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1.
The identification of metal-binding ligands in metalloproteins is an important step in gaining detailed information regarding the environment of the active site. Traditionally, techniques such as 13Cd-substitution for the active metal followed by isotope-filtered NMR techniques have been used to this end. However, for medium to high molecular weight proteins (>20 kDa), these experiments may not be beneficial due to extensive 1H spectral overlap. Here, we describe an alternative approach, where metal-binding ligands such as histidine and cysteine are specifically 15N backbone labeled, excess EDTA is added and changes to (1H-15N) HSQC spectra are followed. Under these conditions, the amide groups of all 15N labeled histidine and cysteine residues, which were either ligands or residues close to the active site, were identified unambiguously for metallo-beta-lactamase from Bacteroides fragilis.  相似文献   

2.
The active sites of enzymes can be studied in great detail using nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. The determination of pKa values of active site histidine residues in bovine pancreatic ribonuclease and the characterization of the binding of peptide hormones to carrier proteins are two such examples. The study of the active site of staphylococcal nuclease is another example and is presented in detail in this paper. The structure of 3'5'-thymidine diphosphate bound in the active site of staphylococcal nuclease has been studied by measuring the relaxation rate enhancement of substrate analog nuclei by a paramagnetic metal ion. The lanthanide ion, Gd(III), was substituted for Ca(II) in the formation of the ternary complex of nuclease: Gd(III) : 3'5'-thymidine diphosphate. Measurements were made of the transverse relaxation rates of protons and the longitudinal and transverse relaxation rates of the phosphorus nuclei of bound nucleotide. Internuclear distances between the metal ion and atoms of the 3'5'-thymidine diphosphate nucleotide were determined from these data by using the Solomon-Bloembergen equation. In general, these distances corresponded closely to those determined by previous X-ray crystallography of the thymidine diphosphate complex. These internuclear distances were also used with a computer program and graphics display to solve for metal : nucleotide geometries which were consistent with the experimental data. A geometry similar to the structure of the metal : nucleotide complex bound to nuclease determined by X-ray analysis was one of the solutions to this computer modeling process. For staphylococcal nuclease the NMR and X-ray methods yield compatible high resolution information about the structure of the active site.  相似文献   

3.
4.
Phosphorus-31 nuclear magnetic resonance (31P-NMR) spectra were obtained from living toad retinae and toad retinal extracts at 4 degrees C. Several phosphorus metabolites--nucleoside di- and triphosphates (NTP), phosphocreatine, phosphodiesters, inorganic phosphate, and phosphomonoesters--were identified from the spectra of whole retinae. The intracellular pH was determined to be 7.27 +/- 0.06 at 4 degrees C and the intracellular MgNTP/NTP ratio was at least 0.77. These results are consistent with those reported by other techniques, and they show that 31P-NMR spectroscopy can be used for noninvasively and quantitatively studying the metabolism of living toad retinae, and for monitoring its changes over time.  相似文献   

5.
The efficacy of proton decoupling for enhancing the 19F nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) signal-to-noise ratio and spectral resolution in the intact subject is demonstrated. A geometrically orthogonal cross-coil antenna configuration (Helmholtz pair, surface coil) is employed to provide 40 dB of isolation between the 19F observe and 1H decouple frequencies of 188 and 200 MHz, respectively. Further isolation is achieved through the use of high-quality notch filters on both observation and decoupling channels. Application of 19F-(1H) NMR spectroscopy to the study of 2-fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucose metabolism in cerebral tissue in situ is presented. Significant improvements in sensitivity and resolution are obtained and result from both a collapse of the JFH multiple structure and a substantial positive nuclear Overhauser effect (NOE). To our knowledge, this is the first such demonstration of 1H decoupling in conjunction with 19F observation for study of the metabolism of a fluorinated compound in the living subject.  相似文献   

6.
Phosphorus-31 nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy of phospholipids   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
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7.
Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy is one of the most powerful analytical techniques available to biology. This review is an introduction to the potential of this method and is aimed at readers who have little or no experience in acquiring or analyzing NMR spectra. We focus on spectroscopic applications of the magnetic resonance effect, rather than imaging ones, and explain how various aspects of the NMR phenomenon make it a versatile tool with which to address a number of biological problems. Using detailed examples, we discuss the use of 1H NMR spectroscopy in mixture analysis and metabolomics, the use of 13C NMR spectroscopy in tracking isotopomers and determining the flux through metabolic pathways (‘fluxomics’) and the use of 31P NMR spectroscopy in monitoring ATP generation and intracellular pH homeotasis in vivo. Further examples demonstrate how NMR spectroscopy can be used to probe the physical environment of a cell by measuring diffusion and the tumbling rates of individual metabolites and how it can determine macromolecular structures by measuring the bonds and distances which separate individual atoms. We finish by outlining some of the key challenges which remain in NMR spectroscopy and we highlight how recent advances—such as increased magnet field strengths, cryogenic cooling, microprobes and hyperpolarisation—are opening new avenues for today's biological NMR spectroscopists.  相似文献   

