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The concept of phylogenetic denseness bears critically on the accuracy of evolutionary pathways inferred from experimentally sequenced proteins isolated from extant species. In this paper I develop an objective measure, rho, of denseness to supplement previous intuitive concepts and which permits one to use this concept in comparing the quality of different evolutionary reconstructions. This measure is used to examine several published phylogenetic trees: insulin, alpha-hemoglobin, beta-hemoglobin, myoglobin, cytochrome c, and the parvalbumin family. The paper emphasizes 1) the importance of denseness in accurately estimating the number of nucleotide replacements which separate homologous sequences when this estimation is made by the method of parsimony, 2) the value of this concept in assessing the quality of those estimates, and 3) the use of this concept as a biologically practical heuristic method for identifying poorly studied regions in a phylogenetic tree, whether or not the tree was obtained by the parsimony method.
J Mol Evol 1978 Aug 02
PMID:A measure of the denseness of a phylogenetic network. 69 Oct 73

Transplantable rat liver tumors 5123 t.c., 7288 ct.c., 5123 t.c.(H) and the Novikoff hepatoma have active mixed function oxidase systems capable of metabolizing a variety of drug and polycyclic hydrocarbon substrates. The tumor drug metabolism systems are at best 20% as active as rat liver. The tumor drug metabolism activities are induced by pretreatment with phenobarbital or beta-naphthoflavone and can be inhibited with specific inhibitors such as carbon monoxide or 7,8-benzoflavone. Tumor drug metabolism systems appear to consist of cytochrome P-450 and cytochrome P-450 reductase. The properties of the two protein components from tumors are highly similar to the corresponding components of the liver drug metabolism system. Cytochrome P-450 reductase has been at least partially purified from the Novikoff hepatoma and hepatoma 5123 t.c.(H). The kinetic and physical properties of the tumor reductases are similar to those of the liver reductase except that the Km of hepatoma 5123 t.c.(H) reductase, but not of the Novikoff hepatoma reductase for NADPH, is elevated an order of magnitude over the Km of the liver reductase. The mechanism for the interaction of electron donor and electron acceptor with liver or tumor reductases seems to be a sequential reaction mechanism. Experiments on the NADP-inhibition of the interaction of NADPH and cytochrome c with liver reductase indicate that NADP is competitive with NADPH and noncompetitive with cytochrome c. This result is consistent with the postulate of a sequential reaction for NADPH-cytochrome P-450 reductases of liver and tumors. These data support the conclusions that an active drug metabolism system is present in liver tumors and that the tumor systems are constituted like the liver system.
Mol Cell Biochem 1978 Dec 22
PMID:The drug metabolism systems of liver and liver tumors: a comparison of activities and characteristics. 74 99

1. We have studied the pleiotropic effect of a single-gene mutation of the pts mutant strain 1511 grown at 23 degrees C and 36 degrees C. 2. Growth of the mutant at the non-permissive temperature results in a decrease of respiration rate to about 50% after one generation and to less than 5% after five generations. The cytochrome spectra analysis revealed that only cytochrome c was present after growth at 36 degrees C. 3. Mitochondrial protein synthesis experiments in vivo demonstrated that the protein synthesizing system was not as rapidly inactivated by high temperature as the respiratory system. 4. The recovery of the respiratory capacity of the cells at 23 degrees C is complete but dependent on the de novo synthesis of a temperature sensitive protein.
Mol Gen Genet 1975 Sep 29
PMID:Studies on a temperature sensitive nuclear petite mutant of Saccharomyces cerevisiae: phenotypic reversibility of the mitochondrial functions. 110 55

