ABSTRACT:
Thermodynamic and spectroscopic study of Cu(II) and Ni(II)
binding to bovine serum albumin.
The thermodynamics of Cu(II) and Ni(II) binding to bovine
serum albumin (BSA) have been studied by isothermal titration
calorimetry (ITC). The Cu(II) binding affinity of the N-terminal
protein site is quantitatively higher when the single free
thiol, Cys-34, is reduced (mercaptalbumin), compared to when
it is oxidized or derivatized with N-ethylmaleimide. This
increased affinity is due predominantly to entropic factors.
At higher pH (approximately 9), when the protein is in the
basic (B) form, a second Cu(II) binds with high affinity to
albumin with reduced Cys-34. The Cu(II) coordination has been
characterized by UV-vis absorption, CD, and EPR spectroscopy,
and the spectral data are consistent with thiolate coordination
to a tetragonal Cu(II), indicating this is a type 2 copper
site with thiolate ligation. Nickel(II) binding to the N-terminal
site of BSA is also modulated by the redox/ligation state
of Cys-34, with higher Ni(II) affinity for mercaptalbumin,
the predominant circulating form of the protein.
Zhang Y, Wilcox DE, Thermodynamic and spectroscopic study
of Cu(II) and Ni(II) binding to bovine serum albumin, J Biol
Inorg Chem, 7 (3): 327-37, 2002.