Article
Copper Transfer from the Cu(I) Chaperone, CopZ, to the Repressor, Zn(II)CopY: Metal Coordination Environments and Protein Interactions†
Support for these investigations was obtained from the Australian Research Council and Grant 32-56716.99 from the Swiss National Foundation. The Stanford Synchrotron Laboratory is funded by the Department of Energy through the Office of Basic Energy Sciences and the Office of Biological and Environmental Research. The Structural Molecular Biology program is supported by the National Institutes of Health Biomedical Research Technology Program, Division of Research Resources.
University of Queensland.
Stanford University.
University of Berne.
To whom correspondence should be addressed: Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Duquesne University, Pittsburgh, PA 15282. Phone: (412) 396-1894. Fax: (412) 396-5683. E-mail: dameron@ duq.edu.
Duquesne University.
Abstract
Extracellular copper regulates the DNA binding activity of the CopY repressor of Enterococcus hirae and thereby controls expression of the copper homeostatic genes encoded by the cop operon. CopY has a CxCxxxxCxC metal binding motif. CopZ, a copper chaperone belonging to a family of metallochaperones characterized by a MxCxxC metal binding motif, transfers copper to CopY. The copper binding stoichiometries of CopZ and CopY were determined by in vitro metal reconstitutions. The stoichiometries were found to be one copper(I) per CopZ and two copper(I) per CopY monomer. X-ray absorption studies suggested a mixture of two- and three-coordinate copper in Cu(I)CopZ, but a purely three-coordinate copper coordination with a Cu−Cu interaction for Cu(I)2CopY. The latter coordination is consistent with the formation of a compact binuclear Cu(I)−thiolate core in the CxCxxxxCxC binding motif of CopY. Displacement of zinc, by copper, from CopY was monitored with 2,4-pyridylazoresorcinol. Two copper(I) ions were required to release the single zinc(II) ion bound per CopY monomer. The specificity of copper transfer between CopZ and CopY was dependent on electrostatic interactions. Relative copper binding affinities of the proteins were investigated using the chelator, diethyldithiocarbamic acid (DDC). These data suggest that CopY has a higher affinity for copper than CopZ. However, this affinity difference is not the sole factor in the copper exchange; a charge-based interaction between the two proteins is required for the transfer reaction to proceed. Gain-of-function mutation of a CopZ homologue demonstrated the necessity of four lysine residues on the chaperone for the interaction with CopY. Taken together, these results suggest a mechanism for copper exchange between CopZ and CopY.
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History
- Published In Issue May 07, 2002
- Received January 6, 2002
Revised Manuscript Received March 5, 2002
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