| Literature DB >> 25195880 |
Simon W M Tanley1, Laurina-Victoria Starkey1, Lucinda Lamplough1, Surasek Kaenket1, John R Helliwell1.
Abstract
This study examines the binding and chemical stability of the platinum hexahalides K2PtCl6, K2PtBr6 and K2PtI6 when soaked into pre-grown hen egg-white lysozyme (HEWL) crystals as the protein host. Direct comparison of the iodo complex with the chloro and bromo complexes shows that the iodo complex is partly chemically transformed to a square-planar PtI3 complex bound to the N(δ) atom of His15, a chemical behaviour that is not exhibited by the chloro or bromo complexes. Each complex does, however, bind to HEWL in its octahedral form either at one site (PtI6) or at two sites (PtBr6 and PtCl6). As heavy-atom derivatives of a protein, the octahedral shape of the hexahalides could be helpful in cases of difficult-to-interpret electron-density maps as they would be recognisable 'objects'.Entities:
Keywords: PtI3 ligand bound to histidine; X-ray lasers; hen egg-white lysozyme; platinum hexahalides
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25195880 PMCID: PMC4157407 DOI: 10.1107/S2053230X14014009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Crystallogr F Struct Biol Commun ISSN: 2053-230X Impact factor: 1.056
X-ray crystallographic data and final protein model-refinement statistics for HEWL crystals soaked in K2PtI6
Values in parentheses are for the last shell.
| PDB code |
|
| Data-collection temperature (K) | 100 |
| Data reduction | |
| Space group |
|
| Unit-cell parameters () |
|
| Crystal-to-detector distance (mm) | 50 |
| Observed reflections | 135236 |
| Unique reflections | 14174 |
| Resolution () | 27.821.62 (1.651.62) |
| Completeness (%) | 97.8 (79.0) |
|
| 0.0893 (0.1779) |
|
| 16.2 (3.7) |
| Multiplicity | 8.7 (2.4) |
| Refinement | |
| Cruickshank DPI () | 0.09 |
| No. of atoms | |
| Protein atoms | 1001 |
| Water molecules | 105 |
| Pt and halogen atoms | 14 |
| Other bound molecules or ions | 1 |
| Average | |
| Protein atoms | 16.6 |
| Water molecules | 23.3 |
| Pt and halogen atoms | 16.8 |
| Other bound molecules or ions | 11.5 |
|
| 17.4/19.3 |
| R.m.s.d., bonds ()/angles () | 0.02/1.81 |
| Ramachandran values (%) | |
| Most favoured | 96.1 |
| Additional allowed | 3.9 |
| Disallowed | 0 |
The other bound atom to the protein is an Na ion.
Figure 1PtI6 binding in a special position between two Arg14 residues in symmetry-related molecules. The 2F o − F c electron-density map (blue) and the anomalous difference electron-density map (orange) are shown. The Pt atom is in grey and I atoms are in purple.
Figure 2A PtI3 moiety bound to the Nδ atom of His15. The 2F o − F c electron-density map (blue) and the anomalous difference electron-density map (orange) are shown. The Pt atom is in grey and I atoms are in purple.