Several reports have pointed out the existence of intermediate states (both kinetic and equilibrium intermediate) between the native and the denatured states. The molten globule state, a compact intermediate state in which the secondary structure is formed but the tertiary structure fluctuates considerably, is currently being studied intensively because of its possible implication in the folding process of several proteins. We have examined the thermal stability of horse cytochrome c at low pH between 2.0 and 3.2 and different potassium chloride concentrations by absorbance of the Soret band, far and near-ultraviolet circular dichroism (u.v. c.d.) and tryptophan fluorescence using a multidimensional spectrophotometer. The concentration of potassium chloride ranged from 0 M to 0.5 M. The experimental thermal denaturation curves show that: (1) the helical content of cytochrome c remains stable at higher temperature when the concentration of salt is increased; whereas (2) the extent of ordering of the tertiary structure is weakly dependent on salt concentration; and (3) for cytochrome c, the stabilization of the molten globule state is induced by the binding of anions. Other salts such as NaCl, LiCl, potassium ferricyanide (K3Fe(CN)6) and Na2SO4 may also be used to stabilize the molten globule state. The thermodynamic analysis of the denaturation curves of c.d. at 222 nm and c.d. at 282 nm shows that, whereas a two-state (native and denatured) transition is observed at low-salt concentration, the far and near-u.v. c.d. melting curves of cytochrome c do not coincide with each other at high-salt concentration, and a minimum of three different thermodynamic states (IIb, intermediate or IIc, and denatured) is necessary to achieve a sufficient analysis. The intermediate state (called IIc) is attributed to the molten globule state because of its high secondary structure content and the absence of tertiary structure. Therefore, at low pH, cytochrome c is present in at least four states (native, IIb, IIc and denatured) depending on the salt concentration and temperature. The thermodynamic parameters, i.e. the Gibbs free energy differences (delta G), the enthalpy differences (delta H), the midpoint temperatures (Tm) of the transition (IIb in equilibrium intermediate (IIc in equilibrium denatured) are determined. We also give estimates of the heat capacity differences (delta Cp) from the temperature dependence of the enthalpy differences. The enthalpy change and the heat capacity difference of the IIc in equilibrium denatured transition are non-zero. The number of charges (protons or chloride anions) released upon transitions are determined by analysing the pH and chloride anion concentration dependence of the Gibbs free energy.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
J Mol Biol 1992 Feb 20
PMID:Thermodynamic characterization of cytochrome c at low pH. Observation of the molten globule state and of the cold denaturation process. 131 87

High-resolution three-dimensional structural analyses of yeast iso-1-cytochrome c have now been completed in both oxidation states using isomorphous crystalline material and similar structure determination methodologies. This approach has allowed a comprehensive comparison to be made between these structures and the elucidation of the subtle conformational changes occurring between oxidation states. The structure solution of reduced yeast iso-1-cytochrome c has been published and the determination of the oxidized protein and a comparison of these structures are reported herein. Our data show that oxidation state-dependent changes are expressed for the most part in terms of adjustments to heme structure, movement of internally bound water molecules and segmental thermal parameter changes along the polypeptide chain, rather than as explicit polypeptide chain positional shifts, which are found to be minimal. This result is emphasized by the retention of all main-chain to main-chain hydrogen bond interactions in both oxidation states. Observed thermal factor changes primarily affect four segments of polypeptide chain. Residues 37-39 show less mobility in the oxidized state, with Arg38 and its side-chain being most affected. In contrast, residues 47-59, 65-72 and 81-85 have significantly higher thermal factors, with maximal increases being observed for Asn52, Tyr67 and Phe82. The side-chains of two of these residues are hydrogen bonded to the internally bound water molecule, Wat166, which shows a large 1.7 A displacement towards the positively charged heme iron atom in the oxidized protein. Further analyses suggest that Wat166 is a major factor in stabilizing both oxidation states of the heme through differential orientation of dipole moment, shift in distance to the heme iron atom and alterations in the surrounding hydrogen bonding network. It also seems likely that Wat166 movement leads to the disruption of the hydrogen bond from the side-chain of Tyr67 to the Met80 heme ligand, thereby further stabilizing the positively charged heme iron atom in oxidized cytochrome c. In total, there appear to be three regions about which oxidation state-dependent structural changes are focussed. These include the pyrrole ring A propionate group, Wat166 and the Met80 heme ligand. All three of these foci are linked together by a network of intermediary interactions and are localized to the Met80 ligand side of the heme group. Associated with each is a corresponding nearby segment of polypeptide chain having a substantially higher mobility in the oxidized protein.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
J Mol Biol 1992 Feb 20
PMID:Oxidation state-dependent conformational changes in cytochrome c. 131 91

Theoretical methods for correlation of sequence changes and redox potential of electron transport proteins are examined using the Asn52----Ile mutation in cytochrome c as a test case. The first approach uses the protein dipoles Langevin dipoles (PDLD) method and the high resolution X-ray structures of the native and the mutant proteins. This approach is found to give reliable results where all the solvent molecules are represented by Langevin dipoles and also when some bound water molecules are represented explicitly. A free energy perturbation method is also found to give reasonable results but at the expense of much more computer time. Finally, an approach that generates mutant structures from the native structure by molecular dynamics simulation and then uses these configurations in PDLD calculations is found to give a reasonable estimate of the effect of the mutation on the corresponding redox potential. The encouraging results obtained here and in a preliminary test case of the Phe82----Ser mutation indicates that the present strategies can provide a useful tool for structure-redox and sequence-redox correlation in proteins.
J Mol Biol 1992 Apr 05
PMID:Effect of the Asn52----Ile mutation on the redox potential of yeast cytochrome c. Theory and experiment. 131

