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1.

Background  

The combination of mass spectrometry and solution phase amide hydrogen/deuterium exchange (H/D exchange) experiments is an effective method for characterizing protein dynamics, and protein-protein or protein-ligand interactions. Despite methodological advancements and improvements in instrumentation and automation, data analysis and display remains a tedious process. The factors that contribute to this bottleneck are the large number of data points produced in a typical experiment, each requiring manual curation and validation, and then calculation of the level of backbone amide exchange. Tools have become available that address some of these issues, but lack sufficient integration, functionality, and accessibility required to address the needs of the H/D exchange community. To date there is no software for the analysis of H/D exchange data that comprehensively addresses these issues.  相似文献   

2.
A Fourier deconvolution method has been developed to explicitly determine the amount of backbone amide deuterium incorporated into protein regions or segments by hydrogen/deuterium (H/D) exchange with high-resolution mass spectrometry. Determination and analysis of the level and number of backbone amide exchanging in solution provide more information about the solvent accessibility of the protein than do previous centroid methods, which only calculate the average deuterons exchanged. After exchange, a protein is digested into peptides as a way of determining the exchange within a local area of the protein. The mass of a peptide upon deuteration is a sum of the natural isotope abundance, fast exchanging side-chain hydrogens (present in MALDI-TOF H/2H data) and backbone amide exchange. Removal of the components of the isotopic distribution due to the natural isotope abundances and the fast exchanging side-chains allows for a precise quantification of the levels of backbone amide exchange, as is shown by an example from protein kinase A. The deconvoluted results are affected by overlapping peptides or inconsistent mass envelopes, and evaluation procedures for these cases are discussed. Finally, a method for determining the back exchange corrected populations is presented, and its effect on the data is discussed under various circumstances.  相似文献   

3.
Studies with the homodimeric recombinant human macrophage colony-stimulating factor beta (rhM-CSFbeta), show for the first time that a large number (9) of disulfide linkages can be reduced after amide hydrogen/deuterium (H/D) exchange, and the protein digested and analyzed successfully for the isotopic composition by electrospray mass spectrometry. Analysis of amide H/D after exchange-in shows that in solution the conserved four-helix bundle of (rhM-CSFbeta) has fast and moderately fast exchangeable sections of amide hydrogens in the alphaA helix, and mostly slow exchanging sections of amide hydrogens in the alphaB, alphaC, and alphaD helices. Most of the amide hydrogens in the loop between the beta1 and beta4 sheets exhibited fast or moderately fast exchange, whereas in the amino acid 63-67 loop, located at the interface of the two subunits, the exchange was slow. Solvent accessibility as measured by H/D exchange showed a better correlation with the average depth of amide residues calculated from reported X-ray crystallographic data for rhM-CSFalpha than with the average B-factor. The rates of H/D exchange in rhM-CSFbeta appear to correlate well with the exposed surface calculated for each amino acid residue in the crystal structure except for the alphaD helix. Fast hydrogen isotope exchange throughout the segment amino acids 150-221 present in rhM-CSFbeta, but not rhM-CSFalpha, provides evidence that the carboxy-terminal region is unstructured. It is, therefore, proposed that the anomalous behavior of the alphaD helix is due to interaction of the carboxy-terminal tail with this helical segment.  相似文献   

