Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.1.26.9 (ribonuclease)
6,589 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

One of the four titrating histidine ring C-2 proton resonances of bovine pancreatic ribonuclease has been assigned to histidine residue 12. This was accomplished by a direct comparison of the rate of tritium incorporation into position C-2 of histidine 12 of S-peptide (residues 1 to 20) derived from ribonuclease S, with the rates of deuterium exchange of the four histidine C-2 proton resonances of ribonuclease S under the same experimental conditions. The same assignment was obtained by a comparison of the NMR titration curves of ribonuclease S, the noncovalent complex of S-peptide and S-protein (residues 21 to 124) with the results for the recombined complex in which position C-2 of histidine 12 was fully deuterated. The second active site histidine resonance was assigned to histidine residue 119 by consideration of the NMR titration results fro carboxymethylated histidines and 1-carboxymethylhistidine 119 ribonuclease. This assignment is a reversal of that originally reported, and has important implications for the interpretation of NMR titration data of ribonuclease.
...
PMID:Nuclear magnetic resonance titration curves of histidine ring protons. A direct assignment of the resonances of the active site histidine residues of ribonuclease. 0 54

The histidine C-2 proton NMR titration curves of ribonuclease S-peptide (residues 1 to 20) and S-protein (residues 21 to 124) are reported. Although S-protein contains 3 histidine residues, four discrete resonances are observed to titrate. One of these arises from the equivalent histidine residues of unfolded S-protein. The variation in area of the four resonances indicate that there is a reversible pH-dependent equilibrium between the folded and unfolded forms of S-protein, with some unfolded material being present at most pH values. Two of the resonances of the folded S-protein can be assigned to 2 of the histidine residues, 48 and 105, from the close similarity of their titration curves to those in ribonuclease. These similarities indicate a homology of portions of the folded conformation of S-protein to that of ribonuclease in solution. These results indicate that the complete amino acid sequence is not required to produce a folded conformation similar to the native globular protein, and they appear to eliminate the possibility that proteins fold from their NH2 terminus during protein synthesis. The low pH inflection present in the titration curve assigned to histidine residue 48 in ribonuclease is absent from this curve in S-protein. This is consistent with our previous conclusion that this inflection arises from the interaction of histidine 48 with aspartic acid residue 14, which is also absent in S-protein. The third titrating resonance of native S-protein is assigned to the remaining histidine residue at position 119. The properties of this resonance are not identical with either of the titration curves of the active site histidine residues 12 and 119 of ribonuclease. The resonance assigned to histidine 119 is the only one significantly affected on the addition of sodium phosphate to S-protein, indicating that some degree of phosphate binding occurs. In both the absence and presence of phosphate this curve also lacks the low pH inflection observed in the histidine 119 NMR titration curve in ribonuclease. This difference presumably arise from a conformational between ribonuclease and the folded S-protein involving a carboxyl group.
...
PMID:Nuclear magnetic resonance titration curves of histidine ring protons. Ribonuclease S-peptide and S-proteins. 0 55

The ribonuclease A derivative Npi-[13C1]carboxymethyl-histine-119 ribonuclease prepared by using [13C1]bromoacetate as alkylating reagent has been investigated with high resolution 13C NMR spectroscopy. In the 13C NMR spectra two carbon resonances of relatively high intensity appear which can be assigned to carboxyl groups attached to His-119 and Met-30, their intensity ratio being 10 : 1. The pH dependence of the carbon resonance of the carboxy-methyl group bound to the Npi of His-119 differs in the absence and presence of Cyd-2'-P, thus indicating that the catalytically inactive derivative does bind nucleotides. A mechanism of the alkylation reaction at pH 5.6 is proposed in which the epsilon-amino group of Lys-41 acts as the binding site for the carboxyl group of bromoacetate pushing the bromomethylene group towards the Npi of His-119 or the Ntau of His-12.
...
PMID:13C NMR investigations on Npi-[13C1]carboxymethyl-histidine-119 ribonuclease. 3 23

