Abstract

The plant metallothioneins differ distinctively from other metallothionein families with respect to the cysteine distribution patterns, the presence of aromatic amino acids in most and histidine in some forms, as well as long cysteine-free amino acid stretches between cysteine-rich regions. Although known for more than 25 years, research activity on plant metallothioneins has been low increasing only in the past few years. In the following, we will present the first characterization of Cicer arietinum (chickpea) MT1. In this root-specific protein two cysteine-rich regions with six cysteine residues each are separated by a 42 amino acids long linker region. A synthetic gene encoding MT1 was designed, cloned into a suitable vector, and the protein was over-expressed in Escherichia coli. We could show, that MT1 has the ability to coordinate up to five Zn 2+ or Cd 2+ ions and even higher amounts of Hg 2+. According to titration experiments pH-dependent zinc– and cadmium–thiolate cluster stability in MT1 is considerably lower than in vertebrate metallothioneins. The approximate contribution of secondary structural elements to the overall structure was assessed with circular dichroism and infrared spectroscopy. Hypothetical metal–thiolate cluster structures will be presented.

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