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1.
Rubredoxins are small, soluble proteins that display a wide variation in thermostability, despite having a high degree of sequence similarity They also vary in the extent to which they are stabilized by solutes such as diglycerol phosphate. Hence, they provide excellent models for studying the mechanisms of thermostabilization. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy can be used to investigate interactions between molecules, as well as subtle changes in conformation in solution, and also provides a means to measure protein stability. The assignment of the proton NMR spectrum of the zinc rubredoxin from Desulfovibrio gigas is presented, together with its structure in solution. The stabilizing effect of diglycerol phosphate on rubredoxin is demonstrated and assessed by determining selected amide proton exchange rates; diglycerol phosphate at 100 mM concentration caused an additional structural stabilization of 1.2 +/-0.4 kJ/mol. The pattern of effects on the exchange rates is discussed in relation to the protein structure.  相似文献   

2.
Despite their high sequence homology, rubredoxins from Desulfovibrio gigas and D. desulfuricans are stabilized to very different extents by compatible solutes such as diglycerol phosphate, the major osmolyte in the hyperthermophilic archaeon Archaeoglobus fulgidus[Lamosa P, Burke A, Peist R, Huber R, Liu M Y, Silva G, Rodrigues-Pousada C, LeGall J, Maycock C and Santos H (2000) Appl Environ Microbiol66, 1974-1979]. The principal structural difference between these two proteins is the absence of the hairpin loop in the rubredoxin from D. desulfuricans. Therefore, mutants of D. gigas rubredoxin bearing deletions in the loop region were constructed to investigate the importance of this structural feature on protein intrinsic stability, as well as on its capacity to undergo stabilization by compatible solutes. The three-dimensional structure of the mutant bearing the largest deletion, Delta17/29, was determined by 1H-NMR, demonstrating that, despite the drastic deletion, the main structural features were preserved. The dependence of the NH chemical shifts on temperature and solute concentration (diglycerol phosphate or mannosylglycerate) provide evidence of subtle conformational changes induced by the solute. The kinetic stability (as assessed from the absorption decay at 494 nm) of six mutant rubredoxins was determined at 90 degrees C and the stabilizing effect exerted by both solutes was assessed. The extent of protection conferred by each solute was highly dependent on the specific mutant examined: while the half-life for iron release in the wild-type D. gigas rubredoxin increased threefold in the presence of 0.1 M diglycerol phosphate, mutant Delta23/29 was destabilized. This study provides evidence for solute-induced compaction of the protein structure and occurrence of weak, specific interactions with the protein surface. The relevance of these findings to our understanding of the molecular basis for protein stabilization is discussed.  相似文献   

3.
Diglycerol phosphate accumulates under salt stress in the archaeon Archaeoglobus fulgidus (L. O. Martins, R. Huber, H. Huber, K. O. Stetter, M. S. da Costa, and H. Santos, Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 63:896-902, 1997). This solute was purified after extraction from the cell biomass. In addition, the optically active and the optically inactive (racemic) forms of the compound were synthesized, and the ability of the solute to act as a protecting agent against heating was tested on several proteins derived from mesophilic or hyperthermophilic sources. Diglycerol phosphate exerted a considerable stabilizing effect against heat inactivation of rabbit muscle lactate dehydrogenase, baker's yeast alcohol dehydrogenase, and Thermococcus litoralis glutamate dehydrogenase. Highly homologous and structurally well-characterized rubredoxins from Desulfovibrio gigas, Desulfovibrio desulfuricans (ATCC 27774), and Clostridium pasteurianum were also examined for their thermal stabilities in the presence or absence of diglycerol phosphate, glycerol, and inorganic phosphate. These proteins showed different intrinsic thermostabilities, with half-lives in the range of 30 to 100 min. Diglycerol phosphate exerted a strong protecting effect, with approximately a fourfold increase in the half-lives for the loss of the visible spectra of D. gigas and C. pasteurianum rubredoxins. In contrast, the stability of D. desulfuricans rubredoxin was not affected. These different behaviors are discussed in the light of the known structural features of rubredoxins. The data show that diglycerol phosphate is a potentially useful protein stabilizer in biotechnological applications.  相似文献   

