Issue 3, 2015

A set of robust fluorescent peptide probes for quantification of Cu(ii) binding affinities in the micromolar to femtomolar range

Abstract

Reliable quantification of copper binding affinities and identification of the binding sites provide a molecular basis for an understanding of the nutritional roles and toxic effects of copper ions. Sets of chromophoric probes are now available that can quantify Cu(I) binding affinities from nanomolar to attomolar concentrations on a unified scale under in vitro conditions. Equivalent probes for Cu(II) are lacking. This work reports development of a set of four fluorescent dansyl peptide probes (DP1–4) that can quantify Cu(II) binding affinities from micromolar to femtomolar concentrations, also on a unified scale. The probes were constructed by conjugation of a dansyl group to four short peptides of specific design. Each was characterised by its dissociation constant KD, its pH dependence and the nature of its binding site. One equivalent of Cu(II) is bound by the individual probes that display different and well-separated affinities at pH 7.4 (log KD = −8.1, −10.1, −12.3 and −14.1, respectively). Intense fluorescence is emitted at λmax ∼ 550 nm upon excitation at ∼330 nm. Binding of Cu(II) quenches the fluorescence intensity linearly until one equivalent of Cu(II) is bound. Multiple approaches and multiple affinity standards were employed to ensure reliability. Selected examples of application to well-characterised Cu(II) binding peptides and proteins are presented. These include Aβ16 peptides, two naturally occurring Cu(II)-chelating motifs in human serum and cerebrospinal fluid with sequences GHK and DAHK and two copper binding proteins, CopC from Pseudomonas syringae and PcoC from Escherichia coli. Previously reported affinities are reproduced, demonstrating that peptides DP1–4 form a set of robust and reliable probes for Cu(II) binding to peptides and protein targets.

Graphical abstract: A set of robust fluorescent peptide probes for quantification of Cu(ii) binding affinities in the micromolar to femtomolar range

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
19 Nov 2014
Accepted
11 Feb 2015
First published
11 Feb 2015
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Metallomics, 2015,7, 567-578

Author version available

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