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1.
G D Henry  B D Sykes 《Biochemistry》1990,29(26):6303-6313
The coat protein of the filamentous coliphage M13 is a 50-residue polypeptide which spans the inner membrane of the Escherichia coli host upon infection. Amide hydrogen exchange kinetics have been used to probe the structure and dynamics of M13 coat protein which has been solubilized in sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) micelles. In a previous 1H nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) study [O'Neil, J. D. J., & Sykes, B. D. (1988) Biochemistry 27, 2753-2762], multiple exponential analysis of the unresolved amide proton envelope revealed the existence of two slow "kinetic sets" containing a total of about 30 protons. The slower set (15-20 amides) originates from the hydrophobic membrane-spanning region and exchanges at least 10(5)-fold slower than the unstructured, non-H-bonded model polypeptide poly(DL-alanine). Herein we use 15N NMR spectroscopy of biosynthetically labeled coat protein to follow individual, assigned, slowly exchanging amides in or near the hydrophobic segment. The INEPT (insensitive nucleus enhancement by polarization transfer) experiment [Morris, G. A., & Freeman, R. (1979) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 101, 760-762] can be used to transfer magnetization to the 15N nucleus from a coupled proton; when 15N-labeled protonated protein is dissolved in 2H2O, the INEPT signal disappears with time as the amide protons are replaced by solvent deuterons. Amide hydrogen exchange is catalyzed by both H+ and OH- ions. Base catalysis is significantly more effective, resulting in a characteristic minimum rate in model peptides at pH approximately equal to 3. Rate versus pH profiles have been obtained by using the INEPT experiment for the amides of leucine-14, leucine-41, tyrosine-21, tyrosine-24, and valines-29, -30, -31, and -33 in M13 coat protein. The valine residues exchange most slowly and at very similar rates, showing an apparent 10(6)-fold retardation over poly(DL-alanine). A substantial basic shift in the pH of the minimum rate (up to 1.5 pH units) was also observed for some residues. Possible reasons for the shift include accumulation of catalytic H+ ions at the negatively charged micelle surface or destabilization of the negatively charged transition state of the base-catalyzed reaction by either charge or hydrophobic effects within the micelle. The time-dependent exchange-out experiment is suitable for slow exchange rates (kex), i.e., less than (1-2) x 10(-4) s-1.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
Uchida K  Markley JL  Kainosho M 《Biochemistry》2005,44(35):11811-11820
A novel method for monitoring proton-deuteron (H/D) exchange at backbone amides is based on the observation of H/D isotope effects on the (13)C NMR signals from peptide carbonyls. The line shape of the carbonyl (13)C(i) signal is influenced by differential H/D occupancy at the two adjacent amides: the H(N)(i)(+1) (beta site) and the H(N)(i) (gamma site). At a carbon frequency of 75.4 MHz, the H --> D isotope shifts on the (13)C signal are about 5-7 Hz for exchange at the beta site and 2 Hz or less for exchange at the gamma site. Because the effects at the two sites are additive, the time dependence of the line shape of a particular carbonyl resonance can report not only the exchange rates at the individual sites but also the level of dual exchange. Therefore, the data can be analyzed to determine the rate (k(c)) and degree of correlated exchange (X(betagamma)) at the two sites. We have applied this approach to the investigation of the pH dependence of hydrogen exchange at several adjacent residues in Streptomyces subtilisin inhibitor (SSI). Two selectively labeled SSI proteins were produced: one with selective (13)C' labeling at all valyl residues and one with selective (13)C' labeling at all leucyl residues. This permitted the direct observation by one-dimensional (13)C NMR of selected carbonyl signals from residues with slowly exchanging amides at the i and i + 1 positions. The residues investigated were located in an alpha helix and in a five-stranded antiparallel beta sheet. Samples of the two labeled proteins were prepared at various pH values, and (13)C NMR spectra were collected at 50 degrees C prior to and at various times after transferring the sample from H(2)O to (2)H(2)O. Most of the slowly exchanging amides studied were intramolecular hydrogen-bond donors. In agreement with prior studies, the results indicated that the exchange rates of the amide hydrogens in proteins are governed not only by hydrogen bonding but also by other factors. For example, the amide hydrogen of Thr34 exchanges rapidly even though it is an intramolecular hydrogen-bond donor. Over nearly the whole pH range studied, the apparent rates of uncorrelated exchange (k(beta) and k(gamma)) were proportional to [OH(-)] and the apparent rates of correlated exchange at two adjacent sites (k(c)) were roughly proportional to [OH(-)](2). This enabled us to extract the pH-independent exchange rates (k(beta) degrees , k(gamma) degrees , and k(c) degrees ). In all cases in which correlated exchange could be measured, the observed sigmoidal pH dependence of X(betagamma) could be replicated roughly from the derived pH-independent rates.  相似文献   

