guanosine-diphosphate has been researched along with 3--(methylanthraniloyl)-2--deoxy-guanosine-diphosphate* in 26 studies
26 other study(ies) available for guanosine-diphosphate and 3--(methylanthraniloyl)-2--deoxy-guanosine-diphosphate
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Fatty acids change the conformation of uncoupling protein 1 (UCP1).
UCP1 catalyzes proton leak across the mitochondrial inner membrane to disengage substrate oxidation from ATP production. It is well established that UCP1 is activated by fatty acids and inhibited by purine nucleotides, but precisely how this regulation occurs remains unsettled. Although fatty acids can competitively overcome nucleotide inhibition in functional assays, fatty acids have little effect on purine nucleotide binding. Here, we present the first demonstration that fatty acids induce a conformational change in UCP1. Palmitate dramatically changed the binding kinetics of 2'/3'-O-(N-methylanthraniloyl)-GDP, a fluorescently labeled nucleotide analog, for UCP1. Furthermore, palmitate accelerated the rate of enzymatic proteolysis of UCP1. The altered kinetics of both processes indicate that fatty acids change the conformation of UCP1, reconciling the apparent discrepancy between existing functional and ligand binding data. Our results provide a framework for how fatty acids and nucleotides compete to regulate the activity of UCP1. Topics: Adipose Tissue, Brown; Animals; Binding, Competitive; Female; Fluorescent Dyes; Guanosine Diphosphate; Ion Channels; Kinetics; Membrane Potential, Mitochondrial; Mice; Mice, Knockout; Mitochondria; Mitochondrial Proteins; ortho-Aminobenzoates; Palmitates; Protein Binding; Protein Conformation; Proteolysis; Rats; Rats, Wistar; Thymus Gland; Trypsin; Uncoupling Protein 1 | 2012 |
Biochemical characterization of Arabidopsis developmentally regulated G-proteins (DRGs).
Developmentally regulated G-proteins (DRGs) are a highly conserved family of GTP-binding proteins found in archaea, plants, fungi and animals, indicating important roles in fundamental pathways. Their function is poorly understood, but they have been implicated in cell division, proliferation, and growth, as well as several medical conditions. Individual subfamilies within the G-protein superfamily possess unique nucleotide binding and hydrolysis rates that are intrinsic to their cellular function, and so characterization of these rates for a particular G-protein may provide insight into its cellular activity. We have produced recombinant active DRG protein using a bacterial expression system and refolding, and performed biochemical characterization of their GTP binding and hydrolysis. We show that recombinant Arabidopsis thaliana atDRG1 and atDRG2a are able to bind GDP and GTP. We also show that DRGs can hydrolyze GTP in vitro without the assistance of GTPase-activating proteins and guanine exchange factors. The atDRG proteins hydrolyze GTP at a relatively slow rate (0.94x10(-3)min(-1) for DRG1 and 1.36x10(-3)min(-1) for DRG2) that is consistent with their nearest characterized relatives, the Obg subfamily. The ability of DRGs to bind nucleotide substrates without assistance, their slow rate of GTP hydrolysis, heat stress activation and domain conservation suggest a possible role as a chaperone in ribosome assembly in response to stress as it has been suggested for the Obg proteins, a different but related G-protein subfamily. Topics: Arabidopsis; Arabidopsis Proteins; Escherichia coli; GTP-Binding Proteins; Guanosine Diphosphate; Guanosine Triphosphate; Hydrolysis; Inclusion Bodies; Mass Spectrometry; ortho-Aminobenzoates; Protein Folding; Recombinant Proteins | 2009 |
Sec2 is a highly efficient exchange factor for the Rab protein Sec4.
Sec2 is a reversibly membrane associated multi-domain protein with guanine nucleotide exchange activity towards the yeast Rab-protein Sec4. Both proteins are localized to secretory vesicles destined for exocytosis. We have used transient kinetic methods to show that Sec2 is a highly active exchange factor, in contrast to other proteins previously characterized as Rab exchange factors. With a K(d) value for the Sec2:Sec4.GDP interaction of ca 70 microM and a maximal rate of GDP displacement of ca 15 s(-1), it is 100-1000-fold more effective than other proteins showing exchange activity towards Rabs (MSS4, DSS4, Vps9) and ca tenfold faster than Cdc25 as a Ras specific exchanger, although still 100-fold slower than the fastest systems studied so far, EF-Tu/Ef-Ts and Ran/RCC1. A comparison with other proteins showing Rab exchange activity shows that maximal rates of GDP dissociation catalyzed by Sec2 are orders of magnitude faster. When comparing Sec2 with DSS4, which also acts on Sec4, the difference was particularly dramatic. Another difference is seen in the kinetics of association of GTP with the Sec4:Sec2 complex, a process which is extremely slow for DSS4/MSS4 complexes with cognate Rabs but in the range observed for other GTPase:exchanger complexes for Sec4:Sec2., It is suggested that systems such as Ef-Tu/Ef-Ts and Ran/RCC1 have evolved for maximal possible activity for the interaction between two soluble proteins, whereas other evolutionary constraints which are connected to the spatial and temporal coordination of events in vesicular transport and other regulatory networks have determined the detailed kinetic properties of the other systems. Topics: GTP-Binding Proteins; Guanine; Guanine Nucleotide Exchange Factors; Guanosine Diphosphate; Guanosine Triphosphate; Kinetics; ortho-Aminobenzoates; Protein Binding; rab GTP-Binding Proteins; Saccharomyces cerevisiae; Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins | 2007 |
Purification and biochemical properties of Rac1, 2, 3 and the splice variant Rac1b.
