We further demonstrate that the two compounds bind to ⌬N3-S218E/S222D MEK in a mutually exclusive fashion, suggesting that they may share a common or overlapping binding site(s). Quantitative evaluation of the steady state kinetics of MEK inhibition by these compounds reveals that U0126 has approximately 100-fold higher affinity for ⌬N3-S218E/S222D MEK than does PD098059. We further tested the effects of these compounds on the activity of wild type MEK isolated after activation from stimulated cells. Surprisingly, we observe a significant diminution in affinity of both compounds for wild type MEK as compared with the ⌬N3-S218E/S222D mutant enzyme. These results suggest that the affinity of both compounds is mediated by subtle conformational differences between the two activated MEK forms. The MEK affinity of U0126, its selectivity for MEK over other kinases, and its cellular efficacy suggest that this compound will serve as a powerful tool for in vitro and cellular investigations of mitogen-activated protein kinase-mediated signal transduction.
The binding interactions for the three primary reactants of the fibroblast growth factor (FGF) system, basic FGF (bFGF), an FGF receptor, FGFR1, and the cofactor heparin/heparan sulfate (HS), were explored by isothermal titrating calorimetry, ultracentrifugation, and molecular modeling. The binding reactions were first dissected into three binary reactions: (1) FGFR1 + bFGF<==>FGFR1/bFGF, K1 = 41 (+/- 12) nM; (2) FGFR1 + HS<==>FGFR1/HS, K2 = 104 (+/- 17) microM; and (3) bFGF + HS<==>bFGF/HS, K3 = 470 (+/- 20) nM, where HS = low MW heparin, approximately 3 kDa. The first, binding of bFGF to FGFR1 in the absence of HS, was found to be a simple binary binding reaction that is enthalpy dominated and characterized by a single equilibrium constant, K1. The conditional reactions of bFGF and FGFR1 in the presence of heparin were then examined under conditions that saturate only the bFGF heparin site (1.5 equiv of HS/bFGF) or saturate the HS binding sites of both bFGF and FGFR1 (1.0 mM HS). Both 3-and 5-kDa low MW heparins increased the affinity for FGFR1 binding to bFGF by approximately 10-fold (Kd = 4.9 +/- 2.0 nM), relative to the reaction with no HS. In addition, HS, at a minimum of 1.5 equiv/bFGF, induced a second FGFR1 molecule to bind to another lower affinity secondary site on bFGF (K4 = 1.9 +/- 0.7 microM) in an entropy-dominated reaction to yield a quaternary complex containing two FGFR1, one bFGF, and at least one HS. Molecular weight estimates by analytical ultracentrifugation of such fully bound complexes were consistent with this proposed composition. To understand these binding reactions in terms of structural components of FGFR1, a three-dimensional model of FGFR1 was constructed using segment match modeling. Electrostatic potential calculations confirmed that an elongated cluster, approximately 15 x 35 A, of nine cationic residues focused positive potential (+2kBT) to the solvent-exposed beta-sheet A, B, E, C' surface of the D(II) domain model, strongly implicating this locus as the HS binding region of FGFR1. Structural models for HS binding to FGFR1, and HS binding to bFGF, were built individually and then assembled to juxtapose adjacent binding sites for receptor and HS on bFGF, against matching proposed growth factor and HS binding sites on FGFR1. The calorimetric binding results and the molecular modeling exercises suggest that bFGF and HS participate in a concerted bridge mechanism for the dimerization of FGFR1 in vitro and presumably for mitogenic signal transduction in vivo.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
A facile purification has been devised for recombinantly produced Salmonella typhimurium acetolactate synthase isozyme II. Purification of the enzyme was made possible by determining the complex set of factors that lead to loss of enzymic activity with this rather labile enzyme. When complexed with thiamin pyrophosphate, FAD, and magnesium, acetolactate synthase is subject to oxygen-dependent inactivation, a property not shared by the enzyme-FAD complex. When divorced from all of its tightly bound cofactors, losses of the enzymic activity are encountered at low ionic strength, especially at low protein concentrations. If purified and stored as the enzyme-FAD complex, acetolactate synthase is quite stable. The enzyme is composed of two types of subunits, a result that was not anticipated from previous studies of ilvG (the gene that codes for the large subunit of acetolactate synthase). These subunits were determined to be in equal molar ratio in the purified enzyme from the distribution of radioactivity between the two subunits after carboxymethylation with iodo[14C]acetate and their respective amino acid compositions. Besides the expected ilvG gene product (59.3 kDa), purified acetolactate synthase contained a smaller subunit (9.7 kDa; designated here as the ilvM gene product). On the basis of sequence homology of the small subunit with that coded for by the corresponding Escherichia coli gene sequence [Lawther, R. P., Calhoun, D. H., Adams, C. W., Hauser, C. A., Gray, J., & Hatfield, G. W. (1981) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 78, 922-925], it is encoded by the region between ilvG and ilvE, beginning at base-pair (bp) 1914 (relative to the point of transcription initiation).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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