10 results on '"Vallone B"'
Search Results
2. The Monod-Wyman-Changeux allosteric model accounts for the quaternary transition dynamics in wild type and a recombinant mutant human hemoglobin.
- Author
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Levantino M, Spilotros A, Cammarata M, Schirò G, Ardiccioni C, Vallone B, Brunori M, and Cupane A
- Subjects
- Adult, Catalytic Domain genetics, Humans, Kinetics, Mutation genetics, Allosteric Site genetics, Hemoglobins chemistry, Hemoglobins genetics, Models, Molecular, Protein Conformation, Recombinant Proteins genetics
- Abstract
The acknowledged success of the Monod-Wyman-Changeux (MWC) allosteric model stems from its efficacy in accounting for the functional behavior of many complex proteins starting with hemoglobin (the paradigmatic case) and extending to channels and receptors. The kinetic aspects of the allosteric model, however, have been often neglected, with the exception of hemoglobin and a few other proteins where conformational relaxations can be triggered by a short and intense laser pulse, and monitored by time-resolved optical spectroscopy. Only recently the application of time-resolved wide-angle X-ray scattering (TR-WAXS), a direct structurally sensitive technique, unveiled the time scale of hemoglobin quaternary structural transition. In order to test the generality of the MWC kinetic model, we carried out a TR-WAXS investigation in parallel on adult human hemoglobin and on a recombinant protein (HbYQ) carrying two mutations at the active site [Leu(B10)Tyr and His(E7)Gln]. HbYQ seemed an ideal test because, although exhibiting allosteric properties, its kinetic and structural properties are different from adult human hemoglobin. The structural dynamics of HbYQ unveiled by TR-WAXS can be quantitatively accounted for by the MWC kinetic model. Interestingly, the main structural change associated with the R-T allosteric transition (i.e., the relative rotation and translation of the dimers) is approximately 10-fold slower in HbYQ, and the drop in the allosteric transition rate with ligand saturation is steeper. Our results extend the general validity of the MWC kinetic model and reveal peculiar thermodynamic properties of HbYQ. A possible structural interpretation of the characteristic kinetic behavior of HbYQ is also discussed.
- Published
- 2012
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3. X-ray structure analysis of a metalloprotein with enhanced active-site resolution using in situ x-ray absorption near edge structure spectroscopy.
- Author
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Arcovito A, Benfatto M, Cianci M, Hasnain SS, Nienhaus K, Nienhaus GU, Savino C, Strange RW, Vallone B, and Della Longa S
- Subjects
- Animals, Spectrum Analysis methods, Sperm Whale, Synchrotrons, X-Ray Diffraction methods, Metalloproteins chemistry, Models, Molecular, Myoglobin chemistry
- Abstract
X-ray absorption spectroscopy is exquisitely sensitive to the coordination geometry of an absorbing atom and therefore allows bond distances and angles of the surrounding atomic cluster to be measured with atomic resolution. By contrast, the accuracy and resolution of metalloprotein active sites obtainable from x-ray crystallography are often insufficient to analyze the electronic properties of the metals that are essential for their biological functions. Here, we demonstrate that the combination of both methods on the same metalloprotein single crystal yields a structural model of the protein with exceptional active-site resolution. To this end, we have collected an x-ray diffraction data set to 1.4-A resolution and Fe K-edge polarized x-ray absorption near edge structure (XANES) spectra on the same cyanomet sperm whale myoglobin crystal. The XANES spectra were quantitatively analyzed by using a method based on the multiple scattering approach, which yielded Fe-heme structural parameters with +/-(0.02-0.07)-A accuracy on the atomic distances and +/-7 degrees on the Fe-CN angle. These XANES-derived parameters were subsequently used as restraints in the crystal structure refinement. By combining XANES and x-ray diffraction, we have obtained an cyanomet sperm whale myoglobin structural model with a higher precision of the bond lengths and angles at the active site than would have been possible with crystallographic analysis alone.
- Published
- 2007
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4. The structure of the endoribonuclease XendoU: From small nucleolar RNA processing to severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus replication.
