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1.
H Haruyama  Y Q Qian  K Wüthrich 《Biochemistry》1989,28(10):4312-4317
With proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy at 22 degrees C and pD 4.5, individual exchange rates in the range from 2 X 10(-5) to 1 X 10(-1) min-1 were observed for 23 amide protons in recombinant desulfatohirudin. The remaining 38 backbone amide protons exchange more rapidly than 1 X 10(-1) min-1. All 23 slowly exchanging protons are located in the polypeptide segment from residue 4 to residue 42, which forms a well-defined globular domain. Three different breathing modes of this molecular region are manifested in the exchange data, which appear to be correlated with the location of the three disulfide bonds. Chemical shift changes larger than 0.15 ppm between pH 2.5 and pH 5.0 arising from through-space interactions with carboxyl groups were observed for seven backbone amide protons. Two of these shifts can be explained by hydrogen bonds in the core of the protein, Gly 25 NH-Glu 43 O epsilon and Ser 32 NH-Asp 33 O delta, and two others by intraresidual NH-O epsilon interactions in Glu 61 and Glu 62. The remaining three pH shifts for Glu 35, Cys 39, and Ile 59 imply the existence of transient interactions between the molecular core and the flexible C-terminal segment 49-65, which have so far not been characterized by nuclear Overhauser effects or other conformational constraints.  相似文献   

2.
H Roder  G Wagner  K Wüthrich 《Biochemistry》1985,24(25):7396-7407
With the use of one-dimensional 1H nuclear magnetic resonance, two-dimensional correlated spectroscopy, and two-dimensional nuclear Overhauser enhancement spectroscopy, the exchange mechanisms for numerous individual amide protons in the basic pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (BPTI) were investigated over a wide range of p2H and temperature. Correlated exchange under an EX1 regime was observed only for the most slowly exchanging protons in the central hydrogen bonds of the antiparallel beta-sheet and only over a narrow range of temperature and p2H, i.e., above ca. 55 degrees C and between p2H 7 and 9, where the opening rates of the structure fluctuations which promote the exchange of these protons are of the order 0.1 min-1. At p2H below 7, the exchange of this most stable group of protons is uncorrelated and is governed by an EX2 mechanism. At p2H above 9, the exchange is also uncorrelated and occurs via either EX2 or EX1 processes promoted by strictly local structure fluctuations. For all other backbone amide protons in BPTI, the exchange was found to be uncorrelated and by an EX2 mechanism under all conditions of p2H and temperature where quantitative measurements could be obtained with the methods used, i.e., for kex approximately less than 5 min-1. From these observations with BPTI it can be concluded that the amide proton exchange in globular proteins is quite generally via EX2 processes, with rare exceptions for measurements with extremely stable protons at high temperature and basic p2H. This emphasizes the need for further development of suitable concepts for the structural interpretation of EX2 amide proton exchange [Wagner, G. (1983) Q. Rev. Biophys. 16, 1-57; Wagner, G., Stassinopoulou, C. I., & Wüthrich, K. (1984) Eur. J. Biochem. 145, 431-436] and for more detailed investigations of the intrinsic exchange rates for solvent-exposed amide protons in the "open" states of a protein [Roder, H., Wagner, G., & Wüthrich, K. (1985) Biochemistry (following paper in this issue)].  相似文献   

3.
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   

4.
Based on the nuclear magnetic resonance assignments of a dimeric protein, Streptomyces subtilisin inhibitor (SSI), microscopic details of secondary structures in solution have been elucidated. The chemical shift index of C(alpha) signals, together with information on the hydrogen exchange rates of the backbone amide protons, were used to identify secondary structures. The locations of these secondary structures were found to be different in some critical points from those determined earlier by X-ray crystallography of the crystal. Notably, the beta3 strand is completely missing and the alpha2 helix is extended toward the C-terminus. Furthermore, hydrogen exchange experiments of individual peptide NH protons under strongly folding conditions revealed mechanisms of global and local structural fluctuation within the dimeric structure. It has been suggested that the global fluctuation of the monomeric unit occurs without affecting the accompanying monomer, in contrast to the equilibrium thermal unfolding, which is cooperative. Higher protection against hydrogen exchange for residues in part of the beta4 strand implies that this region might serve as a folding core.  相似文献   

