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1.
Summary The use of pulsed field gradients in multiple-pulse NMR experiments has many advantages, including the possibility of obtaining excellent water suppression without the need for selective presaturation. In such gradient experiments the water magnetization is dephased deliberately; exchange between the saturated protons of the solvent water and the NH protons of a protein transfers this saturation to the protein. As the solvent is in large excess and relaxes relatively slowly, the result is a reduction in the sensitivity of the experiment due to the fact that the NH proton magnetization is only partially recovered. These effects can be avoided by ensuring that the water magnetization remains intact and is returned to the +z-axis at the start of data acquisition. General procedures for achieving this aim in any triple-resonance experiment are outlined and two specific examples are given. Experimental results confirm the sensitivity advantage of the modified sequences.  相似文献   

2.
In an effort to develop a more versatile quenched hydrogen exchange method for studies of peptide conformation and protein-ligand interactions, the mechanism of amide proton exchange for model peptides in DMSO-D2O mixtures was investigated by NMR methods. As in water, H-D exchange rates in the presence of 90% or 95% DMSO exhibit characteristic acid- and base-catalyzed processes and negligible water catalysis. However, the base-catalyzed rate is suppressed by as much as four orders of magnitude in 95% DMSO. As a result, the pH at which the exchange rate goes through a minimum is shifted up by about two pH units and the minimum exchange rate is approximately 100-fold reduced relative to that in D2O. The solvent-dependent decrease in base-catalyzed exchange rates can be attributed primarily to a large increase in pKa values for the NH group, whereas solvent effects on pKW seem less important. Addition of toluene and cyclohexane resulted in improved proton NMR chemical shift dispersion. The dramatic reduction in exchange rates observed in the solvent mixture at optimal pH makes it possible to apply 2D NMR for NH exchange measurements on peptides under conditions where rates are too rapid for direct NMR analysis. To test this solvent-quenching method, melittin was exchanged in D2O (pH 3.2, 12 degrees C), aliquots were quenched by rapid freezing, lyophilized, and dissolved in quenching buffer (70% DMSO, 25% toluene, 4% D2O, 1% cyclohexane, 75 mM dichloroacetic acid) for NMR analysis. Exchange rates for 21 amide protons were measured by recording 2D NMR spectra on a series of samples quenched at different times. The results are consistent with a monomeric unfolded conformation of melittin at acidic pH. The ability to trap labile protons by solvent quenching makes it possible to extend amide protection studies to peptide ligands or labile protons on the surface of a protein involved in macromolecular interactions.  相似文献   

3.
From a series of isotope-edited proton NMR spectra, amide proton exchange rates were measured at 20 degrees C, 30 degrees C, and 40 degrees C for a tightly bound 15N-labeled tripeptide inhibitor of porcine pepsin (IC50 = 1.7 X 10(-) M). Markedly different NH exchange rates were observed for the three amide protons of the bound inhibitor. The P1 NH exchanged much more slowly than the P2 NH and P3 NH. These results are discussed in terms of the relative solvent accessibility in the active site and the role of the NH protons of the inhibitor for hydrogen bonding to the enzyme. In this study a useful approach is demonstrated for obtaining NH exchange rates on ligands bound to biomacromolecules, the knowledge of which could be of potential utility in the design of therapeutically useful nonpeptide enzyme inhibitors from peptide leads.  相似文献   