3.
J D O'Neil  B D Sykes 《Biochemistry》1988,27(8):2753-2762
The coat protein of bacteriophage M13 is inserted into the inner membrane of Escherichia coli where it exists as an integral membrane protein during the reproductive cycle of the phage. The protein sequence consists of a highly hydrophobic 19-residue central segment flanked by an acidic 20-residue N-terminus and a basic 11-residue C-terminus. We have measured backbone amide hydrogen exchange of the protein solubilized in perdeuteriated sodium dodecyl sulfate using 1H nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. Direct proton exchange-out measurements in D2O at 24 degrees C were used to follow the exchange of the slowest amides in the protein. Multiple exponential fitting of the exchange data showed that these amides (29 +/- 3 at pH 4.5) exchanged in two kinetic sets with exchange rates [(1.2 +/- 0.4) x 10(-4) s-1 and (4.1 +/- 1.2) x 10(-7) s-1] that differed by more than 100-fold, the slower kinetic set being retarded 10(5)-fold relative to poly(DL-alanine). The exchange rate constant for the slowest set of amides exhibited an unusual pD dependence, being proportional to [OD-]1/2. It is shown that this is an artifact of the multiple exponential fitting of the data, and a new method of presentation of exchange data as a function of pD is introduced. Steady-state saturation-transfer techniques were also used to measure exchange. These methods showed that 15-20 amides in the protein are very stable at 55 degrees C and that about 30 amides have exchange rates retarded by at least 10(5)-fold at 24 degrees C. Saturation-transfer studies also showed that the pH dependence of exchange in the hydrophilic termini was unusual. This is explained as being due to long-range electrostatic effects arising both from the protein itself and also from the anionic detergent molecules. Hydrogen exchange studies on the products of proteinase K digestion of the protein localized the slowly exchanging amides to the hydrophobic core of the protein. Relaxation [Henry, G.D., Weiner, J.H., & Sykes, B.D. (1986) Biochemistry 25, 590-598] and solid-state NMR experiments [Leo, G.C., Colnago, L.A., Valentine, K.G., & Opella, S.J. (1987) Biochemistry 26, 854-862] have previously shown that the majority of the protein backbone is rigid on the picosecond to microsecond time scale, except for the extreme ends of the molecule which are mobile.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
G D Henry  B D Sykes 《Biochemistry》1992,31(23):5284-5297
The major coat protein of the filamentous coliphage M13 is a 50-residue integral membrane protein. Detergent-solubilized M13 coat protein is a promising candidate for structure determination by nuclear magnetic resonance methods as the protein can be prepared in large quantities and the protein-containing micelle is reasonably small. Under the conditions of our experiments, SDS-bound coat protein exists as a dimer with an apparent molecular weight of 27,000. Broad lines and poor resolution in the 1H spectrum have led us to adopt an 15N-directed approach, in which the coat protein was labeled both uniformly with 15N and selectively with [alpha-15N]alanine, -glycine, -valine, -leucine, -isoleucine, phenylalanine, -lysine, -tyrosine, and -methionine. Nitrogen resonances were assigned as far as possible using carboxypeptidase digestion, double-labeling, and an independent knowledge of the amide proton exchange rates determined from neighboring assigned 13C-labeled carbonyl carbons. 1H/15N heteronuclear multiple quantum coherence (HMQC) spectroscopy of both uniform and site-selectively-labeled proteins subsequently correlated amide nitrogen with amide proton chemical shifts, and the assignments were completed sequentially from homonuclear NOESY and HMQC-NOESY spectra. The most slowly exchanging amide protons were shown to occur in a continuous stretch extending from methionine-28 to phenylalanine-42. This sequence includes most of the resonances of the hydrophobic core, although it is shifted toward the C-terminal end of the protein. Strong NH to NH (i,i+1) nuclear Overhauser enhancements are a feature of the coat protein, which appears to be largely helical. Between 20 and 25 residues give rise to 2 juxtaposed resonances which can be seen clearly in the HMQC spectrum of uniform 15N-labeled coat protein. These residues are concentrated in a region extending from the beginning of the membrane-spanning sequence through to the disordered region near the C-terminus. We propose that dodecyl sulfate-bound M13 coat protein consists of two independent domains, an N-terminal helix which is in a state of moderately fast dynamic flux and a long, stable, C-terminal membrane-spanning helix, which undergoes extensive interactions with a second monomer. Amide 1H chemical shifts are consistent with this picture; in addition, a marked periodicity is observed at the C-terminal end of the molecule.  相似文献   

