Interrelationships among biological activity, disulfide bonds, secondary structure, and metal ion binding for a chemically synthesized 34-amino-acid peptide derived from alpha-fetoprotein
R. Maccoll et al., Interrelationships among biological activity, disulfide bonds, secondary structure, and metal ion binding for a chemically synthesized 34-amino-acid peptide derived from alpha-fetoprotein, BBA-GEN SUB, 1528(2-3), 2001, pp. 127-134
A 34-amino-acid peptide has been chemically synthesized based on a sequence
from human ct-fetoprotein. The purified peptide is active in anti-growth a
ssays when freshly prepared in pH 7.4 buffer at 0.20 g/l, but this peptide
slowly becomes inactive. This functional change is proven by mass spectrome
try to be triggered by the formation of an intrapeptide disulfide bond betw
een the two cysteine residues on the peptide. Interpeptide cross-linking do
es not occur. The active and inactive forms of the peptide have almost iden
tical secondary structures as shown by circular dichroism (CD). Zinc ions b
ind to the active peptide and completely prevents formation of the inactive
form. Cobalt(II) ions also bind to the peptide, and the UV-Vis absorption
spectrum of the cobalt-peptide complex shows that: (1) a near-UV sulfur-to-
metal-ion charge-transfer band had a molar extinction coefficient consisten
t with two thiolate bonds to Co(II); (2) the lowest-energy visible d-d tran
sition maximum at 659 nm, also, demonstrated that the two cysteine residues
are ligands for the metal ion; (3) the d-d molar extinction coefficient sh
owed that the metal ion-ligand complex was in a distorted tetrahedral symme
try. The peptide has two cysteines, and it is speculated that the other two
metal ion ligands might be the two histidines. The Zn(II)- and Co(II)-pept
ide complexes had similar peptide conformations as indicated by their ultra
violet CID spectra, which differed very slightly from that of the free pept
ide. Surprisingly, the cobalt ions acted in the reverse of the zinc ions in
that, instead of stabilizing anti-growth form of the peptide, they catalyz
ed its loss. Metal ion control of peptide function is a saliently interesti
ng concept. Calcium ions, in the conditions studied, apparently do not bind
to the peptide. Trifluoroethanol and temperature (60 degreesC) affected th
e secondary structure of the peptide, and the peptide was found capable of
assuming various conformations in solution. This conformational flexibility
may possibly be related to the biological activity of the peptide. (C) 200
1 Elsevier Science BN. All rights reserved.