8.
The regio- and stereo-specificity of the labelling in a series of tritiated steroid hormones has been examined by 3H n.m.r., which also yields quantitative information on the distribution of the tritium between the labelled sites. Complete analysis is thus readily achieved non-destructively. Hydrogen chemical shifts for various skeletal sites are provided for the first time. The specificity of the methods of labelling steroids with tritium by catalytic reduction, catalysed exchange, and tritiodehalogenation are discussed.  相似文献   

9.
Progress in the field of protein nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy during the past year has included the elucidation of a number of new structures. In addition, several critical developments in the experimental methodology have opened up the potential for applying the nuclear magnetic resonance-based approach to structure determination in solution of recombinant proteins in excess of 15 kD.  相似文献   

10.
Ceramide (Cer) has been identified as an active lipid second messenger in the regulation of cell growth, differentiation, and apoptosis. Its analog, dihydroceramide, without the 4 to 5 trans double bond in the sphingoid backbone lacks these biological effects. To establish the conformational features that distinguish ceramide from its analogs, nuclear magnetic resonance spectral data were acquired for diluted samples of ceramides (C2- and C18-Cer), dihydroceramide (C16-DHCer), and deoxydihydroceramide (C18-DODHCer). Our results suggest that in both C2- and C18-Cer, an H-bond network is formed in which the amide proton NH is donated to the OH groups on carbons C1 and C3 of the sphingosine backbone. Two tightly bound water molecules appear to stabilize this network by participating in flip-flop interactions with the hydroxyl groups. In DHCer, the lack of the trans double bond leads to a conformational distortion of this H-bonding motif. Without the critical double bond, the degree with which water molecules stabilize the H bonds between the two OH groups of the sphingolipid is reduced. This structural alteration might preclude the participation of DHCer in signaling-related interactions with cellular targets.  相似文献   

11.
12.
The statistical theory of energy levels or random matrix theory is presented in the context of the analysis of chemical shifts of nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectra of large biological systems. Distribution functions for the spacing between nearest-neighbor energy levels are discussed for uncorrelated, correlated, and random superposition of correlated energy levels. Application of this approach to the NMR spectra of a vitamin, an antibiotic, and a protein demonstrates the state of correlation of an ensemble of energy levels that characterizes each system. The detection of coherent and dissipative structures in proteins becomes feasible with this statistical spectroscopic technique.  相似文献   

13.
Summary Evidence is presented from a preliminary study showing that C-13 N.M.R. spectroscopy is a useful new tool for the elucidation of the structure of soil organic matter.  相似文献   

14.
Proteomics is the study of the protein complement of a genome and employs a number of newly emerging tools. One such tool is chemical proteomics, which is a branch of proteomics devoted to the exploration of protein function using both in vitro and in vivo chemical probes. Chemical proteomics aims to define protein function and mechanism at the level of directly observed protein-ligand interactions, whereas chemical genomics aims to define the biological role of a protein using chemical knockouts and observing phenotypic changes. Chemical proteomics is therefore traditional mechanistic biochemistry performed in a systems-based manner, using either activity- or affinity-based probes that target proteins related by chemical reactivities or by binding site shape/properties, respectively. Systems are groups of proteins related by metabolic pathway, regulatory pathway or binding to the same ligand. Studies can be based on two main types of proteome samples: pooled proteins (1 mixture of N proteins) or isolated proteins in a given system and studied in parallel (N single protein samples). Although the field of chemical proteomics originated with the use of covalent labeling strategies such as isotope-coded affinity tagging, it is expanding to include chemical probes that bind proteins noncovalently, and to include more methods for observing protein-ligand interactions. This review presents an emerging role for nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy in chemical proteomics, both in vitro and in vivo. Applications include: functional proteomics using cofactor fingerprinting to assign proteins to gene families; gene family-based structural characterizations of protein-ligand complexes; gene family-focused design of drug leads; and chemical proteomic probes using nuclear magnetic resonance SOLVE and studies of protein-ligand interactions in vivo.  相似文献   