5.
In human metallothionein-2, the exchange rate constants of ten amide protons were found to range from 1.7 x 10(-4) to 1 x 10(-1) min-1 at pH 6.3 and 8 degrees C. Most of these slowly exchanging protons could be associated with hydrogen bonds in secondary structure elements of the alpha-domain. Amide proton exchange rates thus present an additional criterion for the structural characterization of different metallothioneins, which could be particularly valuable for comparisons of different homologous protein preparations containing nuclear magnetic resonance-inactive metal ions, where the metal-polypeptide co-ordinative bonds cannot be identified directly.  相似文献   

6.
Proton nuclear magnetic resonance (1H NMR) assignments for the murine epidermal growth factor (mEGF) in aqueous solution were determined by using two-dimensional NMR at pH 3.1 and 28 degrees C. The assignments are complete for all backbone hydrogen atoms, with the exception of the N-terminal amino group, and for 46 of the 53 side chains. Among the additional seven amino acid residues, three have complete assignments for all but one side-chain proton, and between two and four protons are missing for the remaining four residues. The sequential assignments by nuclear Overhauser effect spectroscopy are consistent with the chemically determined amino acid sequence. The NMR data show that the conformations of both the Tyr3-Pro4 and Cys6-Pro7 peptide bonds are trans in the predominant solution structure. Proton-deuterium exchange rate constants were also measured for 13 slowly exchanging amide protons. The information presented here has been used elsewhere to determine the three-dimensional structure of mEGF in aqueous solution.  相似文献   

7.
New class of 19F pH indicators: fluoroanilines   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
The pH dependence of the 19F chemical shift has been characterized for a number of fluorine-substituted aniline derivatives. These compounds constitute a new class of 19F nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) pH indicators, characterized by single 19F resonance lines with sensitivities ranging from 2 to 7 ppm/pH unit near the aniline pKa; total shifts between conjugate acid and base of 5-15 ppm; and pKas ranging from 1 to 7. One compound, N,N-(methyl-2-carboxyisopropyl)-4-fluoroaniline, has a pKa of 6.8 and a sensitivity of 5 ppm/pH unit. This compound displays significant broadening of its 19F resonance near the aniline pKa (6.8), due to a decreased rate of exchange between conjugate acid and base species. Our results are consistent with slow dissociation of an intramolecular hydrogen bond in the zwitterionic species that limits the exchange rate between protonated and unprotonated forms for N,N-(methyl-2-carboxyisopropyl)-4-fluoroaniline.  相似文献   

8.
The exchange broadening of backbone amide proton resonances of a 23-mer fusion peptide of the transmembrane subunit of HIV-1 envelope glycoprotein gp41, gp41-FP, was investigated at pH 5 and 7 at room temperature in perdeuterated sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) micellar solution. Comparison of resonance peaks for these pHs revealed an insignificant change in exchange rate between pH 5 and 7 for amide protons of residues 4 through 14, while the exchange rate increase at neutral pH was more prominent for amide protons of the remaining residues, with peaks from some protons becoming undetectable. The relative insensitivity to pH of the exchange for the amide protons of residues 4 through 14 is attributable to the drastic reduction in [OH–] in the micellar interior, leading to a decreased exchange rate. The A15-G16 segment represents a transition between these two regimes. The data are thus consistent with the notion that the peptide inserts into the hydrophobic core of a membrane-like structure and the A15-G16 dipeptide is located at the micellar-aqueous boundary.  相似文献   

