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1.
Dynamic averaging effects from internal motions on interproton distances estimated from nuclear Overhauser effects (NOE) are determined by using a molecular dynamics simulation of lysozyme. Generalized order parameters measuring angular averaging and radial averaging parameters are calculated. The product of these two parameters describes the full averaging effects on cross-relaxation. Analysis of 2778 non-methyl NOE interactions from the protein interior and surface indicates that distances estimated by assuming a rigid molecule have less than 10% error for 89% of the NOE interactions. However, analysis of 1854 methyl interactions found that only 68% of the distances estimated from cross-relaxation rates would have less than 10% error. Qualitative evaluation of distances according to strong, medium and weak NOE intensities, when used to define only the upper bound for interproton separation, would misassign less than 1% of the distance constraints because of motional averaging. Internal motions do not obscure the identification of secondary structure, although some instances of significant averaging effects were found for interactions in alpha-helical regions. Interresidue NOEs for amino acids more than three residues apart in the primary sequence are more extensively averaged than intraresidue or short-range interresidue NOEs. Intraresidue interactions exhibit a greater degree of angular averaging than those involving interresidue proton pairs. An internal motion does not equally affect all NOE interactions for a particular proton. Thus, incorporation of averaging parameters in nuclear magnetic resonance structure determination procedures must be made on a proton-pair-wise basis. On the basis of the motional averaging results, particular fixed-distance proton pairs in proteins are suggested for use as distance references. A small percentage of NOE pairs localized to three regions of the protein exhibit extreme averaging effects from internal motions. The regions and types of motions involved are described.  相似文献   

2.
D Genest 《Biopolymers》1989,28(11):1903-1911
Monte Carlo methods have been used to simulate internal motions of aromatic protons of an oligonucleotide at the nanosecond time scale. Each proton is allowed to fluctuate about its equilibrium position. The longitudinal cross-relaxation rates of such a system of spins have been determined by computing the appropriate correlation functions. Then the interproton distances have been deduced according to the procedure generally used in two-dimensional nmr techniques (nuclear Overhauser effect spectroscopy--NOESY) and compared to the true values. The influence of the amplitude A and of the internal rotational diffusion constant Dint characterizing the dynamics of the system has been checked for in-phase and for uncorrelated motions. It is shown that for the investigated models the distances deduced from NOESY experiments may be under- or overestimated, depending strongly on the values of A and Dint. Furthermore, the cross-relaxation rate of a couple of protons is very sensitive to the correlation level of the motions of both protons.  相似文献   

3.
The study of backbone and side-chain internal motions in proteins and peptides is crucial to having a better understanding of protein/peptide "structure" and to characterizing unfolded and partially folded states of proteins and peptides. To achieve this, however, requires establishing a baseline for internal motions and motional restrictions for all residues in the fully, solvent-exposed "unfolded state." GXG-based tripeptides are the simpliest peptides where residue X is fully solvent exposed in the context of an actual peptide. In this study, a series of GXG-based tripeptides has been synthesized with X being varied to include all twenty common amino acid residues. Proton-coupled and -decoupled (13)C-nmr relaxation measurements have been performed on these twenty tripeptides and various motional models (Lipari-Szabo model free approach, rotational anisotropic diffusion, rotational fluctuations within a potential well, rotational jump model) have been used to analyze relaxation data for derivation of angular variances and motional correlation times for backbone and side-chain chi(1) and chi(2) bonds and methyl group rotations. At 298 K, backbone motional correlation times range from about 50 to 85 ps, whereas side-chain motional correlation times show a much broader spread from about 18 to 80 ps. Angular variances for backbone phi,psi bond rotations range from 11 degrees to 23 degrees and those for side chains vary from 5 degrees to 24 degrees for chi(1) bond rotations and from 5 degrees to 27 degrees for chi(2) bond rotations. Even in these peptide models of the "unfolded state," side-chain angular variances can be as restricted as those for backbone and beta-branched (valine, threonine, and isoleucine) and aromatic side chains display the most restricted motions probably due to steric hinderence with backbone atoms. Comparison with motional data on residues in partially folded, beta-sheet-forming peptides indicates that side-chain motions of at least hydrophobic residues are less restricted in the partially folded state, suggesting that an increase in side-chain conformational entropy may help drive early-stage protein folding. Copyright 1999 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