Rac proteins (Rac1, 1b, 2, 3) belong to the GTP-binding proteins (or GTPases) of the Ras superfamily and thus act as molecular switches cycling between an active GTP-bound and an inactive GDP-bound form through nucleotide exchange and hydrolysis. Like most other GTPases, these proteins adopt different conformations depending on the bound nucleotide, the main differences lying in the conformation of two short and flexible loop structures designated as the switch I and switch II region. The three distinct mammalian Rac isoforms, Rac1, 2 and 3, share a very high sequence identity (up to 90%), with Rac1b being an alternative splice variant of Rac1 with a 19 amino acid insertion in vicinity to the switch II region. We have demonstrated that Rac1 and Rac3 are very closely related with respect to their biochemical properties, such as effector interaction, nucleotide binding, and hydrolysis. In contrast, Rac2 displays a slower nucleotide association and is more efficiently activated by the Rac-GEF Tiam1. Modeling and normal mode analysis corroborate the hypothesis that the altered molecular dynamics of Rac2, in particular at the switch I region, may be responsible for different biochemical properties. On the other hand, our structural and biochemical analysis of Rac1b has shown that, compared with Rac1, Rac1b has an accelerated GEF-independent GDP/GTP-exchange and an impaired GTP-hydrolysis, accounting for a self-activating GTPase. This chapter discusses the use of fluorescence spectroscopic methods, allowing real-time monitoring of the interaction of nucleotides, regulators, and effectors with the Rac proteins at submicromolar concentrations and quantification of the kinetic and equilibrium constants. Topics: GTP Phosphohydrolases; Guanine Nucleotide Exchange Factors; Guanosine Diphosphate; Hydrolysis; Kinetics; ortho-Aminobenzoates; rac GTP-Binding Proteins; rac1 GTP-Binding Protein; RAC2 GTP-Binding Protein; Spectrometry, Fluorescence | 2006 |
Kinetic analysis of interaction of eukaryotic release factor 3 with guanine nucleotides.
Eukaryotic translation termination is mediated by two release factors: eRF1 recognizes stop codons and triggers peptidyl-tRNA hydrolysis, whereas eRF3 accelerates this process in a GTP-dependent manner. Here we report kinetic analysis of guanine nucleotide binding to eRF3 performed by fluorescence stopped-flow technique using GTP/GDP derivatives carrying the fluorescent methylanthraniloyl (mant-) group, as well as thermodynamic analysis of eRF3 binding to unlabeled guanine nucleotides. Whereas the kinetics of eRF3 binding to mant-GDP is consistent with a one-step binding model, the double-exponential transients of eRF3 binding to mant-GTP indicate a two-step binding mechanism, in which the initial eRF3.mant-GTP complex undergoes subsequent conformational change. The affinity of eRF3 for GTP (K(d), approximately 70 microM) is about 70-fold lower than for GDP (K(d), approximately 1 microM) and both nucleotides dissociate rapidly from eRF3 (k(-1)(mant-GDP) approximately 2.4 s(-1); k(-2)(mant-GTP) approximately 3.3 s(-1)). Whereas not influencing eRF3 binding to GDP, association of eRF3 with eRF1 at physiological Mg(2+) concentrations specifically changes the kinetics of eRF3/mant-GTP interaction and stabilizes eRF3.GTP binding by two orders of magnitude (K(d) approximately 0.7 microM) due to lowering of the dissociation rate constant approximately 24-fold (k(-1)(mant-GTP) approximately 0.14s(-1) approximately 0.14 s(-1)). Thus, eRF1 acts as a GTP dissociation inhibitor (TDI) for eRF3, promoting efficient ribosomal recruitment of its GTP-bound form. 80 S ribosomes did not influence guanine nucleotide binding/exchange on the eRF1 x eRF3 complex. Guanine nucleotide binding and exchange on eRF3, which therefore depends on stimulation by eRF1, is entirely different from that on prokaryotic RF3 and unusual among GTPases. Topics: Animals; Binding Sites; Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer; Guanosine Diphosphate; Guanosine Triphosphate; Kinetics; ortho-Aminobenzoates; Peptide Termination Factors; Rabbits; Thermodynamics | 2006 |
Mechanism of the guanine nucleotide exchange reaction of Ras GTPase--evidence for a GTP/GDP displacement model.
Ras GTPases function as binary switches in the signaling pathways controlling cell growth and differentiation by cycling between the inactive GDP-bound and the active GTP-bound states. They are activated through interaction with guanine nucleotide exchange factors (GEFs) that catalyze the exchange of bound GDP with cytosolic GTP. In a conventional scheme, the biochemical roles of GEFs are postulated as stimulating the release of the bound GDP and stabilizing a nucleotide-free transition state of Ras. Herein we have examined in detail the catalyzed GDP/GTP exchange reaction mechanism by a Ras specific GEF, GRF1. In the absence of free nucleotide, GRF1 could not efficiently stimulate GDP dissociation from Ras. The release of the Ras-bound GDP was dependent upon the concentration and the structure of the incoming nucleotide, in particular, the hydrophobicity of the beta and gamma phosphate groups, suggesting that the GTP binding step is a prerequisite for GDP dissociation, is the rate-limiting step in the GEF reaction, or both. Using a pair of fluorescent guanine nucleotides (N-methylanthraniloyl GDP and 2',3'-O-(2,4,6-trinitrocyclohexadienylidene)-GTP) as donor and acceptor probes, we were able to detect fluorescence resonance energy transfer between the incoming GTP and the departing GDP on Ras under controlled kinetic conditions, providing evidence that there may exist a novel intermediate of the GEF-Ras complex that transiently binds to two nucleotides simultaneously. Furthermore, we found that Ras was capable of binding pyrophosphate (PPi) with a dissociation constant of 26 microM and that PPi and GMP, but neither alone, synergistically potentiated the GRF1-stimulated GDP dissociation from Ras. These results strongly support a GEF reaction mechanism by which nucleotide exchange occurs on Ras through a direct GTP/GDP displacement model. Topics: Binding Sites; Catalysis; Diphosphates; Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer; GTP Phosphohydrolases; Guanine Nucleotides; Guanosine Diphosphate; Guanosine Triphosphate; Models, Biological; ortho-Aminobenzoates; Protein Binding; ras Guanine Nucleotide Exchange Factors; ras Proteins; ras-GRF1 | 2005 |
Zn7metallothionein-3 and the synaptic vesicle cycle: interaction of metallothionein-3 with the small GTPase Rab3A.