9.
Active fragments of the heat-stable enterotoxin ST I of Escherichia coli were chemically synthesized with the sequence Cys-Cys-Glu-Leu-Cys-Cys-Asn-Pro-Ala-Cys-Thr-Gly-Cys-(Tyr) and studied by proton (1H NMR) and carbon-13 (13C NMR) nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy as a function of pH and temperature. All of the nonexchangeable protons in the 1H NMR spectrum were assigned. Although all amide protons were present at temperatures below 25 degrees C and and pH values below 6, some of the resonances are broad and could not be assigned. The temperature dependence of these broad resonances indicates a change in conformation that is localized in the N-terminus. Other amide protons disappear at higher temperatures owing to chemical exchange with the solvent. Sufficient resonance assignments can be made at high and low temperatures to permit structural conclusions to be made. The chemical shifts of the alpha-carbon protons indicate the presence of substantial structure, which was further defined with the observed pattern of nuclear Overhauser enhancements (NOEs), coupling constants, and exchange rates. The NMR data identify a turn from Ala-14 to Cys-18. A second likely turn is centered around the proline residue. An interresidue NOE between the alpha-carbon protons of Asn-12 and Gly-17 indicates that the molecule folds back on itself. The NMR information is sufficient to define the structure of the C-terminal region of ST I. Manual model building then indicated that one arrangement of the three disulfides is particularly compatible with the NMR data and van der Waals constraints. A model incorporating the disulfide arrangement proposed by Houghten and his co-workers [Houghten, R.A., Ostresh, J.M., & Klipstein, F.A. (1984) Eur. J. Biochem. 145, 157-162] and the NMR constraints was derived with the programs PROTO [Frayman, F. (1985) Ph.D. Thesis, Northwestern University] and NOEMOT [Lane, A.N., Lefévre, J.-F., & Jardetsky, O. (1986) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 867, 45-56].  相似文献   

10.
M M Dhingra  A Saran 《Biopolymers》1989,28(7):1271-1285
The solution conformation of [D-Ala2]-leucine enkephalin in its zwitterionic form in DMSO-d6 has been monitored by one- and two-dimensional proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy at 500 MHz. The resonances from the labile amide protons and the nonlabile protons have been assigned from the shift correlated spectroscopy. The chemical shift of the amide and C-alpha protons are found to vary with temperature but in opposite directions, except the C-alpha proton of the terminal tyrosine residue. This behavior has been explained by the shifting of equilibrium between the zwitterionic and neutral forms of the [D-Ala2]-leucine enkephalin and probably conformational changes accompanying temperature variation. The low values of the temperature coefficients of leucine and glycine amide protons indicate that these protons are either intramolecularly hydrogen bonded or solvent shielded. The observation of sequential cross peaks in the nuclear Overhauser effect spectra obtained at various mixing times, tau m (200-900 ms), indicate an extended backbone, which does not corroborate with the presence of a folded structure, i.e., beta-bend type structure. The estimate of interproton distances in conjunction with the low values of temperature coefficients of the leucine and glycine amide protons and vicinal coupling constants 3JHN-C alpha H have been rationalized by the predominance of two gamma-bends in the backbone conformation of [D-Ala2]-leucine enkephalin. The gamma-bend around the D-Ala residue has phi = 80 degrees and psi = 270 degrees, while the one around Phe it has phi = 285 degrees and psi = 90 degrees.  相似文献   

11.
Nuclear magnetic resonance was used to measure the hydrogen-deuterium exchange rates for individual interior amide protons in a group of small globular proteins related to the basic pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (BPTI). These proteins include two homologous proteins and seven chemical modifications of BPTI. It was previously shown that the spatial structure of BPTI is preserved in all these related proteins. The exchange rates for corresponding amide protons in the different proteins were found to vary by a factor of as much as 5 X 104. The proton exchange is correlated with the thermal stability of the proteins, i.e. the lower the denaturation temperature, the faster the NH exchange. Further evidence that the exchange of interior amide protons is promoted by global fluctuations of the protein structures comes from the observation that the order of the relative exchange rates for the individual protons is the same in all the different species. This is the third in a series of three papers on nuclear magnetic resonance studies of labile protons in BPTI-related proteins. A detailed interpretation of the data will be given in a forthcoming paper.  相似文献   

