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Query: EC:3.1.31.1 (
micrococcal nuclease
)
2,818
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
An active derivative of
staphylococcal nuclease
, in which only tyrosine residue 115 has been nitrated with use of tetranitromethane, has been characterized using absorbance, circular dichroism, and fluorescence spectroscopy. The results show that nitrotyrosine-115 nuclease is indistinguishable from native nuclease with regard to the average secondary structure of the folded polypeptide chain, the susceptibility of the enzyme to heat denaturation, and the local tertiary structure around
tryptophan
residue 140. Inasmuch as optical properties of nitrotyrosine-115 nuclease from 300 to 500 nm can be unambiguously assigned to nitrotyrosine residue 115 in the active site region, this modified enzyme presents a good model system for studying the circular dichroism properties of this aromatic amino acid in a protein. The spectral properties of nitrotyrosine-115 nuclease have been compared to those of the model compounds, cyclo-(-Gly-Tyr(3NO2)-) and Tyr(3NO2). Circular dichroism spectral changes in nitrotyrosine-115 nuclease due to the binding of deoxythymidine 3',5'-diphosphate and Ca-2+ have been compared to the corresponding nitrotyrosyl-115 absorption spectral changes. This comparison shows that the circular dichroism difference spectrum exhibits an over-all change in the intensity of the observed Cotton effects, whereas the absorption difference spectrum exhibits a blue shift. This finding supports the suggestion that perturbations of aromatic amino acid chromophores in proteins due to ligand binding result in red or blue shifts in absorption difference spectra, but in over-all changes of intensity in circular dichroism difference spectra.
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PMID:Circular dichroism and absorbance properties of nitrotyrosyl chromophores in staphylococcal nuclease and in a model diketopiperazine. 23 57
The dynamics of protein molecules in the subnanosecond and nanosecond time range were investigated by time-resolved fluorescence polarization spectroscopy. Synchrotron radiation from a storage ring was used as a pulsed light source to excite the single
tryptophan
residue in a series of proteins. The full width at half maximum of the detected light pulse was 0.65 nsec, making it feasible to measure emission anisotropy kinetics in the subnanosecond time range and thereby to resolve internal rotational motions. The proteins investigated exhibit different degrees of rotational freedom of their
tryptophan
residue, ranging from almost no mobility to nearly complete freedom in the subnanosecond time range. The
tryptophan
residue of
Staphylococcus aureus nuclease B
(20,000 daltons) has a single rotational correlation time (varphi) of 9.9 nsec at 20 degrees C, corresponding to a rotation of the whole protein molecule. By contrast, bovine basic A1 myelin protein (18,000 daltons) exhibits varphi of 0.09 and 1.26 nsec, showing that the
tryptophan
residue in this protein is highly flexible. The single
tryptophan
of human serum albumin (69,000 daltons) has almost no rotational freedom at 8 degrees C (varphi = 31.4 nsec), whereas at 43 degrees C it rotates rapidly (varphi(1) = 0.14 nsec) within a cone of semiangle 26 degrees in addition to rotating together with the whole protein (varphi(2) = 14 nsec). Of particular interest in the large angular range (semiangle, 34 degrees ) and fast rate (varphi(1) = 0.51 nsec) of the rotational motion of the
tryptophan
residue in Pseudomonas aeruginosa azurin (14,000 daltons). This residue is known to be located in the hydrophobic interior of the protein. The observed amplitudes and rates of these internal motions of
tryptophan
residues suggest that elementary steps in functionally significant conformational changes may take place in the subnanosecond time range.
...
PMID:Subnanosecond motions of tryptophan residues in proteins. 28 74
The search for proteins involved in maintaining higher order chromatin structures has led to a systematic examination of the non-histone proteins (NHP) of rat liver nuclei in the context of nuclease digestion studies. 40-45% of the 3H-
tryptophan
labelled NHP originally present could be removed by extensive washing in a "physiological" buffer, incubation at 37 degrees C with or without nuclease and a further wash step. Nuclei at this stage had a remarkably constant NHP content (ca. 0.73 micrograms/micrograms DNA), independent of the degree of digestion with
micrococcal nuclease
or HaeIII. The solubilized chromatin produced by limited digestion with either nuclease contained 0.3-0.5 microgram NHP/microgram DNA, this value falling to ca. 0.16 after more extensive cleavage. Insoluble chromatin fractions were between 2-fold (very limited digestion) and 16-fold (extensive digestion) richer in NHP than the corresponding soluble fractions. Gel electrophoresis revealed about 12 NHP bands in soluble fractions, the most prominent of M.Wt. 41.400, while the insoluble material had at least 50 components. These properties were independent of whether lysis of nuclei occurred in 0.2 or 50 mM ionic strength. The large disparity in NHP content between complementary soluble and insoluble chromatin fractions is considered in terms of chromatin organization in vivo and the possible role of NHP migration.