In the central nervous system, a large amount of chelatable Zn(2+) is sequestered in presynaptic vesicles of certain glutamatergic nerve terminals. The exo-endocytotic cycle of synaptic vesicles is strictly linked to the small GTPase Rab3A. Metallothionein-3 (Zn(7)MT-3) has been proposed to be involved in the intracellular trafficking of Zn(2+) in zinc-containing neurons, but its role in this process is not understood. By using affinity precipitation and surface plasmon resonance analysis, we show that Zn(7)MT-3 binds reversibly to Rab3A.GDP (K(D) = 2.6 microM), but not to Rab3A.GTP. The binding of Zn(7)MT-3 to Rab3A.GDP is specific as no binding was observed with the metal-free form of MT-3. Mutational studies of Rab3A mapped the interaction site to the effector binding site of the protein. This location is further supported by the kinetics of GDP exchange, which was found to be unaffected by binding of Zn(7)MT-3 to Rab3A.GDP. The interaction of Zn(7)MT-3 with Rab3A indicates that Zn(7)MT-3 is not merely a cellular Zn(2+) buffer, but actively participates in synaptic vesicle trafficking upstream of vesicle fusion. Topics: Chemical Precipitation; Glutathione Transferase; Guanosine Diphosphate; Kinetics; Metallothionein 3; Models, Molecular; Nerve Tissue Proteins; ortho-Aminobenzoates; Peptide Fragments; Protein Binding; Protein Interaction Mapping; rab3A GTP-Binding Protein; Surface Plasmon Resonance; Synaptic Vesicles; Zinc | 2005 |
The isolated catalytic hairpin of the Ras-specific guanine nucleotide exchange factor Cdc25Mm retains nucleotide dissociation activity but has impaired nucleotide exchange activity.
Cdc25Mm is a mammalian Ras-specific guanine nucleotide exchange factor (GEF). By homology modeling we show that it shares with Sos-GEF the structure of the putative catalytic HI hairpin where the dominant negative T1184E mutation is located. Similarly to Cdc25MmT1184E, the isolated wild-type and mutant hairpins retain the ability to displace Ras-bound nucleotide, originate a stable Ras/GEF complex and downregulate the Ras pathway in vivo. These results indicate that nucleotide re-entry and Ras/GEF dissociation--final steps in the GEF catalytic cycle--require GEF regions different from the HI hairpin. GEF down-sizing could lead to development of novel Ras inhibitors. Topics: Amino Acid Sequence; Amino Acid Substitution; Animals; Buffers; Catalysis; Catalytic Domain; Cell Line, Transformed; Cell Transformation, Neoplastic; Crystallography, X-Ray; Down-Regulation; Escherichia coli; Fibroblasts; Genes, Dominant; Genes, ras; Genes, Reporter; Glutamic Acid; Guanosine Diphosphate; Guanosine Triphosphate; Homozygote; Luciferases; Mice; Models, Molecular; Molecular Sequence Data; NIH 3T3 Cells; ortho-Aminobenzoates; Protein Structure, Secondary; ras-GRF1; Sequence Homology, Amino Acid; Temperature | 2005 |
GTPase activation of elongation factors Tu and G on the ribosome.
The GTPase activity of elongation factors Tu and G is stimulated by the ribosome. The factor binding site is located on the 50S ribosomal subunit and comprises proteins L7/12, L10, L11, the L11-binding region of 23S rRNA, and the sarcin-ricin loop of 23S rRNA. The role of these ribosomal elements in factor binding, GTPase activation, or functions in tRNA binding and translocation, and their relative contributions, is not known. By comparing ribosomes depleted of L7/12 and reconstituted ribosomes, we show that, for both factors, interactions with L7/12 and with other ribosomal residues contribute about equally and additively to GTPase activation, resulting in an overall 10(7)-fold stimulation. Removal of L7/12 has little effect on factor binding to the ribosome. Effects on other factor-dependent functions, i.e., A-site binding of aminoacyl-tRNA and translocation, are fully explained by the inhibition of GTP hydrolysis. Based on these results, we propose that L7/12 stimulates the GTPase activity of both factors by inducing the catalytically active conformation of the G domain. This effect appears to be augmented by interactions of other structural elements of the large ribosomal subunit with the switch regions of the factors. Topics: Adenosine Diphosphate; Binding Sites; Enzyme Activation; Escherichia coli Proteins; GTP Phosphohydrolases; Guanosine Diphosphate; Guanosine Triphosphate; Hydrolysis; Kinetics; Organometallic Compounds; ortho-Aminobenzoates; Peptide Elongation Factor G; Peptide Elongation Factor Tu; Phosphates; Protein Transport; Ribosomal Proteins; Ribosomes; RNA, Transfer, Phe | 2002 |
Fluorescence methods in the study of small GTP-binding proteins.
Topics: Binding Sites; Catalytic Domain; DNA-Binding Proteins; Fluorescent Dyes; GTP-Binding Proteins; Guanosine Diphosphate; Guanosine Triphosphate; Kinetics; Monomeric GTP-Binding Proteins; Neurofibromin 1; ortho-Aminobenzoates; Protein Binding; Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-raf; rhoA GTP-Binding Protein; Staining and Labeling | 2002 |
Allosteric regulation of substrate binding and product release in geranylgeranyltransferase type II.