12.
K H Mayo 《Biochemistry》1985,24(14):3783-3794
When H2O-exchanged, lyophilized mouse epidermal growth factor (mEGF) is dissolved in deuterium oxide at low pH (i.e., below approximately 6.0), 13 well-resolved, amide proton resonances are observed in the downfield region of an NMR spectrum (500 MHz). Under the conditions of these experiments, the lifetimes of these amide protons in exchange for deuterons of the deuterium oxide solvent suggest that these amide protons are hydrogen-bonded, backbone amide protons. Several of these amide proton resonances show splittings (i.e., JNH alpha-CH) of approximately 8-10 Hz, indicating that their associated amide protons are in some type of beta-structure. Selective nuclear Overhauser effect (NOE) experiments performed on all amide proton resonances strongly suggest that all 13 of these backbone amide protons are part of a single-tiered beta-sheet structural domain in mEGF. Correlation of 2D NMR correlated spectroscopy data, identifying scaler coupled protons, with NOE data, identifying protons close to the irradiated amide protons, allows tentative assignment of some resonances in the NOE difference spectra to specific amino acid residues. These data allow a partial structural model of the tiered beta-sheet domain in mEGF to be postulated.  相似文献   

13.
A J Wand  H Roder  S W Englander 《Biochemistry》1986,25(5):1107-1114
The hydrogen exchange behavior of the N-terminal helical segment in horse heart cytochrome c was studied in both the reduced and the oxidized forms by use of two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance methods. The amide protons of the first six residues are not H bonded and exchange rapidly with solvent protons. The most N-terminal H-bonded groups--the amide NH of Lys-7 to Phe-10--exhibit a sharp gradient in exchange rate indicative of dynamic fraying behavior, consistent with statistical-mechanical principles. This occurs identically in both reduced and oxidized cytochrome c. In the oxidized form, residues 11-14, which form the last helical turn, all exchange with a similar rate, about one million times slower than the rate characteristic of freely exposed peptide NH, even though some are on the aqueous face of the helix and others are fully buried. These and similar observations in several other proteins appear to document local cooperative unfolding reactions as determinants of protein H exchange reactions. The N-terminal segment of cytochrome c is insensitive to the heme redox state, as in the crystallographic model, except for residues closest to the heme (Cys-14 and Ala-15), which exchange about 15-fold more slowly in the reduced form. The cytochrome c H exchange results can be further considered in terms of the conformation of the native and the transiently unfolded forms and their free energy relationships in both the reduced and the oxidized states.  相似文献   

14.
We have examined the contribution to protein stability of an interaction involving a charged hydrogen bond from an arginyl side chain (Arg67) in the serine proteinase inhibitor chymotrypsin inhibitor 2 (CI-2), by replacing this side chain with an alanyl residue by protein engineering. Using nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (NMR), we have examined the effect of this mutation on the hydrogen-deuterium exchange rates of several backbone amide protons in the native and engineered proteins at 50 degrees C. These exchange rates provide a localized probe at multiple discrete sites throughout the protein and from comparison of native and mutant exchange rates allow calculation of the difference in free energy of exchange (delta delta Gex) resulting from the mutation. The results show that for the majority of amides observed this mutation results in delta delta Gex of ca. 1.7 kcal mol-1 over the whole CI-2 molecule. However, for two relatively exposed amide protons the exchange rates are found to be far less perturbed, implying that local unfolding mechanisms predominate for these protons. Direct measurement of the stability of both proteins to denaturation by guanidinum hydrochloride shows that the interaction contributes 1.4 kcal mol-1 to the stability of the molecule. This value is comparable to those obtained from the NMR exchange measurements and indicates that the exchange processes reflect the differences in stability between the native and mutant proteins.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
The hydrogen exchange behavior of exchangeable protons in proteins can provide important information for understanding the principles of protein structure and function. The positions and exchange rates of the slowly-exchanging amide protons in sperm whale myoglobin have been mapped using 15N-1H NMR spectroscopy. The slowest-exchanging amide protons are those that are hydrogen bonded in the longest helices, including members of the B, E, and H helices. Significant protection factors were observed also in the A, C, and G helices, and for a few residues in the D and F helices. Knowledge of the identity of slowly-exchanging amide protons forms the basis for the extensive quench-flow kinetic folding experiments that have been performed for myoglobin, and gives insights into the tertiary interactions and dynamics in the protein.  相似文献   

