Abstract

The dynamics of metal binding to and transfer from metalloproteins involved in metal homeostasis are important for understanding cellular distribution of metal ions. The dicotyledonous plant Arabidopsis thaliana has two type 4 seed-specific metallothionein homologues, MT4a and MT4b, with likely roles in zinc(II) homeostasis. These two metallothioneins are 84% identical, with full conservation of all metal-binding cysteine and histidine residues. Yet, differences in their spatial and temporal expression patterns suggested divergence in their biological roles. To investigate whether biological functions are reflected in molecular properties, we compare aspects of zinc(II)-binding dynamics of full-length MT4a and MT4b, namely the pH dependence of zinc(II) binding and protein folding, and zinc(II) transfer to the chelator EDTA. UV–Vis and NMR spectroscopies as well as native electrospray ionisation mass spectrometry consistently showed that transfer from Zn6MT4a is considerably faster than from Zn6MT4b, with pseudo-first-order rate constants for the fastest observed step of kobs = 2.8 × 10−4 s−1 (MT4b) and kobs = 7.5 × 10−4 s−1 (MT4a) (5 µM protein, 500 µM EDTA, 25 mM Tris buffer, pH 7.33, 298 K). 2D heteronuclear NMR experiments allowed locating the most labile zinc(II) ions in domain II for both proteins. 3D homology models suggest that reactivity of this domain is governed by the local environment around the mononuclear Cys2His2 site that is unique to type 4 MTs. Non-conservative amino acid substitutions in this region affect local electrostatics as well as whole-domain dynamics, with both effects rendering zinc(II) ions bound to MT4a more reactive in metal transfer reactions. Therefore, domain II of MT4a is well suited to rapidly release its bound zinc(II) ions, in broad agreement with a previously suggested role of MT4a in zinc(II) transport and delivery to other proteins.

Highlights

  • The unique importance of the essential micronutrient zinc(II) to the health of all organisms is increasingly recognised [1], with the number of confirmed and predicted zinc(II)-requiring proteins still on the rise [2]

  • Combining electrospray ionisation mass spectrometry (ESI-MS) and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, we have studied proton-induced zinc(II) loss to correlate speciation with protein folding

  • ESIMS at neutral pH and inductively coupled plasma-optical emission spectroscopy (ICP-OES) confirmed that our expression and purification protocols yield overwhelmingly the ­Zn6 species in both cases; this was confirmed for each individual batch used in the studies described below

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Summary

Introduction

The unique importance of the essential micronutrient zinc(II) to the health of all organisms is increasingly recognised [1], with the number of confirmed and predicted zinc(II)-requiring proteins still on the rise [2]. The pervasive utilisation of zinc(II) in biological systems renders it a socalled type 2 nutrient [3], which means that its deficiency impacts on a multitude of physiological processes. This is true for animals and man [4,5,6], and for plants [7, 8]. JBIC Journal of Biological Inorganic Chemistry (2018) 23:137–154 Domain I (2 Zn).

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