GTPases of the Rab family are key components of vesicular transport in eukaryotic cells. Posttranslational attachment of geranylgeranyl moieties is essential for Rab function. Geranylgeranyltransferase type II (GGTase-II) catalyzes the modification of Rab proteins once they are in complex with their escort protein (REP). Upon completion of prenylation, REP and modified Rab leave the enzyme, enabling a new round of catalysis. We have studied the mechanism underlying substrate binding and product release in the geranylgeranylation of Rab proteins. Binding of the Rab7:REP-1 complex to GGTase-II was found to be strongly modulated by geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate (GGpp). The affinity of GGTase-II for the Rab7:REP-1 complex increases from ca. 120 nM to ca. 2 nM in the presence of GGpp. To study the effect of GGpp on interaction of the enzyme with its product, we generated semisynthetic doubly prenylated Rab7 bearing a fluorescent reporter group. Using this novel compound, we demonstrated that the affinity of doubly prenylated Rab7:REP-1 complex for GGTase-II was 2 and 18 nM in the absence and presence of GGpp, respectively. The difference in affinities originates mainly from a difference in the dissociation rates. Thus, binding of the new isoprenoid substrate molecule facilitates the product release by GGTase-II. The affinity of GGpp for the prenylated Rab7:REP-1:GGTase-II was K(d) = 22 nM, with one molecule of GGpp binding per molecule of prenylated ternary complex. We interpreted this finding as an indication that the geranylgeranyl moieties transferred to Rab protein do not occupy the GGpp binding site of the GGTase-II. In summary, these results demonstrate that GGpp acts as an allosteric activator that stabilizes the Rab7:REP-1:GGTase-II complex and triggers product release upon prenylation, preventing product inhibition of the enzyme. Topics: Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing; Alkyl and Aryl Transferases; Allosteric Regulation; Animals; Binding Sites; Fluorescent Dyes; Guanosine Diphosphate; Kinetics; Macromolecular Substances; ortho-Aminobenzoates; Polyisoprenyl Phosphates; Protein Binding; Protein Prenylation; rab GTP-Binding Proteins; rab7 GTP-Binding Proteins; Rats; Spectrometry, Fluorescence; Substrate Specificity; Titrimetry | 2001 |
Determinants of the broad recognition of exocytic Rab GTPases by Mss4.
Rab GTPases function as essential regulators of vesicle transport between subcellular compartments of eukaryotic cells. Mss4, an evolutionarily conserved Rab accessory factor, facilitates nucleotide release and binds tightly to the nucleotide-free form of exocytic but not endocytic Rab GTPases. A structure-based mutational analysis of residues that are conserved only in exocytic Rab GTPases reveals three residues that are critical determinants of the broad specificity recognition of exocytic Rab GTPases by Mss4. One of these residues is located at the N-terminus of the switch I region near the nucleotide binding site whereas the other two flank an exposed hydrophobic triad previously implicated in effector recognition. The spatial disposition of these residues with respect to the structure of Rab3A correlates with the dimensions of the elongated Rab interaction epitope in Mss4 and supports a mode of interaction similar to that of other exchange factor-GTPase complexes. The complementarity of the corresponding interaction surfaces suggests a hypothetical structural model for the complex between Mss4 and Rab GTPases. Topics: Amino Acid Sequence; Animals; Crystallography, X-Ray; DNA Mutational Analysis; Exocytosis; GTP Phosphohydrolase-Linked Elongation Factors; Guanine Nucleotide Exchange Factors; Guanosine Diphosphate; Kinetics; Molecular Sequence Data; Mutagenesis, Site-Directed; ortho-Aminobenzoates; Proteins; rab GTP-Binding Proteins; rab3A GTP-Binding Protein; Rats; Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins; Sequence Alignment; Static Electricity | 2001 |
Kinetics of the interaction of translation factor SelB from Escherichia coli with guanosine nucleotides and selenocysteine insertion sequence RNA.
The kinetics of the interaction of GTP and GDP with SelB, the specific translation factor for the incorporation of selenocysteine into proteins, have been investigated using the stopped-flow method. Useful signals were obtained using intrinsic (i.e. tryptophan) fluorescence, the fluorescence of methylanthraniloyl derivatives of nucleotides, or fluorescence resonance energy transfer from tryptophan to the methylanthraniloyl group. The affinities of SelB for GTP (K(d) = 0.74 micrometer) and GDP (K(d) = 13.4 micrometer) were considerably lower than those of other translation factors. Of functional significance is the fact that the rate constant for GDP release from its complex with SelB (15 s(-)(1)) is many orders of magnitude larger than for elongation factor Tu, explaining why a GDP/GTP exchange factor is not required for the action of SelB. In contrast, the rate of release of GTP is 2 orders of magnitude slower and not significantly faster than for elongation factor Tu. Using a fluorescently labeled 17-nucleotide RNA minihelix that represents a binding site for the protein and that is part of the fdhF selenocysteine insertion sequence element positioned immediately downstream of the UGA triplet coding for selenocysteine incorporation, the kinetics of the interaction were studied. The high affinity of the interaction (K(d) approximately 1 nm) appeared to be increased even further when selenocysteyl-tRNA(Sec) was bound to SelB, but to be independent of the presence or nature of the guanosine nucleotide at the active site. These results suggest that the affinity of SelB for its RNA binding site is maximized when charged tRNA is bound and decreases to allow dissociation and reading of codons downstream of the selenocysteine codon after selenocysteine peptide bond formation. Topics: Bacterial Proteins; Base Sequence; Binding Sites; Binding, Competitive; Escherichia coli; Fluorescence; Fluorescent Dyes; Guanine Nucleotides; Guanosine Diphosphate; Guanosine Triphosphate; Kinetics; Molecular Sequence Data; Nucleic Acid Conformation; ortho-Aminobenzoates; Peptide Elongation Factors; RNA, Messenger; RNA, Transfer, Amino Acid-Specific; RNA, Transfer, Amino Acyl; Selenocysteine; Tryptophan | 2000 |
The mechanism of GTP hydrolysis by dynamin II: a transient kinetic study.
Dynamin II is a 98 kDa protein (870 amino acids) required for the late stages of clathrin-mediated endocytosis. The GTPase activity of dynamin is required for its function in the budding stages of receptor-mediated endocytosis and synaptic vesicle recycling. This activity is stimulated when dynamin self-associates on multivalent binding surfaces, such as microtubules and anionic liposomes. We first investigated the oligomeric state of dynamin II by analytical ultracentrifuge sedimentation equilibrium measurements at high ionic strength and found that it was best described by a monomer-tetramer equilibrium. We then studied the intrinsic dynamin GTPase mechanism by using a combination of fluorescence stopped-flow and HPLC methods using the fluorescent analogue of GTP, mantdGTP (2'-deoxy-3'-O-(N-methylanthraniloyl) guanosine-5'-triphosphate), under the same ionic strength conditions. The results are interpreted as showing that mantdGTP binds to dynamin in a two-step mechanism. The dissociation constant of mantdGTP binding to dynamin, calculated from the ratio of the off-rate to the on-rate (k(off)/k(on)), was 0.5 microM. Cleavage of mantdGTP then occurs to mantdGDP and P(i) followed by the rapid release of mantdGDP and P(i). No evidence of reversibility of hydrolysis was observed. The cleavage step itself is the rate-limiting step in the mechanism. This mechanism more closely resembles that of the Ras family of proteins involved in cell signaling than the myosin ATPase involved in cellular motility. Topics: Animals; Binding, Competitive; Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid; Dynamins; Fluorescent Dyes; GTP Phosphohydrolases; Guanosine Diphosphate; Guanosine Triphosphate; Hydrolysis; Kinetics; ortho-Aminobenzoates; Protein Binding; Protein Conformation; Rats; Ultracentrifugation | 2000 |
Analysis of guanine nucleotide binding and exchange kinetics of the Escherichia coli GTPase Era.
