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1.
Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, and particularly solid-state NMR spectroscopy, is a method of choice to study the structure and dynamics of both the lipid and the protein components of model and biological membranes. Different approaches have been developed to study these systems in which the restricted molecular motions result in broad NMR spectra. This contribution will first present an overview of the different techniques used to study lipid bilayers, namely 31p, 2H and 13C solid-state NMR spectroscopy. On the other hand, the study of the structure of membrane peptides and proteins is a rapidly growing field and several methods developed in the last two decades will be presented. These methods allow the investigation of protein systems for which structural information is often difficult to obtain by techniques such as X-ray diffraction and multidimensional solution NMR.  相似文献   

2.
In recent years, a large number of solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) techniques have been developed and applied to the study of fully or significantly isotopically labelled ((13)C, (15)N or (13)C/(15)N) biomolecules. In the past few years, the first structures of (13)C/(15)N-labelled peptides, Gly-Ile and Met-Leu-Phe, and a protein, Src-homology 3 domain, were solved using magic-angle spinning NMR, without recourse to any structural information obtained from other methods. This progress has been made possible by the development of NMR experiments to assign solid-state spectra and experiments to extract distance and orientational information. Another key aspect to the success of solid-state NMR is the advances made in sample preparation. These improvements will be reviewed in this contribution. Future prospects for the application of solid-state NMR to interesting biological questions will also briefly be discussed.  相似文献   

3.
The filamentous bacteriophage (Inovirus) strain Ff (fd, f1, M13) is widely used in molecular biophysics as a simple model system. A low resolution molecular model of the fd protein coat has been reported, derived from iterative helical real space reconstruction of cryo-electron micrographs (cryoEM). This model is significantly different from the model previously derived from X-ray fibre diffraction and solid-state NMR. We show that the cryoEM model agrees neither with solid-state NMR data nor with X-ray fibre diffraction data of fd, and has some puzzling structural features, for instance nanometre holes through the protein coat. We refine the cryoEM model against the X-ray data, and find that the model after refinement closely approximates the model derived directly from X-ray fibre diffraction and solid-state NMR data. We suggest possible reasons for the differences between the models derived from cryoEM and X-ray diffraction.  相似文献   

4.
Solid-state NMR has been used to determine the structures of membrane proteins in native-like lipid bilayer environments. Most structure calculations based on solid-state NMR observables are performed using simulated annealing with restrained molecular dynamics and an energy function, where all nonbonded interactions are represented by a single, purely repulsive term with no contributions from van der Waals attractive, electrostatic, or solvation energy. To our knowledge, this is the first application of an ensemble dynamics technique performed in explicit membranes that uses experimental solid-state NMR observables to obtain the refined structure of a membrane protein together with information about its dynamics and its interactions with lipids. Using the membrane-bound form of the fd coat protein as a model membrane protein and its experimental solid-state NMR data, we performed restrained ensemble dynamics simulations with different ensemble sizes in explicit membranes. For comparison, a molecular dynamics simulation of fd coat protein was also performed without any restraints. The average orientation of each protein helix is similar to a structure determined by traditional single-conformer approaches. However, their variations are limited in the resulting ensemble of structures with one or two replicas, as they are under the strong influence of solid-state NMR restraints. Although highly consistent with all solid-state NMR observables, the ensembles of more than two replicas show larger orientational variations similar to those observed in the molecular dynamics simulation without restraints. In particular, in these explicit membrane simulations, Lys40, residing at the C-terminal side of the transmembrane helix, is observed to cause local membrane curvature. Therefore, compared to traditional single-conformer approaches in implicit environments, solid-state NMR restrained ensemble simulations in explicit membranes readily characterize not only protein dynamics but also protein-lipid interactions in detail.  相似文献   

