The conserved Trp residue within helix 5 of the N-lobe of human serum transferrin (hTF/2N, 40 kDa) has been mutated to Tyr. NMR and CD spectra and energy calculations show that the mutation causes little perturbation of the overall structure of hTF/2N although the chelating agent Tiron removed Fe3+ from the mutant protein about three times faster than from wild-type hTF/2N. 1H-NMR resonances of residues in the Leu22-Trp128-Ile132 hydrophobic patch are assigned both by ring current calculations and with the aid of the mutation. [1H, 15N]-NMR resonances for 11 of the 14 Tyr residues were observed in the spectra of 15N-Tyr-hTF/2N and a resonance for Tyr128 was assignable in spectra of the mutant. The 15N resonance of Y128 was sensitive to oxalate and Ga3+ binding, and Ga3+ binding perturbed 15N resonances for most of the Tyr residues. Since these are well distributed over the N-lobe, it can be concluded that metal-induced structural changes are not merely local to the binding site.
CITATION STYLE
Beatty, E. J., Cox, M. C., Frenkiel, T. A., He, Q. Y., Mason, A. B., Sadler, P. J., … Woodworth, R. C. (1997). Trp128Tyr mutation in the N-lobe of recombinant human serum transferrin: 1H- and 15N-NMR and metal binding studies. Protein Engineering, 10(5), 583–591. https://doi.org/10.1093/protein/10.5.583
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