4.7 Article

Copper(II) interaction with unstructured prion domain outside the octarepeat region:: Speciation, stability, and binding details of copper(II) complexes with PrP106-126 peptides

Journal

INORGANIC CHEMISTRY
Volume 44, Issue 20, Pages 7214-7225

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ic050754k

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Copper(II) complexes of the neurotoxic peptide fragments of human and chicken prion proteins were studied by potentiometric, UV-vis, CD, and EPR spectroscopic and ESI-MS methods. The peptides included the terminally blocked native and scrambled sequences of HuPrP106-126 (HuPrPAc106-126NH(2) and ScrHuPrPAc106-126NH(2)) and also the nona- and tetrapeptide fragments of both the human and chicken prion proteins (HuPrPAc106-114NH(2), ChPrPAc119-127NH(2), HuPrPA109-112NH(2), and ChPrPAc122-125NH(2)). The histidyl imidazole-N donor atoms were found to be the major copper(II) binding sites of all peptides; 3N and 4N complexes containing additional 2 and 3 deprotonated amide-N donors, respectively, are the major species in the physiological pH range. The complex formation processes for nona- and tetrapeptides are very similar, supporting the fact that successive deprotonation and metal ion coordination of amide functions go toward the N-termini in the form of joined six- and five-membered chelates. As a consequence, the peptide sequences investigated here, related to the neurotoxic region of the human PrP106-126 sequence, show a higher metal-binding affinity than the octarepeat fragments. In the case of the HuPrP peptide sequences, a weak pH-dependent binding of the Met109 residue was also detected in the 3N-coordinated complexes.

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