Era is an essential Escherichia coli guanine nucleotide binding protein that appears to play a number of cellular roles. Although the kinetics of Era guanine nucleotide binding and hydrolysis have been described, guanine nucleotide exchange rates have never been reported. Here we describe a kinetic analysis of guanine nucleotide binding, exchange, and hydrolysis by Era using the fluorescent mant (N-methyl-3'-O-anthraniloyl) guanine nucleotide analogs. The equilibrium binding constants (K(D)) for mGDP and mGTP (0.61 +/- 0. 12 microgM and 3.6 +/- 0.80 microM, respectively) are similar to those of the unmodified nucleotides. The single turnover rates for mGTP hydrolysis by Era were 3.1 +/- 0.2 mmol of mGTP hydrolyzed/min/mol in the presence of 5 mM MgCl(2) and 5.6 +/- 0.3 mmol of mGTP hydrolyzed/min/mol in the presence of 0.2 mM MgCl(2). Moreover, Era associates with and exchanges guanine nucleotide rapidly (on the order of seconds) in both the presence and absence of Mg(2+). We suggest that models of Era function should reflect the rapid exchange of nucleotides in addition to the GTPase activity inherent to Era. Topics: Escherichia coli; Escherichia coli Proteins; GTP-Binding Proteins; Guanosine Diphosphate; Guanosine Triphosphate; Histidine; Hydrolysis; Kinetics; ortho-Aminobenzoates; RNA-Binding Proteins; Time Factors | 2000 |
Mechanism of nucleotide release from Rho by the GDP dissociation stimulator protein.
Guanine nucleotide dissociation stimulator (GDS) promotes the release of tightly bound GDP from various Ras superfamily proteins, including RhoA, Rac1, K-Ras, Rap1A, and Rap1B. It displays no significant sequence homology to other known exchange factors for small G-proteins. Studies are reported here of the mechanism of GDS-mediated nucleotide release from RhoA using a combination of equilibrium and stopped-flow kinetic measurements, employing fluorescent N-methylanthraniloyl (mant) derivatives of GDP and 2'-deoxyGDP. It is proposed that GDS operates by an associative displacement mechanism where stimulated nucleotide release from the Rho.mantGDP complex occurs via a transiently populated ternary complex (Rho.GDS.mantGDP). In kinetic experiments where excess GDS was mixed with the Rho.mantGDP complex, stimulated mantGDP dissociation rates of 1 s(-)(1) were measured during a single turnover, representing a 5000-fold enhancement over the intrinsic rate of mantGDP dissociation from Rho. The stable, nucleotide-free binary complex Rho.GDS was isolated. When the Rho.GDS complex was mixed with excess mantGDP, a biphasic increase in fluorescence occurred, the observed rate constants of which both reached saturating values at high mantGDP concentrations. This is compelling evidence that an isomerization of the Rho.GDS.mantGDP ternary complex is an important feature of the mechanism of nucleotide release. Topics: Guanine Nucleotide Exchange Factors; Guanosine Diphosphate; Humans; Isomerism; Kinetics; Macromolecular Substances; ortho-Aminobenzoates; Protein Conformation; rho GTP-Binding Proteins; rhoA GTP-Binding Protein; Spectrometry, Fluorescence | 2000 |
Evidence for a second nucleotide binding site in rat elongation factor eEF-2 specific for adenylic nucleotides.
The rat elongation factor eEF-2 catalyzes the translocation step of protein synthesis. Besides its well-characterized GTP/GDP binding properties, we have previously shown that ATP and ADP bind to eEF-2 [Sontag, B., Reboud, A. M., Divita, G., Di Pietro, A., Guillot, D., and Reboud, J. P. (1993) Biochemistry 32, 1976-1980]. However, whether the adenylic and guanylic nucleotide binding sites were different or not remained unclear. To further characterize these sites, eEF-2 was incubated in the presence of N-methylanthraniloyl (Mant) fluorescent derivatives of GTP, GDP, ATP, and ADP. This led to an increase in the probe fluorescence and to a partial quenching of eEF-2 tryptophans in each case. The Mant-derivatives and the unmodified corresponding nucleotides were shown to bind to eEF-2 with a similar affinity. Competition experiments between Mant-labeled and unmodified nucleotides suggested the presence of two different sites binding either guanylic or adenylic nucleotides. A Förster's transfer between tryptophan residues and the Mant-probe is obtained with both the adenylic and the guanylic Mant-nucleotides, and comparison of the transfer efficiencies confirmed the presence of a second binding site specific for adenylic nucleotides. A sequence alignment of EF-Gs with eEF-2s from different species suggests the presence of potential Walker A and B motifs in an insert of the G-domain of eEF-2s from higher eukaryotes. Our results raise the possibility that a site specific for adenylic nucleotides and located in this insert has appeared in the course of evolution although its physiological function is still unknown. Topics: Adenine Nucleotides; Adenosine Diphosphate; Adenosine Triphosphate; Affinity Labels; Amino Acid Sequence; Animals; Binding, Competitive; Chickens; Cricetinae; Cricetulus; Energy Transfer; Fluorescent Dyes; Guanosine Diphosphate; Guanosine Triphosphate; Humans; Molecular Sequence Data; ortho-Aminobenzoates; Peptide Elongation Factor 2; Protein Binding; Rats; Spectrometry, Fluorescence | 2000 |
The conserved arginine in rho-GTPase-activating protein is essential for efficient catalysis but not for complex formation with Rho.GDP and aluminum fluoride.
