Weak Acid-Base Interactions of Histidine and Cysteine Affect the Charge States, Tertiary Structure, and Zn(II)-Binding of Heptapeptides

Zinc fingers are proteins that are characterized by the coordination of zinc ions by an amino acid sequence that commonly contains two histidines and two cysteines (2His-2Cys motif). Investigations of oligopeptides that contain the 2His-2Cys motif, e.g., acetyl-His 1 -Cys 2 -Gly 3 -Pro 4 -Tyr 5 -His...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry 2019-10, Vol.30 (10), p.2068-2081
Hauptverfasser: Lin, Yu-Fu, Yousef, Enas N., Torres, Efren, Truong, Linh, Zahnow, James M., Donald, Cole B., Qin, Ying, Angel, Laurence A.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Zinc fingers are proteins that are characterized by the coordination of zinc ions by an amino acid sequence that commonly contains two histidines and two cysteines (2His-2Cys motif). Investigations of oligopeptides that contain the 2His-2Cys motif, e.g., acetyl-His 1 -Cys 2 -Gly 3 -Pro 4 -Tyr 5 -His 6 -Cys 7 , have discovered they exhibit pH-dependent Zn(II) chelation and have redox activities with Cu(I/II), forming a variety of metal complexes. To further understand how these 2His-2Cys oligopeptides bind these metal ions, we have undertaken a series of ion mobility–mass spectrometry and B3LYP/LanL2DZ computational studies of structurally related heptapeptides. Starting with the sequence above, we have modified the potential His, Cys, or C-terminus binding sites and report how these changes in primary structure affect the oligopeptides positive and negative charge states, conformational structure, collision-induced breakdown energies, and how effectively Zn(II) binds to these sequences. The results show evidence that the weak acid-base properties of Cys-His are intrinsically linked and can result in an intramolecular salt-bridged network that affects the oligopeptide properties.
ISSN:1044-0305
1879-1123
DOI:10.1007/s13361-019-02275-7