220-MHz NMR was used to observe the titration behavior of the 5 histidine residues in porcine pancreatic ribonuclease (ribonucleate pyrimidine-nucleotido-2'-transferase (cyclizing), EC 3.1.4.22) and a derivative prepared by removal of 80% of the attached carbohydrate from this glycoprotein. Resonances due to histidine C-2 protons were observed over the full pH range for 3 of the residues; such resonances for the remaining 2 histidine residues broadened out as the pH was increased. Resonances due to histidine C-4 protons were also observed for 2 of the residues. The titration curves for both proteins were identical within experimental error. Resonances were assigned by comparison with histidine NMR titrations in ribonucleases from other species. Histidine 105, immediately adjacent to the site of attachment of a heterosaccharide side chain, has a C-2 proton chemical shift and pK that are insensitive to the large alteration in the bulk of the carbohydrate side chain. The chemical shifts of the C-2 proton of histidine 48 and of the C-4 proton of histidine 80, histidine residues that are close to one another and to another heterosaccharide side chain, show a similar insensitivity. The observations are direct evidence in support of the thesis that the heterosaccharides in porcine ribonuclease project away from the surface of the protein into the solution environment.
...
PMID:A comparison by 220-MHz NMR of histidine hydronium ion titrations in porcine pancreatic ribonuclease and an extensively deglycosylated derivative. 3 80

Zn2+, Cd2+ and Hg2+ inhibit ribonuclease but Mn2+ does not except at very high concentrations. By high resolution NMR one can detect in the pH range 5-8 the C-2 protons of histidines 105, 12, and 119. The inhibiting ions produce large shifts of the resonance of His-12 but not of His-105. On the other hand Mn2+ broadens the C-2 proton of His-105 much more than it does those of His-12 and 119. The selective shifts suggest that the mechanism of inhibition is binding at or near the active site of which His-12 and 119 are a part. The selective broadening is a consequence of binding of the Mn2+ to a site very far from the active site but closer to His-105.
...
PMID:Interaction of transition metal ions with ribonuclease A. II. The selective effects of Mn2+, Zn2+, Cd2+ and Hg2+ on the histidine magnetic resonance. 23 49

The microenvironment of histidine-48 of bovine pancreatic ribonuclease A was investigated by proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy (1H NMR) using partially deuterated enzyme in which resolution of the C(2)-H resonance of histidine-48 was simplified. The NMR titration curves at 100 and 250 MHz of histidine-48 of ribonuclease A are discontinuous both for the enzyme alone in 0.3 M chloride and for its complex with cytidine 3'-phosphate. This suggests that titration of histidine-48 occurs only as the result of a slow conformational transition. The sum of the peaks corresponding to histidine-48 in the acid-stable and base-stable forms of the enzyme is less than one proton in the transition region, which indicates that there exists at least one intermediate conformational form of the enzyme. The transition from the acid-stable form to an intermediate form has a pHmid of 5.6, and the transition from an intermediate form to the base-stable form has a pHmid of 6.9. In ribonuclease S and in ribonuclease A in the presence of 0.3 M acetate, the titration curve of histidine-48 is continuous, and the area of the peak is uniform throughout the titration. Proton NMR difference spectra at 100 and 250 MHz reveal a pH-induced conformational change with a pHmid of 5.7 that affects the chemical shift of a single tyrosine residue. This conformational transition is absent in ribonuclease S and is altered in ribonuclease A by the presence of either acetate or cytidine 3'-monophosphate. It is postulated that the same conformational transition is responsible for both the tyrosine perturbation and the disappearance of the histidine-48 peak observed in the acid-stable form of the enzyme. It is proposed that the perturbed tyrosine is tyrosine-25. The transition with pHmid 5.6 is attributed to dissociation of aspartic acid-14, and the transition with pHmid 6.9 is assigned to dissociation of histidine-48. A peak in the aromatic region that moves upfield on addition of the competitive inhibitor cytidine 3'-monophosphate is assigned to a tyrosine, and evidence is presented that this tyrosine is tyrosine-25. Inhibitor binding appears to induce a conformational change in the histidine-48/tyrosine-25 region which is remote from the active site.
...
PMID:Correlation proton magnetic resonance studies at 250 MHz of bovine pancreatic ribonuclease. II. pH and inhibitor-induced conformational transitions affecting histidine-48 and one tyrosine residue of ribonuclease A. 24 Mar 91

The enrichment of tRNA at specific sites with carbon-13 has been accomplished in vivo using a mutant of Escherichia coli. A relaxed strain of E. coli auxotrophic for methionine was grown in a specifically defined medium supplemented with either [14C] or [13C]-methyl labeled methionine. Cells were collected at the end of the log-phase of growth and tRNA was extracted. Analysis of the radioactivity of the [14C]-labeled tRNA established an incorporation ratio of three labeled carbons per tRNA molecule. Incorporation of the [14C]-label in vivo was confined to the methylation of nucleotides as determined by thin layer chromatography of nucleotides resulting from a ribonuclease digestion of [14C]-labeled tRNA. The carbon-13 NMR spectrum of [13C]-enriched tRNA indicated a similar degree of incorporation into the methylated nucleotides by the substantial enhancement of [13C]-methyl NMR signals only. Assignment of signals has been made for the methyl groups of ribothymidine and N7-methylguanosine in E. coli tRNA.
...
PMID:Utilization of an Escherichia coli mutant for carbon-13 enrichment of tRNA for NMR studies. 110 Dec 25

