Lanthanide-binding helix-turn-helix peptides: Solution structure of a designed metallonuclease

  1. Joel T. Welch*,
  2. William R. Kearney, and
  3. Sonya J. Franklin*,
  1. *Department of Chemistry and College of Medicine NMR Facility, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA 52242
  1. Edited by Kenneth N. Raymond, University of California, Berkeley, CA, and approved January 3, 2003 (received for review October 28, 2002)

Abstract

A designed lanthanide-binding chimeric peptide based on the strikingly similar geometries of the EF-hand and helix-turn-helix (HTH) motifs was investigated by NMR and CD spectroscopy and found to retain the same overall solution structure of the parental motifs. CD spectroscopy showed that the 33-mer peptide P3W folds on binding lanthanides, with an increase in α-helicity from 20% in the absence of metal to 38% and 35% in the presence of excess Eu(III) and La(III) ions, respectively. The conditional binding affinities of P3W for La(III) (5.9 ± 0.3 μM) and for Eu(III) (6.2 ± 0.3 μM) (pH 7.8, 5 mM Tris) were determined by tryptophan fluorescence titration. The La(III) complex of peptide P3, which differs from P3W by only one Trp-to-His substitution, has much less signal dispersion in the proton NMR spectra than LaP3W, indicating that the Trp residue is a critical hydrophobic anchor for maintaining a well-folded helix-turn-helix structure. A chemical-shift index analysis indicates the metallopeptide has a helix-loop-helix secondary structure. A structure calculated by using nuclear Overhauser effect and other NMR constraints reveals that P3W not only has a tightly folded metal-binding loop but also retains the α−α corner supersecondary structure of the parental motifs. Although the solution structure is undefined at both the N and C termini, the NMR structure confirms the successful incorporation of a metal-binding loop into a HTH sequence.

Footnotes

  • To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: sonya-franklin{at}uiowa.edu.

  • This paper was submitted directly (Track II) to the PNAS office.

  • Abbreviations:
    HTH,
    helix-turn-helix;
    TOCSY,
    total correlation spectroscopy;
    Ln,
    lanthanide
« Previous | Next Article »Table of Contents