5.
Magic-angle spinning solid-state NMR experiments are well suited to investigating the structures and mechanisms of important proteins that are inaccessible to X-ray crystallography and solution NMR spectroscopy, including membrane proteins and disease-related protein aggregates. Good progress has been made in the development of methods for the complete structure determination of small (<20 kDa) solid proteins using uniformly 13C, 15N-labeled samples. Studies of selectively labeled proteins focusing on labeled active sites have yielded insights into the mechanisms of enzymes and of membrane proteins involved in energy and signal transduction. Studies of selectively labeled synthetic peptides have yielded structural models for biomedically important systems, including amyloid fibrils and surface-associated peptides involved in biomineralization and cell adhesion. Novel NMR and biochemical methods are being developed to target solid-state NMR experiments within large proteins and whole cells. These approaches are being used to investigate mechanisms of transmembrane signaling by membrane receptors and to characterize binding interactions between antibiotics and bacterial cell walls. Thus, solid-state NMR is proving to be a valuable biophysical tool for probing structure and dynamics in a wide range of biomolecules.  相似文献   

6.
《Molecular membrane biology》2013,30(5-8):156-178
Abstract

Solid-state NMR is unique for its ability to obtain three-dimensional structures and to measure atomic-resolution structural and dynamic information for membrane proteins in native lipid bilayers. An increasing number and complexity of integral membrane protein structures have been determined by solid-state NMR using two main methods. Oriented sample solid-state NMR uses macroscopically aligned lipid bilayers to obtain orientational restraints that define secondary structure and global fold of embedded peptides and proteins and their orientation and topology in lipid bilayers. Magic angle spinning (MAS) solid-state NMR uses unoriented rapidly spinning samples to obtain distance and torsion angle restraints that define tertiary structure and helix packing arrangements. Details of all current protein structures are described, highlighting developments in experimental strategy and other technological advancements. Some structures originate from combining solid- and solution-state NMR information and some have used solid-state NMR to refine X-ray crystal structures. Solid-state NMR has also validated the structures of proteins determined in different membrane mimetics by solution-state NMR and X-ray crystallography and is therefore complementary to other structural biology techniques. By continuing efforts in identifying membrane protein targets and developing expression, isotope labelling and sample preparation strategies, probe technology, NMR experiments, calculation and modelling methods and combination with other techniques, it should be feasible to determine the structures of many more membrane proteins of biological and biomedical importance using solid-state NMR. This will provide three-dimensional structures and atomic-resolution structural information for characterising ligand and drug interactions, dynamics and molecular mechanisms of membrane proteins under physiological lipid bilayer conditions.  相似文献   

7.
The Y145Stop prion protein (PrP23-144), which has been linked to the development of a heritable prionopathy in humans, is a valuable in vitro model for elucidating the structural and molecular basis of amyloid seeding specificities. Here we report the sequential backbone and side-chain 13C and 15N assignments of mouse and Syrian hamster PrP23-144 amyloid fibrils determined by using 2D and 3D magic-angle spinning solid-state NMR. The assigned chemical shifts were used to predict the secondary structures for the core regions of the mouse and Syrian hamster PrP23-144 amyloids, and the results compared to those for human PrP23-144 amyloid, which has previously been analyzed by solid-state NMR techniques.  相似文献   

8.
Filamentous bacteriophages (filamentous bacterial viruses or Inovirus) are simple and well-characterised macromolecular assemblies that are widely used in molecular biology and biophysics, both as paradigms for studying basic biological questions and as practical tools in areas as diverse as immunology and solid-state physics. The strains fd, M13 and f1 are virtually identical filamentous phages that infect bacteria expressing F-pili, and are sometimes grouped as the Ff phages. For historical reasons fd has often been used for structural studies, but M13 and f1 are more often used for biological experiments. Many other strains have been identified that are genetically quite distinct from Ff and yet have a similar molecular structure and life cycle. One of these, Pf1, gives the highest resolution X-ray fibre diffraction patterns known for filamentous bacteriophage. These diffraction patterns have been used in the past to derive a molecular model for the structure of the phage. Solid-state NMR experiments have been used in separate studies to derive a significantly different model of Pf1. Here we combine previously published X-ray fibre diffraction data and solid-state NMR data to give a consensus structure model for Pf1 filamentous bacteriophage, and we discuss the implications of this model for assembly of the phage at the bacterial membrane.  相似文献   