- Author
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Renzi F, Caffarelli E, Laneve P, Bozzoni I, Brunori M, and Vallone B
- Subjects
- Amino Acid Sequence, Animals, Binding Sites, Crystallography, X-Ray, Endoribonucleases genetics, Endoribonucleases metabolism, Humans, Models, Molecular, Molecular Sequence Data, Protein Folding, Severe acute respiratory syndrome-related coronavirus genetics, Sequence Alignment, Uridine Monophosphate metabolism, Xenopus Proteins genetics, Xenopus Proteins metabolism, Endoribonucleases chemistry, Protein Structure, Tertiary, RNA Processing, Post-Transcriptional, RNA, Small Nuclear metabolism, Severe acute respiratory syndrome-related coronavirus physiology, Virus Replication physiology, Xenopus Proteins chemistry, Xenopus laevis metabolism
- Abstract
Small nucleolar RNAs (snoRNAs) play a key role in eukaryotic ribosome biogenesis. In most cases, snoRNAs are encoded in introns and are released through the splicing reaction. Some snoRNAs are, instead, produced by an alternative pathway consisting of endonucleolytic processing of pre-mRNA. XendoU, the endoribonuclease responsible for this activity, is a U-specific, metal-dependent enzyme that releases products with 2'-3' cyclic phosphate termini. XendoU is broadly conserved among eukaryotes, and it is a genetic marker of nidoviruses, including the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus, where it is essential for replication and transcription. We have determined by crystallography the structure of XendoU that, by refined search methodologies, appears to display a unique fold. Based on sequence conservation, mutagenesis, and docking simulations, we have identified the active site. The conserved structural determinants of this site may provide a framework for attempting to design antiviral drugs to interfere with the infectious nidovirus life cycle.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
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5. Extended subnanosecond structural dynamics of myoglobin revealed by Laue crystallography.
- Author
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Bourgeois D, Vallone B, Arcovito A, Sciara G, Schotte F, Anfinrud PA, and Brunori M
- Subjects
- Carbon Monoxide chemistry, Carbon Monoxide metabolism, Crystallography, X-Ray, Heme chemistry, Heme metabolism, Models, Molecular, Myoglobin genetics, Protein Structure, Tertiary, Time Factors, Myoglobin chemistry, Myoglobin metabolism
- Abstract
Work carried out over the last 30 years unveiled the role of structural dynamics in controlling protein function. Cavity networks modulate structural dynamics trajectories and are functionally relevant; in globins they have been assigned a role in ligand migration and docking. These findings raised renewed interest for time-resolved structural investigations of myoglobin (Mb), a simple heme protein displaying a photosensitive iron-ligand bond. Photodissociation of MbCO generates a nonequilibrium population of protein structures relaxing over a time range extending from picoseconds to milliseconds. This process triggers ligand migration to matrix cavities with clear-cut effects on the rate and yield of geminate rebinding. Here, we report subnanosecond time-resolved Laue diffraction data on the triple mutant YQR-Mb [Leu-29(B10)Tyr, His-64(E7)Gln, Thr-67(E10)Arg] that depict the sequence of structural events associated with heme and protein relaxation from 100 ps to 316 ns and above. The photodissociated ligand rapidly (<0.1 ns) populates the Xe-binding cavity distal to the heme. Moreover, the heme relaxation toward the deoxy configuration is heterogeneous, with a slower phase ( approximately ns) evident in these experiments. Damping of the heme response appears to result from a strain exerted by the E-helix via the CD-turn; Phe-43(CD1), in close contact with heme, opposes tilt until the strain is relieved. A comparison with crystallographic data on wild-type Mb and mutants Leu(29)Phe or Leu(29)Trp suggests that the internal structure controls the rate and amplitude of the relaxation events. A correlation between structural dynamics as unveiled by Laue crystallography and functional properties of Mb is presented.
