7 research outputs found
Comparative Analysis of Metal Binding Characteristics of Copper Chaperone Proteins, Atx1 and ATOX1
The metal binding properties of the human copper chaperone ATOXI and its yeast homologue Atxl have
been characterized. Complexes of these proteins with Cu(I), Ag (1), Cd(II) and Hg(II) were studied by native
gel electrophoresis, chemical cross-linking followed by SDS-PAGE, as well as by size exclusion
chromatography, mutagenesis and UV-visible absorption spectroscopy. Results indicate that binding of
different metals to either ATOXI or Atxl altered conformation of subunit structure and the oligomerization
state of the proteins. Furthermore, it has been demonstrated that freshly reduced apoprotein is capable to
convert Cu(ll) to Cu(l) stoichiometrically to the amount of protein present, while oxidized protein is only
twenty per cent as active. Titration of Cu(ll) with either oxidized or reduced protein resulted in similar
increase in absorbance at 254 nm, implicating Cu-thiolate formation in both forms of the protein, but titration
with Ag(i) caused the increase in absorbance at 254 nm with the reduced protein only. These data indicate
that Cu(1), Ag(1), Hg(ll) and Cd(ll) are all capable of binding to ATOXI and Atxl, but the characteristics of
the binding to these copper chaperones differ for different metals