The adenovirus (Ad) genome complexed with viral core proteins designated Ad core is the template for transcription of early genes and the ¢rst round of replication in Adinfected cells. A cellular protein designated template-activating factor-I (TAF-I) is found to be involved in remodeling of the Ad core in vitro. Here we found that TAF-I interacts with the Ad DNA through core protein VII in infected cells in early phases of infection. In vitro binding assays using recombinant proteins showed that TAF-I forms ternary complexes with DNA^protein VII complexes.
The solution chemical properties, superoxide dismutase and catecholase activity of the copper(ii)-Ac-His-His-Gly-His-OH (hhgh) complexes were studied to identify functional and structural models of copper-containing oxidases. The solution speciation was determined in the pH range 3-11 by two independent methods (potentiometry and pH-dependent EPR measurements). The results obtained by the two methods agree very well with each other and show the formation of differently protonated CuH(x)L complexes (where x= 2 ,1, 0, -1, -2, -3) in aqueous solution. The spectroscopic (UV-Vis, CD, EPR) data indicate that the coordination of the imidazole rings is a determinant factor in all these complexes. Amide coordinated complexes are dominant only above pH 8. This offers excellent possibilities for structural/functional modelling of copper(ii) containing metalloenzymes. Indeed, the {3N(im)} coordinated CuL species (pH = 6-7) has efficient superoxide dismutase-like activity. The {3N(im),OH(-)} coordinated CuH(-1)L possesses outstanding activity to catalyze the oxidation of 3,5-di-tert-butylcatechol (H(2)dtbc) by dioxygen in 86 wt% methanol-water, providing the first example that copper(ii)-peptide complexes are able to mimic copper containing oxidases.
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