4.
Understanding protein stabilization by small organic compounds is a topic of great practical importance. The effect of mannosylglycerate, a charged compatible solute typical of thermophilic microorganisms, on a variant of staphylococcal nuclease was investigated using several NMR spectroscopy methods. No structural changes were apparent from the chemical shifts of amide protons. Measurements of 15N relaxation and model-free analysis, water-amide saturation transfer (phase-modulated CLEAN chemical exchange), and hydrogen/deuterium exchange rates provided a detailed picture of the effects of mannosylglycerate on the backbone dynamics and time-averaged structure of this protein. The widest movements of the protein backbone were significantly constrained in the presence of mannosylglycerate, as indicated by the average 5-fold decrease of the hydrogen/deuterium exchange rates, but the effect on the millisecond timescale was small. At high frequencies, internal motions of staphylococcal nuclease were progressively restricted with increasing concentrations of mannosylglycerate or reduced temperature, while the opposite effect was observed with urea (a destabilizing solute). The order parameters showed a strong correlation with the changes in the Tm values induced by different solutes, determined by differential scanning calorimetry. These data show that mannosylglycerate caused a generalised reduction of backbone motions and demonstrate a correlation between protein stabilization and protein rigidification.  相似文献   

5.
The backbone dynamics of ferricytochrome b(562), a four-helix bundle protein from Escherichia coli, have been studied by NMR spectroscopy. The consequences of the introduction of a c-type thioether linkage between the heme and protein and the reduction to the ferrous cytochrome have also been analyzed. (15)N relaxation rates R(1) and R(2) and (1)H-(15)N NOEs were measured at proton Larmor frequencies of 500 and 600 MHz for the oxidized and reduced protein as well as for the oxidized R98C variant. In the latter protein, an "artificial" thioether covalent bond has been introduced between the heme group and the protein frame [Arnesano, F., Banci, L., Bertini, I., Ciofi-Baffoni, S., de Lumley Woodyear, T., Johnson, C. M., and Barker, P. D. (2000) Biochemistry 39, 1499-1514]. The (15)N relaxation data were analyzed with the ModelFree protocol, and the mobility parameters on the picosecond to nanosecond time scale were compared for the three species. The three forms are rather rigid as a whole, with average generalized order parameters values of 0.87 +/- 0.08 (oxidized cytochrome b(562)), 0.84 +/- 0.07 (reduced cytochrome b(562)), and 0.85 +/- 0.07 (oxidized R98C cytochrome b(562)), indicating similar mobility for each system. Lower order parameters (S(2)) are found for residues belonging to loops 1 and 2. Higher mobility, as indicated by lower order parameters, is found for heme binding helices alpha 1 and alpha 4 in the R98C variant with respect to the wild-type protein. The analysis requires a relatively long rotational correlation time (tau(m) = 9.6 ns) whose value is accounted for on the basis of the anisotropy of the molecular shape and the high phosphate concentration needed to ensure the occurrence of monomer species. A parallel study of motions in the millisecond to microsecond time scale has also been performed on oxidized wild-type and R98C cytochrome b(562). In a CPMG experiment, decay rates were analyzed in the presence of spin-echo pulse trains of variable spacing. The dynamic behavior on this time scale is similar to that observed on the sub-nanosecond time scale, showing an increased mobility in the residues connected to the heme ligands in the R98C variant. It appears that the increased protein stability of the variant, established previously, is not correlated with an increase in rigidity.  相似文献   

6.
B Kieffer  P Koehl  J F Lefèvre 《Biochimie》1992,74(9-10):815-824
The internal dynamics of a cyclic peptide which was designed to mimic an antigenic loop of the haemagglutinin, is studied through heteronuclear relaxation along the 13C alpha-1H alpha vectors and through homonuclear relaxation along the 1H alpha-1HN and 1H beta-1H beta' vectors. Order parameters are extracted from the longitudinal and cross-relaxation data. Molecular dynamics simulations are performed and the order parameters are calculated in different ways from the trajectories. The simulation, which is performed in vacuo, gives smaller order parameters (vector motions of larger amplitude) than the experimental results. However, the general features of the experimental order parameters are reproduced by the molecular dynamics simulation. The flexibility of the molecule can then be investigated from the results of the molecular dynamics. It shows that the mobility observed through the order parameters is due to motions in flanking regions, remote from the observed vectors.  相似文献   