NMR titration curves are reported for the 4 histidine residues of ribonuclease A in sodium acetate and for ribonuclease S in sodium acetate, phosphate, and sulfate solutions. Evidence is presented that the imidazole side chain of histidine residue 48 undergoes a conformational change, probably also involving the carboxyl side chain of aspartic acid residue 14. This group is considered to be responsible for the low pH inflection with pKa 4.2 present in the NMR titration curve of the C-2 proton resonance of histidine 48. The NMR titration curves of the active site histidine residues 12 and 119 also exhibit inflections at low pH values, although there is no carboxyl group within 9 A of the imidazole side chain of histidine residue 12 in the structure of ribonuclease S determined by x-ray crystallography (Wyckoff, H. W., Tsernoglou, D., Hanson, A. W. Knox, J. R., Lee, B., and Richards, F. M. (1970) J. Biol. Chem. 245, 305-328). Curve fitting was carried out on 11 sets of NMR titration data using a model in which the 3 histidine residues 12, 119, and 48 are assumed to be affected by a common carboxyl group. The results obtained indicate that such a model with fewer parameters gives as good a representation of the data as the model in which each histidine residue is assumed to interact separately with a different carboxyl group. Therefore, it is concluded that the ionization of aspartic acid residue 14 is indirectly experienced by the active site histidine residues through the conformational change at histidine 48. A model assuming mutual interaction of the active site histidine residues does not account for the low pH inflections in these curves.
...
PMID:Nuclear magnetic resonance titration curves of histidine ring protons. Conformational transition affecting three of the histidine residues of ribonuclease. 123 92

The formation of hydrogen-bonded structure in the folding reaction of ubiquitin, a small cytoplasmic protein with an extended beta-sheet and an alpha-helix surrounding a pronounced hydrophobic core, has been investigated by hydrogen-deuterium exchange labeling in conjunction with rapid mixing methods and two-dimensional NMR analysis. The time course of protection from exchange has been measured for 26 back-bone amide protons that form stable hydrogen bonds upon refolding and exchange slowly under native conditions. Amide protons in the beta-sheet and the alpha-helix, as well as protons involved in hydrogen bonds at the helix/sheet interface, become 80% protected in an initial 8-ms folding phase, indicating that the two elements of secondary structure form and associate in a common cooperative folding event. Somewhat slower protection rates for residues 59, 61, and 69 provide evidence for the subsequent stabilization of a surface loop. Most probes also exhibit two minor phases with time constants of about 100 ms and 10 s. Only two of the observed residues, Gln-41 and Arg-42, display significant slow folding phases, with amplitudes of 37% and 22%, respectively, which can be attributed to native-like folding intermediates containing cis peptide bonds for Pro-37 and/or Pro-38. Compared with other proteins studied by pulse labeling, including cytochrome c, ribonuclease, and barnase, the initial formation of hydrogen-bonded structure in ubiquitin occurs at a more rapid rate and slow-folding species are less prominent.
...
PMID:Early hydrogen-bonding events in the folding reaction of ubiquitin. 131 11

The size of the cavity around Ser68 of Escherichia coli ribonuclease HI was modulated by amino acid substitutions to examine the effects on the stability of the enzyme. Five mutant proteins, Ser68----Gly, Ser68----Ala, Ser68----Thr, Ser68----Val and Ser68----Leu, were constructed. Each of the mutant proteins exhibited at least 40% of the enzyme activity of the wild-type protein. The stabilities of the mutant proteins were determined from urea-denaturation and thermal-denaturation curves. Among the five mutations, only the Ser----Val mutation resulted in an increase in the stability of the enzyme. The melting temperature, tm, at pH 3.0 of the mutant protein Ser68----Val was increased by 1.9 degrees C. Its free-energy change of unfolding in the absence of urea, delta G(H2O), and the midpoint of the denaturation curve, [D]1/2, were also increased by 5.4 kJ/mol and 0.18 M, respectively. The increase in the stability of the enzyme is probably due to the filling of the cavity space around Ser68 by valine. However, the mutation of Ser68 to glycine or leucine residues resulted in a considerable decrease in stability. In these cases, some conformational changes occur, as suggested by the CD and 1H-NMR spectra of these mutant proteins.
...
PMID:Effect of cavity-modulating mutations on the stability of Escherichia coli ribonuclease HI. 131 95


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>