4.
D N Brems  R L Baldwin 《Biochemistry》1985,24(7):1689-1693
pH-pulse exchange curves have been measured for samples taken during the folding of ribonuclease A. The curve gives the number of protected amide protons remaining after a 10-s pulse of exchange at pHs from 6.0 to 9.5, at 10 degrees C. Amide proton exchange is base catalyzed, and the rate of exchange increases 3000-fold between pH 6.0 and pH 9.5. The pH at which exchange occurs depends on the degree of protection against exchange provided by structure. Pulse exchange curves have been measured for samples taken at three times during folding, and these are compared to the pulse exchange curves of N, the native protein, of U, the unfolded protein in 4 M guanidinium chloride, and of IN, the native-like intermediate obtained by the prefolding method of Schmid. The results are used to determine whether folding intermediates are present that can be distinguished from N and U and to measure the average degree of protection of the protected protons in folding intermediates. The amide (peptide NH) protons of unfolded ribonuclease A were prelabeled with 3H by a previous procedure that labels only the slow-folding species. Folding was initiated at pH 4.0, 10 degrees C, where amide proton exchange is slower than the folding of the slow-folding species. Samples were taken at 0-, 10-, and 20-s folding, and their pH-pulse exchange curves were measured.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
The pleomorphic nature of the immature and mature HIV-1 virions has made it difficult to characterize intersubunit interactions using traditional approaches. While the structures of isolated domains are known, the challenge is to identify intersubunit interactions and thereby pack these domains into supramolecular structures. Using high-resolution mass spectrometry, we have measured the amide hydrogen exchange protection factors for the soluble capsid protein (CA) and CA assembled in vitro. Comparison of the protection factors as well as chemical crosslinking experiments has led to a map of the subunit/subunit interfaces in the assembled tubes. This analysis provides direct biochemical evidence for the homotypic N domain and C domain interactions proposed from cryo-electron microscopy image reconstruction of CA tubes. Most significantly, we have identified a previously unrecognized intersubunit N domain-C domain interaction. The detection of this interaction reconciles previously discrepant biophysical and genetic data.  相似文献   

6.
The pH dependence of amide proton exchange rates have been measured for trp-repressor. One class of protons exchanges too fast to be measured in these experiments. Among the protons that have measurable hydrogen-deuterium exchange rates, two additional classes may be distinguished. The second class of protons are in elements of secondary structure that are mostly on the surface of the protein, and exchange linearly with increasing base concentration (log kex versus pH). The third class of amide protons is characterized by much higher protection against exchange at higher pH. These protons are located in the core of the protein, in helices B and C. The exchange rate in the core region does not increase linearly with pH, but rather goes through a minimum around pH 6. The mechanism of exchange for the slowly exchanging core protons is interpreted in terms of the two-process model of Hilton and Woodward (1979, Biochemistry 18:5834-5841), i.e., exchange through both a local mechanism that does not require unfolding of the protein, and a mechanism involving global unfolding of the protein. The increase in exchange rates at low pH is attributed to a partial unfolding of the repressor. It is concluded that the formation of secondary structure alone is insufficient to account for the high protection factors seen in the core of native proteins at higher pH, and that tertiary interactions are essential to stabilize the structure.  相似文献   

7.
Using amide hydrogen exchange combined with electrospray ionization mass spectrometry, we have in this study determined the number of amide hydrogens on several peptides that become solvent-inaccessible as a result of their high-affinity interaction with the urokinase-type plasminogen activator receptor (uPAR). These experiments reveal that at least six out of eight amide hydrogens in a synthetic nine-mer peptide antagonist (AE105) become sequestered upon engagement in uPAR binding. Various uPAR mutants with decreased affinity for this peptide antagonist gave similar results, thereby indicating that deletion of the favorable interactions involving the side chains of these residues in uPAR does not affect the number of hydrogen bonds established by the main chain of the peptide ligand. The isolated growth factor-like domain (GFD) of the cognate serine protease ligand for uPAR showed 11 protected amide hydrogens in the receptor complex. Interestingly, a naturally occurring O-linked fucose on Thr(18) confers protection of two additional amide hydrogens in GFD when it forms a complex with uPAR. Dissociation of the uPAR-peptide complexes is accompanied by a correlated exchange of nearly all amide hydrogens on the peptide ligand. This yields bimodal isotope patterns from which dissociation rate constants can be determined. In addition, the distinct bimodal isotope distributions also allow investigation of the exchange kinetics of receptor-bound peptides providing information about the local structural motions at the interface. These exchange experiments therefore provide both structural and kinetic information on the interaction between uPAR and these small peptide antagonists, which in model systems show promise as inhibitors of intravasation of human cancer cells.  相似文献   

