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1.
Rui L  Pochapsky SS  Pochapsky TC 《Biochemistry》2006,45(12):3887-3897
Structural perturbations in cytochrome P450cam (CYP101) induced by the soluble fragment of cytochrome b5, a nonphysiological effector of CYP101, were investigated by NMR spectroscopy and compared with the perturbations induced by the physiological reductant and effector putidaredoxin (Pdx). Chemical shifts of perdeuterated [U-15N]CYP101 backbone amide (NH) resonances were monitored as a function of cytochrome b5 concentration by 1H-15N TROSY-HSQC experiments. The association of cytochrome b5 with the reduced CYP101-camphor-carbon monoxide complex (CYP-S-CO) perturbs many of the same resonances that Pdx does, including regions of the CYP101 molecule implicated in substrate access and orientation. The perturbations are smaller in magnitude than those observed with Pdx(r) due to a lower binding affinity (a Kd of 13 +/- 3 mM, for the reduced cytochrome b5-CYP-S-CO complex compared to a Kd of 26 +/- 12 microM for the Pdx-CYP-S-CO complex). The results are in accord with our previous suggestion that the observed perturbations are related to effector activity and support the proposal that the primary role of the effector is to populate the active conformation of CYP101 to prevent uncoupling [Pochapsky, S. S., et al. (2003) Biochemistry 42, 5649-5656]. A titratable perturbation is observed at the 1H resonance of the 8-CH3 group of CYP101-bound camphor upon addition of cytochrome b5, a phenomenon also associated with the formation of the CYP101 x Pdx complex, albeit with larger perturbations [Wei, J. Y., et al. (2005) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 127, 6974-6976]. The effector activity of the particular rat cytochrome b5 construct used for NMR studies was confirmed by monitoring the enzymatic turnover that yielded 5-exo-hydroxycamphor using gas chromatography and mass spectrometry. Finally, the common features of the perturbations observed in the NMR spectra of the two complexes are discussed, and their relevance to effector activity is considered.  相似文献   

2.
The backbone dynamics of uniformly 15N-labeled reduced and oxidized putidaredoxin (Pdx) have been studied by 2D 15N NMR relaxation measurements. 15N T1 and T2 values and 1H-15N NOEs have been measured for the diamagnetic region of the protein. These data were analyzed by using a model-free dynamics formalism to determine the generalized order parameters (S2), the effective correlation time for internal motions (tau e), and the 15N exchange broadening contributions (Rex) for each residue, as well as the overall correlation time (tau(m)). Order parameters for the reduced Pdx are generally higher than for the oxidized Pdx, and there is increased mobility on the microsecond to millisecond time scale for the oxidized Pdx, in comparison with the reduced Pdx. These results clearly indicate that the oxidized protein exhibits higher mobility than the reduced one, which is in agreement with the recently published redox-dependent dynamics studied by amide proton exchange. In addition, we observed very high T1/T2 ratios for residues 33 and 34, giving rise to a large Rex contribution. Residue 34 is believed to be involved in the binding of Pdx to cytochrome P450cam (CYP101). The differences in the backbone dynamics are discussed in relation to the oxidation states of Pdx, and their impact on electron transfer. The entropy change occurring on oxidation of reduced Pdx has been calculated from the order parameters of the two forms.  相似文献   

3.
Pochapsky TC  Jain NU  Kuti M  Lyons TA  Heymont J 《Biochemistry》1999,38(15):4681-4690
A refined model for the solution structure of oxidized putidaredoxin (Pdxo), a Cys4Fe2S2 ferredoxin, has been determined. A previous structure (Pochapsky et al. (1994) Biochemistry 33, 6424-6432; PDB entry ) was calculated using the results of homonuclear two-dimensional NMR experiments. New data has made it possible to calculate a refinement of the original Pdxo solution structure. First, essentially complete assignments for diamagnetic 15N and 13C resonances of Pdxo have been made using multidimensional NMR methods, and 15N- and 13C-resolved NOESY experiments have permitted the identification of many new NOE restraints for structural calculations. Stereospecific assignments for leucine and valine CH3 resonances were made using biosynthetically directed fractional 13C labeling, improving the precision of NOE restraints involving these residues. Backbone dihedral angle restraints have been obtained using a combination of two-dimensional J-modulated 15N,1H HSQC and 3D (HN)CO(CO)NH experiments. Second, the solution structure of a diamagnetic form of Pdx, that of the C85S variant of gallium putidaredoxin, in which a nonligand Cys is replaced by Ser, has been determined (Pochapsky et al. (1998) J. Biomol. NMR 12, 407-415), providing information concerning structural features not observable in the native ferredoxin due to paramagnetism. Third, a crystal structure of a closely related ferredoxin, bovine adrenodoxin, has been published (Müller et al. (1998) Structure 6, 269-280). This structure has been used to model the metal binding site structure in Pdx. A family of fourteen structures is presented that exhibits an rmsd of 0.51 A for backbone heavy atoms and 0.83 A for all heavy atoms. Exclusion of the modeled metal binding loop region reduces overall the rmsd to 0.30 A for backbone atoms and 0.71 A for all heavy atoms.  相似文献   