16.
The oxidized and hydroquinone forms of synthetic 8 alpha-N-imidazolylriboflavin have been investigated by proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy at 360 MHz. Proton resonances due to the imidazole ring, isoalloxazine ring, and ribityl side chain have been assigned on the basis of two-dimensional 1H-1H correlated spectra (COSY), selective decoupling, and nuclear Overhauser effect difference spectra and by comparison of computer-simulated with experimental spectra. The effect of pH on the imidazolyl resonances shows a pKa for the unsubstituted imidazole nitrogen of 6.0 +/- 0.1 for the oxidized form and a value of 7.0 +/- 0.1 for the reduced form, in good agreement with the values obtained from oxidation-reduction potential data in a previous paper [Williamson, G., & Edmondson, D. E. (1985) Biochemistry 24, 7790-7797]. Slow exchange of the flavin 8 alpha-methylene and imidazolyl C(2) protons was observed at pH 6.1 but not at pH values below 4.0 for the oxidized form of the flavin. The reduced form, but not the oxidized form, of the flavin exhibits geminal coupling of the 8 alpha-methylene protons and of the C(1') methylene protons of the ribityl side chain. The magnetic nonequivalence of the protons of these two methylene groups is suggested to result from intermolecular association of the reduced flavin in aqueous solutions at the concentrations required for the spectral experiments.  相似文献   

17.
Two-dimensional NMR studies of the antimicrobial peptide NP-5   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
A C Bach  M E Selsted  A Pardi 《Biochemistry》1987,26(14):4389-4397
Nearly complete proton resonance assignment of the rabbit antimicrobial peptide NP-5 has been made from two-dimensional NMR data taken at a single temperature. The assignment procedure involved acquisition of phase-sensitive double-quantum-filtered correlation spectra, relayed coherence-transfer spectra, total correlation (homonuclear Hartmann-Hahn) spectra, double- and triple-quantum spectra, and nuclear Overhauser effect spectra. The combination of these complementary experiments simplified and accelerated resonance assignment of the peptide. Individual assignments were made at 20 degrees C for all amide and C alpha protons in the peptide, and for all nonlabile side-chain protons on 26 of the 33 amino acid residues in NP-5. Analysis of the proton-proton nuclear Overhauser effect connectivities, the slowly exchanging amide protons, and the proton chemical shifts in NP-5 indicates that the peptide has a stable, ordered structure in solution. These data also indicate that residues 19-29 in NP-5 are involved in an antiparallel beta-sheet that has a hairpin conformation.  相似文献   

18.
S Mansy  R S Tobias 《Biochemistry》1975,14(13):2952-2961
Raman difference spectrophotometry reveals that CH3HgII binds quantitatively to N(1) of inosine at pH 8, substituting for the proton. When N(1) is saturated, binding occurs at a second site. Measurements of the 1-H nuclear magnetic resonance spectra of both inosine and of CH3Hg-II are in agreement with the N(1) binding and indicate that the second site for mercuriation is N(7). This second binding reaction is observed to increase the rate of exchange of the C(8) hydrogen with solvent, consistent with results observed for alkylation at N(7). Coordination of the electrophilic CH3Hg-II to N(7) increases the acidity of H(8), facilitating OHminus--catalyzed proton abstraction and reprotonation by themedium. For comparison, the reaction of CH3Hg-II with [8-2-H]inosine has been studied. Displacement of the N(1) hydrogen upon mercuriation of inosine causes a significant electron delocalization into the ring, increasing the basicity of N(7), and accounting for the synergic effect in metal binding observed originally by Simpson. In contrast, 1-methylinosine interacts only slightly with CH3Hg-II at pH 8. Coordination appears to be at N(7), since H(8) again is observed to exchange rapidly with solvent protons. In acidic solution, pH less than 2, binding to inosine is almost quantitative and exclusively to N(7). The behavior of CH3Hg-II is compared with that of Pt(II) and with Ni(II), Co(II), AND Zn(II). A brief comparison is made among ultraviolet absorption spectrophotometry, nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), and Raman difference spectrophotometry for studying reactions of nucleosides and nucleotides.  相似文献   