8.
Hydrogen-deuterium exchange of the primary amide, isobutyramide, was investigated as a model for asparagine and glutamine-NH2 exchange in a protein. A simple amide was chosen since the structures of several well-characterized proteins show most of these residues to be exposed to solvent. Isobutyramide-exchange data were obtained in 1:1 D2O:dioxane solutions using a near-infrared method. The rate data were strictly pseudo-first order and yielded an average of 95% exchange of the primary amide hydrogens. In analogy with secondary amides, the pD dependence of the rate constants was characteristic of specific acid and base catalysis. In addition, analysis of the rate-pD profile for isobutyramide indicated a significant uncatalyzed exchange reaction. Temperature-dependence studies of the first-order rate constants at a fixed pD yielded an apparent activation energy of 19.3 kcal/mole. Predicted half-life times for the exposed primary amide hydrogens in proteins, based on these exchange parameters, indicate that asparagine and glutamine side chains generally would contribute to the overall rate data only below 15°C and then only for approximately 1 pD unit around the point of minimum reaction velocity.  相似文献   

9.
The infectious pathogen responsible for prion diseases is the misfolded, aggregated form of the prion protein, PrPSc. In contrast to recent progress in studies of laboratory rodent-adapted prions, current understanding of the molecular basis of human prion diseases and, especially, their vast phenotypic diversity is very limited. Here, we have purified proteinase resistant PrPSc aggregates from two major phenotypes of sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (sCJD), determined their conformational stability and replication tempo in vitro, as well as characterized structural organization using recently emerged approaches based on hydrogen/deuterium (H/D) exchange coupled with mass spectrometry. Our data clearly demonstrate that these phenotypically distant prions differ in a major way with regard to their structural organization, both at the level of the polypeptide backbone (as indicated by backbone amide H/D exchange data) as well as the quaternary packing arrangements (as indicated by H/D exchange kinetics for histidine side chains). Furthermore, these data indicate that, in contrast to previous observations on yeast and some murine prion strains, the replication rate of sCJD prions is primarily determined not by conformational stability but by specific structural features that control the growth rate of prion protein aggregates.  相似文献   

10.
A fragment of the prion protein, PrP(89–143, P101L), bearing a mutation implicated in familial prion disease, forms fibrils that have been shown to induce prion disease when injected intracerebrally into transgenic mice expressing full-length PrP containing the P101L mutation. In this study, we utilize amide hydrogen exchange measurements to probe the organization of the peptide in its fibrillar form. We determined the extent of hydrogen exchange first by tandem proteolysis, liquid chromatography, and mass spectrometry (HXMS) and then by exchange-quenched NMR. Although single amide resolution is afforded by NMR measurements, HXMS is well suited to the study of natural prions because it does not require labeling with NMR active isotopes. Thus, natural prions obtained from infected animals can be compared with model systems such as PrP(89–143, P101L) studied here. In our study, we find two segments of sequence that display a high level of protection from exchange, residues 102–109 and 117–136. In addition, there is a region that displays exchange behavior consistent with the presence of a conformationally heterogeneous turn. We discuss our data with respect to several structural models proposed for infectious PrP aggregates and highlight HXMS as one of the few techniques well suited to studying natural prions.  相似文献   

11.
The kinetic folding mechanism for Escherichia coli dihydrofolate reductase postulates two distinct types of transient intermediates. The first forms within 5 ms and has substantial secondary structure but little stability. The second is a set of four species that appear over the course of several hundred milliseconds and have secondary structure, specific tertiary structure, and significant stability (Jennings PA, Finn BE, Jones BE, Matthews CR, 1993, Biochemistry 32:3783-3789). Pulse labeling hydrogen exchange experiments were performed to determine the specific amide hydrogens in alpha-helices and beta-strands that become protected from exchange through the formation of stable hydrogen bonds during this time period. A significant degree of protection was observed for two subsets of the amide hydrogens within the dead time of this experiment (6 ms). The side chains of one subset form a continuous nonpolar strip linking six of the eight strands in the beta-sheet. The other subset corresponds to a nonpolar cluster on the opposite face of the sheet and links three of the strands and two alpha-helices. Taken together, these data demonstrate that the complex strand topology of this eight-stranded sheet can be formed correctly within 6 ms. Measurement of the protection factors at three different folding times (13 ms, 141 ms, and 500 ms) indicates that, of the 13 amide hydrogens displaying significant protection within 6 ms, 8 exhibit an increase in their protection factors from approximately 5 to approximately 50 over this time range; the remaining five exhibit protection factors > 100 at 13 ms. Only approximately half of the population of molecules form this set of stable hydrogen bonds. Thirteen additional hydrogens in the beta-sheet become protected from exchange as the set of native conformers appear, suggesting that the stabilization of this network reflects the global cooperativity of the folding reaction.  相似文献   

