57 research outputs found
Excimer fluorescence of pyrene-maleimide-labeled tubulin
Excimer-forming cysteines in tubulin are detected by the presence of excimer fluorescence in N-(1-pyrenyl)maleimide-labeled tubulin. The ratio of excimer/monomer fluorescence of labeled protein remained unchanged upon its dilution. These results indicating that both partner of each pair(s) of cysteine are located in the same subunit. The excimer fluorescence is insensitive to prior treatment of tubulin with either colchicine or GTP, indicating that pairs of cysteines protected by those drugs are not involved in excimer formation. This excimer fluorescence of N-(1-pyrenyl)maleimide-labeled tubulin disappeared upon treatment with SDS, guanidinium chloride (GdmCl) and urea. Studies with GdmCl induced unfolding of N-(1-pyrenyl)maleimide-labeled tubulin showed that the loss of excimer fluorescence preceeds subunit dissociation. The loss of both colchicine-binding activity and the excimer fluorescence with increasing temperature indicates a major conformational change of the tubulin molecule at elevated temperatures
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A study of colchicine tubulin complex by donor quenching of fluorescence energy transfer
The utility of collisional quenching of energy donors in fluorescence energy transfer is described. In multi-donor single acceptor systems, which contain different classes of donors (as distinguished by their accessibility towards a collisional quencher), donor quenching may be used to assess the fraction of energy transfer from each class of donor. The tubulin-colchicine complex was used as a donor-acceptor system to show that two inaccessible tryptophans are at or near the colchicine binding site
The colchicine-binding and pyrene-excimer-formation activities of tubulin involve a common cysteine residue in the β subunit
Colchicine binding and pyrene excimer fluorescence of tubulin have been used to identify
cysteine residue(s) essential for the colchicine binding activity of the protein. We report here that
both the colchicine binding activity and the ability to form pyrene excimers of tubulin decay at an
identical rate when the protein ages at 37°C. Glycerol, which stabilizes the colchicine binding
site also stabilizes the excimer formation equally. Thus, these two properties of tubulin are
correlated and are likely to belong to the same structural domain. In an attempt to identify the
excimer-forming Cys residues, we found that incubation of tubulin with N,N' ethylenebis
(iodoacetamide) causes a significant inhibition of excimer fluorescence. Incubation of tubulin with
colchicine prior to this treatment fully retains excimer-forming ability. It is known that Cys239 and
Cys354 of β-tubulin, which are about 0.9 nm apart in the native structure, are protected from
ethylenebis(iodoacetamide) cross-linking by incubation of tubulin with colchicine [Luduena, R. F.
& Roach, M. C. (1981)Pharmacol. Ther. 49, 133-152], These residues must therefore be responsible
for the excimer formation of tubulin with pyrene maleimide. Incubation of tubulin with
ethylenebis(iodoacetamide) decreases the colchicine binding activity and the excimer formation at an
identical rate. Since the alkylation of Cys239 of β-tubulin (responsible for tubulin
self-assembly) has no effect on colchicine binding [Bai, R., Lin, C. M., Nguyen, N. Y., Liu, T. &
Hamel, E. (1989)Biochemistry 28, 5606-5612], our results suggest that excimer formation and the
colchicine binding site of tubulin share Cys354 of the β -subunit. Determination of the number
of essential Cys residue(s) for colchicine binding activity, using the statistical method of Tsou
[Tsou, C. L. (1962)Sci. Sin. 11, 1535-1558], also shows only one essential Cys residue
Anion-induced increases in the affinity of colcemid binding to tubulin
Colcemid binds tubulin rapidly and reversibly in contrast to colchicine which binds tubulin
relatively slowly and essentially irreversibly. At 37° C the association rate constant for
colcemid binding is 1.88 × 106 M-1 h-1, about 10 times higher
than that for colchicine; this is reflected in the activation energies for binding which are 51.4
kJ/mol for colcemid and 84.8 kJ/mol for colchicine. Scatchard analysis indicates two binding sites on
tubulin having different affinities for colcemid. The high-affinity site (Ka= 0.7 ×
105 M-1 at 37° C) is sensitive to temperature and binds both colchicine
and colcemid and hence they are mutually competitive inhibitors. The low-affinity site
(Kb= 1.2 × 104 M-1) is rather insensitive to temperature and
binds only colcemid. Like colchicine, 0.6 mol of colcemid are bound/mol of tubulin dimer (at the
high-affinity site) and the reaction is entropy driven (163 J K-1 mol-1).