4.
Pochapsky TC  Kostic M  Jain N  Pejchal R 《Biochemistry》2001,40(19):5602-5614
Putidaredoxin (Pdx), a Cys4Fe2S2 ferredoxin from Pseudomonas putida, exhibits redox-dependent binding to its physiological redox partner, cytochrome P450(cam) (CYP101), with the reduced form of Pdx (Pdx(r)) binding with greater affinity to oxidized camphor-bound CYP101 than the oxidized form, Pdx(o). It has been previously shown that Pdx(o) is more dynamic than Pdx(r) on all accessible time scales, and it has been proposed that Pdx(r) samples only a fraction of the conformational substates populated by Pdx(o) on a time average. It is postulated that the ensemble subset populated by Pdx(r) is the same subset that binds CYP101, providing a mechanism for coupling the Pdx oxidation state to binding affinity for CYP101. Evidence from a variety of sources, including redox-dependent shifts of 15N and 13C resonances, indicates that the metal cluster binding loop of Pdx is the primary determinant of redox-dependent conformational selection. Patterns of paramagnetic effects suggest that the metal cluster binding loop contracts around the metal cluster upon reduction, possibly due to the strengthening of hydrogen bonds between the sulfur atoms of the metal cluster and the surrounding polypeptide NH and OH groups. Effects of this perturbation are then transmitted mechanically to other affected regions of the protein. A specific mutation has been introduced into the metal binding loop of Pdx, G40N, that slows conformational exchange sufficiently that the ensemble of conformational substates in Pdx(o) are directly observable as severe broadenings or splittings in affected NMR resonances. Many of the residues most affected by the mutation also show significant exchange contributions to 15N T(2) relaxation in wild-type Pdx(o). As predicted, G40N Pdx(r) shows a collapse of many of these multiplets and broadened lines to form much sharper resonances that are essentially identical to those observed in wild-type Pdx(r), indicating that Pdx(r) occupies fewer conformational substates than does Pdx(o). This is the first direct observation of such redox-dependent ensembles at slow exchange on the chemical shift time scale. These results confirm that conformational selection within the Fe2S2 cluster binding loop is the primary source of redox-dependent changes in protein dynamics in Pdx.  相似文献   

5.
Pochapsky SS  Pochapsky TC  Wei JW 《Biochemistry》2003,42(19):5649-5656
The camphor hydroxylase cytochrome P450(cam) (CYP101) catalyzes the 5-exo hydroxylation of camphor in the first step of camphor catabolism by Pseudomonas putida. CYP101 forms a specific electron transfer complex with its physiological reductant, the Cys(4)Fe(2)S(2) ferredoxin putidaredoxin (Pdx). Pdx, along with other proteins and small molecules, has also been shown to be an effector for turnover by CYP101. Multidimensional nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) techniques have been used to make extensive sequential (1)H, (15)N, and (13)C resonance assignments in CYP101 that permit a more complete characterization of the complex formed by CYP101 and Pdx. NMR-detected perturbations in CYP101 upon Pdx binding encompass regions of the CYP101 remote from the putative Pdx binding site, including in particular a region of the CYP101 molecule that has been implicated in substrate access to the active site via dynamical processes. A model for effector activity is proposed in which the primary role of the effector is to prevent uncoupling (formation of reduced oxo species without formation of hydroxycamphor) by enforcing conformations of CYP101 that prevent loss of substrate and/or intermediates prior to turnover. A secondary role could also be to enforce conformations that permit efficient proton transfer into the active site for coupled proton/electron transfer.  相似文献   