9.
Recently, there have been several technical advances in the use of solution and solid-state NMR spectroscopy to determine the structures of membrane proteins. The structures of several isolated transmembrane (TM) helices and pairs of TM helices have been solved by solution NMR methods. Similarly, the complete folds of two TM beta-barrel proteins with molecular weights of 16 and 19 kDa have been determined by solution NMR in detergent micelles. Solution NMR has also provided a first glimpse at the dynamics of an integral membrane protein. Structures of individual TM helices have also been determined by solid-state NMR. A combination of NMR with site-directed spin-label electron paramagnetic resonance or Fourier transform IR spectroscopy allows one to assemble quite detailed protein structures in the membrane.  相似文献   

10.
Although amyloid fibrils are generally considered to be causative or contributing agents in amyloid diseases, several amyloid fibrils are also believed to have biological functions. Among these are fibrils formed by Pmel17 within melanosomes, which act as a template for melanin deposition. We use solid-state NMR to show that the molecular structures of fibrils formed by the 130-residue pseudo-repeat domain Pmel17:RPT are polymorphic even within the biologically relevant pH range. Thus, biological function in amyloid fibrils does not necessarily imply a unique molecular structure. Solid-state NMR spectra of three Pmel17:RPT polymorphs show that in all cases, only a subset (∼30%) of the full amino acid sequence contributes to the immobilized fibril core. Although the repetitive nature of the sequence and incomplete spectral resolution prevent the determination of unique chemical shift assignments from two- and three-dimensional solid-state NMR spectra, we use a Monte Carlo assignment algorithm to identify protein segments that are present in or absent from the fibril core. The results show that the identity of the core-forming segments varies from one polymorph to another, a phenomenon known as segmental polymorphism.  相似文献   

11.
核磁共振波谱应用于结构生物学的研究进展   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
综述了核磁共振波谱在结构生物学研究中的进展。在溶液中测定生物大分子的结构,分子大小的限制正被减少,尽管新结构的测定仍然需要付出比较大的努力。核磁共振是一个有效的手段,可用于研究在许多细胞过程中存在的弱的或者瞬态的蛋白质-蛋白质相互作用。结构的柔性在蛋白质分子功能中起了中心作用。由于最近方法学的发展,使NMR可以表征蛋白质的动力学,从而可以对分子机制有新的认识。核磁共振波谱可以在原子分辨率下表征无序的蛋白质系统,可以研究折叠路径。跨膜蛋白在细胞中起了关键作用,这使它们成为药物的靶标。应用液体和固体核磁共振技术已经成功测定了跨膜蛋白质的结构。  相似文献   

12.
Solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) measurements have made major contributions to our understanding of the molecular structures of amyloid fibrils, including fibrils formed by the beta-amyloid peptide associated with Alzheimer's disease, by proteins associated with fungal prions, and by a variety of other polypeptides. Because solid-state NMR techniques can be used to determine interatomic distances (both intramolecular and intermolecular), place constraints on backbone and side-chain torsion angles, and identify tertiary and quaternary contacts, full molecular models for amyloid fibrils can be developed from solid-state NMR data, especially when supplemented by lower-resolution structural constraints from electron microscopy and other sources. In addition, solid-state NMR data can be used as experimental tests of various proposals and hypotheses regarding the mechanisms of amyloid formation, the nature of intermediate structures, and the common structural features within amyloid fibrils. This review introduces the basic experimental and conceptual principles behind solid-state NMR methods that are applicable to amyloid fibrils, reviews the information about amyloid structures that has been obtained to date with these methods, and discusses how solid-state NMR data provide insights into the molecular interactions that stabilize amyloid structures, the generic propensity of polypeptide chains to form amyloid fibrils, and a number of related issues that are of current interest in the amyloid field.  相似文献   