The Rho family of small GTP-binding proteins are downregulated by an intrinsic GTPase, which is enhanced by GTPase-activating proteins (GAPs). RhoGAPs contain a single conserved arginine residue that has been proposed to be involved in catalysis. Here, the role of this arginine has been elucidated by mutagenesis followed by determination of catalytic and equilibrium binding constants using single-turnover kinetics, isothermal titration calorimetry, and scintillation proximity assays. The turnover numbers for wild-type, R282A, and R282K RhoGAPs were 5.4, 0.023, and 0.010 s-1, respectively. Thus, the function of this arginine could not be replaced by lysine or alanine. Nevertheless, the R282A mutation had a minimal effect on the binding affinity of RhoGAP for either Rho. GTP or Rho.GMPPNP, which confirms the importance of the arginine residue for catalysis as opposed to formation of the protein-protein complex. The R282A mutant RhoGAP still increased the hydrolysis rate of Rho.GTP by 160-fold, whereas the wild-type enzyme increased it by 38000-fold. We conclude that this arginine contributes half of the total reduction of activation energy of catalysis. In the presence of aluminum fluoride, the R282A mutant RhoGAP binds almost as well as the wild type to Rho.GDP, demonstrating that the conserved arginine is not required for this interaction. The affinity of wild-type RhoGAP for the triphosphate form of Rho is similar to that for Rho.GDP with aluminum fluoride. These last two observations show that this complex is not associated with the free energy changes expected for the transition state, although the Rho.GDP.AlF4-.RhoGAP complex might well be a close structural approximation. Topics: Alanine; Aluminum Compounds; Arginine; Catalysis; Conserved Sequence; Fluorides; GTP Phosphohydrolases; GTP-Binding Proteins; GTPase-Activating Proteins; Guanosine Diphosphate; Guanylyl Imidodiphosphate; Humans; Lysine; Macromolecular Substances; ortho-Aminobenzoates; Protein Binding; Rho Factor | 1999 |
Kinetics of Cdc42 membrane extraction by Rho-GDI monitored by real-time fluorescence resonance energy transfer.
The mechanisms underlying the ability of the Rho-GDP dissociation inhibitor (RhoGDI) to elicit the release of Rho-related GTP-binding proteins from membranes is currently unknown. In this report, we have set out to address this issue by using fluorescence resonance energy transfer approaches to examine the functional interactions of the RhoGDI with membrane-associated Cdc42. Two fluorescence assays were developed to monitor the interactions between these proteins in real time. The first involved measurements of resonance energy transfer between N-methylanthraniloyl GDP (MantGDP) bound to Cdc42 and fluorescein maleimide covalently attached to cysteine 79 of RhoGDI (RhoGDI-FM). This assay allowed us to directly monitor the binding of RhoGDI to membrane-associated Cdc42. The second fluorescence assay involved measurements of resonance energy transfer between membrane-associated Cdc42-MantGDP and hexadecyl(amino) fluorescein that was randomly inserted into the membrane bilayer. This assay enabled us to directly monitor the (GDI-induced) release of Cdc42 from membranes. Analyses of the rates of change in the fluorescence of Cdc42-MantGDP, which serves as a resonance energy transfer donor in both of these assays, as a function of RhoGDI concentration suggests a two-step mechanism to explain the ability of RhoGDI to stimulate the release of Cdc42 from membranes. Specifically, we propose that the GDI first binds rapidly to membrane-associated Cdc42 and then a slower isomerization occurs which represents the rate-limiting step for the dissociation of the Cdc42-RhoGDI complex from membranes. We propose that this slow step in the observed kinetics reflects the time-course of translocation of the geranyl-geranyl lipid tail of Cdc42 from the outer leaflet of the membrane to the isoprenyl binding site observed in the previously reported NMR structure of the Cdc42-RhoGDI complex [Gosser et al. (1997) Nature 387, 814]. Topics: cdc42 GTP-Binding Protein; Cell Cycle Proteins; Cell Membrane; Energy Transfer; GTP-Binding Proteins; Guanine Nucleotide Dissociation Inhibitors; Guanosine Diphosphate; Humans; Kinetics; Macromolecular Substances; Models, Biological; Models, Chemical; ortho-Aminobenzoates; Protein Binding; rho Guanine Nucleotide Dissociation Inhibitor alpha; rho-Specific Guanine Nucleotide Dissociation Inhibitors; Solubility; Spectrometry, Fluorescence | 1999 |
Negative regulation of Rho family GTPases Cdc42 and Rac2 by homodimer formation.
The Rho family GTPases are tightly regulated between the active GTP-bound state and the inactive GDP-bound state in a variety of signal transduction processes. Here the Rho family members Cdc42, Rac2, and RhoA were found to form reversible homodimers in both the GTP- and the GDP-bound states. The homophilic interaction of Cdc42 and Rac2, but not RhoA, in the GTP-bound state, caused a significant stimulation of the intrinsic GTPase activity, i.e. the activated form of Cdc42 and Rac2 acts as GTPase-activating proteins toward Cdc42-GTP or Rac2-GTP. The dimerization of the GTPases appeared to be mediated by the carboxyl-terminal polybasic domain, and the specific GTPase-activating effects of Cdc42 and Rac2 were also attributed to the structural determinant(s) in the same region of the molecules. Moreover, similar to the case of Cdc42 and Cdc42GAP interaction, Cdc42-GDP interacted with tetrafluoroaluminate and Cdc42-GTPgammaS (guanosine 5'-3-O-(thio)triphosphate) to form a transition state complex of the GTPase-activating reaction in which the carboxyl-terminal determinant(s) of the GTPgammaS-bound Cdc42 plays a critical role. These results provide a rationale for the fast rate of intrinsic GTP hydrolysis by Cdc42 and Rac and suggest that dimerization may play a role in the negative regulation of specific Rho family GTPases mediated by the carboxyl-terminal polybasic domain. Topics: Aluminum Compounds; cdc42 GTP-Binding Protein, Saccharomyces cerevisiae; Cell Cycle Proteins; Dimerization; Fluorides; GTP Phosphohydrolases; GTP-Binding Proteins; Guanosine Diphosphate; Guanosine Triphosphate; Humans; ortho-Aminobenzoates; rac GTP-Binding Proteins; ras Proteins; rhoA GTP-Binding Protein; Sequence Alignment; Signal Transduction; Spectrometry, Fluorescence | 1998 |
Interaction of guanine nucleotides with the signal recognition particle from Escherichia coli.