6.
Jain NU  Tjioe E  Savidor A  Boulie J 《Biochemistry》2005,44(25):9067-9078
Structural differences in the [2Fe-2S] ferredoxin, putidaredoxin (Pdx), from the camphor hydroxylation pathway of Pseudomonas putida have been investigated as a function of oxidation state of the iron cluster. Pdx is involved in biological electron transfer to cytochrome P450(cam) (CYP101). Redox-dependent differences have been observed previously for Pdx in terms of binding affinities to CYP101, NMR spectral differences, and dynamic properties. To further characterize these differences, structure refinement of both oxidized and reduced Pdx has been carried out using a hybrid approach utilizing paramagnetic distance restraints and NMR orientational restraints in the form of backbone (15)N residual dipolar couplings. Use of these new restraints has improved the structure of oxidized Pdx considerably over the earlier solution NMR structure without RDC restraints, with the new structure now much closer in overall fold to the recently published X-ray crystal structures. We now observe better defined relative orientations of the major secondary structure elements as also of the conformation of the metal binding loop region. Extension of this approach to structure calculation of reduced Pdx has identified structural differences that are primarily localized for residues in the C-terminal interaction domain consisting of the functionally important residue Trp 106 and regions near the metal binding loop in Pdx. These redox-dependent structural differences in Pdx correlate to dynamic changes observed before and may be linked to differences in binding and electron transfer properties between oxidized and reduced Pdx.  相似文献   

7.
The camphor monoxygenase cytochrome P450cam (CYP101) requires potassium ion (K+) to drive formation of the characteristic high-spin state of the heme Fe+3 upon substrate binding. Amide 1H, 15N correlations in perdeuterated [U-15N] CYP101 were monitored as a function of K+ concentration by 2D-TROSY-HSQC in both camphor-bound oxidized (CYP-S) and camphor- and CO-bound reduced CYP101 (CYP-S-CO). In both forms, K+-induced spectral perturbations are detected in the vicinity of the K+ binding site proposed from crystallographic structures, but are larger and more widespread structurally in CYP-S than in CYP-S-CO. In CYP-S-CO, K+-induced perturbations occur primarily near the proposed K+ binding site in the B-B' loop and B' helix, which are also perturbed by binding of effector, putidaredoxin (Pdx). The spectral effects of K+ binding in CYP-S-CO oppose those observed upon Pdxr titration. However, Pdxr titration of CYP-S-CO in the absence of K+ results in multiple conformations. The spin-state equilibrium in the L358P mutant of CYP101 is more sensitive to K+ concentration than WT CYP101, consistent with a hypothesis that L358P preferentially populates conformations enforced by Pdx binding in WT CYP101. Thallium(I), a K+ mimic, minimizes the effects of Pdx titration on the NMR spectrum of CYP-S-CO, but is competent to replace K+ in driving the formation of high-spin CYP-S. These observations suggest that the role of K+ is to stabilize conformers of CYP-S that drive the spin-state change prior to the first electron transfer, and that K+ stabilizes the CYP-S-CO conformer that interacts with Pdx. However, upon binding of Pdx, further conformational changes occur that disfavor K+ binding.  相似文献   

8.
Backbone dynamics of the camphor monoxygenase cytochrome P450(cam) (CYP101) as a function of oxidation/ligation state of the heme iron were investigated via hydrogen/deuterium exchange (H/D exchange) as monitored by mass spectrometry. Main chain amide NH hydrogens can exchange readily with solvent and the rate of this exchange depends upon, among other things, dynamic fluctuations in local structural elements. A fluxional region of the polypeptide will exchange more quickly with solvent than one that is more constrained. In most regions of the enzyme, exchange rates were similar between oxidized high-spin camphor-bound and reduced camphor- and CO-bound CYP101 (CYP-S and CYP-S-CO, respectively). However, in regions of the protein that have previously been implicated in substrate access by structural and molecular dynamics investigations, the reduced enzyme shows significantly slower exchange rates than the oxidized CYP-S. This observation corresponds to increased flexibility of the oxidized enzyme relative to the reduced form. Structural features previously found to be perturbed in CYP-S-CO upon binding of the biologically relevant effector and reductant putidaredoxin (Pdx) as determined by nuclear magnetic resonance are also more protected from exchange in the reduced state. To our knowledge, this study represents the first experimental investigation of backbone dynamics within the P450 family using this methodology.  相似文献   

