64 research outputs found

    Crystal structure of the cold-active aminopeptidase from Colwellia psychrerythraea, a close structural homologue of the human bifunctional leukotriene A4 hydrolase

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    peer reviewedThe crystal structure of a cold-active aminopeptidase (ColAP) from Colwellia psychrerythraea strain 34H has been determined, extending the number of crystal structures of the M1 metallopeptidase family to four among the 436 members currently identified. In agreement with their sequence similarity, the overall structure of ColAP displayed a high correspondence with leukotriene A4 hydrolase (LTA4H), a human bifunctional enzyme that converts leukotriene A4 (LTA4) in the potent chemoattractant leukotriene B4. Indeed, both enzymes are composed of three domains, an N-terminal saddle-like domain, a catalytic thermolysin-like domain, and a less conserved C-terminal alpha-helical flat spiral domain. Together, these domains form a deep cavity harboring the zinc binding site formed by residues included in the conserved HEXXHX(18)H motif. A detailed structural comparison of these enzymes revealed several plausible determinants of ColAP cold adaptation. The main differences involve specific amino acid substitutions, loop content and solvent exposure, complexity and distribution of ion pairs, and differential domain flexibilities. Such elements may act synergistically to allow conformational flexibility needed for an efficient catalysis in cold environments. Furthermore, the region of ColAP corresponding to the aminopeptidase active site of LTA4H is much more conserved than the suggested LTA4 substrate binding region. This observation supports the hypothesis that this region of the LTA4H active site has evolved in order to fit the lipidic substrate

    Crystal structure of PerR-Zn-Mn

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    Site-selective EXAFS in mixed-valence compounds using high-resolution fluorescence detection : A study of iron in Prussian Blue

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    A quantitative analysis is presented for the site-selective Fe K-edge absorption spectra of Prussian Blue: Fe-4[Fe-(CN)(6)](3).xH(2)O (x = 14-16). The site-selective spectra were recorded using high-resolution fluorescence detection lof the Kbeta emission from a polycrystalline sample. The Kbeta fluorescence lines arising from the high-spin and low-spin sites are shifted in energy. Since the emission features partially overlap, fluorescence-detected absorption spectra using different emission energies represent different linear combinations of the pure high-spin and low-spin EXAFS. A numerical method was used to extract the individual site EXAFS spectra from the experimental data. The analysis yields a range of solutions. A unique solution can be obtained if homovalent model compounds are used to simulate the K fluorescence emission from the two Fe sites in Prussian Blue. EXAFS analysis of the range of spectra obtained in the numerical method yields almost identical interatomic distances for the different spectra while the Debye-Waller factors vary considerably. The distances obtained in the EXAFS fit correspond to the crystallographic distances

    Site-selective EXAFS in mixed-valence compounds using high-resolution fluorescence detection : A study of iron in Prussian Blue

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    A quantitative analysis is presented for the site-selective Fe K-edge absorption spectra of Prussian Blue: Fe-4[Fe-(CN)(6)](3).xH(2)O (x = 14-16). The site-selective spectra were recorded using high-resolution fluorescence detection lof the Kbeta emission from a polycrystalline sample. The Kbeta fluorescence lines arising from the high-spin and low-spin sites are shifted in energy. Since the emission features partially overlap, fluorescence-detected absorption spectra using different emission energies represent different linear combinations of the pure high-spin and low-spin EXAFS. A numerical method was used to extract the individual site EXAFS spectra from the experimental data. The analysis yields a range of solutions. A unique solution can be obtained if homovalent model compounds are used to simulate the K fluorescence emission from the two Fe sites in Prussian Blue. EXAFS analysis of the range of spectra obtained in the numerical method yields almost identical interatomic distances for the different spectra while the Debye-Waller factors vary considerably. The distances obtained in the EXAFS fit correspond to the crystallographic distances

    Structure of E. coli monothiol glutaredoxin GRX4 homodimer

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    X-ray absorption spectroscopy of a new zinc site in the fur protein from Escherichia coli.

