The molecular recognition of polyoxometalates by human serum albumin is studied using two different polyoxometalates (POMs) at pH 7.5. The results are compared with those obtained at pH 3.5 and 9.0. At pH 7.5, both POMs strongly interact with the protein with different binding behaviors. The Keggin shaped POM, [H(2)W(12)O(40)](6-) (H2W12), specifically binds the protein, forming a complex with a 1:1 stoichiometry with Ka = 2.9 x 10(6) M(-1). The binding constant decreased dramatically with the increase of the ionic strength, thus indicating a mostly electrostatic binding process. Isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) experiments show that the binding is an enthalpically driven exothermic process. For the wheel shaped POM [NaP(5)W(30)O(110)](14-) (P5W30), there are up to five binding sites on the protein. Increasing the ionic strength changes the binding behavior significantly, leading to a simple exothermic process, with several binding sites. Competitive binding experiments indicate that the two POMs share one common binding site. In addition, they show the existence of another important binding site for P5W30. The two POMs exhibit different binding dependences on the pH. The combination of the experimental results with the knowledge of the surface map of the protein in its N-B conformation transition domain leads to the proposal for the probable binding site of POMs. The present work reveals a protein conformation change upon P5W30 binding, a new feature not explicitly documented in previous studies.
As a step toward the elucidation of the mechanistic pathways governing the known bioactivity of polyoxometalates (POMs), two representative molecules of this class of chemicals, the wheel-shaped [NaP(5)W(30)O(110)]14- (P(5)W(30)) and the Keggin-type anion [H(2)W(12)O(40)]6- (H(2)W(12)), are shown, by two independent techniques, to interact with the fatty-acid-free human serum albumin (HSA). The excited-state lifetime of the single tryptophan molecule of this protein is dramatically decreased by the binding. The quenching mechanism is found to constitute the first example of energy transfer between HSA and POMs. Such molecular recognition is believed to be a key step for subsequent evolution of the systems. Circular dichroism (CD) was used to assess the structural effects of POM binding on HSA and to confirm the interaction revealed by fluorescence studies. CD experiments showed that the two POMs have different effects on the secondary structure of the protein. Binding P(5)W(30) partially unfolds the protein whereas H(2)W(12) has no remarkable effect on the structure of the protein.
Five Co(II) silicotungstate complexes are reported. The centrosymmetric heptanuclear compound K(20)[{(B-beta-SiW(9)O(33)(OH))(beta-SiW(8)O(29)(OH)(2))Co(3)(H(2)O)}(2)Co(H(2)O)(2)]47 H(2)O (1) consists of two {(B-beta-SiW(9)O(33)(OH))(beta-SiW(8)O(29)(OH)(2))Co(3)(H(2)O)} units connected by a {CoO(4)(H(2)O)(2)} group. In the chiral species K(7)[Co(1.5)(H(2)O)(7))][(gamma-SiW(10)O(36))(beta-SiW(8)O(30)(OH))Co(4)(OH)(H(2)O)(7)]36 H(2)O (2), a {gamma-SiW(10)O(36)} and a {beta-SiW(8)O(30)(OH)} unit enclose a mononuclear {CoO(4)(H(2)O)(2)} group and a {Co(3)O(7)(OH)(H(2)O)(5)} fragment. The two trinuclear Co(II) clusters present in 1 enclose a mu(4)-O atom, while in 2 a mu(3)-OH bridging group connects the three paramagnetic centers of the trinuclear unit, inducing significantly larger Co-L-Co (L=mu(4)-O (1), mu(3)-OH (2)) bridging angles in 2 (theta(av(Co-L-Co))=99.1 degrees ) than in 1 (theta(av(Co-L-Co))=92.8 degrees ). Weaker ferromagnetic interactions were found in 2 than in 1, in agreement with larger Co-L-Co angles in 2. The electrochemistry of 1 was studied in detail. The two chemically reversible redox couples observed in the positive potential domain were attributed to the redox processes of Co(II) centers, and indicated that two types of Co(II) centers in the structure were oxidized in separate waves. Redox activity of the seventh Co(II) center was not detected. Preliminary experiments indicated that 1 catalyzes the reduction of nitrite and NO. Remarkably, a reversible interaction exists with NO or related species. The hybrid tetranuclear complexes K(5)Na(3)[(A-alpha-SiW(9)O(34))Co(4)(OH)(3)(CH(3)COO)(3)]18 H(2)O (3) and K(5)Na(3)[(A-alpha-SiW(9)O(34))Co(4)(OH)(N(3))(2)(CH(3)COO)(3)]18 H(2)O (4) were characterized: in both, a tetrahedral {Co(4)(L(1))(L(2))(2)(CH(3)COO)(3)} (3: L(1)=L(2)=OH; 4: L(1)=OH, L(2)=N(3)) unit capped the [A-alpha-SiW(9)O(34)](10-) trivacant polyanion. The octanuclear complex K(8)Na(8)[(A-alpha-SiW(9)O(34))(2)Co(8)(OH)(6)(H(2)O)(2)(CO(3))(3)]52 H(2)O (5), containing two {Co(4)O(9)(OH)(3)(H(2)O)} units, was also obtained. Compounds 2, 3, 4, and 5 were less stable than 1, but their partial electrochemical characterization was possible; the electronic effect expected for 3 and 4 was observed.
