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Dimerization of Nitrophorin 4 at Low pH and Comparison to the K1A Mutant of Nitrophorin 1

[Image: see text] Nitrophorin 4, one of the four NO-carrying heme proteins from the salivary glands of Rhodnius prolixus, forms a homodimer at pH 5.0 with a K(d) of ∼8 μM. This dimer begins to dissociate at pH 5.5 and is completely dissociated to monomer at pH 7.3, even at 3.7 mM. The dimer is signi...

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Autores principales: Berry, Robert E., Yang, Fei, Shokhireva, Tatiana K., Amoia, Angela M., Garrett, Sarah A., Goren, Allena M., Korte, Stephanie R., Zhang, Hongjun, Weichsel, Andrzej, Montfort, William R., Walker, F. Ann
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2014
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4303305/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25489673
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/bi5013047
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author Berry, Robert E.
Yang, Fei
Shokhireva, Tatiana K.
Amoia, Angela M.
Garrett, Sarah A.
Goren, Allena M.
Korte, Stephanie R.
Zhang, Hongjun
Weichsel, Andrzej
Montfort, William R.
Walker, F. Ann
author_facet Berry, Robert E.
Yang, Fei
Shokhireva, Tatiana K.
Amoia, Angela M.
Garrett, Sarah A.
Goren, Allena M.
Korte, Stephanie R.
Zhang, Hongjun
Weichsel, Andrzej
Montfort, William R.
Walker, F. Ann
author_sort Berry, Robert E.
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] Nitrophorin 4, one of the four NO-carrying heme proteins from the salivary glands of Rhodnius prolixus, forms a homodimer at pH 5.0 with a K(d) of ∼8 μM. This dimer begins to dissociate at pH 5.5 and is completely dissociated to monomer at pH 7.3, even at 3.7 mM. The dimer is significantly stabilized by binding NO to the heme and at pH 7.3 would require dilution to well below 0.2 mM to completely dissociate the NP4-NO homodimer. The primary techniques used for investigating the homodimer and the monomer–dimer equilibrium were size-exclusion fast protein liquid chromatography at pH 5.0 and (1)H{(15)N} heteronuclear single-quantum coherence spectroscopy as a function of pH and concentration. Preparation of site-directed mutants of NP4 (A1K, D30A, D30N, V36A/D129A/L130A, K38A, R39A, K125A, K125E, D132A, L133V, and K38Q/R39Q/K125Q) showed that the N-terminus, D30, D129, D132, at least one heme propionate, and, by association, likely also E32 and D35 are involved in the dimerization. The “closed loop” form of the A–B and G–H flexible loops of monomeric NP4, which predominates in crystal structures of the monomeric protein reported at pH 5.6 but not at pH 7.5 and which involves all of the residues listed above except D132, is required for dimer formation. Wild-type NP1 does not form a homodimer, but NP1(K1A) and native N-terminal NP1 form dimers in the presence of NO. The homodimer of NP1, however, is considerably less stable than that of NP4 in the absence of NO. This suggests that additional aspartate or glutamate residues present in the C-terminal region of NP4, but not NP1, are also involved in stabilizing the dimer.
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spelling pubmed-43033052015-12-09 Dimerization of Nitrophorin 4 at Low pH and Comparison to the K1A Mutant of Nitrophorin 1 Berry, Robert E. Yang, Fei Shokhireva, Tatiana K. Amoia, Angela M. Garrett, Sarah A. Goren, Allena M. Korte, Stephanie R. Zhang, Hongjun Weichsel, Andrzej Montfort, William R. Walker, F. Ann Biochemistry [Image: see text] Nitrophorin 4, one of the four NO-carrying heme proteins from the salivary glands of Rhodnius prolixus, forms a homodimer at pH 5.0 with a K(d) of ∼8 μM. This dimer begins to dissociate at pH 5.5 and is completely dissociated to monomer at pH 7.3, even at 3.7 mM. The dimer is significantly stabilized by binding NO to the heme and at pH 7.3 would require dilution to well below 0.2 mM to completely dissociate the NP4-NO homodimer. The primary techniques used for investigating the homodimer and the monomer–dimer equilibrium were size-exclusion fast protein liquid chromatography at pH 5.0 and (1)H{(15)N} heteronuclear single-quantum coherence spectroscopy as a function of pH and concentration. Preparation of site-directed mutants of NP4 (A1K, D30A, D30N, V36A/D129A/L130A, K38A, R39A, K125A, K125E, D132A, L133V, and K38Q/R39Q/K125Q) showed that the N-terminus, D30, D129, D132, at least one heme propionate, and, by association, likely also E32 and D35 are involved in the dimerization. The “closed loop” form of the A–B and G–H flexible loops of monomeric NP4, which predominates in crystal structures of the monomeric protein reported at pH 5.6 but not at pH 7.5 and which involves all of the residues listed above except D132, is required for dimer formation. Wild-type NP1 does not form a homodimer, but NP1(K1A) and native N-terminal NP1 form dimers in the presence of NO. The homodimer of NP1, however, is considerably less stable than that of NP4 in the absence of NO. This suggests that additional aspartate or glutamate residues present in the C-terminal region of NP4, but not NP1, are also involved in stabilizing the dimer. American Chemical Society 2014-12-09 2015-01-20 /pmc/articles/PMC4303305/ /pubmed/25489673 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/bi5013047 Text en Copyright © 2014 American Chemical Society This is an open access article published under an ACS AuthorChoice License (http://pubs.acs.org/page/policy/authorchoice_termsofuse.html) , which permits copying and redistribution of the article or any adaptations for non-commercial purposes.
spellingShingle Berry, Robert E.
Yang, Fei
Shokhireva, Tatiana K.
Amoia, Angela M.
Garrett, Sarah A.
Goren, Allena M.
Korte, Stephanie R.
Zhang, Hongjun
Weichsel, Andrzej
Montfort, William R.
Walker, F. Ann
Dimerization of Nitrophorin 4 at Low pH and Comparison to the K1A Mutant of Nitrophorin 1
title Dimerization of Nitrophorin 4 at Low pH and Comparison to the K1A Mutant of Nitrophorin 1
title_full Dimerization of Nitrophorin 4 at Low pH and Comparison to the K1A Mutant of Nitrophorin 1
title_fullStr Dimerization of Nitrophorin 4 at Low pH and Comparison to the K1A Mutant of Nitrophorin 1
title_full_unstemmed Dimerization of Nitrophorin 4 at Low pH and Comparison to the K1A Mutant of Nitrophorin 1
title_short Dimerization of Nitrophorin 4 at Low pH and Comparison to the K1A Mutant of Nitrophorin 1
title_sort dimerization of nitrophorin 4 at low ph and comparison to the k1a mutant of nitrophorin 1
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4303305/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25489673
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/bi5013047
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