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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Weak binding of divalent cations to plasma gelsolin.

Calcium binding of swine plasma gelsolin was examined. When applied to ion-exchange chromatography, its elution volume was drastically altered depending on the free Ca2+ concentration of the medium. The presence of two classes of Ca2+ binding sites, high-affinity sites (Kd = 7 microM) and low-affinity sites (Kd = 1 mM), was suggested from the concentration dependence of the elution volume. The tight binding sites were specific for Ca2+. The weakly bound Ca2+ could be replaced by Mg2+ once the tight binding sites were occupied with Ca2+. The binding of metal ions was totally reversible. Circular dichroism measurement of plasma gelsolin indicated that most change in secondary structure was associated with Ca2+ binding to the high-affinity sites. Binding of Mg2+ to the low-affinity sites caused a secondary structural change different from that caused by Ca2+ bound to the high-affinity sites. Gel permeation chromatography exhibited a small change in Stokes radius with and without Ca2+. Microheterogeneity revealed by isoelectric focusing did not relate to the presence of two classes of Ca2+ binding sites. These results indicated that plasma gelsolin drastically altered its surface charge property due to binding of Ca2+ or Ca2+, Mg2+ with a concomitant conformational change.[1]

References

  1. Weak binding of divalent cations to plasma gelsolin. Doi, Y., Kim, F., Kido, S. Biochemistry (1990) [Pubmed]
 
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