9.
The 58-kDa complex formed between the [2Fe-2S] ferredoxin, putidaredoxin (Pdx), and cytochrome P450cam (CYP101) from the bacterium Pseudomonas putida has been investigated by high-resolution solution NMR spectroscopy. Pdx serves as both the physiological reductant and effector for CYP101 in the enzymatic reaction involving conversion of substrate camphor to 5-exo-hydroxycamphor. In order to obtain an experimental structure for the oxidized Pdx-CYP101 complex, a combined approach using orientational data on the two proteins derived from residual dipolar couplings and distance restraints from site-specific spin labeling of Pdx has been applied. Spectral changes for residues in and near the paramagnetic metal cluster region of Pdx in complex with CYP101 have also been mapped for the first time using 15N and 13C NMR spectroscopy, leading to direct identification of the residues strongly affected by CYP101 binding. The new NMR structure of the Pdx-CYP101 complex agrees well with results from previous mutagenesis and biophysical studies involving residues at the binding interface such as formation of a salt bridge between Asp38 of Pdx and Arg112 of CYP101, while at the same time identifying key features different from those of earlier modeling studies. Analysis of the binding interface of the complex reveals that the side chain of Trp106, the C-terminal residue of Pdx and critical for binding to CYP101, is located across from the heme-binding loop of CYP101 and forms non-polar contacts with several residues in the vicinity of the heme group on CYP101, pointing to a potentially important role in complex formation.  相似文献   

10.
As a necessary first step in the use of heteronuclear correlated spectra to obtain high resolution solution structures of the protein, assignment of the 15N NMR spectra of reduced and oxidized Escherichia coli thioredoxin (Mr 12,000) uniformly labeled with 15N has been performed. The 15N chemical shifts of backbone amide nitrogen atoms have been determined for both oxidation states of thioredoxin using 15N-1H correlated and two-dimensional heteronuclear single-quantum coherence (HSQC) TOCSY and NOESY spectra. The backbone assignments are complete, except for the proline imide nitrogen resonances and include Gly33, whose amide proton resonance is difficult to observe in homonuclear 1H spectra. The differences in the 15N chemical shift between oxidized and reduced thioredoxin, which occur mainly in the vicinity of the two active site cysteines, including residues distant in the amino acid sequence which form a hydrophobic surface close to the active site, are consistent with the differences observed for proton chemical shifts in earlier work on thioredoxin.  相似文献   

11.
Mo H  Pochapsky SS  Pochapsky TC 《Biochemistry》1999,38(17):5666-5675
Terpredoxin (Tdx) is a 105-residue bacterial ferredoxin consisting of a single polypeptide chain and a single Fe2S2 prosthetic group. Tdx was first identified in a strain of Pseudomonas sp. capable of using alpha-terpineol as sole carbon source. The Tdx gene, previously cloned from the plasmid-encoded terp operon, that carries genes encoding for proteins involved in terpineol catabolism, has been subcloned and expressed as the holoprotein in E. coli. Physical characterization of the expressed Tdx has been performed, and a model for the solution structure of oxidized Tdx (Tdxo) has been determined. High-resolution homo- and heteronuclear NMR data have been used for structure determination in diamagnetic regions of the protein. The structure of the metal binding site (which cannot be determined directly by NMR methods due to paramagnetic broadening of resonances) was modeled using restraints obtained from a crystal structure of the homologous ferredoxin adrenodoxin (Adx) and loose restraints determined from paramagnetic broadening patterns in NMR spectra. Essentially complete 1H and 15N NMR resonance assignments have been made for the diamagnetic region of Tdxo (ca. 80% of the protein). A large five-stranded beta-sheet and a smaller two-stranded beta-sheet were identified, along with three alpha-helices. A high degree of structural homology was observed between Tdx and two other ferredoxins with sequence and functional homology to Tdx for which structures have been determined, Adx and putidaredoxin (Pdx), a homologous Pseudomonas protein. 1H/2H exchange rates for Tdx backbone NH groups were measured for both oxidation states and are rationalized in the context of the Tdx structure. In particular, an argument is made for the importance of the residue following the third ligand of the metal cluster (Arg49 in Tdx, His49 in Pdx, His56 in Adx) in modulating protein dynamics as a function of oxidation state. Some differences between Tdx and Pdx are detected by UV-visible spectroscopy, and structural differences at the C-terminal region were also observed. Tdx exhibits only 2% of the activity of Pdx in turnover assays performed using the reconstituted camphor hydroxylase system of which Pdx is the natural component.  相似文献   