The bacterial signal recognition particle (SRP) is an RNA-protein complex. In Escherichia coli, the particle consists of a 114 nt RNA, a 4.5S RNA, and a 48 kDa GTP-binding protein, Ffh. GDP-GTP exchange on, and GTP hydrolysis by, Ffh are thought to regulate SRP function in membrane targeting of translating ribosomes. In the present paper, we report the equilibrium and kinetic constants of guanine nucleotide binding to Ffh in different functional complexes. The association and dissociation rate constants of GTP/GDP binding to Ffh were measured using a fluorescent analogue of GTP/GDP, mant-GTP/GDP. For both nucleotides, association and dissociation rate constants were about 10(6) M-1 s-1 and 10 s-1, respectively. The equilibrium constants of nonmodified GTP and GDP binding to Ffh alone and in SRP, and in the complex with the ribosomes were measured by competition with mant-GDP. In all cases, the same 1-2 microM affinity for GTP and GDP was observed. Binding of both GTP and GDP to Ffh was independent of Mg2+ ions. The data suggest that, at conditions in vivo, (i) there will be rapid spontaneous GDP-GTP exchange, and (ii) the GTP-bound form of Ffh, or of SRP, will be predominant. Topics: Bacterial Proteins; Binding Sites; Escherichia coli; Escherichia coli Proteins; Guanine Nucleotides; Guanosine Diphosphate; Guanosine Triphosphate; Kinetics; Magnesium; ortho-Aminobenzoates; Protein Binding; Ribosomes; Signal Recognition Particle; Spectrometry, Fluorescence | 1998 |
C-terminal binding domain of Rho GDP-dissociation inhibitor directs N-terminal inhibitory peptide to GTPases.
The Rho GDP-dissociation inhibitors (GDIs) negatively regulate Rho-family GTPases. The inhibitory activity of GDI derives both from an ability to bind the carboxy-terminal isoprene of Rho family members and extract them from membranes, and from inhibition of GTPase cycling between the GTP- and GDP-bound states. Here we demonstrate that these binding and inhibitory functions of rhoGDI can be attributed to two structurally distinct regions of the protein. A carboxy-terminal folded domain of relative molecular mass 16,000 (M[r] 16K) binds strongly to the Rho-family member Cdc42, yet has little effect on the rate of nucleotide dissociation from the GTPase. The solution structure of this domain shows a beta-sandwich motif with a narrow hydrophobic cleft that binds isoprenes, and an exposed surface that interacts with the protein portion of Cdc42. The amino-terminal region of rhoGDI is unstructured in the absence of target and contributes little to binding, but is necessary to inhibit nucleotide dissociation from Cdc42. These results lead to a model of rhoGDI function in which the carboxy-terminal binding domain targets the amino-terminal inhibitory region to GTPases, resulting in membrane extraction and inhibition of nucleotide cycling. Topics: Amino Acid Sequence; Animals; Cattle; cdc42 GTP-Binding Protein, Saccharomyces cerevisiae; Cell Cycle Proteins; GTP Phosphohydrolases; GTP-Binding Proteins; Guanine Nucleotide Dissociation Inhibitors; Guanosine Diphosphate; Humans; Hydrogen Bonding; Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy; Models, Molecular; Molecular Sequence Data; Molecular Weight; ortho-Aminobenzoates; Protein Binding; Protein Conformation; Protein Folding; Protein Prenylation; Protein Structure, Secondary; Protein Structure, Tertiary; rho Guanine Nucleotide Dissociation Inhibitor alpha; rho-Specific Guanine Nucleotide Dissociation Inhibitors; Sequence Alignment; Thermodynamics | 1997 |
Characterization of the interaction between RhoGDI and Cdc42Hs using fluorescence spectroscopy.
The GDP-dissociation-inhibitor (GDI) for Rho-like GTP-binding proteins is capable of three different biochemical activities. These are the inhibition of GDP dissociation, the inhibition of GTP hydrolysis, and the stimulation of the release of GTP-binding proteins from membranes. In order to better understand how GDI interactions with Rho-like proteins mediate these different effects, we have set out to develop a direct fluorescence spectroscopic assay for the binding of the GDI to the Rho-like protein, Cdc42Hs. We show here that when the GDI interacts with Cdc42Hs that contains bound N-methylanthraniloyl GDP (Mant-GDP), there is an approximately 20% quenching of the Mant fluorescence. The GDI-induced quenching is only observed when Mant-GDP is bound to Spodoptera frugiperda-expressed Cdc42Hs and is not detected when the Mant nucleotide is bound to Escherichia coli-expressed Cdc42Hs and thus shows the same requirement for isoprenylated GTP-binding protein as that observed when assaying GDI activity. A truncated Cdc42Hs mutant that lacks 8 amino acids from the carboxyl terminus and is insensitive to GDI regulation also does not show changes in the fluorescence of its bound Mant-GDP upon GDI addition. Thus, the GDI-induced quenching of Mant-GDP provides a direct read-out for the binding of the GDI to Cdc42Hs. Titration profiles of the GDI-induced quenching of the Mant-GDP fluorescence are saturable and are well fit to a simple 1:1 binding model for Cdc42Hs-GDI interactions with an apparent Kd value of 30 nM. A very similar Kd value (28 nM) is measured when titrating the GDI-induced quenching of the fluorescence of Mant-guanylyl imidotriphosphate, bound to Cdc42Hs. These results suggest that the GDI can bind to the GDP-bound and GTP-bound forms of Cdc42Hs equally well. We also have used the fluorescence assay for GDI interactions to demonstrate that the differences in functional potency observed between the GDI molecule and a related human leukemic protein, designated LD4, are due to differences in their binding affinities for Cdc42Hs. This, together with the results from studies using GDI/LD4 chimeras, allow us to conclude that a limit region within the carboxyl-terminal domain of the GDI molecule is responsible for its ability to bind with higher affinity (compared with LD4) to Cdc42Hs. Topics: cdc42 GTP-Binding Protein; Cell Cycle Proteins; GTP-Binding Proteins; Guanine Nucleotide Dissociation Inhibitors; Guanosine Diphosphate; Guanylyl Imidodiphosphate; Humans; ortho-Aminobenzoates; Protein Binding; Recombinant Fusion Proteins; Recombinant Proteins; rho Guanine Nucleotide Dissociation Inhibitor alpha; rho-Specific Guanine Nucleotide Dissociation Inhibitors; Spectrometry, Fluorescence; Structure-Activity Relationship | 1996 |
Codon-dependent conformational change of elongation factor Tu preceding GTP hydrolysis on the ribosome.