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    International audienceThe zinc K-edge X-ray absorption spectra of the Fur (ferric uptake regulation) protein isolated from Escherichia coli have been analyzed in frozen solution to determine details of the zinc coordination. The spectra of apoFur and of the cobalt-substituted protein have been analyzed and compared in order to see the influence of the cobalt incorporation on the geometry of the zinc site. EXAFS analysis gave for both samples (apoFur and CoFur) a tetrahedral environment for the zinc atom with two sulfur donor ligands at a distance of 2.3 A from the zinc and two N/O donor ligands at 2.0 A. The two sulfur donor ligands are probably two of the four cysteines present in each Fur monomer and could be Cys92 and Cys95, which are known from mutagenesis studies to be essential for Fur activity [Coy, M., Doyle, C., Besser, J., and Neilands, J. B. (1994) BioMetals 7, 292-298]. The distances obtained from our fits were always too short to be compatible with penta or hexa coordination. The typical pattern observed for the Fourier transform of the EXAFS oscillations suggests the presence of at least one imidazole ligand. The XANES of these two forms of the protein are similar but significantly different. This suggests a change of the conformation of the zinc site upon cobalt incorporation. The present study provides the first unambiguous evidence for the presence of a structural zinc site in the Fur protein from Escherichia coli

    Spectroscopic and saturation magnetization properties of the manganese- and cobalt-substituted Fur (ferric uptake regulation) protein from Escherichia coli.

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    International audienceThe Fur apoprotein has been purified and reconstituted with Co2+ and Mn2+ ions. These samples have been analyzed by UV-visible, EPR, and 1H NMR spectroscopies, by XAS, and by magnetization measurements. The apo-Fur protein is able to bind one metal dication (Co2+ or Mn2+) per monomer. A saturation magnetization study confirms the presence of a high-spin metal dication [Mn(II) S = 5/2 and Co(II) S = 3/2]. The two metal ions per Fur dimer are not in magnetic interaction (|J| < 0.1 cm-1 ). The UV-visible spectrum of the cobalt-substituted form (Co-Fur) presents two main bands at 660 nm and 540(br) nm with epsilon540 nm = 65 M-1 cm-1. The EPR spectrum gives the following g values: gx = 5.0(5), gy = 4.0(2), and gz = 2. 3(1), which are in accordance with a nearly axial (E/D < 0.11) site. The value of 55 cm-1 for the splitting (Delta) between the ground and the first excited state has been derived from an EPR saturation study and is in agreement with magnetization data. The EXAFS data of Co-Fur indicate a metal environment comprising five nitrogen/oxygen atoms at 2.11 A, the absence of sulfur, and the presence of histidines as ligands. 1H NMR of Co-Fur in H2O and D2O shows at least two exchangeable signals coming from histidine NH protons and shows the signature of carboxylate group(s). The combined spectroscopic data allow us to propose that the main metal site of Fur in Co-Fur contains at least two histidines, at least one aspartate or glutamate, and no cysteine as ligands and is in an axially distorted octahedral environment

    Identification of the two zinc-bound cysteines in the ferric uptake regulation protein from Escherichia coli: chemical modification and mass spectrometry analysis.

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    International audienceSelective chemical modification of thiol groups combined with mass spectrometry analysis was used to characterize cysteine ligands in the zinc-binding site of the Fur protein. Fur is a metalloregulatory protein involved in the regulation of almost all bacterial genes related to iron uptake in Gram-negative bacteria such as Escherichia coli. In addition to the iron site, Fur also possesses a tight-binding zinc site that likely comprises two cysteines. Using a new procedure, we confirm the involvement of two cysteines in zinc binding and identify them within the two pairs of cysteines present in the protein. The protein was treated under nondenaturing conditions with iodoacetamide, and the progressive alkylation of the thiol groups monitored by quenching the reaction at different times and measuring the extent of alkylation by mass spectrometry. Complementary experiments were carried out in the absence or presence of EDTA, a strong zinc chelator, to determine which of the cysteines were protected from alkylation by the zinc atom. Enzymatic digestion of the modified protein and analysis of the peptide mixture by mass spectrometry enabled fast identification of reactive and protected thiol groups. Two cysteines, Cys92 and Cys95, were thus assigned as zinc ligands. Examination of the sequence comprising the zinc site indicates that it may belong to a new type of structural zinc site. Furthermore, Cys132 was shown to be the fastest reacting cysteine, implying it is a surface-exposed residue
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