5.
E Tüchsen  P E Hansen 《Biochemistry》1988,27(23):8568-8576
The carbonyl region of the natural abundance 13C nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectrum of basic pancreatic trypsin inhibitor is examined, and 65 of the 66 expected signals are characterized at varying pH and temperature. Assignments are reported for over two-thirds of the signals, including those of all buried backbone amide groups with slow proton exchange and all side-chain carbonyl groups. This is the first extensively assigned carbonyl spectrum for any protein. A method for carbonyl resonance assignments utilizing amide proton exchange and isotope effects on nuclear shielding is described in detail. The assignments are made by establishing kinetic correlation between effects of amide proton exchange observed in the carbonyl 13C region with development of isotope effects and in the amide proton region with disappearance of preassigned resonances. Several aspects of protein structure and dynamics in solution may be investigated by carbonyl 13C NMR spectroscopy. Some effects of side-chain primary amide group hydrolysis are described. The main interest is on information about intramolecular hydrogen-bond energies and changes in the protein due to amino acid replacements by chemical modification or genetic engineering.  相似文献   

6.
The 1H, 13C, and 15N high field nuclear magnetic resonance spectra of the cyclic peptide viomycin have been fully assigned using homo- and heteronuclear double resonance experiments and pH effects. In addition it is shown how the two- and three-bond H-D isotope effects upon carbonyl resonances may assist in their assignment. The resistance to exchange with solvent water of the amide proton involved in the transannular hydrogen bond is observed directly in the 1H spectra, via the isotope effect on a carbonyl resonance in the 13C spectra, and via the one-bond 1H couppling in the 15N spectra.  相似文献   

7.
The acyl carrier protein (ACP) of Escherichia coli is a 77-amino acid, highly negatively charged three-helix protein that plays a central role in fatty acid biosynthesis. Previous NMR studies have suggested the presence of multiple conformations and marginally stable secondary structural elements. The stability of these elements is now examined by monitoring amide exchange in apo-ACP using NMR-based methods. Because ACP exhibits many rapid exchange rates, application of traditional isotope exchange methods is difficult. In one approach, heteronuclear correlation experiments with pulsed field-gradient coherence selection have reduced the time needed to collect two-dimensional 1H-15N correlation spectra to the point where measurement of exchange of amide protons for deuterium on the timescale of minutes can be made. In another approach, water proton selective inversion-exchange experiments were performed to estimate the exchange rates of protons exchanging on timescales of less than a second. Backbone amide protons in the region of helix II were found to exchange significantly more rapidly than those in helices I and III, consistent with earlier structural models suggesting a dynamic disruption of the second helix. Highly protected amides occur on faces of the helices that may pack into a hydrophobic core present in a partially disrupted state.  相似文献   