The mechanisms by which elongation factor Tu (EF-Tu) promotes the binding of aminoacyl-tRNA to the A site of the ribosome and, in particular, how GTP hydrolysis by EF-Tu is triggered on the ribosome, are not understood. We report steady-state and time-resolved fluorescence measurements, performed in the Escherichia coli system, in which the interaction of the complex EF-Tu.GTP.Phe-tRNAPhe with the ribosomal A site is monitored by the fluorescence changes of either mant-dGTP [3'-O-(N-methylanthraniloyl)-2-deoxyguanosine triphosphate], replacing GTP in the complex, or of wybutine in the anticodon loop of the tRNA. Additionally, GTP hydrolysis is measured by the quench-flow technique. We find that codon-anticodon interaction induces a rapid rearrangement within the G domain of EF-Tu around the bound nucleotide, which is followed by GTP hydrolysis at an approximately 1.5-fold lower rate. In the presence of kirromycin, the activated conformation of EF-Tu appears to be frozen. The steps following GTP hydrolysis--the switch of EF-Tu to the GDP-bound conformation, the release of aminoacyl-tRNA from EF-Tu to the A site, and the dissociation of EF-Tu-GDP from the ribosome--which are altogether suppressed by kirromycin, are not distinguished kinetically. The results suggest that codon recognition by the ternary complex on the ribosome initiates a series of structural rearrangements resulting in a conformational change of EF-Tu, possibly involving the effector region, which, in turn, triggers GTP hydrolysis. Topics: Anticodon; Binding Sites; Codon; Escherichia coli; Guanosine Diphosphate; Guanosine Triphosphate; Hydrolysis; Nucleic Acid Conformation; ortho-Aminobenzoates; Peptide Elongation Factor Tu; Protein Conformation; Pyridones; Ribosomes; RNA, Transfer, Amino Acyl | 1995 |
Investigation of the GTP-binding/GTPase cycle of Cdc42Hs using fluorescence spectroscopy.
We have developed several high-resolution assays for the nucleotide state of a rho-subfamily low molecular weight GTP-binding protein, Cdc42Hs. The first involves the use of the fluorescent N-methylanthraniloyl derivative of GDP (mant-GDP). As has been shown for the ras protein, mant-dGDP fluorescence is significantly enhanced (approximately 20%) upon binding to Cdc42Hs. It was further found that the binding of mant-nucleotides results in an efficient energy transfer between the single tryptophan residue of Cdc42Hs and the mant moiety. The exchange of mant-dGDP for GDP bound to Cdc42Hs, as read-out either by the enhancement of the mant fluorescence or by energy transfer, is inhibited by physiological (mM) Mg2+ concentrations and correlates exactly to the rate of [3H]GDP exchange observed in filter-binding assays. Moreover, changes in the fluorescence of mant-dGDP are also sensitive to nucleotide dissociation induced by the dbl-oncogene product, a known nucleotide exchange factor for Cdc42Hs. A second fluorescence read-out for the nucleotide-bound state of Cdc42Hs involves the measurements of intrinsic fluorescence of a single tryptophan residue (W97) which is highly sensitive to whether GDP or GTP is bound in the nucleotide pocket. The hydrolysis of GTP to GDP by Cdc42Hs results in an approximately 30% enhancement of the protein fluorescence. The rate of this fluorescence change corresponds well to the rate of conversion of [gamma-32P]GTP to GDP plus [32P]Pi as measured by filter-binding assays.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS) Topics: Escherichia coli; GTP Phosphohydrolases; GTP-Binding Proteins; Guanosine Diphosphate; Guanosine Triphosphate; Hydrolysis; ortho-Aminobenzoates; Spectrometry, Fluorescence; Tryptophan | 1994 |
Kinetics of interaction of nucleotides with nucleotide-free H-ras p21.
A method is described for the convenient preparation of substantial quantities of nucleotide-free p21 or of 1:1 complexes with nucleotides other than GDP. The nucleotide-free protein has been used for kinetic studies of the binding of GDP and GTP, making use of the fluorescent analogues 3'-(methylanthraniloyl)-2'-deoxy-GDP and -GTP. Stopped-flow studies have led to the formulation of a two-step binding mechanism for both GDP and GTP, involving initial rapid but weak binding of the nucleotide followed by a relatively slow (10-20 s-1 at 25 degrees C; 3-5 s-1 at 5 degrees C) quasi-irreversible isomerization reaction. By use of a nonequilibrium competition method, guanosine and GMP have been shown to interact weakly but significantly with p21 (dissociation constants of 153 and 29 microM, respectively). The presence of guanosine or GMP at the active site of p21 leads to a marked stabilization of p21 against spontaneous denaturation when compared with the nucleotide- and nucleoside-free protein. Topics: Guanosine; Guanosine Diphosphate; Guanosine Triphosphate; Kinetics; Nucleotides; Oncogene Protein p21(ras); ortho-Aminobenzoates; Spectrometry, Fluorescence | 1990 |