...
PMID:The non-histone proteins of the rat liver nucleus and their distribution amongst chromatin fractions as produced by nuclease digestion. 49 43
The protein from a mutant clone of
staphylococcal nuclease
with a cysteine substituting for a lysine at position 78 was prepared and labeled with a cysteine-specific fluorescent probe 5-[[2-[(iodoacetyl)-amino]ethyl]amino]naphthalene-1-sulfonic acid (IAEDANS). Time-resolved nonradiative energy-transfer studies were done using the single
tryptophan
at position 140 as the energy donor and the IAEDANS as the receptor. Changes in distance and distance distributions were observed as a function of increasing guanidinium (GuHCl) concentration (0-2 M) and in the presence or absence of Ca2+ and inhibitor 2'-deoxythymidine 3',5'-diphosphate (pdTp). In the native state, both the ternary complex and the noncomplexed protein are best fit with one population having an average donor-acceptor distance of approximately 23 A and an "apparent" full width at half-maximum (fwhm) of distance distribution of approximately 18 A. Besides the contribution of linker arm of the acceptor, it appears that there are some conformational heterogeneties either due to the disordering of the
tryptophan
region or due to the whole protein in the native state. During GuHCl unfolding, the average distance remains relatively constant up to GuHCl concentrations where both the ternary complex and the ligand-free protein are denatured (1-1.3 M). The compact denatured states persist up to 2 M GuHCl. At 2 M GuHCl, the heterogeneity of the denatured state in the ternary complex is much larger than that of the ligand-free nuclease. The results show that the denatured states of
staphylococcal nuclease
mutant K78C by GuHCl are compact and these compact denatured states are likely due to residual structures or incompletely disrupted hydrophobic cores under these conditions.
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PMID:Compact denatured state of a staphylococcal nuclease mutant by guanidinium as determined by resonance energy transfer. 142 Jan 43
The kinetics of the hydrodynamic volume change accompanying the reversible unfolding of
staphylococcal nuclease
have been observed by size-exclusion chromatography at 4 degrees C and pH 7.0 using the denaturant guanidine hydrochloride. The observed chromatographic profiles have been simulated by a six-component unfolding/refolding mechanism using a consistent set of equilibrium and kinetic parameters. The native protein is an equilibrium mixture of the cis and trans isomers of the peptide bond preceding proline-117. The native conformation containing the cis isomer dominates the equilibrium mixture, is more stable, and unfolds more slowly at its transition midpoint. The denatured protein is an equilibrium mixture of at least four components, the cis/trans isomers of proline-117 and one of the five remaining prolines. The dominant refolding pathway is initiated from the denatured component containing the trans isomer of proline-117. The six-component mechanism is consistent with
tryptophan
fluorescence kinetic measurements of the wild-type protein and with chromatographic measurements of a mutant P117G protein.
...
PMID:A kinetic study of the folding of staphylococcal nuclease using size-exclusion chromatography. 144 76
Thermodynamic analysis by differential scanning calorimetry shows that the folding/unfolding transition of
staphylococcal nuclease
is consistent with the two-state process. Stopped-flow kinetic measurements, monitoring the Trp140 fluorescence and covering five decades in time (2 ms to 300 s), indicate that the unfolding from pH 7.0 to 3.1 is monophasic (time constant 1.15 s) and from pH 7.0 to 12.2 is biphasic (time constants: one less than 2 ms and the other 0.6 s). However, the folding, either from pH 3.1 to 7.0 or from pH 12.2 to 7.0, is triphasic (time constants 150 ms, 850 ms and 30 s from acid, 90 ms, 565 ms and 33 s from alkaline). A simple sequential model, which agrees with the above observations for acidic folding/unfolding is, D3 in equilibrium D2 in equilibrium D1 in equilibrium N. The three Ds denote three sub-states of the unfolded state and N denotes the native state. These sub-states of D have similar enthalpy and
tryptophan
fluorescence, and their equilibrium cannot be shifted by temperature changes. However, they are kinetically distinctive. Data do not favor alternative mechanisms assuming parallel transitions of the three Ds to N, or complexity of the N state, or parallel transitions of sub-states of N1, N2 and N3 to D. Other more complex, branched or cyclic, kinetics are not considered because of the lack of evidence, pH dependence of the unfolding kinetics suggests that the unfolding is triggered by protonation of 0.8(+/- 0.3) ionizable groups, with a pKa of 3.9 or by deprotonation of 1.6(+/- 0.4) ionizable groups with pKa values near 10.5. Circular dichroisms indicate that these three D states retain nonrandom chain conformation. Possible role of these "chain conformation" in the protein folding is discussed.