12.
Hyperfine 1H NMR signals of the 2Fe-2S* vegetative ferredoxin from Anabaena 7120 have been studied by two-dimensional (2D) magnetization exchange spectroscopy. The rapid longitudinal relaxation rates of these signals required the use of very short nuclear Overhauser effect (NOE) mixing times (0.5-20 ms). The resulting pattern of NOE cross-relaxation peaks when combined with previous 1D NOE results [Dugad, L. B., La Mar, G. N., Banci, L., & Bertini, I. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 2263-2271] led to elucidation of the carbon-bound proton spin systems from each of the four cysteines ligated to the 2Fe-2S* cluster in the reduced ferredoxin. Additional NOE cross peaks were observed that provide information about other amino acid residues that interact with the iron-sulfur cluster. NOE cross peaks were assigned tentatively to Leu27, Arg42, and Ala43 on the basis of the X-ray coordinates of oxidized Anabaena 7120 ferredoxin [Rypniewski, W.R., Breiter, D.R., Benning, M.M., Wesenberg, G., Oh, B.-H., Markley, J.L., Rayment, I., & Holden, H. M. (1991) Biochemistry 30, 4126-4131]. Three chemical exchange cross peaks were detected in magnetization exchange spectra of half-reduced ferredoxin and assigned to the 1H alpha protons of Cys49 and Cys79 [both of whose sulfur atoms are ligated to Fe(III)] and Arg42 (whose amide nitrogen is hydrogen-bonded to one of the inorganic sulfurs of the 2Fe-2S* cluster). The chemical exchange cross peaks provide a means of extending assignments in the spectrum of reduced ferredoxin to assignments in the spectrum of the oxidized protein.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
WEFT-NOESY and transfer WEFT-NOESY NMR spectra were used to determine the heme proton assignments for Rhodobacter capsulatus ferricytochrome c2. The Fermi contact and pseudo-contact contributions to the paramagnetic effect of the unpaired electron in the oxidized state were evaluated for the heme and ligand protons. The chemical shift assignments for the 1H and 15N NMR spectra were obtained by a combination of 1H-1H and 1H-15N two-dimensional NMR spectroscopy. The short-range nuclear Overhauser effect (NOE) data are consistent with the view that the secondary structure for the oxidized state of this protein closely approximates that of the reduced form, but with redox-related conformational changes between the two redox states. To understand the decrease in stability of the oxidized state of this cytochrome c2 compared to the reduced form, the structural difference between the two redox states were analyzed by the differences in the NOE intensities, pseudo-contact shifts and the hydrogen-deuterium exchange rates of the amide protons. We find that the major difference between redox states, although subtle, involve heme protein interactions, orientation of the heme ligands, differences in hydrogen bond networks and, possible alterations in the position of some internal water molecules. Thus, it appears that the general destabilization of cytochrome c2, which occurs on oxidation, is consistent with the alteration of hydrogen bonds that result in changes in the internal dynamics of the protein.  相似文献   

14.
The two-protein complex between putidaredoxin (Pdx) and cytochrome P450(cam) (CYP101) is the catalytically competent species for camphor hydroxylation by CYP101. We detected a conformational change in CYP101 upon binding of Pdx that reorients bound camphor appropriately for hydroxylation. Experimental evidence shows that binding of Pdx converts a single X-proline amide bond in CYP101 from trans or distorted trans to cis. Mutation of proline 89 to isoleucine yields a mixture of both bound camphor orientations, that seen in Pdx-free and that seen in Pdx-bound CYP101. A mutation in CYP101 that destabilizes the cis conformer of the Ile 88-Pro 89 amide bond results in weaker binding of Pdx. This work provides direct experimental evidence for involvement of X-proline isomerization in enzyme function.  相似文献   