7.
The backbone dynamics of uniformly 15N-labeled reduced and oxidized putidaredoxin (Pdx) have been studied by 2D 15N NMR relaxation measurements. 15N T1 and T2 values and 1H-15N NOEs have been measured for the diamagnetic region of the protein. These data were analyzed by using a model-free dynamics formalism to determine the generalized order parameters (S2), the effective correlation time for internal motions (tau e), and the 15N exchange broadening contributions (Rex) for each residue, as well as the overall correlation time (tau(m)). Order parameters for the reduced Pdx are generally higher than for the oxidized Pdx, and there is increased mobility on the microsecond to millisecond time scale for the oxidized Pdx, in comparison with the reduced Pdx. These results clearly indicate that the oxidized protein exhibits higher mobility than the reduced one, which is in agreement with the recently published redox-dependent dynamics studied by amide proton exchange. In addition, we observed very high T1/T2 ratios for residues 33 and 34, giving rise to a large Rex contribution. Residue 34 is believed to be involved in the binding of Pdx to cytochrome P450cam (CYP101). The differences in the backbone dynamics are discussed in relation to the oxidation states of Pdx, and their impact on electron transfer. The entropy change occurring on oxidation of reduced Pdx has been calculated from the order parameters of the two forms.  相似文献   

8.
Mannosylglycerate is a compatible solute typical of thermophilic marine microorganisms that has a remarkable ability to protect proteins from thermal denaturation. This ionic solute appears to be a universal stabilizing agent, but the extent of protection depends on the specific protein examined. To understand how mannosylglycerate confers protection, we have been studying its influence on the internal motions of a hyperstable staphylococcal nuclease (SNase). Previously, we found a correlation between the magnitude of protein stabilization and the restriction of fast backbone motions. We now report the effect of mannosylglycerate on the fast motions of side-chains and on the slower unfolding motions of the protein. Side-chain motions were assessed by (13)CH(3) relaxation measurements and model-free analysis while slower unfolding motions were probed by H/D exchange measurements at increasing concentrations of urea. Side-chain motions were little affected by the presence of different concentrations of mannosylglycerate or even by the presence of urea (0.25M), and show no correlation with changes in the thermodynamic stability of SNase. Native hydrogen exchange experiments showed that, contrary to reports on other stabilizing solutes, mannosylglycerate restricts local motions in addition to the global motions of the protein. The protein unfolding/folding pathway remained undisturbed in the presence of mannosylglycerate but the solute showed a specific effect on the local motions of β-sheet residues. This work reinforces the link between solute-induced stabilization and restriction of protein motions at different timescales, and shows that the solute preferentially affects specific structural elements of SNase.  相似文献   

9.
Diglycerol phosphate accumulates under salt stress in the archaeon Archaeoglobus fulgidus (L. O. Martins, R. Huber, H. Huber, K. O. Stetter, M. S. da Costa, and H. Santos, Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 63:896–902, 1997). This solute was purified after extraction from the cell biomass. In addition, the optically active and the optically inactive (racemic) forms of the compound were synthesized, and the ability of the solute to act as a protecting agent against heating was tested on several proteins derived from mesophilic or hyperthermophilic sources. Diglycerol phosphate exerted a considerable stabilizing effect against heat inactivation of rabbit muscle lactate dehydrogenase, baker's yeast alcohol dehydrogenase, and Thermococcus litoralis glutamate dehydrogenase. Highly homologous and structurally well-characterized rubredoxins from Desulfovibrio gigas, Desulfovibrio desulfuricans (ATCC 27774), and Clostridium pasteurianum were also examined for their thermal stabilities in the presence or absence of diglycerol phosphate, glycerol, and inorganic phosphate. These proteins showed different intrinsic thermostabilities, with half-lives in the range of 30 to 100 min. Diglycerol phosphate exerted a strong protecting effect, with approximately a fourfold increase in the half-lives for the loss of the visible spectra of D. gigas and C. pasteurianum rubredoxins. In contrast, the stability of D. desulfuricans rubredoxin was not affected. These different behaviors are discussed in the light of the known structural features of rubredoxins. The data show that diglycerol phosphate is a potentially useful protein stabilizer in biotechnological applications.  相似文献   