13.
A variety of biomolecules acting on the cell membrane folds into a biologically active structure in the membrane environment. It is, therefore, important to determine the structures and dynamics of such biomolecules in a membrane environment. While several biophysical techniques are used to obtain low-resolution information, solid-state NMR spectroscopy is one of the most powerful means for determining the structure and dynamics of membrane bound biomolecules such as antibacterial biomolecules and amyloidogenic proteins; unlike X-ray crystallography and solution NMR spectroscopy, applications of solid-state NMR spectroscopy are not limited by non-crystalline, non-soluble nature or molecular size of membrane-associated biomolecules. This review article focuses on the applications of solid-state NMR techniques to study a few selected antibacterial and amyloid peptides. Solid-state NMR studies revealing the membrane inserted bent α-helical structure associated with the hemolytic activity of bee venom melittin and the chemical shift oscillation analysis used to determine the transmembrane structure (with α-helix and 310-helix in the N- and C-termini, respectively) of antibiotic peptide alamethicin are discussed in detail. Oligomerization of an amyloidogenic islet amyloid polypeptide (IAPP, or also known as amylin) resulting from its aggregation in a membrane environment, molecular interactions of the antifungal natural product amphotericin B with ergosterol in lipid bilayers, and the mechanism of lipid raft formation by sphingomyelin studied using solid state NMR methods are also discussed in this review article. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled "Biophysical Exploration of Dynamical Ordering of Biomolecular Systems" edited by Dr. Koichi Kato.  相似文献   

14.
Structural crystallography and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy are the predominant techniques for understanding the biological world on a molecular level. Crystallography is constrained by the ability to form a crystal that diffracts well and NMR is constrained to smaller proteins. Although powerful techniques, they leave many soluble, purified structurally uncharacterized protein samples. Small angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) is a solution technique that provides data on the size and multiple conformations of a sample, and can be used to reconstruct a low-resolution molecular envelope of a macromolecule. In this study, SAXS has been used in a high-throughput manner on a subset of 28 proteins, where structural information is available from crystallographic and/or NMR techniques. These crystallographic and NMR structures were used to validate the accuracy of molecular envelopes reconstructed from SAXS data on a statistical level, to compare and highlight complementary structural information that SAXS provides, and to leverage biological information derived by crystallographers and spectroscopists from their structures. All the ab initio molecular envelopes calculated from the SAXS data agree well with the available structural information. SAXS is a powerful albeit low-resolution technique that can provide additional structural information in a high-throughput and complementary manner to improve the functional interpretation of high-resolution structures.  相似文献   

15.
Cross-polarization magic-angle spinning (CPMAS) 13C NMR spectroscopy has been used to characterize covalent conjugates of alachlor, an alpha-chloroacetamide hapten, with glutathione (GSH) and bovine serum albumin (BSA). The solid-state NMR method demonstrates definitively the covalent nature of these conjugates and can also be used to characterize the sites of hapten attachment to proteins. Three different sites of alachlor binding are observed in the BSA system. Accurate quantitation of the amount of hapten covalently bound to GSH and BSA is reported. The solid-state 13C NMR technique can easily be generalized to study other small molecule/protein conjugates and can be used to assist the development and refinement of synthetic methods needed for the successful formation of such protein alkylation products.  相似文献   

16.
The outer membrane protein Ail (Adhesion invasion locus) is one of the most abundant proteins on the cell surface of Yersinia pestis during human infection. Its functions are expressed through interactions with a variety of human host proteins, and are essential for microbial virulence. Structures of Ail have been determined by X-ray diffraction and solution NMR spectroscopy, but those samples contained detergents that interfere with functionality, thus, precluding analysis of the structural basis for Ail’s biological activity. Here, we demonstrate that high-resolution solid-state NMR spectra can be obtained from samples of Ail in detergent-free phospholipid liposomes, prepared with a lipid to protein molar ratio of 100. The spectra, obtained with 13C or 1H detection, have very narrow line widths (0.40–0.60 ppm for 13C, 0.11–0.15 ppm for 1H, and 0.46–0.64 ppm for 15N) that are consistent with a high level of sample homogeneity. The spectra enable resonance assignments to be obtained for N, CO, CA and CB atomic sites from 75 out of 156 residues in the sequence of Ail, including 80% of the transmembrane region. The 1H-detected solid-state NMR 1H/15N correlation spectra obtained for Ail in liposomes compare very favorably with the solution NMR 1H/15N TROSY spectra obtained for Ail in nanodiscs prepared with a similar lipid to protein molar ratio. These results set the stage for studies of the molecular basis of the functional interactions of Ail with its protein partners from human host cells, as well as the development of drugs targeting Ail.  相似文献   