- Published
- 2006
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- View/download PDF
6. Neuroglobin, nitric oxide, and oxygen: functional pathways and conformational changes.
- Author
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Brunori M, Giuffrè A, Nienhaus K, Nienhaus GU, Scandurra FM, and Vallone B
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- Animals, Flavin Mononucleotide metabolism, Kinetics, Light, Mice, NAD metabolism, Neuroglobin, Signal Transduction physiology, Globins chemistry, Globins metabolism, Models, Molecular, Nerve Tissue Proteins chemistry, Nerve Tissue Proteins metabolism, Nitric Oxide metabolism, Oxygen metabolism
- Abstract
Neuroglobin (Ngb) is a globin expressed in the nervous system of humans and other organisms that is involved in the protection of the brain from ischemic damage. Despite considerable interest, however, the in vivo function of Ngb is still a conundrum. In this paper we report a number of kinetic experiments with O2 and NO that we have interpreted on the basis of the 3D structure of Ngb, now available for human and murine metNgb and murine NgbCO. The reaction of reduced deoxyNgb with O2 and NO is slow (t(1/2) approximately 2 s) and ligand concentration-independent, because exogenous ligand binding can only occur upon dissociation of the distal His-64, which is coordinated to the ferrous heme iron. By contrast, NgbO2 reacts very rapidly with NO, yielding metNgb and NO3- by means of a heme-bound peroxynitrite intermediate. Steady-state amperometric experiments show that Ngb is devoid of O2 reductase and NO reductase activities. To achieve this result, we have set up a protocol for efficient reduction of metNgb using a mixture of FMN and NADH under bright illumination. The results are discussed with reference to a global scheme inspired by the 3D structures of metNgb and NgbCO. Based on the ligand-linked conformational changes discovered by crystallography, the pathways of the reactions with O2 and NO provide a framework that may account for the involvement of Ngb in controlling the activation of a protective signaling mechanism.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
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7. The structure of carbonmonoxy neuroglobin reveals a heme-sliding mechanism for control of ligand affinity.
- Author
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Vallone B, Nienhaus K, Matthes A, Brunori M, and Nienhaus GU
- Subjects
- Amino Acid Sequence, Animals, Crystallography, X-Ray, Heme chemistry, Ligands, Mice, Models, Molecular, Neuroglobin, Protein Binding, Protein Structure, Tertiary, Spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared, Carbon Monoxide metabolism, Globins chemistry, Globins metabolism, Heme metabolism, Nerve Tissue Proteins chemistry, Nerve Tissue Proteins metabolism
- Abstract
Neuroglobin (Ngb), a globular heme protein expressed in the brain of vertebrates, binds oxygen reversibly, with an affinity comparable to myoglobin (Mb). Despite low sequence identity, the overall 3D fold of Ngb and Mb is very similar. Unlike in Mb, in Ngb the sixth coordination position of the heme iron is occupied by the distal histidine, in the absence of an exogenous ligand. Endogenous ligation has been proposed as a unique mechanism for affinity regulation and ligand discrimination in heme proteins. This peculiarity might be related to the still-unknown physiological function of Ngb. Here, we present the x-ray structure of CO-bound ferrous murine Ngb at 1.7 A and a comparison with the 1.5-A structure of ferric bis-histidine Ngb. We have also used Fourier transform IR spectroscopy of WT and mutant CO-ligated Ngb to examine structural heterogeneity in the active site. Upon CO binding, the distal histidine retains (by and large) its position, whereas the heme group slides deeper into a preformed crevice, thereby reshaping the large cavity ( approximately 290 A(3)) connecting the distal and proximal heme sides with the bulk. The heme relocation is accompanied by a significant decrease of structural disorder, especially of the EF loop, which may be the signal whereby Ngb communicates hypoxic conditions. This unexpected structural change unveils a heme-sliding mechanism of affinity control that may be of significance to understanding Ngb's role in the pathophysiology of the brain.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
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8. Complex landscape of protein structural dynamics unveiled by nanosecond Laue crystallography.
- Author
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Bourgeois D, Vallone B, Schotte F, Arcovito A, Miele AE, Sciara G, Wulff M, Anfinrud P, and Brunori M
- Subjects
- Amino Acid Substitution, Animals, Binding Sites, Biophysical Phenomena, Biophysics, Crystallography, X-Ray methods, Heme chemistry, Models, Molecular, Myoglobin chemistry, Myoglobin genetics, Myoglobin radiation effects, Photolysis, Protein Conformation, Recombinant Proteins chemistry, Recombinant Proteins genetics, Recombinant Proteins radiation effects, Static Electricity, Thermodynamics, Proteins chemistry
- Abstract
Although conformational changes are essential for the function of proteins, little is known about their structural dynamics at atomic level resolution. Myoglobin (Mb) is the paradigm to investigate conformational dynamics because it is a simple globular heme protein displaying a photosensitivity of the iron-ligand bond. Upon laser photodissociation of carboxymyoglobin Mb a nonequilibrium population of protein structures is generated that relaxes over a broad time range extending from picoseconds to milliseconds. This process is associated with migration of the ligand to cavities in the matrix and with a reduction in the geminate rebinding rate by several orders of magnitude. Here we report nanosecond time-resolved Laue diffraction data to 1.55-A resolution on a Mb mutant, which depicts the sequence of structural events associated with this extended relaxation. Motions of the distal E-helix, including the mutated residue Gln-64(E7), and of the CD-turn are found to lag significantly (100-300 ns) behind local rearrangements around the heme such as heme tilting, iron motion out of the heme plane, and swinging of the mutated residue Tyr-29(B10), all of which occur promptly (< or =3 ns). Over the same delayed time range, CO is observed to migrate from a cavity distal to the heme known to bind xenon (called Xe4) to another such cavity proximal to the heme (Xe1). We propose that the extended relaxation of the globin moiety reflects reequilibration among conformational substates known to play an essential role in controlling protein function.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. The role of cavities in protein dynamics: crystal structure of a photolytic intermediate of a mutant myoglobin.