Similar to colchicine, colcemid binding to tubulin is stimulated by certain anions (viz. sulfate and
tartrate) but by a different mechanism. Colcemid binding affinity at the lower-affinity site of
tubulin is increased in the presence of ammonium sulfate. Interestingly, the lower-affinity site on
tubulin for colcemid, even when converted to higher affinity in presence of ammonium sulfate, is not
recognized by colchicine. We conclude that tubulin possesses two binding sites, one of which
specifically recognized the groups present on the B-ring of colchicine molecule and is effected by
the ammonium sulfate, whereas the higher-affinity site, which could accommodate both colchicine and
colcemid, possibly recognized the A and C ring of colchicine
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Amino acid changes in the repressor of bacteriophage lambda due to temperature-sensitive mutations in its cI gene and the structure of a highly temperature-sensitive mutant repressor
The mutant cIts genes from seven different λcIts phages carrying tsU50, tsU9, tsU46, ts1, tsU51, tsI-22 and ts2 mutations were cloned in plasmid. The positions of these mutations and the resulting changes of amino acids in the repressor were determined by DNA sequencing. The first four mutations mapping in the N-terminal domain show the following changes: I21S, G53S, A62T and V73A, respectively. Of the three remaining mutations mapping in the C-terminal domain, cItsI-22 and cIts2 show N207T and K224E substitutions respectively, while the mutant cItsU51 gene carries F141I and P153L substitutions. Among these ts repressors, CIts2 having the charge-reversal change K224E was overexpressed from tac promoter in a plasmid and purified, and its structure and function were studied. Operator-binding studies suggest that the ts2 repressor is somewhat defective in monomer-dimer equilibrium and/ or cooperativity even at permissive temperatures and loses its operator-binding ability very rapidly above 25°C. Comparative studies of fluorescence and CD spectra, sulfhydryl group reactivity and elution behaviour in size-exclusion HPLC of both wild-type and ts2-mutant repressors at permissive and non-permissive temperatures suggest that the C-terminal domain of the ts2 repressor carrying a K224E substitution has a structure that does not favor tetramer formation at non-permissive temperatures
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Interaction of a fluorescent analog of N -deacetyl-N -methyl-colchicine (colcemid) with liver alcohol dehydrogenase
The evidence for specific binding of N-(7-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-diazol-4-yl)-colcemid (NBD-colcemid), a fluorescent analog of colcemid (N-deacetyl-N-methyl-colchicine), to liver alcohol dehydrogenase is presented. Alcohol dehydrogenase bound NBD-colcemid in a time-dependent manner, enhanced the fluorescence intensity, and caused a large blue shift of the emission maximum of the free drug. The specificity of binding was determined for both the colchicine nucleus and the NBD moiety. The binding was not affected by the presence of alcohol or NAD in the reaction mixture. Preincubation of horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase with colcemid inhibited the binding to a considerable extent. NBD-colcemid inhibited the enzymic activity of alcohol dehydrogenase in a mixed-type noncompetitive mode with a Ki value of 32 μM, whereas colcemid showed noncompetitive inhibition with a Ki of 100 μM. The association rate constant of NBD-colcemid binding with liver alcohol dehydrogenase was 587 M-1 s-1 at 25 °C. The stoichiometry and dissociation constant of the binding reaction were 0.62/dimer and 12 μM, respectively. Donor quenching experiments showed that both tryptophans of alcohol dehydrogenase transferred energy to the bound NBD-colcemid. Thus, this study reports the binding of a colchicine analog to a protein other than tubulin with high affinity. It is concluded that NBD-colcemid binding to dehydrogenases is a general phenomenon, but the common structural element(s) that is responsible for the binding activity, and which exists among tubulin and dehydrogenases, has yet to be determined
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Multiphasic denaturation of the λ repressor by urea and its implications for the repressor structure
Urea denaturation of the λ repressor has been studied by fluorescence and circular dichroic spectroscopies. Three phases of denaturation could be detected which we have assigned to part of the C-terminal domain, N-terminal domain and subunit dissociation coupled with further denaturation of the rest of the C-terminal domain at increasing urea concentrations. Acrylamide quenching suggests that at least one of the three tryptophan residues of the λ repressor is in a different environment and its emission maximum is considerably blue-shifted. The transition in low urea concentration (midpoint approximately 2 M) affects the environment of this tryptophan residue, which is located in the C-terminal domain. Removal of the hinge and the N-terminal domain shifts this transition towards even lower urea concentrations, indicating the presence of interaction between hinge on N-terminal and C-terminal domains in the intact repressor
N-(7-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-diazol-4-yl)colcemid, a probe for different classes of colchincine-binding site on tubulin
The nature of binding of 7-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-diazol-4-yl-colcemid (NBD-colcemid), an
environment-sensitive fluorescent analogue of colchicine, to tubulin was tested. This article reports
the first fluorometric study where two types of binding site of colchincine analogue on tubulin were
detected. Binding of NBD-colcemid to one of these sites equilibrates slsowly. NBD-colcemid competes
with colchicine for this site. Binding of NBD-colcemid to this site also causes inhibition of tubulin
self-assembly. In contrast, NBD-colcemid binding to the other site is characterised by rapid
equilibration and lack of competition with colchicine. Nevertheless, binding to this site is highly
specific for the cholchicine nucleus, as alkyl-NBD analogues have no significant binding activity.