4.
V Dive  A Lai  G Valensin  G Saba  A Yiotakis  F Toma 《Biopolymers》1991,31(3):305-317
The interaction of succinyl-Pro-Ala, a competitive inhibitor of Achromobacter iophagus collagenase, with the enzyme was studied by longitudinal proton and tritium relaxation. Specific deuterium and tritium labeling of the succinyl part at vicinal positions allowed the measurement of the cross-relaxation rates of individual proton or tritium spin pairs in the inhibitor-enzyme complex as well as in the free inhibitor. Overall correlation times, internuclear distances, and qualitative information on the internal mobility in Suc1 (as provided by the generalized order parameter S2) could be deduced by the comparison of proton and tritium cross-relaxation of spin pairs at complementary positions in the -CH2- CH2- moiety as analyzed in terms of the model-free approach by Lipari and Szabo. The conformational and motional parameters of the inhibitor in the free and enzyme-bound state were directly compared by this method. The measurement of proton cross-relaxation in the Ala residue provided additional information on the inhibitor binding. The determination of the order parameter in different parts of the inhibitor molecule in the bound state indicates that the succinyl and alanyl residues are primarily involved in the interaction with the enzyme activity site. The succinyl moiety, characterized in solution by the conformational equilibrium among the three staggered rotamers--i.e., trans: 50%; g+: 20%; g-: 30%--adopted in the bound state the unique trans conformation.  相似文献   

5.
A time-dependent transferred nuclear Overhauser enhancement study of the conformation of the single-stranded DNA 11mer 5'd(A-A-G-T-G-T-G-A-T-A-T) bound to the single-stranded DNA binding protein of Escherichia coli (SSB) is presented. It is shown that the conformation of the bound 11mer is that of a right-handed B-type helix similar to that of the free 11mer. The observation of internucleotide transferred nuclear Overhauser enhancements for every base step excludes the possibility of intercalation by aromatic protein residues. In addition, it is shown that the effective correlation time of the bases (80 ns) corresponds to that of a complex of molecular weight approximately 170,000, containing two SSB tetramers. The sugars, on the other hand, exhibit a shorter effective correlation time (40 ns), indicating the presence of internal motion. This suggests that the bases are anchored to the protein surface, possibly by hydrophobic interactions, whereas the sugar-phosphate groups are directed outwards towards the solvent.  相似文献   

6.
In order to elucidate the mobilities of the fluorophores of fluorescent 2- and 16-(9-anthroyloxy)palmitic acids (16-AP and 2-AP, respectively) in lipid bilayer vesicles, the steady-state and time-dependent nuclear Overhauser effects in 1H-NMR spectroscopy, but not the fluorescence depolarization in fluorescence spectroscopy, have been measured. The steady-state nuclear Overhauser effect measurements showed an appreciable magnitude of negative nuclear Overhauser effects between the resonances due to the fluorophores of the two fluorescent probes and lipids. These results definitely mean that in lipid bilayers, the fluorophores (anthroyloxy ring) of the fluorescent probes experience other types of motions with much longer correlation times than those detected by the fluorescence depolarization measurements, since at the correlation time showed by the fluorescent method (1–2 · 10−9 s or less), no such transfer of the negative nuclear Overhauser effects is expected to occur. The correlation times of the fluorophores, as calculated from the cross-relaxation rates of the anthroyl ring protons of 16-AP and 2-AP, were 3.8 · 10−8 and 1.1 · 10−7 s, respectively. These values, respectively, compare favorably with those of the terminal methyl of acyl chains and the choline methyl carbons which were estimated by 13C T2 relaxation times. Thus, it is concluded that the fluorophores of both 16-AP and 2-AP have a slow form of motion which moves with a similar time scale to those of lipids in addition to the faster one that causes fluorescence depolarization.  相似文献   

7.
(13)C spin-lattice relaxation times (T(1)) and nuclear Overhauser enhancements (NOE) were measured as a function of temperature and magnetic field strength for the hetero-polysaccharide hyaluronan in water solutions. The relaxation data of the endocyclic ring carbons were successfully interpreted in terms of chain segmental motions by using the bimodal time-correlation function of Dejean de la Batie, Laupretre and Monnerie. On the basis of the calculated correlation times for segmental motion and amplitudes of librational motions of the C-H vectors at the various carbon sites of the HA repeating unit, we concluded that intramolecular hydrogen bonding of the secondary structure of HA plays a major role in the conformational flexibility of this carbohydrate molecule. The internal rotation of the free hydroxymethyl groups about the exocyclic C-5-C-6 bonds superimposed on segmental motion has been described as a diffusion process of restricted amplitude. The rate and amplitude of the internal rotation indicate that the hydroxymethyl groups are not involved in intramolecular hydrogen bonding. Finally, the motional parameters describing the local dynamics of the HA chain were correlated with the secondary structure of HA in aqueous solutions.  相似文献   

