Spelling suggestions: "subject:"azurin"" "subject:"azurins""
1 |
NMR spectroscopic studies of transition metal binding sites in metalloproteinsHannan, Jonathan Paul January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
|
2 |
Structural and electrostatic contributions to differences in oxidation-reduction potentials of two mutants of the copper protein, pseudoazurin /Peters-Libeu, Clare Ann. January 1996 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 1996. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves [140]-153).
|
3 |
Analysis and Molecular Characterization of an Unusual Copper Inducible Homeostasis Mechanism in Pseudomonas putida KT2440Quaranta, Davide January 2009 (has links)
The purpose of this research was to identify and characterize novel molecular mechanisms in copper homeostasis. Pseudomonas putida KT2440 is a soil bacterium studied for its potential use in bioremediation of soils contaminated with aromatic organic contaminants. The cinAQ operon was analyzed. cinAQ is transcribed in presence of copper. The product of cinA is a periplasmic azurin-like protein with a methionine and histidine rich region, characterized by a high redox potential (456 ±4 mV). CinQ was shown to be a pyridine nucleotide-dependent nitrile oxidoreductase that catalyzes the reduction of preQ₀ to preQ₁, the first committed step in the biosynthetic pathway leading to the production of the unusual nucleotide queuosine. Gene disruption of cinQ in Pseudomonas putida KT2440 and in Pseudomonas aeruginosa PAO1 did not result in a significant increase in copper sensitivity on disk assays. Furthermore, a P. putida KT2440 cinA mutant also did not present a greater sensitivity to copper on disk assays while cinA mutants in Pseudomonas aeruginosa PAO1 presented increased toxicity to copper compared to the wild-type. CinA is by sequence similarity proposed to be an electron shuttle, and was shown to be upregulated in the presence of copper. Increasing CinA levels in the periplasm after copper stress may represent a mechanism used to regenerate the multicopper oxidase CopA (involved in Cu(I) to Cu(II) oxidation). Alternatively, CinA could act as an electron shuttle that takes part in an alternative electron transport chain once redox active copper is available, or it could represent a periplasmic copper chaperon. CinQ is involved in the biosynthesis of the rare hyper-modified nucleotide queuosine, found in the wobble position of several tRNAs, and required to avoid the readthrough of the stop codon UAG. Transcription of cinAQ was shown to be under the control of the two component system CinR-CinS. CinS is a histidine kinase, with a sensor domain located in the periplasm. CinR is the cognate response regulator that activates transcription of genes upon phosphorylation from CinS. The CinR-CinS two component system was shown to be responsive to 0.5 LM copper. CinS displayed very high metal specificity and elicited a response only in the presence of copper and silver, but not other metals. Modeling of the CinS protein structure, performed using Swiss Model and using the periplasmic sensor DcuS from Escherichia coli as a template, identified a potential copper binding site, containing H37 and H147. Sequence alignment of copper sensing histidine kinases further identified other conserved residues in the periplasmic domain. Site-Directed Mutagenesis was used to generate CinS mutants that were tested for their ability to activate the cinAQ promoter in presence of Cu. When challenged with copper CinS mutant H37R and H147R had an almost 10 fold reduction in copper sensitivity compared to the wild-type, indicating a possible role in Cu coordination. Other CinS mutants responded similarly to the wild-type in the presence of 10 μM of Cu.
|
4 |
Bioorganometallic Chemistry within Nickel-Substituted Azurin: From Protein Design to ReactivityManesis, Anastasia C. January 2018 (has links)
No description available.
|
5 |
Effects of Outer Sphere Mutations on CO Binding to Nickel-Substituted Azurin andImplications for Acetyl Coenzyme A Synthase Substrate ChannelingWilson, Clayton Allan 30 September 2019 (has links)
No description available.
|
6 |
Bioelectrochemistry by fluorescent cyclic voltammetryMizzon, Giulia January 2012 (has links)
Understanding the factors influencing the ET characteristics of redox proteins confined at an electrochemical interface is of fundamental importance from both pure (fundamental science) and applied (biosensory) perspectives. This thesis reports on progress made in the emerging field of coupled electrochemical characterization and optical imaging in moving the analysis of redox-active films to molecular scales. More specifically the combination of cyclic voltammetry and wide-field Total Internal Reflection (TIRF) microscopy, here named ‘Fluorescent Cyclic Voltammetry’ (FCV), was applied to monitoring the response of surface-confined redox active proteins at submonolayer concentrations. The combined submicrometre spatial resolution and photon capture efficiency of an inverted TIRF configuration enabled the redox reactions of localized populations of proteins to be directly imaged at scales down to a few hundreds of molecules. This represents a 6-9 orders of magnitude enhancement in sensitivity with respect to classical current signals observed in bioelectrochemical analysis. Importantly, measurements of redox potentials at this scale could be achieved from both natural and artificially designed bioelectrochemical fluorescent switches and shed fundamental light on the thermodynamic and kinetic dispersion within a population of surface confined metalloproteins. The first three chapters of this thesis provide an overview of the relevant literature and a theoretical background to both the rapidly expanding fields of electroactive monolayers bioelectrochemistry and TIRF imaging. The initial design and construction of a robust electrochemically and optically addressable fluorescent switch, crucial to the applicability of FCV is reported in chapter 5. The generation of optically transparent, and chemically modifiable electrode surfaces suitable for FCV are also described. Chapter 6 describes the response of the surface confined azurin-based switch. Analysis of the spatially-resolved redox reaction of zeptomole samples in various conditions enables the mapping of thermodynamic dispersion across the sampled areas. In chapter 7 the newly developed FCV detection method was extended to investigate more complex bioelectrochemical systems containing multiple electron transferring redox centres and responding optically at different wavelengths. This approach provides a platform for spectral resolution of different electrochemical processes on the same sample. Finally in chapter 8 an electrochemical procedure is proposed for investigating the kinetic response of redox proteins using a fundamentally new methodology based on interfacial capacitance. In using variations in the surface chemistry to tune the rate of electron transfer, the approach was shown to be a robust and facile means of characterising redox active films in considerably more detail than possible through standard electrochemical methodologies. Ultimately, it can be applied to probe dispersion within protein populations and represents a powerful means of analysing molecular films more generally.
|
Page generated in 0.0324 seconds