12.
Protein amide hydrogen exchange (HDX) is a convoluted process, whose kinetics is determined by both dynamics of the protein and the intrinsic exchange rate of labile hydrogen atoms fully exposed to solvent. Both processes are influenced by a variety of intrinsic and extrinsic factors. A mathematical formalism initially developed to rationalize exchange kinetics of individual amide hydrogen atoms is now often used to interpret global exchange kinetics (e.g., as measured in HDX MS experiments). One particularly important advantage of HDX MS is direct visualization of various protein states by observing distinct protein ion populations with different levels of isotope labeling under conditions favoring correlated exchange (the so-called EX1 exchange mechanism). However, mildly denaturing conditions often lead to a situation where the overall HDX kinetics cannot be clearly classified as either EX1 or EX2. The goal of this work is to develop a framework for a generalized exchange model that takes into account multiple processes leading to amide hydrogen exchange, and does not require that the exchange proceed strictly via EX1 or EX2 kinetics. To achieve this goal, we use a probabilistic approach that assigns a transition probability and a residual protection to each equilibrium state of the protein. When applied to a small protein chymotrypsin inhibitor 2, the algorithm allows complex HDX patterns observed experimentally to be modeled with remarkably good fidelity. On the basis of the model we are now in a position to begin to extract quantitative dynamic information from convoluted exchange kinetics.  相似文献   

13.
Dissection of the pathway of molecular recognition by calmodulin   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Kranz JK  Flynn PF  Fuentes EJ  Wand AJ 《Biochemistry》2002,41(8):2599-2608
Amide hydrogen exchange has been used to examine the structural dynamics and energetics of the interaction of a peptide corresponding to the calmodulin-binding domain of smooth muscle myosin light chain kinase (smMLCKp) with calcium-saturated calmodulin. Heteronuclear NMR (15)N-(1)H correlation spectroscopy was used to quantify amide proton exchange rates of the uniformly (15)N-labeled domain bound to calmodulin. A key feature of a proposed model for molecular recognition by calmodulin [Ehrhardt et al. (1995) Biochemistry 34, 2731-2738] is tested by examination of the dependence of amide hydrogen exchange on applied hydrostatic pressure. Hydrogen exchange rates and corresponding protection factors (1/K(op)) for individual amide protons of the bound smMLCKp domain span 5 orders of magnitude at ambient pressure. Individual protection factors decrease significantly in a linear fashion with increasing hydrostatic pressure. A common pressure dependence is revealed by a constant large negative volume change across the residues comprising the core of the bound helical domain. The pattern of protection factors and their response to hydrostatic pressure is consistent with a structural reorganization that results in the concerted disruption of ion pairs between calmodulin and the bound domain. These observations reinforce a model for the molecular recognition pathway where formation of the initial encounter complex is followed by helix-coil transitions in the bound state and subsequent concerted formation of the extensive ion pair network defining the intermolecular contact surface between CaM and the target domain in the final, compact complex structure.  相似文献   