10.
A new approach was developed to overproduce 15N-enriched yeast iso-1-cytochrome c in the periplasm of Escherichia coli in order to perform a study of the motions in the ms-micros time scale on the oxidized and reduced forms through rotating frame 15N relaxation rates and proton/deuterium exchange studies. It is confirmed that the reduced protein is rather rigid whereas the oxidized species is more flexible. The regions of the protein that display increased internal mobility upon oxidation are easily identified by the number of residues experiencing conformational equilibria and by their exchange rates. These data complement the information already available in the literature and provide a comprehensive picture of the mobility in the protein. In particular, oxidation mobilizes the loop containing Met80 and, through specific contacts, affects the mobility of helix 3 and possibly of helix 5, and of a section of protein connecting the heme propionates to helix 2. The relevance of internal motions to molecular recognition and to the early steps of the unfolding process of the oxidized species is also discussed. In agreement with the reported data, subnanosecond mobility is found to be less informative than the ms-micros with respect to redox dependent properties.  相似文献   

11.
S M Lewis  D D Thomas 《Biochemistry》1991,30(34):8331-8339
We have measured the microsecond rotational motions of the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca-ATPase as a function of enzyme-specific ligands, including those that induce active calcium transport. We labeled the Ca-ATPase with a maleimide spin probe and detected rotational dynamics using saturation-transfer electron paramagnetic resonance (ST-EPR). This probe's ST-EPR spectra have been shown to be sensitive to microsecond protein rotational motion, corresponding to large-scale protein rotations that should be affected by changes in the enzyme's shape, flexibility, protein-protein interactions (oligomeric state), and protein-lipid interactions. We found that the motions of the enzyme-nucleotide and the enzyme-nucleotide/Ca states are indistinguishable from the motions in the absence of ligands. Rotational mobility does decrease in response to the addition of DMSO, a solvent that inhibits Ca-ATPase activity and stabilizes the phosphoenzyme. However, the addition of phosphate to form phosphoenzyme, in the presence or absence of DMSO, does not change the motions significantly. During the steady state of active calcium transport, the microsecond rotational mobility is indistinguishable from that of the resting enzyme. In order to detect any transient changes in mobility that might not be detectable in the steady state and to improve the precision of steady-state measurements, we photolyzed caged ATP with a laser pulse in the presence of calcium and detected the ST-EPR response from the spin-labeled enzyme, with a time resolution of 1 s.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
Eotaxin is a member of the chemokine family of about 40 proteins that induce cell migration. Eotaxin binds the CC chemokine receptor CCR3 that is highly expressed by eosinophils, and it is considered important in the pathology of chronic respiratory disorders such as asthma. The high resolution structure of eotaxin is known. The 74 amino acid protein has two disulfide bridges and shows a typical chemokine fold comprised of a core of three antiparallel beta-strands and an overlying alpha-helix. In this paper, we report the backbone dynamics of eotaxin determined through 15N-T1, T2, and [1H]-15N nuclear Overhauser effect heteronuclear multidimensional NMR experiments. This is the first extensive study of the dynamics of a chemokine derived from 600, 500, and 300 MHz NMR field strengths. From the T1, T2, and NOE relaxation data, parameters that describe the internal motions of eotaxin were derived using the Lipari-Szabo model free analysis. The most ordered regions of the protein correspond to the known secondary structure elements. However, surrounding the core, the regions known to be functionally important in chemokines show a range of motions on varying timescales. These include extensive subnanosecond to picosecond motions in the N-terminus, C-terminus, and the N-loop succeeding the disulfides. Analysis of rotational diffusion anisotropy of eotaxin and chemical exchange terms at multiple fields also allowed the confident identification of slow conformational exchange through the "30s" loop, disulfides, and adjacent residues. In addition, we show that these motions may be attenuated in the dimeric form of a synthetic eotaxin. The structure and dynamical basis for eotaxin receptor binding is discussed in light of the dynamics data.  相似文献   

