Proton fourier transform NMR studies of insulin: coordination of calcium to the Glu(B13) site drives hexamer assembly and induces a conformation change
- 1 May 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Biochemistry
- Vol. 27 (9) , 3387-3397
- https://doi.org/10.1021/bi00409a040
Abstract
1H Fourier transform NMR investigations of metal ion binding to insulin in 2H2O were undertaken as a function of pH* to determine the effects of metal ion coordination to the Glu(B13) site on the assembly and structure of the insulin hexamer. The C-2 histidyl regions of the 1H NMR spectra of insulin species containing respectively one Ca2+ and two Zn2+/hexamer and three Cd2+/hexamer have been assigned. Both the Cd2+ derivative (In)6(Cd2+)2Cd2+, where two of the Cd2+ ions are coordinated to the His(B10) sites and the remaining Cd2+ ion is coordinated to the Glu(B13) site [Sudmeier, J. L., Bell, S. J., Storm, M. C., and Dunn, M. F. (1981) Science (Washington, D.C.) 212, 560], and the Zn2+-Ca2+ derivative (In)6-(Zn2+)2Ca2+, where the two Zn2+ ions are coordinated to the His(B10) sites and Ca2+ ion is coordinated to the Glu(B13) site, give spectra in which the C-2 proton resonances of His(B10) are shifted upfield relative to metal-free insulin. Spectra of insulin solutions (3-20 mg/mL) containing a ratio of In:Zn2+ = 6:2 in the pH* region from 8.6 to 10 were found to contain signals both from metal-free insulin species and from the 2Zn-insulin hexamer, (In)6(Zn2+)2. The addition of either Ca2+ (in the ratio In:Zn2+:Ca2+ = 6:2:1) or 40 mM NaSCN was found to provide sufficient additional thermodynamic drive to bring about the nearly complete assembly of insulin hexamers. Cd2+ in the ratio In:Cd2+ = 6:3 also drives hexamer assembly to completion. We postulate that the additional thermodynamic drive provided by Ca2+ and Cd2+ is due to coordination of these metal ions to the Glu(B13) carboxylates of the hexamer. At high pH*, this coordination neutralizes the repulsive Coulombic interactions between the six Glu(B13) carboxylates and forms metal ion "cross-links" across the dimer-dimer interfaces. Comparison of the aromatic region of the 1H NMR spectra for (In)6(Zn2+)2 with (In)6(Zn2+)2Ca2+, (In)6(Cd2+)2Cd2+, (In)6(Cd2+)2Ca2+ indicates that binding of either Ca2+ or Cd2+ to the Glu(B13) site induces a conformation change that perturbs the environments of the side chains of several of the aromatic residues in the insulin structure. Since these residues lie on the monomer-monomer and dimer-dimer subunit interfaces, we conclude that the conformation change includes small changes in the subunit interfaces that alter the microenvironments of the aromatic rings.This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
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