| Literature DB >> 16180886 |
Giuseppe Di Natale1, Giulia Grasso, Giuseppe Impellizzeri, Diego La Mendola, Giovanni Micera, Nikolett Mihala, Zoltán Nagy, Katalin Osz, Giuseppe Pappalardo, Viktória Rigó, Enrico Rizzarelli, Daniele Sanna, Imre Sóvágó.
Abstract
Copper(II) complexes of the neurotoxic peptide fragments of human and chicken prion proteins were studied by potentiometric, UV-vis, CD, and EPR spectroscopic and ESI-MS methods. The peptides included the terminally blocked native and scrambled sequences of HuPrP106-126 (HuPrPAc106-126NH2 and ScrHuPrPAc106-126NH2) and also the nona- and tetrapeptide fragments of both the human and chicken prion proteins (HuPrPAc106-114NH2, ChPrPAc119-127NH2, HuPrPAc109-112NH2, and ChPrPAc122-125NH2). The histidyl imidazole-N donor atoms were found to be the major copper(II) binding sites of all peptides; 3N and 4N complexes containing additional 2 and 3 deprotonated amide-N donors, respectively, are the major species in the physiological pH range. The complex formation processes for nona- and tetrapeptides are very similar, supporting the fact that successive deprotonation and metal ion coordination of amide functions go toward the N-termini in the form of joined six- and five-membered chelates. As a consequence, the peptide sequences investigated here, related to the neurotoxic region of the human PrP106-126 sequence, show a higher metal-binding affinity than the octarepeat fragments. In the case of the HuPrP peptide sequences, a weak pH-dependent binding of the Met109 residue was also detected in the 3N-coordinated complexes.Entities:
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Year: 2005 PMID: 16180886 DOI: 10.1021/ic050754k
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Inorg Chem ISSN: 0020-1669 Impact factor: 5.165