17.
The past year has witnessed significant advances in NMR analysis of bio-macromolecules from a broad array of disciplines. First, great progress in the development of methods for measuring residual dipolar couplings in nematic media promises to increase both the size of systems to be studied and the accuracy with which structures can be determined. Second, the ability of solid-state NMR to provide structural information on biological systems is undergoing rapid expansion as a result of recent developments. The structural details that can be derived for biomolecules in the liquid and solid states can be used for the rational design of high-affinity ligands. Such studies are now complemented by NMR screening of synthetic and natural molecular libraries. Several NMR screening protocols have been designed that employ both rational and random elements.  相似文献   

18.
Rotational-echo double resonance (REDOR) is a solid-state NMR technique that has the capability of providing intra- and intermolecular distance and orientational restraints in non-crystallizable, poorly soluble heterogeneous molecular systems such as cell membranes and cell walls. In this review, we will present two applications of REDOR: the investigation of a magainin-related antimicrobial peptide in lipid bilayers and the study of a vancomycin-like glycopeptide in the cell walls of Staphylococcus aureus.  相似文献   

19.
Weller K  Lauber S  Lerch M  Renaud A  Merkle HP  Zerbe O 《Biochemistry》2005,44(48):15799-15811
Pep-1 is a tryptophane-rich cell-penetrating peptide (CPP) that has been previously proposed to bind protein cargoes by hydrophobic assembly and translocate them across cellular membranes. To date, however, the molecular mechanisms responsible for cargo binding and translocation have not been clearly identified. This study was conducted to gain insight into the interaction between Pep-1 with its cargo and the biological membrane to identify the thereby involved structural elements crucial for translocation. We studied three peptides differing in their N- and C-termini: (i) Pep-1, carrying an acetylated N-terminus and a C-terminal cysteamine elongation, (ii) AcPepWAmide, with an acetylated N-terminus and an amidated C-terminus, and (iii) PepW, with two free termini. Thioredoxin (TRX) and beta-galactosidase were used as protein cargoes. To study CPP-membrane interactions, we performed biophysical as well as biological assays. To mimic biological membranes, we used phospholipid liposomes in a dye leakage assay and surfactant micelles for high-resolution NMR studies. In addition, membrane integrity, cell viability, and translocation efficiency were analyzed in HeLa cells. An alpha-helical structure was found for all peptides in the hydrophobic N-terminal region encompassing residues 4-13, whereas the hydrophilic region remained unstructured in the presence of micelles. Our results show that the investigated peptides interacted with the micelles as well as with the protein cargo via their tryptophan-rich domain. All peptides displayed an orientation parallel to the micelle surface. The C-terminal cysteamine group formed an additional membrane anchor, leading to more efficient translocation properties in cells. No membrane permeabilization was observed, and our data were largely compatible with an endocytic pathway for cellular uptake.  相似文献   

20.
5-Enolpyruvylshikimate-3-phosphate (EPSP) synthase, the product of the Escherichia coli aroA gene, has been overproduced in E. coli BL21(lambda DE3) under the control of the T7 gene 10 promoter and ribosome binding site, to a level of approximately 50% of total cell protein. EPSP synthase is the primary target of the post-emergence herbicide, glyphosate, commonly known as Roundup. A simple two step purification is described, which results in 99% pure homogeneous protein (as determined by PAGE). The integrity of the protein has been compared with previously characterized protein from E. coli AB2829(pKD501) by determination of its kinetic parameters, N-terminal protein and DNA sequences, amino acid analysis and 13C-NMR spectroscopy. This new overproducing strain readily provides the gram quantities of highly pure protein required for NMR studies of the active site and the development of novel time-resolved solid-state NMR techniques currently underway in this laboratory.  相似文献   

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