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PMID:Kinetic analysis of the acid and the alkaline unfolded states of staphylococcal nuclease. 187 Jan 30
To quantitate the contributions of the large hydrophobic residues in
staphylococcal nuclease
to the stability of its native state, single alanine and glycine substitutions were constructed by site-directed mutagenesis for each of the 11 leucine, 9 valine, 7 tyrosine, 5 isoleucine, 4 methionine, and 3 phenylalanine residues. In addition, each isoleucine was also mutated to valine. The resulting collection of 83 mutant nucleases was submitted to guanidine hydrochloride denaturation using intrinsic
tryptophan
fluorescence to monitor the equilibrium constant between the native and denatured states. From analysis of these data, each mutant protein's stability to reversible denaturation (delta GH2O) and sensitivity to guanidine hydrochloride (mGuHCl or d(delta G)/d[GuHCl]) were obtained. Four unexpected trends were observed. (1) A striking bipartite distribution was found for sites of mutations that altered mGuHCl: mutations that increased this parameter only involved residues that contribute side chains to the major hydrophobic core centered around a five-strand beta-barrel, whereas mutations that caused mGuHCl to decrease clustered around a second, smaller and less well-defined hydrophobic core. (2) The average stability loss for mutants in each of the six residue classes was 2-3 times greater than that estimated on the basis of the free energy of transfer of the hydrophobic side chain from water to n-octanol. (3) The magnitude of the stability loss on substituting Ala or Gly for a particular type of amino acid varied extensively among the different sites of its occurrence in nuclease, indicating that the environment surrounding a specific residue determines how large a stability contribution its side chain will make.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Contributions of the large hydrophobic amino acids to the stability of staphylococcal nuclease. 226 61
A combination of multinuclear two-dimensional NMR experiments served to identify and assign the combined 1H, 13C, and 15N spin systems of the single
tryptophan
, three phenylalanines, three histidines, and seven tyrosines of
staphylococcal nuclease
H124L in its ternary complex with calcium and thymidine 3',5'-bisphosphate at pH 5.1 (H2O) or pH 5.5 (2H2O). Samples of recombinant nuclease were labeled with 13C or 15N as appropriate to individual NMR experiments: uniformly with 15N (all sites to greater than 95%), uniformly with 13C (all sites to 26%), selectively with 13C (single amino acids uniformly labeled to 26%), or selectively with 15N (single amino acids uniformly labeled to greater than 95%). NMR data used in the analysis included single-bond and multiple-bond 1H-13C and multiple-bond 1H-15N correlations, 1H-13C single-bond correlation with Hartmann-Hahn relay (1H[13C]SBC-HH), and 1H-13C single-bond correlation with NOE relay (1H[13C]SBC-NOE). The aromatic protons of the spin systems were identified from 1H[13C]SBC-HH data, and the nonprotonated aromatic ring carbons were identified from 1H-13C multiple-bond correlations. Sequence-specific assignments were made on the basis of observed NOE relay connectivities between assigned 1H alpha-13C alpha or 1H beta-13C beta direct cross peaks in the aliphatic region [Wang, J., LeMaster, D. M., & Markley, J. L. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 88-101] and 1H delta-13C delta direct cross peaks in the aromatic region of the 1H[13C]SBC-NOE spectrum. The His121 1H delta 2 resonance, which has an unusual upfield shift (at 4.3 ppm in the aliphatic region), was assigned from 1H[13C]SBC, 1H[13C]MBC, and 1H[15N]MBC data. Evidence for local structural heterogeneity in the ternary complex was provided by doubled peaks assigned to His46, one tyrosine, and one phenylalanine. Measurement of NOE buildup rates between protons on different aromatic residues of the major ternary complex species yielded a number of interproton distances that could be compared with those from X-ray structures of the wild-type nuclease ternary complex with calcium and thymidine 3',5'-bisphosphate [Cotton, F. A., Hazen, E. E., Jr., & Legg, M. J. (1979) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 76, 2551-2555; Loll, P. J., & Lattman, E. E. (1989) Proteins: Struct., Funct., Genet. 5, 183-201]. The unusual chemical shift of His121 1H delta 2 is consistent with ring current calculations from either X-ray structure.