13.
D Huster  L Xiao  M Hong 《Biochemistry》2001,40(25):7662-7674
Solid-state NMR spectroscopy was employed to study the molecular dynamics of the colicin Ia channel domain in the soluble and membrane-bound states. In the soluble state, the protein executes small-amplitude librations (with root-mean-square angular fluctuations of 0-10 degrees ) in the backbone and larger-amplitude motions (16-17 degrees ) in the side chains. Upon membrane binding, the motional amplitudes increase significantly for both the backbone (12-16 degrees ) and side chains (23-29 degrees ), as manifested by the reduction in the C-H and H-H dipolar couplings and (15)N chemical shift anisotropy. These motions occur not only on the pico- to nanosecond time scales, but also on the microsecond time scale, as revealed by the (1)H rotating-frame spin-lattice relaxation times. Average motional correlation times of 0.8 and 1.2 micros were extracted for the soluble and membrane-bound states, respectively. In comparison, both forms of the colicin Ia channel domain are completely immobile on the millisecond scale. These results indicate that the colicin Ia channel domain has enhanced conformational mobility in the lipid bilayer compared to the soluble state. This membrane-induced mobility increase is consistent with the loss of tertiary structure of the protein in the membrane, which was previously suggested by the extended helical array model [Zakharov et al. (1998) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 95, 4282-4287]. An extended structure would also facilitate protein interactions with the mobile lipids and thus increase the protein internal motions. We speculate that the large mobility of the membrane-bound colicin Ia channel domain is a prerequisite for channel opening in the presence of a voltage gradient.  相似文献   

14.
Information about the interaction between nucleic acids and coat proteins in intact virus particles may be obtained by studying the restricted backbone dynamics of the incapsulated nucleic acids using 31P nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. In this article, simulations are carried out to investigate how reorientation of a rod-shaped virus particle as a whole and isolated nucleic acid motions within the virion influence the 31P NMR lineshape and transversal relaxation dominated by the phosphorus chemical shift anisotropy. Two opposite cases are considered on a theoretical level. First, isotropic rotational diffusion is used as a model for mobile nucleic acids that are loosely or partially bound to the protein coat. The effect of this type of diffusion on lineshape and transversal relaxation is calculated by solving the stochastic Liouville equation by an expansion in spherical functions. Next, uniaxial rotational diffusion is assumed to represent the mobility of phosphorus in a virion that rotates as a rigid rod about its length axis. This type of diffusion is approximated by an exchange process among discrete sites. As turns out from these simulations, the amplitude and the frequency of the motion can only be unequivocally determined from experimental data by a combined analysis of the lineshape and the transversal relaxation. In the fast motional region both the isotropic and the uniaxial diffusion model predict the same transversal relaxation as the Redfield theory. For very slow motion, transversal relaxation resembles the nonexponential relaxation as observed for water molecules undergoing translational diffusion in a magnetic field gradient. In this frequency region T2e is inversely proportional to the cube root of the diffusion coefficient. In addition to the isotropic and uniaxial diffusion models, a third model is presented, in which fast restricted nucleic acid backbone motions dominating the lineshape are superimposed on a slow rotation of the virion about its length axis, dominating transversal relaxation. In an accompanying article the models are applied to the 31P NMR results obtained for bacteriophage M13 and tobacco mosaic virus.  相似文献   

15.
A Arora  M Esmann  D Marsh 《Biochemistry》1999,38(31):10084-10091
The microsecond motions of spin-labeled lipids associated with the Na(+)/K(+)-transporting ATP hydrolase (Na,K-ATPase) in native and tryptically shaved membranes from Squalus acanthias have been studied by progressive saturation electron spin resonance (ESR). This includes both the segmental mobility of the lipid chains and the exchange dynamics of the lipids interacting directly with the protein. The lipids at the protein interface display a temperature-dependent chain mobility on the submicrosecond time scale. Exchange of these lipids with those in the bulk bilayer regions of the membrane takes place on the time scale of the nitroxide spin-lattice relaxation, i.e., in the microsecond regime. The off-rates for exchange directly reflect the specificity of ionized fatty acids relative to protonated fatty acids for interaction with the Na,K-ATPase. These essential features of the lipid dynamics at the intramembranous protein surface, namely, a temperature-dependent exchange on the microsecond time scale that reflects the lipid selectivity, are preserved on removing the extramembranous parts of the Na,K-ATPase by extensive trypsinization.  相似文献   