15.
Rodríguez JC  Wilks A  Rivera M 《Biochemistry》2006,45(14):4578-4592
The 198 amino acid long heme oxygenase from Pseudomonas aeruginosa (pa-HO) was studied by multinuclear and multidimensional NMR spectroscopy in its paramagnetic cyanide-inhibited (pa-HO-CN) and azide-inhibited (pa-HO-N3) forms. Nearly complete backbone assignments (>93%) of all non-proline residues have been obtained, with the majority of the nonassigned residues corresponding to the first 10 amino terminal residues. Resonances strongly affected by heme iron paramagnetism were assigned with the aid of selective amino acid labeling and experiments tailored to detect fast relaxing signals, whereas the rest of the polypeptide was assigned using conventional three-dimensional NMR experiments. Amide chemical shift assignments were used to monitor the rate of exchange of backbone protons in hydrogen-deuterium exchange experiments. The polypeptide in the pa-HO-N3 complex was found to be significantly less prone to exchange than the polypeptide in pa-HO-CN, which we interpret to indicate that pa-HO-N3 is conformationally less flexible than pa-HO-CN. The differences in protection factors extend to regions of the protein remote from the heme iron and distal ligand. Mapping the differences in protection factors into the X-ray crystal structure of pa-HO [Friedman, J., Lad, L., Li, H., Wilks, A. Poulos, T. L. (2004) Biochemistry 43, 5239-5345] suggests that the distinct chemical properties imparted by the coordination of azide or cyanide to the heme iron [Zeng, Y. Caignan, G. A., Bunce, R. A., Rodríguez, J. C., Wilks, A., Rivera, M. (2005) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 127, 9794-9807] are transmitted to the polypeptide by a network of structural water molecules extending from the active site to the surface of the enzyme. Finally, while the 1H amide resonance of Gly125 was too broad to detect, the corresponding 15N resonance exhibits a large downfield shift, large line width, steep temperature dependence, and a larger than usual upfield deuterium isotope effect. These properties indicate unpaired spin delocalization from the heme iron into the Gly 15N atom via formation of a hydrogen bond between the coordinated azide nitrogen and the Gly125 N-H.  相似文献   

16.
R D Guiles  V J Basus  I D Kuntz  L Waskell 《Biochemistry》1992,31(46):11365-11375
15N and 1H resonance assignments for backbone and side-chain resonances of both equilibrium forms of rat ferrocytochrome b5 have been obtained, using 15N-1H heteronuclear correlation methods employing globally 15N-labeled protein. Unlike other cytochrome b5 species assigned to date (Guiles et al., 1990) the rat cytochrome exists as an equilibrium distribution of conformers in nearly equal abundance (Lee et al., 1990). The ratio of conformers present in all other species variants is approximately 1:9. More than 40% of all residues of the rat protein exhibit NMR-detectable heterogeneity due to the 180 degrees rotation of the heme about the alpha, gamma-meso axis. NOESY and HOHAHA relayed 15N-1H double-DEPT heteronuclear correlation methods were an indispensible tool for the deconvolution of a system with this level of heterogeneity. Differences in the resonance assignments between the two equilibrium conformers were found to be as great as differences between species variants we have previously reported. On the basis of the magnitude and extent of the observed chemical shift differences and specific NOESY connectivities observed in the two isomers, we believe the two equilibrium conformers differ not only by a simple back-to-front flip of the heme but also by an additional rotation about an axis normal to the heme plane as has been previously suggested by Pochapsky et al. (1990). A short segment of the protein at the N-terminus could not be assigned, presumably due to rapid exchange of solvent-accessible amide protons in this disordered segment of the protein. Assignments for 93 of the 98 residues of this 12-kDa protein have been obtained.  相似文献   

17.
Accurate 1H, 15N, and 13C chemical shift assignments were determined for staphylococcal nuclease H124L (in the absence of inhibitor or activator ion). Backbone 1H and 15N assignments, obtained by analysis of three-dimensional 1H-15N HMQC-NOESY data [Wang, J., Mooberry, E.S., Walkenhorst, W.F., & Markley, J. L. (1992) Biochemistry (preceding paper in this issue)], were refined and extended by a combination of homo- and heteronuclear two-dimensional NMR experiments. Staphylococcal nuclease H124L samples used in the homonuclear 1H NMR studies were at natural isotopic abundance or labeled randomly with 2H (to an isotope level of 50%); nuclease H124L samples used for heteronuclear NMR experiments were labeled uniformly with 15N (to an isotope level greater than 95%) or uniformly with 13C (to an isotope level of 26%). Additional nuclease H124L samples were labeled selectively by incorporating single 15N- or 13C-labeled amino acids. The chemical shifts of uncomplexed enzyme were then compared with those determined previously for the nuclease H124L.pdTp.Ca2+ ternary complex [Wang, J., LeMaster, D. M., & Markley, J.L. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 88-101; Wang, J., Hinck, A.P., Loh, S. N., & Markley, J.L. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 102-113; Wang, J., Hinck, A.P., Loh, S.N., & Markley, J.L. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 4242-4253]. The results reveal that the binding of pdTp and Ca2+ induces large shifts in the resonances of several amino acid segments. These chemical shift changes are interpreted in terms of changes in backbone torsion angles that accompany the binding of pdTp and Ca2+; changes at the binding site appear to be transmitted to other regions of the molecule through networks of hydrogen bonds.  相似文献   

