The role of ceruloplasmin as a ferroxidase in the blood, mediating the release of iron from cells and its subsequent incorporation into serum transferrin, has long been the subject of speculation and debate. However, a recent X-ray crystal structure determination of human ceruloplasmin at a resolution of around 3.0 Å, in conjunction with studies associating mutations in the ceruloplasmin gene with systemic haemosiderosis in humans, has added considerable weight to the argument in favour of a ferroxidase role for this enzyme. Further X-ray studies have now been undertaken involving the binding of the cations Co(II), Fe(II), Fe(III), and Cu(II) to ceruloplasmin. These results give insights into a mechanism for ferroxidase activity in ceruloplasmin. The residues and sites involved in ferroxidation are similar to those proposed for the heavy chains of human ferritin. The nature of the ferroxidase activity of human ceruloplasmin is described in terms of its threedimensional molecular structure.
Staphylococcal enterotoxins are prototype superantigens characterized by their ability to bind to major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II molecules and subsequently activate a large fraction of T‐lymphocytes. The crystal structure of staphylococcal enterotoxin type A (SEA), a 27 kDa monomeric protein, was determined to 1.9 A resolution with an R‐factor of 19.9% by multiple isomorphous replacement. SEA is a two domain protein composed of a beta‐barrel and a beta‐grasp motif demonstrating the same general structure as staphylococcal enterotoxins SEB and TSST‐1. Unique for SEA, however, is a Zn2+ coordination site involved in MHC class II binding. Four amino acids including Ser1, His187, His225 and Asp227 were found to be involved in direct coordination of the metal ion. SEA is the first Zn2+ binding enterotoxin that has been structurally determined.
Ceruloplasmin is a multi-copper oxidase, which contains most of the copper present in the plasma. It is an acute-phase reactant that exhibits a two- to three-fold increase over the normal concentration of 300 microg/ml in adult plasma. However, the precise physiological role(s) of ceruloplasmin has been the subject of intensive debate and it is likely that the enzyme has a multi-functional role, including iron oxidase activity and the oxidation of biogenic amines. The three-dimensional X-ray structure of the human enzyme was elucidated in 1996 and showed that the molecule was composed of six cupredoxin-type domains arranged in a triangular array. There are six integral copper atoms per molecule (mononuclear sites in domains 2, 4 and 6 and a trinuclear site between domains 1 and 6) and two labile sites with roughly 50% occupancy. Further structural studies on the binding of metal cations by the enzyme indicated a putative mechanism for ferroxidase activity. In this paper we report medium-resolution X-ray studies (3.0-3.5 A) which locate the binding sites for an inhibitor (azide) and various substrates [aromatic diamines, biogenic amines and (+)-lysergic acid diethylamide, LSD]. The binding site of the azide moiety is topologically equivalent to one of the sites reported for ascorbate oxidase. However, there are two distinct binding sites for amine substrates: aromatic diamines bind on the bottom of domain 4 remote from the mononuclear copper site, whereas the biogenic amine series typified by serotonin, epinephrine and dopa bind in close vicinity to that utilised by cations in domain 6 and close to the mononuclear copper. These binding sites are discussed in terms of possible oxidative mechanisms. The binding site for LSD is also reported.
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