Binding human serum albumin (HSA) of three polyoxometalates (POMs) with the Wells-Dawson structure, alpha(2)-[P2W17O61]10- (abbreviated as alpha(2)-P2W17) and two of its metal-substituted derivatives, alpha(2)-[NiP2W17O61]8- and alpha(2)-[CuP2W17O61]8- (alpha(2)-P2W17Ni and alpha(2)-P2W17Cu, respectively) was studied in an aqueous medium at pH 7.5. Fluorescence quenching, circular dichroism (CD), thermal denaturation, and isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) were used for this purpose. The results were compared with those obtained previously with the Keggin structure POM, [H2W12O40]6- (H2W12), and the wheel-shaped structure, [NaP5W30O110]14- (P5W30). All these POMs bind HSA mainly by electrostatic interactions. Comparison of the physical characteristics and HSA interaction parameters for the POMs of the present work and those studied previously showed that the overall charge of the clusters is not the single parameter governing the binding process and its consequences. In contrast, besides the influences of the structure, the dimension and/or weight of the POMs, the results have permitted highlighting of the importance of each POM atomic composition for its binding behavior.
The electrochemical signature of peroxynitrite oxidation is reported for the first time, and its mechanism discussed in the light of data obtained by steady-state and transient voltammetry at microelectrodes. Peroxynitrite is an important biological species generated by aerobic cells presumably via the near diffusion-limited coupling of nitric oxide and superoxide ion. Its production by living cells has been previously suspected during cellular oxidative bursts as well as in several human pathologies (arthritis, inflammation, apoptosis, ageing, carcinogenesis, Alzheimer disease, AIDS, etc.). However, this could only be inferred on the basis of characteristic patient metabolites or through indirect detection, or by observation of follow-up species resulting supposedly from its chemical reactions in vivo. In this work, thanks to the independent knowledge of the electrochemical characteristics of ONO2- oxidation, the kinetics and intensity of this species released by single human fibroblasts could be established directly and quantitatively based on the application of the artificial synapse method. It was then observed and established that fibroblasts submitted to mechanical stresses produce oxidative bursts, which involve the release within less than a tenth of a second of a complex cocktail composed of several femtomoles of peroxynitrite, hydrogen peroxide, nitric oxide, and nitrite ions.
We have generated mutants of cytochrome b562 in which the histidine ligand to the heme iron (His102) has been replaced by a methionine. The resulting proteins can have bis-methionine coordination to the heme iron, but the stability of this arrangement is dependent on oxidation state and solution pH. We have used optical, MCD, and EPR spectroscopies to study the nature of the heme coordination environment under a variety of conditions. Optical spectra of the reduced state of the single variant, H102M, are consistent with bis-methionine ligation. In its oxidized state, this protein is high-spin under all conditions studied, and the spectroscopic properties are consistent with only one of the methionine ligands being coordinated. We cannot identify what, if anything, provides the other axial ligand. A double variant, R98C/H102M (in which the heme is covalently attached to the protein through a c-type thioether linkage), is also bis-methionine coordinated in the ferrous state, but has significantly different properties in the oxidized state. With a pKa of 7.1 at 20 degrees C, the protein converts from a low-spin, 6-coordinate heme protein at low pH, to a high-spin species, similar to the high-spin species observed for the single variant. Our spectroscopic data prove that the low-spin species is bis-methionine coordinated. The reduction potential of this bis-methionine species has been measured using direct electrochemical techniques and is +440 mV at pH 4.8. The electrochemistry of these proteins is complicated by coupled coordination-state changes. Proof that the ferrous state is bis-methionine coordinated is provided by NMR results presented in the following paper.
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