Abstract
The nucleotide binding site of the uncoupling protein (UCP) from brown adipose tissue was mapped by photoaffinity labeling with 2-azidoadenosine 5'-triphosphate (2-azido-ATP) and by affinity labeling with 3'-O-(5-fluoro-2,4-dinitrophenyl)adenosine 5'-triphosphate (FDNP-ATP). Both analogs bind with high affinity and specificity to the UCP in intact mitochondria, as well as to the isolated solubilized protein. Reversible binding at 4 degrees C in the dark is competitively blocked by GTP. Like the natural ligands ATP and GTP, both analogs are capable of inhibiting the H+/OH- conductance of the UCP as measured in proteoliposomes with reconstituted UCP. 2-azido-ATP was incorporated into UCP in mitochondria in the presence of carboxyatractylate, while FDNP-ATP was inserted into isolated UCP by prolonged incubation at room temperature under pH variation. Both reactions can be blocked by GTP. The incorporation of 2-azido-ATP could be localized between residues 258 and 283 by cleavage with CNBr. Solid-phase sequencing of the homoserine-linked radioactive peptide indicated that the 2-azido-ATP was linked to threonine-263. The incorporation of FDNP-ATP could be assigned by cleavage with CNBr and alternatively with trypsin at a locus of covalent attachment between residues 238 and 255. On the basis of published data that no tyrosine participates in nucleotide binding of the UCP, the probable residue reacting with FDNP-ATP is cysteine-253.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)