15.
Proteomics is the study of the protein complement of a genome and employs a number of newly emerging tools. One such tool is chemical proteomics, which is a branch of proteomics devoted to the exploration of protein function using both in vitro and in vivo chemical probes. Chemical proteomics aims to define protein function and mechanism at the level of directly observed protein–ligand interactions, whereas chemical genomics aims to define the biological role of a protein using chemical knockouts and observing phenotypic changes. Chemical proteomics is therefore traditional mechanistic biochemistry performed in a systems-based manner, using either activity- or affinity-based probes that target proteins related by chemical reactivities or by binding site shape/properties, respectively. Systems are groups of proteins related by metabolic pathway, regulatory pathway or binding to the same ligand. Studies can be based on two main types of proteome samples: pooled proteins (1 mixture of N proteins) or isolated proteins in a given system and studied in parallel (N single protein samples). Although the field of chemical proteomics originated with the use of covalent labeling strategies such as isotope-coded affinity tagging, it is expanding to include chemical probes that bind proteins noncovalently, and to include more methods for observing protein–ligand interactions. This review presents an emerging role for nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy in chemical proteomics, both in vitro and in vivo. Applications include: functional proteomics using cofactor fingerprinting to assign proteins to gene families; gene family-based structural characterizations of protein–ligand complexes; gene family-focused design of drug leads; and chemical proteomic probes using nuclear magnetic resonance SOLVE and studies of protein–ligand interactions in vivo.  相似文献   

16.
The first high resolution proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectra are reported for the native ferric and ferric cyano complexes of bovine lactoperoxidase. The spectrum of the native species exhibits broad heme signals in a far downfield region characteristic of the high-spin ferric state. The low-spin cyano complex yields a proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectrum with signals as far as 68.5 ppm downfield and as far as -28 ppm upfield of the tetramethylsilane reference. These peak positions are anomalous with respect to those seen only as far as 35 ppm downfield in other cyano hemoprotein complexes. An extreme asymmetry in the unpaired spin delocalization pattern of the iron porphyrin is suggested. The unusual proton nuclear magnetic resonance properties parallel distinctive optical spectral properties and the exceptional resistance to heme displacement from the enzyme. Lactoperoxidase utilized in these studies was isolated from raw milk and purified by an improved, rapid chromatographic procedure.  相似文献   

17.
In an attempt to distinguish between the interaction of GTP and ATP with tubulin dimer, high-resolution 1H- and 31P-NMR experiments have been carried out on the nucleotides in the presence of tubulin. The location of the ATP binding sites on the protein in relation to the GTP sites is still not clear. Using NMR spectroscopy, we have tried to address this question. Evidence for the existence of a site labelled as X-site and another site (labelled as L-site for both the nucleotides on tubulin has been obtained. It is suggested that this X-site is possibly the putative E-site. In order to gain further insight into the nature of these sites, the Mg(II at the N-site has been replaced by Mn(II and the paramagnetic effect of Mn(II on the linewidth of the proton resonances of tubulin-bound ATP and GTP has been studied. The results show that the L-site nucleotide is closer to the N-site metal ion compared to the X-site nucleotide. On the basis of these results, it is suggested that the L-site of ATP is distinct from the L-site of GTP while the X-site of both the nucleotides seems to be same. By using the paramagnetic effect of the metal ion, Mn(II), at the N-site on the relaxation rates of tubulin-bound ATP at L-site, distances of the protons of the base, sugar and phosphorous nuclei of the phosphorous moiety of ATP, from the N-site metal ion have been mapped. The base protons are 2 0.7–1 nm distant from the N-site metal ion, while the protons of the sugar are 2 0.8-1 nm from this metal ion site. On the other hand, the phosphorous nuclei of the phosphate groups are somewhat nearer (2 0.4–0.5 nm from the N-site metal ion.  相似文献   

18.
P nuclear magnetic resonance spectra of a number of purified yeast O-phosphonohexoglycans were recorded. The data therefrom were correlated with established chemicals aspects of individual and collective polymer structures, permitting (a) conclusions to be drawn regarding the chemical environment of the phosphate groups of these polymers, and (b) assignment of anormeric configurations to the hexosyl phosphate residues.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Structure determination of secondary DNA structural elements, such as G-quadruplexes, gains an increasing importance as fundamental physiological roles are being associated with the formation of such structures in vivo. A truncated native DNA sequence generally requires further optimization to obtain a candidate with desired nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) properties for structural analysis in solution. The optimum sequence is expected to form one dominant, stable molecular entity in solution with well-resolved NMR peaks. However, DNA sequences are prone to form structures composed of one, two, three, or four strands depending on sequence and solution conditions. The thorough characterization of the molecularity (stoichiometry and molecular weight) and appropriate solution conditions for sequences with different modifications traditionally applies analytical techniques that generally do not represent the solution conditions for NMR structure determination. Here we present the application of diffusion-ordered NMR spectroscopy as a useful analytical tool for the optimization and analysis of DNA secondary structural elements, specifically, the DNA G-quadruplex structures, including those formed in the human telomeric sequence and in the promoter regions of bcl-2 and c-myc genes.  相似文献   

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