- Author
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Brunori M, Vallone B, Cutruzzola F, Travaglini-Allocatelli C, Berendzen J, Chu K, Sweet RM, and Schlichting I
- Subjects
- Amino Acid Sequence, Animals, Crystallography, X-Ray, Ligands, Molecular Sequence Data, Mutagenesis, Myoglobin genetics, Myoglobin metabolism, Photolysis, Protein Conformation, Whales, Myoglobin chemistry
- Abstract
We determined the structure of the photolytic intermediate of a sperm whale myoglobin (Mb) mutant called Mb-YQR [Leu-(B10)-->Tyr; His(E7)-->Gln; Thr(E10)-->Arg] to 1.4-A resolution by ultra-low temperature (20 K) x-ray diffraction. Starting with the CO complex, illumination leads to photolysis of the Fe-CO bond, and migration of the photolyzed carbon monoxide (CO*) to a niche in the protein 8.1 A from the heme iron; this cavity corresponds to that hosting an atom of Xe when the crystal is equilibrated with xenon gas at 7 atmospheres [Tilton, R. F., Jr., Kuntz, I. D. & Petsko, G. A. (1984) Biochemistry 23, 2849-2857]. The site occupied by CO* corresponds to that predicted by molecular dynamics simulations previously carried out to account for the NO geminate rebinding of Mb-YQR observed in laser photolysis experiments at room temperature. This secondary docking site differs from the primary docking site identified by previous crystallographic studies on the photolyzed intermediate of wild-type sperm whale Mb performed at cryogenic temperatures [Teng et al. (1994) Nat. Struct. Biol. 1, 701-705] and room temperature [Srajer et al. (1996) Science 274, 1726-1729]. Our experiment shows that the pathway of a small molecule in its trajectory through a protein may be modified by site-directed mutagenesis, and that migration within the protein matrix to the active site involves a limited number of pre-existing cavities identified in the interior space of the protein.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Free energy of burying hydrophobic residues in the interface between protein subunits.
- Author
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Vallone B, Miele AE, Vecchini P, Chiancone E, and Brunori M
- Subjects
- Allosteric Regulation, Animals, Energy Transfer, Hemoglobins genetics, Hemoglobins metabolism, Humans, Mutation, Protein Binding, Thermodynamics, Hemoglobins chemistry
- Abstract
We have obtained an experimental estimate of the free energy change associated with variations at the interface between protein subunits, a subject that has raised considerable interest since the concept of accessible surface area was introduced by Lee and Richards [Lee, B. & Richards, F. M. (1971) J. Mol. Biol. 55, 379-400]. We determined by analytical ultracentrifugation the dimer-tetramer equilibrium constant of five single and three double mutants of human Hb. One mutation is at the stationary alpha1 beta1 interface, and all of the others are at the sliding alpha1 beta2 interface where cleavage of the tetramer into dimers and ligand-linked allosteric changes are known to occur. A surprisingly good linear correlation between the change in the free energy of association of the mutants and the change in buried hydrophobic surface area was obtained, after corrections for the energetic cost of losing steric complementarity at the alphabeta dimer interface. The slope yields an interface stabilization free energy of -15 +/- 1.2 cal/mol upon burial of 1 A2 of hydrophobic surface, in very good agreement with the theoretical estimate given by Eisenberg and McLachlan [Eisenberg, D. & McLachlan, A. D. (1986) Nature (London) 319, 199-203].
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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