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. 2007 Aug 1;79(15):5659-67.
doi: 10.1021/ac070312l. Epub 2007 Jul 4.

Mass spectrometric determination of the coordination geometry of potential copper(II) surrogates for the mammalian prion protein octarepeat region

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Mass spectrometric determination of the coordination geometry of potential copper(II) surrogates for the mammalian prion protein octarepeat region

M Jake Pushie et al. Anal Chem. .

Abstract

The N-terminal domain of mammalian prion proteins contains several tandem repeats of the octapeptide PHGGGWGQ, each one capable of selectively binding up to 1 equiv of Cu2+. Under saturating conditions Cu2+ is known to coordinate the HGG portion of the repeat sequence via the histidine imidazole side chain, two deprotonated amide N-atoms, and a backbone carbonyl O-atom. Using appropriate selection criteria, we have generated a short list of candidate metal ions (Co3+, Ni2+, Pd2+, Pt2+) that can serve as potential surrogates for Cu2+. The selected metal ions were screened for binding interactions with the OR-derived peptide fragment AcHGGGWNH2 (Ac = acetyl, amino acid residues in italics) using electrospray ionization mass spectrometry. The coordination geometries of these metal ions with the synthetic OR peptide were subsequently determined from fragment analysis using collision-induced dissociation tandem mass spectrometry. Our results indicate that, although Co3+, Pd2+, and Pt2+ all bind to the OR fragment via the peptide backbone to varying extents, each of these metal ions appears to associate with the peptide in a unique manner, which is distinct from the way in which Cu2+ is coordinated. This work illustrates the extremely strong selectivity for Cu2+ of this highly conserved region of the mammalian prion protein.

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