Search results for "hemocyanin"
showing 10 items of 148 documents
Similar enzyme activation and catalysis in hemocyanins and tyrosinases
2006
This review presents the common features and differences of the type 3 copper proteins with respect to their structure and function. In spite of these differences a common mechanism of activation and catalysis seems to have been preserved throughout evolution. In all cases the inactive proenzymes such as tyrosinase and catecholoxidase are activated by removal of an amino acid blocking the entrance channel to the active site. No other modification at the active site seems to be necessary to enable catalytic activity. Hemocyanins, the oxygen carriers in many invertebrates, also behave as silent inactive enzymes and can be activated in the same way. The molecular basis of the catalytic process…
Evolution of molluscan hemocyanin structures
2013
AbstractHemocyanin transports oxygen in the hemolymph of many molluscs and arthropods and is therefore a central physiological factor in these animals. Molluscan hemocyanin molecules are oligomers composed of many protein subunits that in turn encompass subsets of distinct functional units. The structure and evolution of molluscan hemocyanin have been studied for decades, but it required the recent progress in DNA sequencing, X-ray crystallography and 3D electron microscopy to produce a detailed view of their structure and evolution. The basic quaternary structure is a cylindrical decamer 35nm in diameter, consisting of wall and collar (typically at one end of the cylinder). Depending on th…
Recent findings on phenoloxidase activity and antimicrobial activity of hemocyanins
2003
All hierarchical levels are involved in conformational transitions of the 4×6-meric tarantula hemocyanin upon oxygenation
2002
The respiratory protein of the tarantula Eurypelma californicum is a 4 x 6-meric hemocyanin that binds oxygen with high cooperativity. This requires the existence of different conformations which have been confirmed by small angle X-ray scattering (SAXS). Here we present reconstructed 3D-models of the oxy- and deoxy-forms of tarantula hemocyanins, as obtained by fitting small angle X-rays scattering curves on the basis of known X-ray structures and electron microscopy of related hemocyanins. For the first time, the involvement of movements at all levels of the quaternary structure was confirmed for an arthropod hemocyanin upon oxygenation. The two identical 2 x 6-meric half-molecules of the…
Limulus polyphemus Hemocyanin: 10 Å Cryo-EM Structure, Sequence Analysis, Molecular Modelling and Rigid-body Fitting Reveal the Interfaces Between th…
2007
Abstract The blue copper protein hemocyanin from the horseshoe crab Limulus polyphemus is among the largest respiratory proteins found in nature (3.5 MDa) and exhibits a highly cooperative oxygen binding. Its 48 subunits are arranged as eight hexamers (1×6mers) that form the native 8×6mer in a nested hierarchy of 2×6mers and 4×6mers. This quaternary structure is established by eight subunit types (termed I, IIA, II, IIIA, IIIB, IV, V, and VI), of which only type II has been sequenced. Crystal structures of the 1×6mer are available, but for the 8×6mer only a 40 A 3D reconstruction exists. Consequently, the structural parameters of the 8×6mer are not firmly established, and the molecular inte…
Nautilus pompilius Hemocyanin: 9 Å Cryo-EM Structure and Molecular Model Reveal the Subunit Pathway and the Interfaces between the 70 Functional Units
2007
Hemocyanins are giant extracellular oxygen carriers in the hemolymph of many molluscs. Nautilus pompilius (Cephalopoda) hemocyanin is a cylindrical decamer of a 350 kDa polypeptide subunit that in turn is a "pearl-chain" of seven different functional units (FU-a to FU-g). Each globular FU has a binuclear copper centre that reversibly binds one O(2) molecule, and the 70-FU decamer is a highly allosteric protein. Its primary structure and an 11 A cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) structure have recently been determined, and the crystal structures of two related FU types are available in the databanks. However, in molluscan hemocyanin, the precise subunit pathway within the decamer, the inter…
Keyhole limpet hemocyanin: 9-A CryoEM structure and molecular model of the KLH1 didecamer reveal the interfaces and intricate topology of the 160 fun…
2008
Abstract Hemocyanins are blue copper-containing respiratory proteins in the hemolymph of many arthropods and molluscs. Molluscan hemocyanins are decamers, didecamers, or multidecamers of a 340- to 400-kDa polypeptide subunit containing seven or eight globular functional units (FUs; FU-a to FU-h), each with an oxygen-binding site. The decamers are short 35-nm hollow cylinders, with their lumen narrowed by a collar complex. Our recently published 9-A cryo-electron microscopy/crystal structure hybrid model of a 3.4-MDa cephalopod hemocyanin decamer [Nautilus pompilius hemocyanin (NpH)] revealed the pathway of the seven-FU subunit (340 kDa), 15 types of inter-FU interface, and an asymmetric col…
10-A cryoEM structure and molecular model of the Myriapod (Scutigera) 6x6mer hemocyanin:understanding a giant oxygen transport protein
2009
Oxygen transport in Myriapoda is maintained by a unique 6x6mer hemocyanin, that is, 36 subunits arranged as six hexamers (1x6mers). In the sluggish diplopod Spirostreptus, the 1x6mers seem to operate as almost or fully independent allosteric units (h approximately 1.3; P(50) approximately 5 torr), whereas in the swift centipede Scutigera, they intensively cooperate allosterically (h approximately 10; P(50) approximately 50 torr). Here, we show the chemomechanical basis of this differential behavior as deduced from hybrid 6x6mer structures, obtained by single-particle cryo-electron microscopy of the Scutigera 6x6mer (10.0 A resolution according to the 0.5 criterion) and docking of homology-m…
Homology modelling of hemocyanins and tyrosinases: pitfalls in automated approaches.
2004
Structural Mechanism of SDS-Induced Enzyme Activity of Scorpion Hemocyanin Revealed by Electron Cryomicroscopy
2009
Summary Phenoloxidases (POs) occur in all organisms and are involved in skin and hair coloring in mammals, and initiating melanization in wound healing. Mutation or overexpression of PO can cause albinism or melanoma, respectively. SDS can convert inactive PO and the oxygen carrier hemocyanin (Hc) into enzymatically active PO. Here we present single-particle cryo-EM maps at subnanometer resolution and pseudoatomic models of the 24-oligomeric Hc from scorpion Pandinus imperator in resting and SDS-activated states. Our structural analyses led to a plausible mechanism of Hc enzyme PO activation: upon SDS activation, the intrinsically flexible Hc domain I twists away from domains II and III in …