8.
C Sanders  B D Sykes  L B Smillie 《Biochemistry》1988,27(18):7000-7008
The side chain and backbone mobilities of chicken gizzard tropomyosin (TM) and its nonpolymerizable derivative have been investigated by H NMR spectroscopy and amide hydrogen exchange kinetics and compared to those of rabbit cardiac TM and its nonpolymerizable derivative. Analysis of the 300-MHz H NMR spectra of native chicken gizzard and rabbit cardiac TMs and their nonpolymerizable derivatives showed that the line widths of the aromatic and histidine residues were within a factor of 2 for all four proteins, demonstrating that the side chain mobility of these residues is similar in the different TMs. Direct proton exchange-out kinetics were determined in D2O in the pD range 1.5-3.0 at 25 degrees C by H NMR spectroscopy. Multiple exponential fitting of the exchange data indicated the presence in gizzard TM of at least three kinetically distinct classes of amide hydrogens at pD 1.7 with average population sizes of 147, 74, and 61, whose rates were retarded by a factor of 10, 10(3), and 10(5), respectively, relative to the random-coil peptide poly(DL-alanine). Measurement of the direct exchange kinetics of both rabbit cardiac and nonpolymerizable gizzard TMs showed that their rate constants and population sizes were within experimental error of those for the gizzard protein, except that the fast exchanging class for cardiac TM was increased in size while that of the nonpolymerizable gizzard TM was reduced, relative to that for gizzard TM. Comparison of the exchange-out kinetics for the cardiac and gizzard proteins at pH 2.0 and 55 degrees C, where only the two slowly exchanging amide hydrogen sets are measured, again demonstrated the similarity of their kinetic parameters.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
Deuterium isotope effects on carbonyl 13C magnetic shielding were measured for the backbone carbonyl groups in BPTI (basic pancreatic trypsin inhibitor), and interpreted as a measure of hydrogen bond energies. The effects originate from peptide amide proton deuterium substitution and were observed on carbonyl carbons separated by two or three covalent bonds from the amide H/D. Two-bond isotope effects depend on the energy of the hydrogen bond donated by NH/D. Calibration of the effect with model compound data leads to hydrogen bond enthalpies less than 4.7 kcal/mol. Isotope effects over three bonds from the amide H/D to the carbonyl carbon of the same amino acid residue are observed for seven carbonyl resonances in BPTI. The three-bond isotope effects are highly related to the various backbone conformations. The largest effects are observed for residues with an approximate syn- periplanar conformation of the H-N-C alpha-C = O atoms, as realized for many residues in the BPTI antiparallel beta-sheet. The residues that show measurable three-bond effects have unusually short distances between H and O. The size of this effect decreases rapidly with increased O..H distance in the open five-membered ring. This observation suggests appreciable interactions in these rings.  相似文献   

10.
Natural abundance 13C and high field 1H NMR spectroscopy are used to characterize the major coat protein of the filamentous bacteriophage fd in sodium dodecyl sulfate micelles. Chemical shift dispersion of protein resonances, slow and differential exchange rates of amide protons, and relaxation parameters of the alpha carbons of the protein indicate that the detergent solubilized coat protein has a stable native conformation. The structure of the coat protein in micelles differs from that found for typical globular proteins in solution in that parts of the peptide backbone exhibit rapid segmental motion.  相似文献   

