Binding of vanadate (V) to ribonuclease-T1 and inosine, investigated by 51V NMR spectroscopy
- PMID: 2513377
- DOI: 10.1016/0162-0134(89)80037-6
Binding of vanadate (V) to ribonuclease-T1 and inosine, investigated by 51V NMR spectroscopy
Abstract
Ribonuclease T1 (RNase-T1) from Aspergillus Oryzae cleaves ribonucleic acid specifically at guanosine to yield oligonucleotides with terminal guanosine-3'-phosphate. It forms a complex with vanadate (association constant K approximately 145 +/- 30 M-1; delta (51V) = -514 ppm) with spectral features similar to the less stable complexes obtained with di- and tripeptides (Gly-His, Pros-His-Ala, Gly-His-Lys, Val-Glu) containing amino acids that are constituents at the active site of the enzyme. Guanosine also forms a (sparingly soluble) complex with vanadate. Its role is mimicked by inosine, which yields two soluble complexes with vanadate, characterized by delta values of -511 (K = 94 M-1) and -523 ppm (K = 305 M-1 in TRIS buffer and 685 m-1 in buffer-free solution). Comparison with literature values leads to an assignment of the delta = -523 signal to a complex where monovanadate, possibly in a trigonal bipyramidal geometry suggested for the transition state of the phosphate analogue, is coordinated to the 2'- and 3'-oxygens of the ribose ring. A drastic increase of complex stability is observed in the ternary vanadate (12-16 mM)/inosine(10.5 mM)/RNase-T1(5.4 mM) system. An approximate lower limit for the association constant is 1.5.10(5) M-2. The spectral characteristics of the main component of the binary vanadate/inosine complex are essentially maintained (delta = -525 ppm, half-width = 960 Hz), suggesting vanadate binding to the enzyme through hydrogen bonds.
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