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Fragment-based identification of determinants of conformational and spectroscopic change at the ricin active site

BACKGROUND: Ricin is a potent toxin and known bioterrorism threat with no available antidote. The ricin A-chain (RTA) acts enzymatically to cleave a specific adenine base from ribosomal RNA, thereby blocking translation. To understand better the relationship between ligand binding and RTA active sit...

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Autores principales: Carra, John H, McHugh, Colleen A, Mulligan, Sheila, Machiesky, LeeAnn M, Soares, Alexei S, Millard, Charles B
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2194779/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17986339
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6807-7-72
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author Carra, John H
McHugh, Colleen A
Mulligan, Sheila
Machiesky, LeeAnn M
Soares, Alexei S
Millard, Charles B
author_facet Carra, John H
McHugh, Colleen A
Mulligan, Sheila
Machiesky, LeeAnn M
Soares, Alexei S
Millard, Charles B
author_sort Carra, John H
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Ricin is a potent toxin and known bioterrorism threat with no available antidote. The ricin A-chain (RTA) acts enzymatically to cleave a specific adenine base from ribosomal RNA, thereby blocking translation. To understand better the relationship between ligand binding and RTA active site conformational change, we used a fragment-based approach to find a minimal set of bonding interactions able to induce rearrangements in critical side-chain positions. RESULTS: We found that the smallest ligand stabilizing an open conformer of the RTA active site pocket was an amide group, bound weakly by only a few hydrogen bonds to the protein. Complexes with small amide-containing molecules also revealed a switch in geometry from a parallel towards a splayed arrangement of an arginine-tryptophan cation-pi interaction that was associated with an increase and red-shift in tryptophan fluorescence upon ligand binding. Using the observed fluorescence signal, we determined the thermodynamic changes of adenine binding to the RTA active site, as well as the site-specific binding of urea. Urea binding had a favorable enthalpy change and unfavorable entropy change, with a ΔH of -13 ± 2 kJ/mol and a ΔS of -0.04 ± 0.01 kJ/(K*mol). The side-chain position of residue Tyr80 in a complex with adenine was found not to involve as large an overlap of rings with the purine as previously considered, suggesting a smaller role for aromatic stacking at the RTA active site. CONCLUSION: We found that amide ligands can bind weakly but specifically to the ricin active site, producing significant shifts in positions of the critical active site residues Arg180 and Tyr80. These results indicate that fragment-based drug discovery methods are capable of identifying minimal bonding determinants of active-site side-chain rearrangements and the mechanistic origins of spectroscopic shifts. Our results suggest that tryptophan fluorescence provides a sensitive probe for the geometric relationship of arginine-tryptophan pairs, which often have significant roles in protein function. Using the unusual characteristics of the RTA system, we measured the still controversial thermodynamic changes of site-specific urea binding to a protein, results that are relevant to understanding the physical mechanisms of protein denaturation.
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spelling pubmed-21947792008-01-29 Fragment-based identification of determinants of conformational and spectroscopic change at the ricin active site Carra, John H McHugh, Colleen A Mulligan, Sheila Machiesky, LeeAnn M Soares, Alexei S Millard, Charles B BMC Struct Biol Research Article BACKGROUND: Ricin is a potent toxin and known bioterrorism threat with no available antidote. The ricin A-chain (RTA) acts enzymatically to cleave a specific adenine base from ribosomal RNA, thereby blocking translation. To understand better the relationship between ligand binding and RTA active site conformational change, we used a fragment-based approach to find a minimal set of bonding interactions able to induce rearrangements in critical side-chain positions. RESULTS: We found that the smallest ligand stabilizing an open conformer of the RTA active site pocket was an amide group, bound weakly by only a few hydrogen bonds to the protein. Complexes with small amide-containing molecules also revealed a switch in geometry from a parallel towards a splayed arrangement of an arginine-tryptophan cation-pi interaction that was associated with an increase and red-shift in tryptophan fluorescence upon ligand binding. Using the observed fluorescence signal, we determined the thermodynamic changes of adenine binding to the RTA active site, as well as the site-specific binding of urea. Urea binding had a favorable enthalpy change and unfavorable entropy change, with a ΔH of -13 ± 2 kJ/mol and a ΔS of -0.04 ± 0.01 kJ/(K*mol). The side-chain position of residue Tyr80 in a complex with adenine was found not to involve as large an overlap of rings with the purine as previously considered, suggesting a smaller role for aromatic stacking at the RTA active site. CONCLUSION: We found that amide ligands can bind weakly but specifically to the ricin active site, producing significant shifts in positions of the critical active site residues Arg180 and Tyr80. These results indicate that fragment-based drug discovery methods are capable of identifying minimal bonding determinants of active-site side-chain rearrangements and the mechanistic origins of spectroscopic shifts. Our results suggest that tryptophan fluorescence provides a sensitive probe for the geometric relationship of arginine-tryptophan pairs, which often have significant roles in protein function. Using the unusual characteristics of the RTA system, we measured the still controversial thermodynamic changes of site-specific urea binding to a protein, results that are relevant to understanding the physical mechanisms of protein denaturation. BioMed Central 2007-11-06 /pmc/articles/PMC2194779/ /pubmed/17986339 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6807-7-72 Text en Copyright © 2007 Carra et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Carra, John H
McHugh, Colleen A
Mulligan, Sheila
Machiesky, LeeAnn M
Soares, Alexei S
Millard, Charles B
Fragment-based identification of determinants of conformational and spectroscopic change at the ricin active site
title Fragment-based identification of determinants of conformational and spectroscopic change at the ricin active site
title_full Fragment-based identification of determinants of conformational and spectroscopic change at the ricin active site
title_fullStr Fragment-based identification of determinants of conformational and spectroscopic change at the ricin active site
title_full_unstemmed Fragment-based identification of determinants of conformational and spectroscopic change at the ricin active site
title_short Fragment-based identification of determinants of conformational and spectroscopic change at the ricin active site
title_sort fragment-based identification of determinants of conformational and spectroscopic change at the ricin active site
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2194779/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17986339
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6807-7-72
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