Gaggelli Elena, Bernardi Francesca, Molteni Elena, Pogni Rebecca, Valensin Daniela, Valensin Gianni, Remelli Maurizio, Luczkowski Marek, Kozlowski Henryk
Department of Chemistry, University of Siena, Via A. Moro, 53100, Siena, Italy.
J Am Chem Soc. 2005 Jan 26;127(3):996-1006. doi: 10.1021/ja045958z.
The synthetic peptide encompassing residues 106-126 (PrP106-126, KTNMKHMAGAAAAGAVVGGLG) of the human prion protein was considered for its binding properties toward copper(II), manganese(II) and zinc(II) at pH 5.7. 1H and 13C 1D spectra, 1H spin-lattice relaxation rates, and 1H-15N and 1H-13C HSQC 2D experiments were obtained in the absence and in the presence of metal ions. While Zn(II) was found to yield negligible effects upon any NMR parameter, metal-peptide association was demonstrated by the paramagnetic effects of Cu(II) and Mn(II) upon 1D and 2D spectra. Delineation of structures of metal complexes was sought by interpreting the paramagnetic effect on 1H spin-lattice relaxation rates. Exchange of peptide molecules from the metal coordination sphere was shown to provide sizable contribution to the observed relaxation rates. Such contribution was calculated in the case of Cu(II); whereas the faster paramagnetic rates of peptide molecules bound to Mn(II) were determining spin-lattice relaxation rates almost exclusively dominated by exchange. Proton-metal distances were therefore evaluated in the case of the Cu(II) complex only and used as restraints in molecular dynamics calculations where from the structure of the complex was obtained. The peptide was shown to bind copper through the imidazole nitrogen and the ionized amide nitrogen of His-111 and the amino-terminal group with the terminal carboxyl stabilizing the coordination sphere through ionic interactions. The data were interpreted as to demonstrate that the hydrophobic C-terminal region was not affecting the copper-binding properties of the peptide and that this hydrophobic tail is left free to interact with other target molecules. As for the complex with Mn(II), qualitative information was obtained on carbonyl oxygens of Gly-124 and Leu-125, beyond the terminal Gly-126 carboxyl, being at close distance from the metal ion, that also interacts, most likely, through a hydrogen bond of metal-bound water, with the imidazole ring of His-111.
研究了包含人朊病毒蛋白106 - 126位残基(PrP106 - 126,KTNMKHMAGAAAAGAVVGGLG)的合成肽在pH 5.7时与铜(II)、锰(II)和锌(II)的结合特性。在不存在和存在金属离子的情况下,分别获得了1H和13C一维谱、1H自旋晶格弛豫速率以及1H - 15N和1H - 13C HSQC二维实验结果。虽然发现锌(II)对任何核磁共振参数的影响可忽略不计,但铜(II)和锰(II)对一维和二维谱的顺磁效应证明了金属 - 肽的结合。通过解释对1H自旋晶格弛豫速率的顺磁效应来寻求金属配合物结构的描绘。肽分子从金属配位球中的交换被证明对观察到的弛豫速率有相当大的贡献。这种贡献在铜(II)的情况下进行了计算;而与锰(II)结合的肽分子更快的顺磁速率几乎完全由交换决定自旋晶格弛豫速率。因此,仅在铜(II)配合物的情况下评估了质子 - 金属距离,并将其用作分子动力学计算中的约束条件,由此获得了配合物的结构。结果表明,该肽通过His - 111的咪唑氮、离子化酰胺氮以及氨基末端基团与铜结合,末端羧基通过离子相互作用稳定配位球。对数据的解释表明,疏水的C末端区域不影响肽的铜结合特性,并且该疏水尾部可自由与其他靶分子相互作用。至于与锰(II)的配合物,除了末端Gly - 126羧基外,还获得了关于Gly - 124和Leu - 125羰基氧与金属离子距离较近的定性信息,金属离子很可能也通过与His - 111咪唑环的金属结合水形成氢键而相互作用。