4.
Peptide NH resonances in the 250 MHZ 1H nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectrum of oxytocin in H2O were assigned to specific amino acid residues by the "underwater decoupling" technique (i.e., decoupling from corresponding CalphaH resonances, which are buried beneath the intense water peak). These experiments confirm previous assignments of A. I. Brewster an V. J. Hruby ((1973), Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 70, 3806) and A. F. Bradbury et al. ((1974), FEBS Lett. 42, 179). Three methods of assigning NH resonances of peptides--solvent titration, underwater decoupling, and isotopic labeling--are compared. As the solvet composition is gradually changed from dimethyl sulfoxide to H2O, oxytocin undergoes a conformational change at 70-90 mol % of H2O. Exposure to solvent of specific hydrogens of oxytocin in H2O was studied by monitoring intensity changes of solute resonances when the solvent peak was saturated. Positive nuclear Overhauser effects (NOE's) of 14 +/- 5 were observed for the Tyr ortho CH and meta CH resonances, respectively. Comparative studies with deamino-oxytocin indicate that these effects result predominantly from intermolecular dipoledipole interaction between aromatic side chain CH protons and protons of the solvent. The NOE's therefore indicate intimate contact between water and the aromatic CH hydrogens of the Tyr side chain. The extent of saturation transferred by proton exchange between water and NH group varies with Ph in a manner which appears to reflect the acid-base catalysis of the protolysis reaction. There is no indication that any NH protons are substantially shiedled from the solvent.  相似文献   

5.
We show for the first time that the secondary structure of the Alzheimer beta-peptide is in a temperature-dependent equilibrium between an extended left-handed 3(1) helix and a flexible random coil conformation. Circular dichroism spectra, recorded at 0.03 mM peptide concentration, show that the equilibrium is shifted towards increasing left-handed 3(1) helix structure towards lower temperatures. High resolution nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy has been used to study the Alzheimer peptide fragment Abeta(12-28) in aqueous solution at 0 degrees C and higher temperatures. NMR translation diffusion measurements show that the observed peptide is in monomeric form. The chemical shift dispersion of the amide protons increases towards lower temperatures, in agreement with the increased population of a well-ordered secondary structure. The solvent exchange rates of the amide protons at 0 degrees C and pH 4.5 vary within at least two orders of magnitude. The lowest exchange rates (0.03-0.04 min(-1)) imply that the corresponding amide protons may be involved in hydrogen bonding with neighboring side chains.  相似文献   

6.
The met-cyano complex of elephant myoglobin has been investigated by high field 1H NMR spectroscopy, with special emphasis on the use of exchangeable proton resonances in the heme cavity to obtain structural information on the distal glutamine. Analysis of the distance dependence of relaxation rates and the exchange behavior of the four hyperfine shifted labile proton resonances has led to the assignment of the proximal His-F8 ring and peptide NHs and the His-FG3 ring NH and the distal Gln-E7 amide NH. The similar hyperfine shift patterns for both the apparent heme resonances as well as the labile proton peaks of conserved resonances in elephant and sperm whale met-cyano myoglobins support very similar electronic/molecular structures for their heme cavities. The essentially identical dipolar shifts and dipolar relaxation times for the distal Gln-E7 side chain NH and the distal His-E7 ring NH in sperm whale myoglobin indicate that those labile protons occupy the same geometrical position relative to the iron and heme plane. This geometry is consistent with the distal residue hydrogen bonding to the coordinated ligand. The similar rates and identical mechanisms of exchange with bulk water of the labile protons for the three conserved residues in the elephant and sperm whale heme cavity indicate that the dynamic stability of the proximal side of the heme pocket is unaltered upon the substitution (His----Gln). The much slower exchange rate (by greater than 10(4] of the distal NH in elephant relative to sperm whale myoglobin supports the assignment of the resonance to the intrinsically less labile amide side chain.  相似文献   

7.
A peptide of 51 amino acids corresponding to the NH2-terminal region (5-55) of the glycoprotein gp41 of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 was synthesized to study its conformation and assembly. Nuclear magnetic resonance experiments indicated the sequence NH2-terminal to the leucine zipper-like domain of gp41 was induced into helix in the micellar solution, in agreement with circular dichroism data. Light scattering experiment showed that the peptide molecules self-assembled in water into trimeric structure on average. That the peptide molecules oligomerize in aqueous solution was supported by gel filtration and diffusion coefficient experiments. Molecular dynamics simulation based on the NMR data revealed a flexible region adjacent to the hydrophobic NH2 terminus of gp41. The biological significance of the present findings on the conformational flexibility and the propensity of oligomerization of the peptide may be envisioned by a proposed model for the interaction of gp41 with membranes during fusion process.  相似文献   