14.
Marlatt NM  Shaw GS 《Biochemistry》2007,46(25):7478-7487
S100B is a 21 kDa member of the S100 calcium-binding protein family. This protein comprises a symmetric homodimer with each subunit having two EF-hands arranged from four alpha-helices (I-IV). S100B binds calcium and undergoes a conformation change leading to the exposure of hydrophobic surface residues that enable the protein to interact with biological target molecules. The most significant structural change that occurs during calcium binding results in a change in the orientation of helix III with respect to helices II and IV. In this work, the calcium-sensitive conformational change has been studied by utilizing fast 1H-15N HSQC experiments and water-transfer methods to follow the amide exchange in apo-S100B and Ca-S100B at 35 degrees C. In apo-S100B, the protection factors are 2-3 orders of magnitude lower for helix III than for helix I, II, or IV. In addition, the exchange stability measured here for the dimer interface helices (I, I', IV, and IV'), in the absence of calcium, is similar to the stability obtained from chemical denaturation experiments. When calcium binds, significant decreases in the protection factors for helices I and IV indicate a modification in the stability of the dimer interface has occurred. In contrast, helix II protection factors increase slightly, which is consistent with a decreased level of surface exposure of this helix. These data have been compared with those of the monomeric S100 protein, calbindin D9k, to illustrate that upon calcium binding there is a balance maintained between the amide exchange rates in helices II and III, although largely the rates are dissimilar for each of these proteins. This distinguishing feature may be important for the calcium-induced conformational change in S100B, where calcium binding is transmitted to the dimer-forming helices.  相似文献   

15.
A simple method for measuring amide hydrogen exchange rates is presented, which is based on the selective inversion of water magnetization with the use of radiation damping. Simulations show that accurate exchange rates can be measured despite the complications of radiation damping and cross relaxation to the exchange process between amide and water protons. This method cannot eliminate the contributions of the exchange-relayed NOE and direct NOE to the measured exchange rates, but minimize the direct NOE contribution. In addition, the amides with a significant amount of such indirect contributions are possible to be identified from the shape of the exchange peak intensity profiles or/and from the apparent relaxation rates of amide protons which are extracted from fitting the intensity profiles to an equation established here for our experiment. The method was tested on ubiquitin and also applied to an acyl carrier protein. The amide exchange rates for the acyl carrier protein at two pHs indicate that the entire protein is highly dynamic on the second timescale. Low protection factors for the residues in the regular secondary structural elements also suggest the presence of invisible unfolded species. The highly dynamic nature of the acyl carrier protein may be crucial for its interactions with its substrate and enzymes.  相似文献   

16.
The backbone dynamics of the EF-hand Ca(2+)-binding protein, calbindin D9k, has been investigated in the apo, (Cd2+)1 and (Ca2+)2 states by measuring the rate constants for amide proton exchange with solvent. 15N-1H correlation spectroscopy was utilized to follow direct 1H-->2H exchange of the slowly exchanging amide protons and to follow indirect proton exchange via saturation transfer from water to the rapidly exchanging amide protons. Plots of experimental rate constants versus intrinsic rate constants have been analyzed to give qualitative insight into the opening modes of the protein that lead to exchange. These results have been interpreted within the context of a progressive unfolding model, wherein hydrophobic interactions and metal chelation serve to anchor portions of the protein, thereby damping fluctuations and retarding amide proton exchange. The addition of Ca2+ or Cd2+ was found to retard the exchange of many amide protons observed to be in hydrogen-bonding environments in the crystal structure of the (Ca2+)2 state, but not of those amide protons that were not involved in hydrogen bonds. The largest changes in rate constant occur for residues in the ion-binding loops, with substantial effects also found for the adjacent residues in helices I, II and III, but not helix IV. The results are consistent with a reorganization of the hydrogen-bonding networks in the metal ion-binding loops, accompanied by a change in the conformation of helix IV, as metal ions are chelated. Further analysis of the results obtained for the three states of metal occupancy provides insight into the nature of the changes in conformational fluctuations induced by ion binding.  相似文献   

17.
To examine the relationship between protein structural dynamics and measurable hydrogen exchange (HX) data, the detailed exchange behavior of most of the backbone amide hydrogens of Staphylococcal nuclease was compared with that of their neighbors, with their structural environment, and with other information. Results show that H-bonded hydrogens are protected from exchange, with HX rate effectively zero, even when they are directly adjacent to solvent. The transition to exchange competence requires a dynamic structural excursion that removes H-bond protection and allows exposure to solvent HX catalyst. The detailed data often make clear the nature of the dynamic excursion required. These range from whole molecule unfolding, through smaller cooperative unfolding reactions of secondary structural elements, and down to local fluctuations that involve as little as a single peptide group or side chain or water molecule. The particular motion that dominates the exchange of any hydrogen is the one that allows the fastest HX rate. The motion and the rate it produces are determined by surrounding structure and not by nearness to solvent or the strength of the protecting H-bond itself or its acceptor type (main chain, side chain, structurally bound water). Many of these motions occur over time scales that are appropriate for biochemical function.  相似文献   