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PMID:Two-dimensional NMR studies of staphylococcal nuclease: evidence for conformational heterogeneity from hydrogen-1, carbon-13, and nitrogen-15 spin system assignments of the aromatic amino acids in the nuclease H124L-thymidine 3',5'-bisphosphate-Ca2+ ternary complex. 236 Nov 41
The effect of methanol on the folding of
staphylococcal nuclease
has been investigated. Equilibrium thermal unfolding transitions were monitored by fluorescence emission. The transition was very sensitive to the presence of methanol (at pH 7.0), the Tm decreased from above 50 degrees C for aqueous solution to below 0 degree C for 70% methanol. The transitions were fully reversible and conformed to two-state behavior. A linear relationship was observed between the hydrophobicity of the solvent and both the Tm and the change in delta G for unfolding. The effect of pH on the transition in 50% methanol at 0 degree C was essentially the same as for aqueous solution, with a cooperative transition in the vicinity of apparent pH (pH*) 4. The unfolding transition was determined as a function of guanidine thiocyanate in aqueous and 50% methanol solvents. The midpoints of the transitions were 0.30 and 0.20 M, respectively, at 2.1 degrees C. The kinetics of folding at 0 degree C were compared in aqueous, 50% methanol and 0.30 M guanidine thiocyanate solvents, by monitoring changes in the
tryptophan
fluorescence intensity. Triphasic kinetics for refolding in both aqueous and 50% methanol solutions were observed in stopped-flow experiments. In both solvent systems the slowest phase is ascribed to proline isomerization. The kinetics of refolding were monitored at subzero temperatures in 50% methanol at pH* 7.0 in manual mixing experiments. Biphasic kinetics were observed at temperatures between 0 and -35 degrees C. A third, faster phase, was inferred from the missing amplitude. The energies of activation were 20.0 and 17.2 kcal mol-1, respectively, for the two slower phases. At -33.8 degrees C, the observed pseudo first-order rate constants were 1.2 x 10(-3) and 2.1 x 10(-5) s-1. At temperatures above -35 degrees C, the sum of the observed amplitudes was essentially constant at 70-75% of the expected total amplitude. At lower temperatures the amplitude of the refolding reaction decreased, and the native state was not formed (unless the temperature was increased), due to the formation of a trapped intermediate state. This intermediate has circular dichroism and fluorescence properties consistent with a compact state with some molten globule characteristics.
...
PMID:The folding of staphylococcal nuclease in the presence of methanol or guanidine thiocyanate. 237 96
With a view toward the determination of nucleic acid binding domains and sites on nucleic acid helix-destabilizing (single strand-specific) proteins (HDPs), we have studied the interactions of the copolymer polynucleotide photoaffinity label, poly(adenylic, 8-azidoadenylic acid), (poly(A,8-N3A] with the T4 bacteriophage HDP, 32 protein. Poly(A,8-N3A) quenched the intrinsic
tryptophan
fluorescence of 32 protein in a manner similar to that observed with other polynucleotides, and the effect could be reversed by addition of sufficient NaCl. The binding affinity and site size of this noncovalent interaction of poly(A,8-N3A) with 32 protein are similar to the values obtained for poly(A) and this protein. When [3H]poly(A,8-N3A)/32 protein mixtures were irradiated at 254 nm, fluorescence quenching was not reversed by NaCl, suggesting that the label was covalently bound to the protein. Mixtures of photolabel and protein subjected to short periods of irradiation (generally 1 min, 2000 erg mm-2) formed high molecular weight complexes, which when electrophoresed on sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gels were radioactive and stained with Coomassie Blue R. Under the same conditions, [3H]poly(A) failed to label 32 protein. The radioactivity of [3H]poly(A,8-N3A)-labeled complexes subjected to
micrococcal nuclease
after irradiation was seen to migrate just behind the free 32 protein monomer on SDS-polyacrylamide gels, indicating that portions of the photolabel not in direct contact with protein were accessible to this enzyme. By several criteria, we conclude that 32 protein was photolabeled specifically at its single-stranded nucleic acid binding site. Single-stranded nucleic acids with affinities for protein greater than that of poly(A,8-N3A) effectively inhibited photolabeling. The [NaCl] dependence of photolabeling monitored on SDS gels paralleled the NaCl reversal of (noncovalent) poly(A,8-N3A)-32 protein binding. Photolabeling reached a plateau after 1-2 min. The formation of high molecular weight complexes with increasing [poly(A,8-N3A)] paralleled the disappearance of free protein on SDS gels, and reached a saturation level of about 75% labeling. Several chromatographic procedures appear to be useful for the separation of the photolabeled complexes from free protein and photolabel. Limited trypsin hydrolysis of photolabeled 32 protein indicated that all the label was within the central ("III") portion of the protein. This approach should have general applicability to the identification of nucleic acid binding sites on helix-destabilizing proteins.
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PMID:Photoaffinity labeling of T4 bacteriophage 32 protein. 243 10
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