19.
The solution structure of porcine pancreatic phospholipase A2 (124 residues, 14 kDa) has been studied by two-dimensional homonuclear 1H and two- and three-dimensional heteronuclear 15N-1H nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Backbone assignments were made for 117 of the 124 amino acids. Short-range nuclear Overhauser effect (NOE) data show three alpha-helices from residues 1-13, 40-58, and 90-109, an antiparallel beta-sheet for residues 74-85, and a small antiparallel beta-sheet between residues 25-26 and 115-116. A 15N-1H heteronuclear multiple-quantum correlation experiment was used to monitor amide proton exchange over a period of 22 h. In total, 61 amide protons showed slow or intermediate exchange, 46 of which are located in the three large helices. Helix 90-109 was found to be considerably more stable than the other helices. For the beta-sheets, four hydrogen bonds could be identified. The secondary structure of porcine PLA in solution, as deduced from NMR, is basically the same as the structure of porcine PLA in the crystalline state. Differences were found in the following regions, however. Residues 1-6 in the first alpha-helix are less structured in solution than in the crystal structure. Whereas in the crystal structure residues 24-29 are involved both in a beta-sheet with residues 115-117 and in a hairpin turn, the expected hydrogen bonds between residues 24-117 and 25-29 do not show slow exchange behavior. This and the absence of several expected NOEs imply that this region has a less well defined structure in solution. Finally, the hydrogen bond between residues 78-81, which is part of a beta-sheet, does not show slow exchange behavior.  相似文献   

20.
P Tang  J Hu  S Liachenko    Y Xu 《Biophysical journal》1999,77(2):739-746
Although it plays no clinical role in general anesthesia, gramicidin A, a transmembrane channel peptide, provides an excellent model for studying the specific interaction between volatile anesthetics and membrane proteins at the molecular level. We show here that a pair of structurally similar volatile anesthetic and nonimmobilizer (nonanesthetic), 1-chloro-1,2,2-trifluorocyclobutane (F3) and 1, 2-dichlorohexafluorocyclobutane (F6), respectively, interacts differently with the transmembrane peptide. With 400 microM gramicidin A in a vesicle suspension of 60 mM phosphatidylcholine-phosphatidylglycerol (PC/PG), the intermolecular cross-relaxation rate constants between (19)F of F3 and (1)H in the chemical shift regions for the indole and backbone amide protons were 0.0106 +/- 0.0007 (n = 12) and 0.0105 +/- 0.0014 (n = 8) s(-1), respectively. No cross-relaxation was measurable between (19)F of F6 and protons in these regions. Sodium transport study showed that with 75 microM gramicidin A in a vesicle suspension of 66 mM PC/PG, F3 increased the (23)Na apparent efflux rate constant from 149.7 +/- 7.2 of control (n = 3) to 191.7 +/- 12.2 s(-1) (n = 3), and the apparent influx rate constant from 182.1 +/- 15.4 to 222.8 +/- 21.7 s(-1) (n = 3). In contrast, F6 had no effects on either influx or efflux rate. It is concluded that the ability of general anesthetics to interact with amphipathic residues near the peptide-lipid-water interface and the inability of nonimmobilizer to do the same may represent some characteristics of anesthetic-protein interaction that are of importance to general anesthesia.  相似文献   

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