8.
A novel method is proposed for the study of the conformation in solution of small molecules bound to proteins. In transfer of saturation experiments, irradiation at the frequency of a proton in the bound ligand can result in an intensity change in the signal from a different proton in the free excess ligand via a nuclear Overhauser effect between the two protons in the bound ligand. Approximatel calculations show that the observation of such effects depends upon the close spatial proximity (within about 4.0 Å) of the two protons involved and thus gives useful conformational information. Two examples of this method are given, for the binding of trimethoprim and NADP+, respectively, to Lactobacillus casei dihydrofolate reductase.  相似文献   

9.
Summary A recent 1H NMR method has been applied to the determination of the solution structure and internal dynamics of a synthetic mixed C/O trisaccharide related to sialyl Lewisx. Varying the rf field offset in ROESY-type experiments enabled the measurement of longitudinal and transverse dipolar cross-relaxation rates with high accuracy. Assuming that for each proton pair the motion could be represented by a single exponential autocorrelation function, it was possible to derive geometrical parameters (r) and dynamic parameters cp. With this assumption, 224 cross-relaxation rates have been transformed into 30 interproton distance constraints and 30 dipolar correlation times. The distance constraints have been used in a simulated-annealing procedure. This trisaccharide exhibits a structure close to the O-glycosidic analogue, but its flexibility seems highly reduced. On the basis of the determined structure and dynamics, it is shown that no conformational exchange occurs, the molecule existing in the form of a unique family in aqueous solution. In order to assess the quality of the resulting structures and to validate this new experimental procedure of distance extraction, we finally compare these solution structures to the ones obtained using three different sets of distances deduced from three choices of internal reference. It appears that this procedure allows the determination of the most precise and accurate solution.Abbreviations COSY correlation spectroscopy - NOE nuclear Overhauser enhancement - NOESY nuclear Overhauser enhancement spectroscopy; rmsd, root-mean-square deviation - ROESY rotating frame Overhauser enhancement spectroscopy - SLex sialyl Lewisx - TOCSY total correlation spectroscopy  相似文献   

10.
The carbon- 13 spin-lattice relaxation times and nuclear Overhauser enhancements of the N epsilon-monomethyllysine, N epsilon,N epsilon-dimethyllysine, and N alpha,N alpha-dimethylalanine resonances of 13C-methylated concanavalin A have been measured at three carbon frequencies and compared to the relaxation parameters predicted by several motional models. The experimental parameters cannot be reproduced by a simple dipolar relaxation model which includes isotropic reorientation of the protein plus free internal rotational diffusion of the methyl groups but are well predicted by a wobble in a cone model which includes isotropic reorientation of the protein at 33 ns, free internal rotational diffusion of the methyl groups, and a wobble diffusion which reflects the net motion of the amino acid side chains. The analysis indicates that the methylated epsilon-amino side chains exhibit only slightly more motional freedom than does the methylated N-terminal alpha-amino group and suggests some restriction of methyl group rotation in the dimethylamino residues.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Residual dipolar couplings for a ligand that is in fast exchange between a free state and a state where it is bound to a macroscopically ordered membrane protein carry precise information on the structure and orientation of the bound ligand. The couplings originate in the bound state but can be detected on the free ligand using standard high resolution NMR. This approach is used to study an analog of the C-terminal undecapeptide of the alpha-subunit of the heterotrimeric G protein transducin when bound to photo-activated rhodopsin. Rhodopsin is the major constituent of disk-shaped membrane vesicles from rod outer segments of bovine retinas, which align spontaneously in the NMR magnet. Photo-activation of rhodopsin triggers transient binding of the peptide, resulting in measurable dipolar contributions to 1J(NH) and 1J(CH) splittings. These dipolar couplings report on the time-averaged orientation of bond vectors in the bound peptide relative to the magnetic field, i.e. relative to the membrane normal. Approximate distance restraints of the bound conformation were derived from transferred NOEs, as measured from the difference of NOESY spectra recorded prior to and after photo-activation. The N-terminal eight residues of the bound undecapeptide adopt a near-ideal alpha-helical conformation. The helix is terminated by an alpha(L) type C-cap, with Gly9 at the C' position in the center of the reverse turn. The angle between the helix axis and the membrane normal is 40 degrees (+/-4) degrees. Peptide protons that make close contact with the receptor are identified by analysis of the NOESY cross-relaxation pattern and include the hydrophobic C terminus of the peptide.  相似文献   

