Lanthanide-binding helix-turn-helix peptides: Solution structure of a designed metallonuclease
- *Department of Chemistry and †College of Medicine NMR Facility, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA 52242
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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
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↵ ‡ To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: sonya-franklin{at}uiowa.edu.
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This paper was submitted directly (Track II) to the PNAS office.
- Abbreviations:
- HTH,
- helix-turn-helix;
- TOCSY,
- total correlation spectroscopy;
- Ln,
- lanthanide
- Copyright © 2003, The National Academy of Sciences