Beef heart mitochondrial ubiquinol:cytochrome c oxidoreductase has been crystallized in the shape of hexagonal bipyramids. At present the crystals diffract X-rays to 4.7 A. From preliminary analysis the diffraction pattern appears to be consistent with space group P6(1)22 or P6(5)22 and with unit cell parameters a = b = 212 A and c = 352 A.
J Mol Biol 1992 Apr 20
PMID:X-ray diffraction by crystals of beef heart ubiquinol: cytochrome c oxidoreductase. 131 6

The oxidation of NADH and accompanying reduction of oxygen to H2O2 stimulated by polyvanadate was markedly inhibited by SOD and cytochrome c. The presence of decavanadate, the polymeric form, is necessary for obtaining the microsomal enzyme-catalyzed activity. The accompanying activity of reduction of cytochrome c was found to be SOD-insensitive and therefore does not represent superoxide formation. The reduction of cytochrome c by vanadyl sulfate was also SOD-insensitive. In the presence of H2O2, all the forms of vanadate were able to oxidize reduced cytochrome c, which was sensitive to mannitol, tris and also catalase, indicating H2O2-dependent generation of hydroxyl radicals. Using ESR and spin trapping technique only hydroxyl radicals, but not superoxide anion radicals, were detected during polyvanadate-dependent NADH oxidation.
Mol Cell Biochem 1992 Apr
PMID:Characterization of oxygen free radicals generated during vanadate-stimulated NADH oxidation. 131 4

The interaction of urea and guanidinium chloride with proteins has been studied calorimetrically by titrating protein solutions with denaturants at various fixed temperatures, and by scanning them with temperature at various fixed concentrations of denaturants. It has been shown that the observed heat effects can be described in terms of a simple binding model with independent and similar binding sites. Using the calorimetric data, the number of apparent binding sites for urea and guanidinium chloride have been estimated for three proteins in their unfolded and native states (ribonuclease A, hen egg white lysozyme and cytochrome c). The intrinsic and total thermodynamic characteristics of their binding (the binding constant, the Gibbs energy, enthalpy, entropy and heat capacity effect of binding) have also been determined. It is found that the binding of urea and guanidinium chloride by protein is accompanied by a significant decrease of enthalpy and entropy. At all concentrations of denaturants the enthalpy term slightly dominates the entropy term in the Gibbs energy function. Correlation analysis of the number of binding sites and structural characteristics of these proteins suggests that the binding sites for urea and guanidinium chloride are likely to be formed by several hydrogen bonding groups. This type of binding of the denaturant molecules should lead to a significant restriction of conformational freedom within the polypeptide chain. This raises a doubt as to whether a polypeptide chain in concentrated solutions of denaturants can be considered as a standard of a random coil conformation.
J Mol Biol 1992 Jul 20
PMID:Protein interactions with urea and guanidinium chloride. A calorimetric study. 132 62

As part of a study of protein folding and stability, the three-dimensional structures of yeast iso-2-cytochrome c and a composite protein (B-2036) composed of primary sequences of both iso-1 and iso-2-cytochromes c have been solved to 1.9 A and 1.95 A resolutions, respectively, using X-ray diffraction techniques. The sequences of iso-1 and iso-2-cytochrome c share approximately 84% identity and the B-2036 composite protein has residues 15 to 63 from iso-2-cytochrome c with the rest being derived form the iso-1 protein. Comparison of these structures reveals that amino acid substitutions result in alterations in the details of intramolecular interactions. Specifically, the substitution Leu98Met results in the filling of an internal cavity present in iso-1-cytochrome c. Further substitutions of Val20Ile and Cys102Ala alter the packing of secondary structure elements in the iso-2 protein. Blending the isozymic amino acid sequences in this latter area results in the expansion of the volume of an internal cavity in the B-2036 structure to relieve a steric clash between Ile20 and Cys102. Modification of hydrogen bonding and protein packing without disrupting the protein fold is illustrated by the His26Asn and Asn63Ser substitutions between iso-1 and iso-2-cytochromes c. Alternatively, a change in main-chain fold is observed at Gly37 apparently due to a remote amino acid substitution. Further structural changes occur at Phe82 and the amino terminus where a four residue extension is present in yeast iso-2-cytochrome c. An additional comparison with all other eukaryotic cytochrome c structures determined to date is presented, along with an analysis of conserved water molecules. Also determined are the midpoint reduction potentials of iso-2 and B-2036 cytochromes c using direct electrochemistry. The values obtained are 286 and 288 mV, respectively, indicating that the amino acid substitutions present have had only a small impact on the heme reduction potential in comparison to iso-1-cytochrome c, which has a reduction potential of 290 mV.
J Mol Biol 1992 Sep 05
PMID:Structure determination and analysis of yeast iso-2-cytochrome c and a composite mutant protein. 132 54


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