Proteins with multiple binding sites exhibit a complex behavior that depends on the intrinsic affinities for each site and the energetic communication between the sites. The contributions from intrinsic affinity and cooperativity are difficult to deconvolute using conventional binding experiments that lack information about the occupancies of individual sites. Here, we report the concerted use of NMR and isothermal titration calorimetry to determine the intrinsic and cooperative binding free energies for a ligand-protein complex. The NMR measurements provided the site-specific information necessary to resolve the binding parameters. Using this approach, we observed that human ileal bile acid binding protein binds two molecules of glycocholic acid with low intrinsic affinity but an extraordinarily high degree of positive cooperativity. The highly cooperative nature of the binding provides insights into the protein's biological mechanism. With ongoing improvements in sensitivity and resolution, NMR methods are becoming more amenable to dissecting the complex binding energetics of multisite systems.
Human ileal bile acid binding protein (I-BABP) is a member of the intracellular lipid binding protein family. This protein is thought to function in the transcellular transport and enterohepatic circulation of bile salts. Human I-BABP binds two molecules of glycocholate, the physiologically most abundant bile salt, with modest intrinsic affinity but a remarkably high degree of positive cooperativity. Here we report a calorimetric analysis for the binding of a broad panel of bile salts to human I-BABP. The interaction of I-BABP with nine physiologically relevant derivatives of cholic acid, chenodeoxycholic acid, and deoxycholic acid in their conjugated (glycine and taurine) and unconjugated forms was monitored by isothermal titration calorimetry. All bile salts bound to I-BABP with a 2:1 stoichiometry and similar overall affinity, but the derivatives of cholic acid displayed much higher Hill coefficients, a measure of macroscopic positive cooperativity. To test whether the cooperativity was dependent on individual structural features of the bile salt side chain, a series of side-chain-extended bile salts that lacked a hydrogen bond donor or acceptor at C-24 were chemically synthesized. These synthetic variants exhibited the same energetic and cooperativity profile as the naturally occurring bile salts. Our findings indicate that cooperativity in bile salt-I-BABP recognition is governed by the pattern of steroid B- and C-ring hydroxylation and not the presence or type of side-chain conjugation.
Human ileal bile acid binding protein (I-BABP) is a member of the family of intracellular lipid-binding proteins and is thought to play a role in the enterohepatic circulation of bile salts. Our group has previously shown that human I-BABP binds two molecules of glycocholate (GCA) with low intrinsic affinity but an extraordinary high degree of positive cooperativity. Besides the strong positive cooperativity, human I-BABP exhibits a high degree of site selectivity in its interactions with GCA and glycochenodeoxycholate (GCDA), the two major bile salts in humans. In this study, on the basis of our first generation nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) structure of the ternary complex of human I-BABP with GCA and GCDA, we introduced single-residue mutations at certain key positions in the binding pocket that might disrupt a hydrogen-bonding network, a likely way of energetic communication between the two sites. Macroscopic binding parameters were determined using isothermal titration calorimetry, and site selectivity was monitored by NMR spectroscopy of isotopically enriched bile salts. According to our results, cooperativity and site selectivity are not linked in human I-BABP. While cooperativity is governed by a subtle interplay of entropic and enthalpic contributions, site selectivity appears to be determined by more localized enthalpic effects. Possible communication pathways between the two binding sites are discussed.
The iron responsive element (IRE) RNA hairpin contains a conserved six-nucleotide loop. The NMR structure of this loop showed that the positions of four of its bases are not tightly constrained, while the remaining two are hydrogen-bonded [Laing, L. G., and Hall, K. B. (1996) Biochemistry 35, 13586]. To investigate the flexibility of the RNA in the loop and in the stem, 13C NMR relaxation methods have been used to describe the dynamics of the purine bases. IRE hairpins containing [13C]guanosine and [13C]adenosine are used in NMR experiments to measure T1, T1rho, and NOE values of the bases as a function of temperature (20-37 degreesC). Data are analyzed using the Lipari-Szabo model-free formalism [Lipari, G., and Szabo, A. (1982) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 104, 4546] to determine order parameters and time scales of the motion. Results indicate that the purine bases in the stem have order parameters that are independent of temperature, although they show evidence of both fast (6-40 ps) motions and slower motions at 37 degreesC. The three purines in the loop exhibit increasingly complex motions with long (nanoseconds) correlation times as the temperature increases, suggesting that the loop structure has become disordered.
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