9 +/- 0.1, 4.9 +/- 0.9, and 5.5 +/- 0.4 nM, respectively). D400C and Y401C also showed statistically significant yet modest (approximately twofold) changes in sensitivity to mu-CTX block compared to WT (p < 0.05). Application of the negatively charged, sulfhydryl-reactive compound methanethiosulfonate-ethylsulfonate (MTSES) enhanced the toxin sensitivity of D1241C (IC50 = 46.3 +/- 12 nM) while having little effect on E758C mutant channels (IC50 = 199.8 +/- 21.8 nM). On the other hand, the positively charged methanethiosulfonate-ethylammonium (MTSEA) completely abolished the mu-CTX sensitivity of E758C (IC50 > 1 microM) and increased the IC50 of D1241C by about threefold. Applications of MTSEA, MTSES, and the neutral MTSBN (benzyl methanethiosulfonate) to the tryptophan-to-cysteine mutants partially or fully restored the wild-type mu-CTX sensitivity, suggesting that the bulkiness of the tryptophan's indole group is a determinant of toxin binding. In support of this suggestion, the blocking IC50 of W1531A (7.5 +/- 1.3 nM) was similar to W1531C, whereas W1531Y showed reduced toxin sensitivity (14.6 +/- 3.5 nM) similar to that of the wild-type channel. Our results demonstrate that charge at positions 758 and 1241 are important for mu-CTX toxin binding and further suggest that the tryptophan residues within the pore in domains I, III, and IV negatively influence toxin-channel interaction.  相似文献   

19.
Escherichia coli ribonuclease P (RNase P), a ribonucleoprotein complex which primarily functions in tRNA biosynthesis, is composed of a catalytic RNA subunit, M1 RNA, and a protein cofactor, C5 protein. The fluorescence emission spectrum of the single tryptophan residue-containing C5 protein exhibits maxima at 318 nm and 332 nm. Based on a comparison of the emission spectra of wild-type C5 protein and some of its mutant derivatives, we have determined that the 318 nm maximum could be the result of a complex formed in the excited state as a result of hydrophobic interactions between Trp109, Phe18 and Phe73. The analogous tryptophan fluorescence emission spectra of wild-type C5 protein and the barstar mutant W38F/W44F, taken together with the detailed structural information available for barstar, provide a possible explanation for the unusual emission spectrum of C5 protein.  相似文献   

20.
Tyr114 and Tyr197 are highly conserved residues in the active site of human glutathione reductase, Tyr114 in the glutathione disulfide (GSSG) binding site and Tyr197 in the NADPH site. Mutation of either residue has profound effects on catalysis. Y197S and Y114L have 17% and 14% the activity of the wild-type enzyme, respectively. Mutation of Tyr197, in the NADPH site, leads to a decrease in Km for GSSG, and mutation of Tyr114, in the GSSG site, leads to a decrease in Km for NADPH. This behavior is predicted for enzymes operating by a ping-pong mechanism where both half-reactions partially limit turnover. Titration of the wild-type enzyme or Y114L with NADPH proceeds in two phases, Eox to EH2 and EH2 to EH2-NADPH. In contrast, Y197S reacts monophasically, showing that excess NADPH fails to enhance the absorbance of the thiolate-FAD charge-transfer complex, the predominant EH2 form of glutathione reductase. The reductive half-reactions of the wild-type enzyme and of Y114L are similar; FAD reduction is fast (approximately 500 s-1 at 4 degreesC) and thiolate-FAD charge-transfer complex formation has a rate of 100 s-1. In Y197S, these rates are only 78 and 5 s-1, respectively. The oxidative half-reaction, the rate of reoxidation of EH2 by GSSG, of the wild-type enzyme is approximately 4-fold faster than that of Y114L. These results are consistent with Tyr197 serving as a gate in the binding of NADPH, and they indicate that Tyr114 assists the acid catalyst His467'.  相似文献   

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