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Book ChapterDOI

Cobalt as probe and label of proteins

Wolfgang Maret, +1 more
- 01 Jan 1993 - 
- Vol. 226, pp 52-71
TLDR
This chapter discusses the preparation and handling of cobalt enzymes and the nature of the information that can be obtained from spectroscopic measurements regarding the role of the metal center.
Abstract
Publisher Summary Cobalt ions exhibit characteristic spectra. When cobalt is introduced into proteins, the spectral properties become a desirable attribute to probe the environment of active enzymatic sites. Moreover, cobalt can be substituted for spectroscopically silent zinc when this is the native, catalytically active metal atom of enzymes. Such a metal exchange has been particularly fruitful in the study of these systems because the majority of cobalt substituted zinc enzymes retain their enzymatic activity. Hence, cobalt substitution for zinc has become an essential technique to address the structural basis of catalytic properties in zinc enzymes, as well as the coordination environment of structural zinc sites in proteins. This chapter discusses the preparation and handling of cobalt enzymes and the nature of the information that can be obtained from spectroscopic measurements regarding the role of the metal center. It evaluates the circumstances under which cobalt becomes a structural and functional substitute for zinc atoms. The existence of structural data for cobalt enzymes now makes possible such comparisons between cobalt and zinc in proteins.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Synthetic ratiometric fluorescent probes for detection of ions

TL;DR: In this review, recent advances made in the development and biological applications of synthetic ratiometric fluorescent probes are described and particular emphasis is given to organic dye-based ratiomet fluorescent probes that are designed to detect biologically important and relevant ions in cells and living organisms.
Journal ArticleDOI

In vitro selection and characterization of a highly efficient Zn(II)-dependent RNA-cleaving deoxyribozyme

TL;DR: The results demonstrate that nucleic acid enzymes are capable of binding transition metal ions such as Zn(2+)with high affinity, and the resulting enzymes are more efficient at RNA cleavage than most Mg(2+)-dependent nucleic acids enzymes under similar conditions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Redox Switch of Hsp33 Has a Novel Zinc-binding Motif

TL;DR: It is shown that zinc binding is essential for the function of this redox switch, and that Hps33 contains a new, high affinity, zinc-binding motif in the form Cys- X-Cys-X 27–32-CYS-X-X/Cys, which acts to coordinate a single zinc atom.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Reaction mechanism of alkaline phosphatase based on crystal structures. Two-metal ion catalysis.

TL;DR: In this paper, the crystal structure of E. coli AP complexed with inorganic phosphate (Pi), which is a strong competitive inhibitor as well as a substrate for the reverse reaction, has been refined at 2.0 A resolution.
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