A comparison of electron spin-echo envelope modulation (ESEEM) spectra from multi-crystalline Cu(2+)-insulin with and without additional Cd(2+) show a dramatic change in the quadrupole coupling parameters of the remote nitrogens of the two histidine imidazoles that ligate to copper. Without Cd(2+), the quadrupole parameters are like those observed in blue copper proteins and in copper substituted lactoferrin. With Cd(2+) soaked into the Cu(2+)-insulin crystals, the quadrupole parameters are similar to those found in galactose oxidase. Theoretical simulations of ESEEM spectra guided by structure modeling suggest that these changes originate from differences in the hydrogen bonding environments of the imidazole remote nitrogen. In addition, a compilation of results from previous ESEEM studies of copper proteins reveals that the asymmetry parameter, eta, may be an indicator of type of hydrogen bond the imidazole remote nitrogen makes. When eta > or = 0.9, the nitrogen hydrogen bonds to water, whereas when eta < 0.9, the nitrogen hydrogen bonds to the protein.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/bi991613v | DOI Listing |
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