18.
T Sivaraman  T K Kumar  C Yu 《Biochemistry》1999,38(31):9899-9905
The conformational stability of a small ( approximately 7 kDa), all beta-sheet protein, cardiotoxin analogue III (CTX III), from the venom of the Taiwan cobra has been investigated by hydrogen-deuterium (H/D) exchange using two-dimensional NMR spectroscopy. The H/D exchange kinetics of backbone amide protons in CTX III has been monitored at pD 3.6 and 6.6 (at 25 degrees C), for over 5000 h. Examination of H/D exchange kinetics in the protein showed that a number of slowly exchanging residues are in the hydrophobic core of the protein. The average protection factor of the amide protons of residues belonging to the triple-stranded beta-sheet domain is about 20 times greater than that of those in the double-stranded beta-sheet segment. The residues in the C-terminal tail of the molecule, though structureless, have been found to exhibit significant protection against H/D exchange. Comparison of the quenched-flow H/D exchange data on CTX III with those obtained in the present study reveals that the most slowly exchanging portion constitutes the folding core of the protein.  相似文献   

19.
The rate at which amide hydrogens located at the peptide backbone in protein/protein complexes undergo hydrogen/deuterium exchange is highly dependent on whether the amide groups participate in binding. Here, a new mass spectrometric method is presented in which this effect is utilized for the characterization of protein/ligand binding sites. The information obtained is which region within the protein participates in binding. The method includes hydrogen/deuterium exchange of receptor and ligand protein amide protons, binding, and back exchange. After this procedure those backbone amide groups that participate in protein binding are protected from back exchange and therefore still deuterated. These regions were then identified by peptic proteolysis, fast microbore high-performance liquid chromatography separation, and electrospray ionization mass spectrometry. The approach has been applied to the investigation of structural features of insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) and the interaction of insulin-like growth factor I with IGF-I binding protein 1. The data show that the approach can provide information on the location of the hydrophobic core of IGF-1 and on two regions that are mainly involved in binding to IGF-I binding protein 1. The data are consistent with results obtained with other approaches. The amount of sample required for one experiment is in the subnanomolar range.  相似文献   

20.
Amide hydrogen/deuterium exchange (H/D exchange) coupled with mass spectrometry has been widely used to analyze the interface of protein-protein interactions, protein conformational changes, protein dynamics and protein-ligand interactions. H/D exchange on the backbone amide positions has been utilized to measure the deuteration rates of the micro-regions in a protein by mass spectrometry(1,2,3). The resolution of this method depends on pepsin digestion of the deuterated protein of interest into peptides that normally range from 3-20 residues. Although the resolution of H/D exchange measured by mass spectrometry is lower than the single residue resolution measured by the Heteronuclear Single Quantum Coherence (HSQC) method of NMR, the mass spectrometry measurement in H/D exchange is not restricted by the size of the protein(4). H/D exchange is carried out in an aqueous solution which maintains protein conformation. We provide a method that utilizes the MALDI-TOF for detection(2), instead of a HPLC/ESI (electrospray ionization)-MS system(5,6). The MALDI-TOF provides accurate mass intensity data for the peptides of the digested protein, in this case protein kinase Pak2 (also called γ-Pak). Proteolysis of Pak 2 is carried out in an offline pepsin digestion. This alternative method, when the user does not have access to a HPLC and pepsin column connected to mass spectrometry, or when the pepsin column on HPLC does not result in an optimal digestion map, for example, the heavily disulfide-bonded secreted Phospholipase A(2;) (sPLA(2;)). Utilizing this method, we successfully monitored changes in the deuteration level during activation of Pak2 by caspase 3 cleavage and autophosphorylation(7,8,9).  相似文献   

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