Structural influence of cation binding to recombinant human brain S100b: Evidence for calcium-induced exposure of a hydrophobic surface

被引:66
作者
Smith, SP
Barber, KR
Dunn, SD
Shaw, GS
机构
[1] UNIV WESTERN ONTARIO, DEPT BIOCHEM, LONDON, ON N6A 5C1, CANADA
[2] UNIV WESTERN ONTARIO, MCLAUGHLIN MACROMOLEC STRUCT FACIL, LONDON, ON N6A 5C1, CANADA
关键词
D O I
10.1021/bi952698c
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
The dimeric calcium-binding protein S100b is proposed to undergo a calcium-induced structural change allowing it to interact, via a hydrophobic surface, with other proteins. Previously it has been suggested that calcium binding to S100b leads to the exposure of at least one phenylalanine residue (Mani et al., 1982, 1983). This effect appears to be ''reversed'' at higher ionic strength, leading to a possible reburying of phenylalanine residues (Mani et al., 1982, 1983). To study these effects, we monitored calcium binding to recombinant human S100b by NMR spectroscopy under different salt (KCl) conditions. N-15-Labeled glycine residues in S100b showed calcium-induced chemical shift changes similar to those reported for the related monomeric protein calbindin D-9k, suggesting similar conformational changes are occurring in the calcium-binding loops of these two proteins. Calcium binding to S100b also resulted in a shifting and broadening of several H-1 resonances from the Ca-S100b form only including those from the side chains of residues F14, F70, and F73 but not those of residue Y17. This broadening was enhanced with increased ionic strength (KCl). However, small additions (<15% v/v) of the hydrophobic solvent trifluoroethanol relieved this phenomenon, leading to narrower line widths. These observations are consistent with the calcium-induced exposure of at least one of these hydrophobic residues, resulting in self-association of the S100b dimer. Trifluoroethanol serves to dissociate these complexes back to the dimeric calcium species. We propose that this cluster of hydrophobic residues which include F14, F73, and F88 may be important for interactions with a target protein.
引用
收藏
页码:8805 / 8814
页数:10
相关论文
共 69 条
[41]   PHYSICOCHEMICAL AND OPTICAL STUDIES ON CALCIUM-INDUCED AND POTASSIUM-INDUCED CONFORMATIONAL-CHANGES IN BOVINE BRAIN S-100B PROTEIN [J].
MANI, RS ;
BOYES, BE ;
KAY, CM .
BIOCHEMISTRY, 1982, 21 (11) :2607-2612
[42]   A TWO-DIMENSIONAL NMR-STUDY OF THE ANTIMICROBIAL PEPTIDE MAGAININ-2 [J].
MARION, D ;
ZASLOFF, M ;
BAX, A .
FEBS LETTERS, 1988, 227 (01) :21-26
[43]   RANDOM COIL H-1 CHEMICAL-SHIFTS OBTAINED AS A FUNCTION OF TEMPERATURE AND TRIFLUOROETHANOL CONCENTRATION FOR THE PEPTIDE SERIES GGXGG [J].
MERUTKA, G ;
DYSON, HJ ;
WRIGHT, PE .
JOURNAL OF BIOMOLECULAR NMR, 1995, 5 (01) :14-24
[44]  
MUCHMORE DC, 1989, METHOD ENZYMOL, V177, P44
[45]   BINDING STUDY OF METAL-IONS TO S100 PROTEIN - CA-43, MG-25, ZN-67 AND K-39 NMR [J].
OGOMA, Y ;
KOBAYASHI, H ;
FUJII, T ;
KONDO, Y ;
HACHIMORI, A ;
SHIMIZU, T ;
HATANO, M .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL MACROMOLECULES, 1992, 14 (05) :279-286
[46]   BACKBONE DYNAMICS OF (1-71)BACTERIOOPSIN STUDIED BY 2-DIMENSIONAL H-1-N-15 NMR-SPECTROSCOPY [J].
OREKHOV, VY ;
PERVUSHIN, KV ;
ARSENIEV, AS .
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF BIOCHEMISTRY, 1994, 219 (03) :887-896
[47]   DEGRADATION OF ESCHERICHIA-COLI UNCB MESSENGER-RNA BY MULTIPLE ENDONUCLEOLYTIC CLEAVAGES [J].
PATEL, AM ;
DUNN, SD .
JOURNAL OF BACTERIOLOGY, 1995, 177 (14) :3917-3922
[48]   NMR IDENTIFICATION OF PROTEIN SURFACES USING PARAMAGNETIC PROBES [J].
PETROS, AM ;
MUELLER, L ;
KOPPLE, KD .
BIOCHEMISTRY, 1990, 29 (43) :10041-10048
[49]   THE STRUCTURE OF CALCYCLIN REVEALS A NOVEL HOMODIMERIC FOLD FOR S100 CA2+-BINDING PROTEINS [J].
POTTS, BCM ;
SMITH, J ;
AKKE, M ;
MACKE, TJ ;
OKAZAKI, K ;
HIDAKA, H ;
CASE, DA ;
CHAZIN, WJ .
NATURE STRUCTURAL BIOLOGY, 1995, 2 (09) :790-796
[50]   DETECTION OF S-100B PROTEIN IN TRITON CYTOSKELETONS - AN IMMUNOCYTOCHEMICAL STUDY ON CULTURED SCHWANN-CELLS [J].
RAMBOTTI, MG ;
SPRECA, A ;
LEONCINI, P ;
ESTENOZ, M ;
COSTANTINOCECCARINI, E ;
GIAMBANCO, I ;
DONATO, R .
JOURNAL OF HISTOCHEMISTRY & CYTOCHEMISTRY, 1990, 38 (11) :1583-1589