Literature DB >> 12381325

Kinetic analysis of the interactions between troponin C and the C-terminal troponin I regulatory region and validation of a new peptide delivery/capture system used for surface plasmon resonance.

Brian Tripet1, Gregory De Crescenzo, Suzanne Grothe, Maureen O'Connor-McCourt, Robert S Hodges.   

Abstract

Using surface plasmon resonance (SPR)-based biosensor analysis and fluorescence spectroscopy, the apparent kinetic constants, k(on) and k(off), and equilibrium dissociation constant, K(d), have been determined for the binding interaction between rabbit skeletal troponin C (TnC) and rabbit skeletal troponin I (TnI) regulatory region peptides: TnI(96-115), TnI(96-131) and TnI(96-139). To carry out SPR analysis, a new peptide delivery/capture system was utilized in which the TnI peptides were conjugated to the E-coil strand of a de novo designed heterodimeric coiled-coil domain. The TnI peptide conjugates were then captured via dimerization to the opposite strand (K-coil), which was immobilized on the biosensor surface. TnC was then injected over the biosensor surface for quantitative binding analysis. For fluorescence spectroscopy analysis, the environmentally sensitive fluoroprobe 5-((((2-iodoacetyl)amino)ethyl)amino) naphthalene-1-sulfonic acid (1,5-IAEDANS) was covalently linked to Cys98 of TnC and free TnI peptides were added. SPR analysis yielded equilibrium dissociation constants for TnC (plus Ca(2+)) binding to the C-terminal TnI regulatory peptides TnI(96-131) and TnI(96-139) of 89nM and 58nM, respectively. The apparent association and dissociation rate constants for each interaction were k(on)=2.3x10(5)M(-1)s(-1), 2.0x10(5)M(-1)s(-1) and k(off)=2.0x10(-2)s(-1), 1.2x10(-2)s(-1) for TnI(96-131) and TnI(96-139) peptides, respectively. These results were consistent with those obtained by fluorescence spectroscopy analysis: K(d) being equal to 130nM and 56nM for TnC-TnI(96-131) and TnC-TnI(96-139), respectively. Interestingly, although the inhibitory region peptide (TnI(96-115)) was observed to bind with an affinity similar to that of TnI(96-131) by fluorescence analysis (K(d)=380nM), its binding was not detected by SPR. Subsequent investigations examining salt effects suggested that the binding mechanism for the inhibitory region peptide is best characterized by an electrostatically driven fast on-rate ( approximately 1x10(8) to 1x10(9)M(-1)s(-1)) and a fast off-rate ( approximately 1x10(2)s(-1)). Taken together, the determination of these kinetic rate constants permits a clearer view of the interactions between the TnC and TnI proteins of the troponin complex.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12381325     DOI: 10.1016/s0022-2836(02)00883-5

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Mol Biol        ISSN: 0022-2836            Impact factor:   5.469


  3 in total

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Authors:  Cunle Wu; Gregor Jansen; Jianchun Zhang; David Y Thomas; Malcolm Whiteway
Journal:  Genes Dev       Date:  2006-03-15       Impact factor: 11.361

Review 2.  The contractile apparatus as a target for drugs against heart failure: interaction of levosimendan, a calcium sensitiser, with cardiac troponin c.

Authors:  Tia Sorsa; Piero Pollesello; R John Solaro
Journal:  Mol Cell Biochem       Date:  2004-11       Impact factor: 3.396

3.  Long-timescale molecular dynamics simulations elucidate the dynamics and kinetics of exposure of the hydrophobic patch in troponin C.

Authors:  Steffen Lindert; Peter M Kekenes-Huskey; J Andrew McCammon
Journal:  Biophys J       Date:  2012-10-16       Impact factor: 4.033

  3 in total

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