Abstract

The kinetic mechanism of calcium binding was investigated for the high-affinity calcium-magnesium sites of troponin C (TN-C), for the C-terminal fragment containing only the high-affinity sites (TR2) and for the TN-C:TN-I (where TN-I represents the inhibitory subunit of troponin) complex. Rate constants were measured by the change in fluorescence of the proteins labeled with 4-(N-iodoacetoxyethyl-N-methyl-7-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-diazole at Cys 98. Rate constants for calcium dissociation were also measured using the fluorescent calcium chelating agent quin 2. Calcium binding to TR2 at 4 degrees C is a two-step process at each binding site. (formula; see text) A first order transition (k1 = 700 s-1) follows the formation of a weakly bound collision complex (K0 = 2.5 X 10(3) M-1). The two sits of the labeled protein are distinguishable because of a 2-4-fold difference in rate constants of calcium dissociation. The kinetic evidence is consistent with additive changes in structure induced by calcium binding to two identical or nearly identical high-affinity sites. The mechanism for TN-C:TN-I is similar to TR2. TN-C gave complex kinetic behavior for calcium binding but calcium dissociation occurred with the same rate constants found for TR2. Calcium binding to the high-affinity sites of TnC can be interpreted by the same mechanism as for TR2 but an additional reaction possibly arriving from calcium binding to the low-affinity sites leads to a high-fluorescence intermediate state which is detected by the fluorophore. The interactions between the two classes of sites are interpreted by a model in which calcium binding at the high-affinity sites reverses the fluorescence change induced by calcium binding at the low-affinity sites. Magnesium binding to the calcium-magnesium sites of TR2 and TN-C occurs by the same two-step binding mechanism with a smaller value for K0 and a 5-fold larger rate constant of dissociation.

Highlights

  • The kinetic mechanism of calcium binding was in- “high-affinity” sites, have a binding constant of 2 x lo7M-’

  • troponin C (TN-C) gave complex kinetic behavior for calcium binding but calcium dissociation occurred with the same rate constants found for TR2

  • Calcium binding to the high-affinitysites of TnC can be interpreted by thesame mechanism as forTR2but an additionalreaction possibly arriving from calcium binding to the low-affinity sites leads to a high-fluorescence intermediate state which is detected by the change in TN-C and troponin, and have proposed complex kinetic models which take into account the biphasic nature of their observed transients

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Summary

Kinetic Studies of Calcium and Magnesium Bindingto Troponin C*

Calcium binding to the high-affinitysites of TnC can be interpreted by thesame mechanism as forTR2but an additionalreaction possibly arriving from calcium binding to the low-affinity sites leads to a high-fluorescence intermediate state which is detected by the change in TN-C and troponin, and have proposed complex kinetic models which take into account the biphasic nature of their observed transients. We have systematically examined the kinetics of calcium and magnesium binding to TN-C, to a C-terminal fragment of TN-C containing the high-affinity sites (TR2), and toa complex of TN-C and TN-I, by using the fluorescent probe IANBD. The kinetic behavior of the high-af~nistiytes of TN-C is very similar to TR2 but the fluorescent label detects an additional transition which is attributed to calcium binding at thelow-affinity sites.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
No divalent cation
The titrationcurve obtained using the tyrosinefluorescence
The results do notdistinguish between two intrinsically
DISCUSSION
Ca with association constant
Dissociation rate constant
Full Text
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