Fulfilling a bevy of biological roles, copper is an essential metal for healthy brain function. Cu dyshomeostasis has been demonstrated to be involved in some neurological conditions including Menkes and Alzheimer's diseases. We have previously reported localized Cu-rich aggregates in astrocytes of the subventricular zone (SVZ) in rodent brains with Cu concentrations in the hundreds of millimolar. Metallothionein, a cysteine-rich protein critical to metal homeostasis and known to participate in a variety of neuroprotective and neuroregenerative processes, was proposed as a binding protein. Here, we present an analysis of metallothionein(1,2) knockout (MTKO) mice and age-matched controls using X-ray fluorescence microscopy. In large structures such as the corpus callosum, cortex, and striatum, there is no significant difference in Cu, Fe, or Zn concentrations in MTKO mice compared to age-matched controls. In the astrocyte-rich subventricular zone where Cu-rich aggregates reside, approximately 1/3 as many Cu-rich aggregates persist in MTKO mice resulting in a decrease in periventricular Cu concentration. Aggregates in both wild-type and MTKO mice show XANES spectra characteristic of CuxSy multimetallic clusters and have similar [S]/[Cu] ratios. Consistent with assignment as a CuxSy multimetallic cluster, the astrocyte-rich SVZ of both MTKO and wild-type mice exhibit autofluorescent bodies, though MTKO mice exhibit fewer. Furthermore, XRF imaging of Au-labeled lysosomes and ubiquitin demonstrates a lack of co-localization with Cu-rich aggregates suggesting they are not involved in a degradation pathway. Overall, these data suggest that Cu in aggregates is bound by either metallothionein-3 or a yet unknown protein similar to metallothionein.
Many naturally occurring metalloenzymes
are gated by rate-limiting
conformational changes, and there exists a critical interplay between
macroscopic structural rearrangements of the protein and subatomic
changes affecting the electronic structure of embedded metallocofactors.
Despite this connection, most artificial metalloproteins (ArMs) are
prepared in structurally rigid protein hosts. To better model the
natural mechanisms of metalloprotein reactivity, we have developed
conformationally switchable ArMs (swArMs) that undergo a large-scale
structural rearrangement upon allosteric effector binding. The swArMs
reported here contain a Co(dmgH)2(X) cofactor (dmgH = dimethylglyoxime
and X = N3
–, H3C–, and
i
Pr–). We used
UV–vis absorbance and energy-dispersive X-ray fluorescence
spectroscopies, along with protein assays, and mass spectrometry to
show that these metallocofactors are installed site-specifically and
stoichiometrically via direct Co–S cysteine ligation within
the Escherichia coli glutamine binding
protein (GlnBP). Structural characterization by single-crystal X-ray
diffraction unveils the precise positioning and microenvironment of
the metallocofactor within the protein fold. Fluorescence, circular
dichroism, and infrared spectroscopies, along with isothermal titration
calorimetry, reveal that allosteric Gln binding drives a large-scale
protein conformational change. In swArMs containing a Co(dmgH)2(CH3) cofactor, we show that the protein stabilizes
the otherwise labile Co–S bond relative to the free complex.
Kinetics studies performed as a function of temperature and pH reveal
that the protein conformational change accelerates this bond dissociation
in a pH-dependent fashion. We present swArMs as a robust platform
for investigating the interplay between allostery and metallocofactor
regulation.
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