11.
The acid and base catalytic rate constants, kH, obs and kOH, obs and the pH at the minimum rate, pHmin, of 25 rapidly exchanging protons in bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor have been determined. Here we report the labeling procedure giving 1H nuclear magnetic resonance spectral resolution of seven additional rapidly exchanging NH protons and the pH dependence of their chemical shifts. Values of kH,obs kOH,obs and pHmin are given for Ala16, Gly28 and Arg53 NH groups, the only backbone amide protons with static accessibility of more than zero in the crystal structure not previously reports, and for Gly56 NH, buried at the C terminus of an alpha-helix. All four protons reported here have pH min greater than or equal to 3. Conclusions of the previous study predict that peptide protons with pHmin higher than those of model compounds have greater static accessibility of the peptide O than of the peptide N atom. The locations in the crystal structure of the four NH groups whose exchange rates are reported here are in qualitative agreement with these predictions. The ionic strength dependence of Ala16 at pH 5.5 shows a sharp increase in the exchange rate with decreasing salt concentration, as expected for base-catalyzed exchange in a positive electrostatic field.  相似文献   

12.
The synthetic ketone peptide analogue of pepstatin, isovaleryl-L-valyl-[3-13C]-(3-oxo-4S)-amino-6-methylheptanoyl-L-al anyl-isoamylamide is a strong inhibitor of aspartyl proteases. When the peptide is added to porcine pepsin in H2O at pH 5.1, the 13C NMR chemical shift of the ketone carbon moves from 208 ppm for the inhibitor in solution to 99.07 ppm when bound to the enzyme active site. In 2H2O the bound shift is 98.71 ppm, 0.36 ppm upfield. For the analogous experiment contrasting H216O and H218O, the 13C chemical shift was 0.05 ppm to higher field for the heavier isotope. These data show that water, and not an enzyme nucleophile, adds to the peptide carbonyl to yield a tetrahedral diol adduct in the enzyme-catalyzed reaction, and provide a method for differentiating between covalent and non-covalent mechanisms.  相似文献   

13.
The exchange reaction of the peptide NH protons of a microbial protease inhibitor (Streptomyces subtilisin inhibitor) with deuterium atoms in 2H2O (p2H 6.8) has been studied by proton magnetic resonance in the temperature range 56-71 degrees C. Both slowly and rapidly exchanging processes have been observed. The number of slowly exchanging protons is estimated to be 25 +/- 2 per subunit of the protein molecule. The decay of the slowly exchanging proton signals follows a single time-exponential function at each temperature. The observed first-order rate constants have been analyzed to give the denaturated fraction of the protein as a function of temperature with a consequent enthalpy (56 kcal/mol) and an entropy (137 cal/degree per mol) of denaturation. The results indicate the high conformational stability of this protein against heat denaturation.  相似文献   

14.
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   

15.
Experiments were carried out to measure the effect of concentrations of glycerol on H-exchange (HX) rates by using myoglobin as a test protein. Concentrated glycerol has only a small slowing effect on the HX kinetics of freely exposed amides, studied in a small molecule model (acetamide). Larger effects occur in structured proteins. The effect of solvent glycerol on different parts of the HX curve of myoglobin was studied by use of a selective "kinetic labeling" approach. Concentrated glycerol exerts an apparently reverse effect on protein H exchange; the faster exchanging "surface" protons are least affected, while the slower and slower amide NH is further slowed by larger and larger factors. These results seem inconsistent with solvent penetration models which generally visualize slower and slower protons as being placed, and undergoing exchange, farther and farther from the solvent-protein interface. On the other hand, the results are as expected for the local unfolding model for protein H exchange since concentrated glycerol is known to stabilize proteins against unfolding. In the local unfolding model, slower exchanging protons are released by way of higher energy and therefore generally larger, unfolding reactions. Larger unfoldings must be more inhibited by the glycerol effect.  相似文献   

