Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
9017838 Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology 2005 7 Pages PDF
Abstract
We selected the estrogen receptor protein for study because of prior results indicating that arsenite is a “potential nonsteroidal environmental estrogen”. We utilized radioactive 73As-labeled arsenite and vacuum filtration methodology to determine the binding affinity of arsenite to synthetic peptides. A zinc finger region containing four free sulfhydryls and the hormone binding region containing three free sulfhydryls based on the human estrogen receptor-α were studied. Peptide 15 (RYCAVCNDYASGYHYGVWSCEGCKA) bound arsenite with a Kd of 2.2 μM and Bmax (maximal binding capacity) of 89 nmol/mg protein. Peptide 10 (LECAWQGKCVEGTEHLYSMKCKNV) had a Kd of 1.3 μM and Bmax of 59 nmol/mg protein. In contrast, the monothiol peptide 19 (LEGAWQGKGVEGTEHLYSMKCKNV) bound arsenite with a higher Kd of 124 μM and a Bmax of 26 nmol/mg protein. In our studies, amino acids other than cysteine (including methionine and histidine) did not bind arsenite at all. Peptides modeled on the estrogen receptor with two or more nearby free sulfhydryls (two or five intervening amino acids) had low Kd values in the 1-4 μM range. Peptides containing single sulfhydryls or two sulfhydryls spaced 17 amino acids apart had higher Kd values in the 100-200 μM range, demonstrating lower affinity. With the exception of peptide 24 which had an unusually high Bmax value of 234 nmol/mg, the binding capacity of the studied peptides was proportional to the number of free cysteines. Binding of trivalent arsenicals to peptides and proteins can contribute to arsenic toxicity and carcinogenicity via altered peptide/protein structure and enzyme function.
Related Topics
Life Sciences Environmental Science Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis
Authors
, ,