8.
The acid and base catalytic rate constants, kH, obs and kOH, obs and the pH at the minimum rate, pHmin, of 25 rapidly exchanging protons in bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor have been determined. Here we report the labeling procedure giving 1H nuclear magnetic resonance spectral resolution of seven additional rapidly exchanging NH protons and the pH dependence of their chemical shifts. Values of kH,obs kOH,obs and pHmin are given for Ala16, Gly28 and Arg53 NH groups, the only backbone amide protons with static accessibility of more than zero in the crystal structure not previously reports, and for Gly56 NH, buried at the C terminus of an alpha-helix. All four protons reported here have pH min greater than or equal to 3. Conclusions of the previous study predict that peptide protons with pHmin higher than those of model compounds have greater static accessibility of the peptide O than of the peptide N atom. The locations in the crystal structure of the four NH groups whose exchange rates are reported here are in qualitative agreement with these predictions. The ionic strength dependence of Ala16 at pH 5.5 shows a sharp increase in the exchange rate with decreasing salt concentration, as expected for base-catalyzed exchange in a positive electrostatic field.  相似文献   

9.
The preceding article shows that there are eight highly protected amide protons in the S-peptide moiety of RNAase S at pH 5, 0 degrees C. The residues with protected NH protons are 7 to 13, whose amide protons are H-bonded in the 3 to 13 alpha-helix, and Asp 14, whose NH proton is H-bonded to the CO group of Val47. We describe here the exchange behavior of these eight protected protons as a function of pH. Exchange rates of the individual NH protons are measured by 1H nuclear magnetic resonance in D2O. A procedure is used for specifically labeling with 1H only these eight NH protons. The resonance assignments of the eight protons are made chiefly by partial exchange, through correlating the resonance intensities in spectra taken when the peptide is bound and when it is dissociated from S-protein in 3.5 M-urea-d4, in D2O, pH 2.3, -4 degrees C. The two remaining assignments are made and some other assignments are checked by measurements of the nuclear Overhauser effect between adjacent NH protons of the alpha-helix. There is a transition in exchange behavior between pH 3, where the helix is weakly protected against exchange, and pH 5 where the helix is much more stable. At pH 3.1, 20 degrees C, exchange rates are uniform within the helix within a factor of two, after correction for different intrinsic exchange rates. The degree of protection within the helix is only 10 to 20-fold at this pH. At pH 5.1, 20 degrees C, the helix is more stable by two orders of magnitude and exchange occurs preferentially from the N-terminal end. At both pH values the NH proton of Asp 14, which is just outside the helix, is less protected by an order of magnitude than the adjacent NH protons inside the helix. Opening of the helix can be observed below pH 3.7 by changes in chemical shifts of the NH protons in the helix. At pH 2.4 the changes are 25% of those expected for complete opening. Helix opening is a fast reaction on the n.m.r. time scale (tau much less than 1 ms) unlike the generalized unfolding of RNAase S which is a slow reaction. Dissociation of S-peptide from S-protein in native RNAase S at pH 3.0 also is a slow reaction. Opening of the helix below pH 3.7 is a two-state reaction, as judged by comparing chemical shifts with exchange rates. The exchange rates at pH 3.1 are predicted correctly from the changes in chemical shift by assuming that helix opening is a two-state reaction. At pH values above 3.7, the nature of the helix opening reaction changes. These results indicate that at least one partially unfolded state of RNAase S is populated in the low pH unfolding transition.  相似文献   

10.
The conformation of cyclo[D-Trp-D-Asp-Pro-D-Val-Leu], (BQ123), an endothelin-A receptor-selective antagonist, has been studied in 20% acetonitrile in water by CD and NMR spectroscopy. CD studies showed the peptide adopted a similar, constrained conformation in both water alone and 20% acetonitrile in water. NMR spectra showed the proline residue to be in the trans conformation and 2 of the NH protons to exchange slowly with the solvent, indicating hydrogen bonding. Structural constraints derived from the NMR spectra were used to define the conformation in molecular dynamics simulations. A single backbone conformation is observed for the cycle, comprising a beta type II turn and a gamma' turn.  相似文献   

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