16.
Phospholamban is a 52-amino acid residue membrane protein that regulates Ca(2+)-ATPase activity in the sarcoplasmic reticulum of cardiac muscle cells. The hydrophobic C-terminal 28 amino acid fragment of phospholamban (hPLB) anchors the protein in the membrane and may form part of a Ca(2+)-selective ion channel. We have used polarized attenuated total reflection-Fourier transform infrared (ATR-FTIR) spectroscopy along with site-directed isotope labeling to probe the local structure of hPLB. The frequency and dichroism of the amide I and II bands appearing at 1658 cm-1 and 1544 cm-1, respectively, show that dehydrated and hydrated hPLB reconstituted into dimyristoylphosphatidycholine bilayer membranes is predominantly alpha-helical and has a net transmembrane orientation. Specific local secondary structure of hPLB was probed by incorporating 13C at two positions in the protein backbone. A small band seen near 1614 cm-1 is assigned to the amide I mode of the 13C-labeled amide carbonyl group(s). The frequency and dichroism of this band indicate that residues 39 and 46 are alpha-helical, with an axial orientation that is approximately 30 degrees relative to the membrane normal. Upon exposure to 2H2O (D2O), 30% of the peptide amide groups in hPLB undergo a slow deuterium/hydrogen exchange. The remainder of the protein, including the peptide groups of Leu-39 and Leu-42, appear inaccessible to exchange, indicating that most of the hPLB fragment is embedded in the lipid bilayer. By extending spectroscopic characterization of PLB to include hydrated, deuterated as well as site-directed isotope-labeled hPLB films, our results strongly support models of PLB that predict the existence of an alpha-helical hydrophobic region spanning the membrane domain.  相似文献   

17.
G D Henry  J H Weiner  B D Sykes 《Biochemistry》1987,26(12):3619-3626
The major coat protein of the filamentous bacteriophage M13 is a 50-residue amphiphilic polypeptide which is inserted, as an integral membrane-spanning protein, in the inner membrane of the Escherichia coli host during infection. 13C was incorporated biosynthetically into a total of 23 of the peptide carbonyls using labeled amino acids (alanine, glycine, lysine, phenylalanine, and proline). The structure and dynamics of carbonyl-labeled M13 coat protein were monitored by 13C nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. Assignment of many resonances was achieved by using protease digestion, pH titration, or labeling of the peptide bond with both 13C and 15N. The carbonyl region of the natural-abundance 13C NMR spectrum of M13 coat protein in sodium dodecyl sulfate solution shows approximately eight backbone carbonyl resonances with line widths much narrower than the rest. Three of these more mobile residues correspond to assigned peaks (glycine-3, lysine-48, and alanine-49) in the individual amino acid spectra, and another almost certainly arises from glutamic acid-2. A ninth residue, alanine-1, also gives rise to a very narrow carbonyl resonance if the pH is well above or below the pKa of the terminal amino group. These data suggest that only about four residues at either end of the protein experience large-amplitude spatial fluctuations; the rest of the molecule is essentially rigid on the time scale of the overall rotational tumbling of the protein-detergent complex. The relative exposure of different regions of detergent-bound protein was monitored by limited digestion with proteinase K.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
K Akasaka  T Inoue  H Hatano  C K Woodward 《Biochemistry》1985,24(12):2973-2979
The hydrogen isotope exchange kinetics of the 10 slowest exchanging resonances in the 1H NMR spectrum of Streptomyces subtilisin inhibitor (SSI) have been determined at pH 7-11 and 30-60 degrees C. These resonances are assigned to peptide amide protons in the beta-sheet core that comprises the extensive protein-protein interface of the tightly bound SSI dimer. The core protons are atypical in that their exchange rates are orders of magnitude slower than those for all other SSI protons. When they do exchange at temperatures greater than 50 degrees C, they do so as a set and with a very high temperature coefficient. The pH dependence of the exchange rate constants is also atypical. Exchange rates are approximately first order in hydroxyl ion dependence at pH less than 8.5 and greater than 9.5 and pH independent between pH 8.5 and 9.5. The pH dependence and temperature dependence of the SSI proton exchange rates are interpreted by the two-process model [Woodward, C. K., & Hilton, B. D. (1980) Biophys. J. 32, 561-575]. The results suggest that in the average solution structure of SSI, an unusual mobility of secondary structural elements at the protein surface is, in a sense, compensated by an unusual rigidity and inaccessibility of the beta-sheet core at the dimer interface.  相似文献   

20.
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   

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