Whilst Zn2+ ions are critical regulators of many fundamental cellular processes, methods to monitor the free concentrations of these ions dynamically within living cells are presently limited. We have developed a series of genetically-encoded Förster Resonance Energy Transfer (FRET)-based sensors that display a large ratiometric change upon Zn2+ binding, have affinities that span the pico- to nanomolar range, and can readily be targeted to subcellular organelles. These sensors reveal that the free cytosolic Zn2+ concentration of fibroblasts and pancreatic islet β-cells is tightly buffered at ~400 pM, a level at least 103-fold lower than that in secretory granules.
Methanotrophic bacteria are capable of using methane as their sole source of carbon and energy. The first step in methane metabolism, the oxidation of methane to methanol, is catalyzed by a fascinating enzyme system called methane monooxygenase (MMO). The selective oxidation of the very stable C-H bond in methane under ambient conditions is a remarkable feat that has not yet been repeated by synthetic catalysts and has attracted considerable scientific and commercial interest. The best studied MMO is a complex enzyme system that consists of three soluble protein components, all of which are required for efficient catalysis. Dioxygen activation and subsequent methane hydroxylation are catalyzed by a hydroxylase enzyme that contains a non-heme diiron site. A reductase protein accepts electrons from NADH and transfers them to the hydroxylase where they are used for the reductive activation of O(2). The third protein component couples electron and dioxygen consumption with methane oxidation. In this review we examine different aspects of catalysis by the MMO proteins, including the mechanisms of dioxygen activation at the diiron site and substrate hydroxylation by the activated oxygen species. We also discuss the role of complex formation between the different protein components in regulating various aspects of catalysis.
The fusion of different protein domains via peptide linkers is a powerful, modular approach to obtain proteins with new functions. A detailed understanding of the conformational behavior of peptide linkers is important for applications such as fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET)-based sensor proteins and multidomain proteins involved in multivalent interactions. To investigate the conformational behavior of flexible glycine- and serine-containing peptide linkers, we constructed a series of fusion proteins of enhanced cyan and yellow fluorescent proteins (ECFP-linker-EYFP) in which the linker length was systematically varied by incorporating between 1 and 9 GGSGGS repeats. As expected, both steady-state and time-resolved fluorescence measurements showed a decrease in energy transfer with increasing linker length. The amount of energy transfer observed in these fusion proteins can be quantitatively understood by simple models that describe the flexible linker as a worm-like chain with a persistence length of 4.5 A or a Gaussian chain with a characteristic ratio of 2.3. The implications of our results for understanding the properties of FRET-based sensors and other fusion proteins with Gly/Ser linkers are discussed.
High-affinity cellular copper uptake is mediated by the CTR (copper transporter) 1 family of proteins. The highly homologous hCTR (human CTR) 2 protein has been identified, but its function in copper uptake is currently unknown. To characterize the role of hCTR2 in copper homoeostasis, epitope-tagged hCTR2 was transiently expressed in different cell lines. hCTR2-vsvG (vesicular-stomatitis-virus glycoprotein) predominantly migrated as a 17 kDa protein after imunoblot analysis, consistent with its predicted molecular mass. Chemical cross-linking resulted in the detection of higher-molecular-mass complexes containing hCTR2-vsvG. Furthermore, hCTR2-vsvG was co-immunoprecipitated with hCTR2-FLAG, suggesting that hCTR2 can form multimers, like hCTR1. Transiently transfected hCTR2-eGFP (enhanced green fluorescent protein) was localized exclusively to late endosomes and lysosomes, and was not detected at the plasma membrane. To functionally address the role of hCTR2 in copper metabolism, a novel transcription-based copper sensor was developed. This MRE (metal-responsive element)-luciferase reporter contained four MREs from the mouse metallothionein 1A promoter upstream of the firefly luciferase open reading frame. Thus the MRE-luciferase reporter measured bioavailable cytosolic copper. Expression of hCTR1 resulted in strong activation of the reporter, with maximal induction at 1 muM CuCl2, consistent with the K(m) of hCTR1. Interestingly, expression of hCTR2 significantly induced MRE-luciferase reporter activation in a copper-dependent manner at 40 and 100 microM CuCl2. Taken together, these results identify hCTR2 as an oligomeric membrane protein localized in lysosomes, which stimulates copper delivery to the cytosol of human cells at relatively high copper concentrations. This work suggests a role for endosomal and lysosomal copper pools in the maintenance of cellular copper homoeostasis.
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