Fast-reaction-kinetic studies gave 1.76 × 105 M-1 s-1 for the
association and 0.79 s-1 for the dissociation rate constants for the binding of
NBD-colcemid to the fast site of tubulin. The association rate constants for the two phases of the
slow site are 0.016 × 10-4 M-1 s-1 and 3.5 × 10-4
M-1 respectively. These two sites may be related to the two sites of colchicine
reported earlier, with binding characteristics altered by the increased hydrophobic nature of
NBD-colcemid
Chaperone-like activity of tubulin
Tubulin, a ubiquitous protein of eukaryotic cytoskeleton, is a building block unit of microtubule. Although several cellular processes are known to be mediated through the tubulin-microtubule system, the participation of tubulin or microtubule in protein folding pathway has not yet been reported. Here we show that goat brain tubulin has some functions and features similar to many known molecular chaperones. Substoichiometric amounts of tubulin can suppress the non-thermal and thermal aggregation of a number of unrelated proteins such as insulin, equine liver alcohol dehydrogenase, and soluble eye lens proteins containing β- and γ-crystallins. This chaperone-like activity of tubulin becomes more pronounced as temperature increases. Aging of tubulin solution at 37° C also enhances its chaperone-like activity. Tubulin loses its chaperone-like activity upon removal of its flexible hydrophilic C-terminal tail. These results suggest that both electrostatic and hydrophobic interactions are important in substrate binding by tubulin and that the negatively charged C-terminal tails play a crucial role for its chaperone-like activity
Sulfhydryls of tubulin
The 20 cysteine residues of tubulin are heterogeneously distributed throughout its three-dimensional structure. In the present work, we have used the reactivity of these cysteine residues with 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) (DTNB) as a probe to detect the global conformational changes of tubulin under different experimental conditions. The 20 sulfhydryl groups can be classified into two categories: fast and slow reacting. Colchicine binding causes a dramatic decrease in the reactivity of the cysteine residues and causes complete protection of 1.4 cysteine residues. Similarly, other colchicine analogs that bind reversibly initially decrease the rate of reaction; but unlike colchicine they do not cause complete protection of any sulfhydryl groups. Interestingly, in all cases we find that all the slow reacting sulfhydryl groups are affected to the same extent, that is, have a single rate constant. Glycerol has a major inhibitory effect on all these slow reacting sulfhydryls, suggesting that the reaction of slow reacting cysteines takes place from an open state at equilibrium with the native. Ageing of tubulin at 37 ° C leads to loss of self-assembly and colchicine binding activity. Using DTNB kinetics, we have shown that ageing leads to complete protection of some of the sulfhydryl groups and increased reaction rate for other slow reacting sulfhydryl groups. Ageing at 37 ° C also causes aggregation of tubulin as indicated by HPLC analysis. The protection of some sulfhydryl groups may be a consequence of aggregation, whereas the increased rate of reaction of other slow reacting sulfhydryls may be a result of changes in global dynamics. CD spectra and acrylamide quenching support such a notion. Binding of 8-anilino-1-naphthalenesulfonate (ANS) and bis-ANS by tubulin cause complete protection of some cysteine residues as indicated by the DTNB reaction, but has little effect on the other slow reacting cysteines, suggesting local effects
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