18.
15N NMR assignments were made to the backbone amide nitrogen atoms at natural isotopic abundance of intact and reactive-site (Arg5-Ile6) hydrolyzed Cucurbita maxima trypsin inhibitor III (CMTI-III and CMTI-III*, respectively) by means of 2D proton-detected heteronuclear single bond chemical shift correlation (HSBC) spectroscopy, utilizing the previously made sequence-specific 1H NMR assignments (Krishnamoorthi et al. (1992) Biochemistry 31, 898-904). Comparison of the 15N chemical shifts of the two forms of the inhibitor molecule revealed significant changes not only for residues located near the reactive-site region, but also for those distantly located. Residues Cys3, Arg5, Leu7, Met8, Cys10, Cys16, Glu19, His25, Tyr27, Cys28 and Gly29 showed significant chemical shift changes ranging from 0.3 to 6.1 ppm, thus indicating structural perturbations that were transmitted throughout the molecule. These findings confirm the earlier conclusions based on 1H NMR investigations.  相似文献   

19.
Proton resonance assignments of horse ferricytochrome c   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
Two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (2D NMR) was used to obtain extensive resonance assignments in the 1H NMR spectrum of horse ferricytochrome c. Assignments were made for the main-chain and C beta protons of 102 residues (all except Pro-44 and Gly-84) and the majority of side-chain protons. As starting points for the assignment of the oxidized protein, a limited set of protons was initially assigned by use of 2D NMR magnetization transfer methods to correlate resonances in the oxidized form with assigned resonances in the reduced form [Wand, A. J., Di Stefano, D. L., Feng, Y., Roder, H., & Englander, S. W. (1989) Biochemistry (preceding paper in this issue)]. Given the complexity of the spectrum due to the size of this protein (104 residues) and its paramagnetic center, the initial search for side-chain spin systems in J-correlated spectra was successful only for the simplest side chains, but the majority of NH-C alpha H-C beta H subspin systems (NAB sets) could be identified at this stage. The subsequent search for sequential NOE connectivities focused on NAB sets, with use of previously assigned residues to place NOE-connected segments within the amino acid sequence. Selective proton labeling of either the slowly or the rapidly exchanging amide sites was used to simplify the spectra, and systematic work at two temperatures was used to resolve ambiguities in the 2D NMR spectra. These approaches, together with the use of magnetization transfer methods to correlate reduced and oxidized cytochrome c spectra, provide multiple cross-checks to verify assignments.  相似文献   

20.
B H Oh  J L Markley 《Biochemistry》1990,29(16):4012-4017
All the nitrogen signals from the amino acid side chains and 80 of the total of 98 backbone nitrogen signals of the oxidized form of the 2Fe.2S* ferredoxin from Anabaena sp. strain PCC 7120 were assigned by means of a series of heteronuclear two-dimensional experiments [Oh, B.-H. Mooberry, E. S., & Markley, J. L. (1990) Biochemistry (second paper of three in this issue )]. Two additional nitrogen signals were observed in the one-dimensional 15N NMR spectrum and classified as backbone amide resonances from residues whose proton resonances experience paramagnetic broadening. The one-dimensional 15N NMR spectrum shows nine resonances that are hyperfine shifted and broadened. From this inventory of diamagnetic nitrogen signals and the available X-ray coordinates of a related ferredoxin [Tsukihara, T., Fukuyama, K., Nakamura, M., Katsube, Y., Tanaka, N., Kakudo, M., Wada, K., Hase, T., & Matsubara, H. (1981) J. Biochem. 90, 1763-1773], the resolved hyperfine-shifted 15N peaks were attributed to backbone amide nitrogens of the nine amino acids that share electrons with the 2Fe.2S* center or to backbone amide nitrogens of two other amino acids that are close to the 2Fe.2S* center. The seven 15N signals that are missing and unaccounted for probably are buried under the envelope of amide signals. 1H NMR signals from all the amide protons directly bonded to the seven missing and nine hyperfine-shifted nitrogens were too broad to be resolved in conventional 2D NMR spectra.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

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