16.
The villin headpiece subdomain (HP36) is a widely used system for protein-folding studies. Nuclear magnetic resonance cross-correlated relaxation rates arising from correlated fluctuations of two N-HN dipole-dipole interactions involving successive residues were measured at two temperatures at which HP36 is at least 99% folded. The experiment revealed the presence of motions slower than overall tumbling of the molecule. Based on the theoretical analysis of the spectral densities we show that the structural and dynamic contributions to the experimental cross-correlated relaxation rate can be separated under certain conditions. As a result, dynamic cross-correlated order parameters describing slow microsecond-to-millisecond motions of N-H bonds in neighboring residues can be introduced for any extent of correlations in the fluctuations of the two bond vectors. These dynamic cross-correlated order parameters have been extracted for HP36. The comparison of their values at two different temperatures indicates that when the temperature is raised, slow motions increase in amplitude. The increased amplitude of these fluctuations may reflect the presence of processes directly preceding the unfolding of the protein.  相似文献   

17.
18.
A nonlinear optical Kerr effect (OKE) microscope was developed and used to elucidate the ultra-fast diffusive motions of intracellular water molecules. In the OKE microscope, a pump-induced birefringence is sensed by a delayed probe pulse within a spatially confined volume that measures 0.5 microm in the lateral direction and 4.0 microm along the axial coordinate. This microscope allows the recording of time-resolved Kerr signals, which reflect the ultra-fast structural relaxation of the liquid, exclusively from intracellular aqueous domains. Because relaxation occurs on a picosecond time scale, only local diffusive motions are probed. The microscopic OKE signal is therefore insensitive to long-time-scale hindered translational motions enforced by intracellular mechanical barriers but probes the intrinsic orientational mobility of water molecules in cells instead. The Kerr response as determined from single intact mammalian cells under physiological conditions shows a structural relaxation time of 1.35 ps, which is 1.7 times slower than the Kerr decay observed in pure water. The data indicate that the mobility of water molecules in cellular domains is moderately restricted due to the high intracellular content of proteins and solutes.  相似文献   

19.
Phosphorus-31 NMR relaxation rates for the ternary complex of manganese-alkaline phosphatase-phosphate have been measured and their temperature dependence studied. The exchange of phosphate into the complex is exchange limited with respect to the transverse relaxation rate but is fast with respect to longitudinal relaxation. The data show that the observed phosphate relaxation is an outer-sphere effect. The activation energy for phosphate exchange is Ea = 8 Kcal/mole as determined from the temperature dependence of the line width of the phosphorus resonance.  相似文献   

20.
In order to better understand the dynamics of an integral membrane protein, backbone amide 15N NMR dynamics measurements of the β-barrel membrane protein OmpA have been performed at three magnetic fields. A total of nine relaxation data sets were globally analyzed using an extended model-free formalism. The diffusion tensor was found to be prolate axially symmetric with an axial ratio of 5.75, indicating a possible rotation of the protein within the micelle. The generalized order parameters gradually decreased from the mid-plane towards the two ends of the barrel, counteracting the dynamic gradient of the lipids in a matching bilayer, and were dramatically reduced in the extracellular loops. Large-scale internal motions on the ns time scale indicate that entire loops most likely undergo concerted (“sea anemone”-like) motions emanating from their anchoring points on the barrel. The case of OmpA in DPC micelles also illustrates inherent limitations of analyzing the data with even the most sophisticated current models of the model-free formalism. It is likely that conformational exchange processes on the ms-μs also play a role in describing the motions of some residues, but their analysis did not produce unique results that could be independently verified.  相似文献   

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