13.
R S Ehrlich  R F Colman 《Biochemistry》1985,24(20):5378-5387
The binding of coenzymes, NADP+ and NADPH, and coenzyme fragments, 2'-phosphoadenosine 5'-(diphosphoribose), adenosine 2',5'-bisphosphate, and 2'-AMP, to pig heart NADP+-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase has been studied by proton NMR. Transferred nuclear Overhauser enhancement (NOE) between the nicotinamide 1'-ribose proton and the 2-nicotinamide ring proton indicates that the nicotinamide-ribose bond assumes an anti conformation. For all nucleotides, a nuclear Overhauser effect between the adenine 1'-ribose proton and 8-adenine ring proton is observed, suggesting a predominantly syn adenine--ribose bond conformation for the enzyme-bound nucleotides. Transferred NOE between the protons at A2 and N6 is observed for NADPH (but not NADP+), implying proximity between adenine and nicotinamide rings in a folded enzyme-bound form of NADPH. Line-width measurements on the resonances of free nucleotides exchanging with bound species indicate dissociation rates ranging from less than 7 s-1 for NADPH to approximately 1600 s-1 for adenosine 2',5'-bisphosphate. Substrate, magnesium isocitrate, increases the dissociation rate for NADPH about 10-fold but decreases the corresponding rate for phosphoadenosine diphosphoribose and adenosine 2',5'-bisphosphate about 10-fold. These effects are consistent with changes in equilibrium dissociation constants measured under similar conditions. The 1H NMR spectrum of isocitrate dehydrogenase at pH 7.5 has three narrow peaks between delta 7.85 and 7.69 that shift with changes in pH and hence arise from C-4 protons of histidines. One of those, with pK = 5.35, is perturbed by NADP+ and NADPH but not by nucleotide fragments, indicating that this histidine is in the region of the nicotinamide binding site. Observation of nuclear Overhauser effects arising from selective irradiation at delta 7.55 indicates proximity of either a nontitrating histidine or an aromatic residue to the adenine ring of all nucleotides. In addition, selective irradiation of the methyl region of the enzyme spectrum demonstrates that the adenine ring is close to methyl side chains. The substrate magnesium isocitrate produces no observable differences in these protein--nucleotide interactions. The alterations in enzyme--nucleotide conformation that result in changes in affinity in the presence of substrate must involve either small shifts in the positions of amino acid side chains or changes in groups not visible in the proton NMR spectrum.  相似文献   

14.
Internal motions at specific locations through yeast phenylalanine tRNA were measured by using nucleic acid biosynthetically enriched in 13C at modified base methyl groups. Carbon NMR spectra of isotopically enriched tRNA(Phe) reveal 12 individual peaks for 13 of the 14 methyl groups known to be present. The two methyls of N2,N2-dimethylguanosine (m22G-26) have indistinguishable resonances, whereas the fourteenth methyl bound to ring carbon-11 of the hypermodified nucleoside 3' adjacent to the anticodon, wyosine (Y-37), does not come from the [methyl-13C]methionine substrate. Assignments to individual nucleosides within the tRNA were made on the basis of chemical shifts of the mononucleosides [Agris, P. F., Kovacs, S. A. H., Smith, C., Kopper, R. A., & Schmidt, P. G. (1983) Biochemistry 22, 1402-1408; Smith, C., Schmidt, P. G., Petsch, J., & Agris, P. F. (1985) Biochemistry 24, 1434-1440] and correlation of 13C resonances with proton NMR chemical shifts via two-dimensional heteronuclear proton-carbon correlation spectroscopy [Agris, P. F., Sierzputowska-Gracz, H., & Smith, C. (1986) Biochemistry 25, 5126-5131]. Values of 13C longitudinal relaxation (T1) and the nuclear Overhauser enhancements (NOE) were determined at 22.5, 75.5, and 118 MHz for tRNA(Phe) in a physiological buffer solution with 10 mM MgCl2, at 22 degrees C. These data were used to extract two physical parameters that define the system with regard to fast internal motion: the generalized order parameters (S2) and effective correlation times (tau e) for internal motion of the C-H internuclear vectors.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
The resonances of the aromatic protons of trimethoprim [2,4-diamino-5-(3',4',5'-trimethoxybenzyl)pyrimidine] in its complexes with dihydrofolate reductases from Lactobacillus casei and Escherichia coli cannot be directly observed. Their chemical shifts have been determined by transfer of saturation experiments and by difference spectroscopy using [2',6'-2H2]trimethoprim. The complex of 2,4-diamino-5-(3',4'-dimethoxy-5'-bromobenzyl)pyrimidine with the L. casei enzyme has also been examined. At room temperature, the 2',6'-proton resonance of bound trimethoprim is very broad (line width great than 30 Hz); with the E. coli enzyme, the resonance sharpens with increasing temperature so as to be clearly visible by difference spectroscopy at 45 degrees C. This line broadening is attributed to an exchange contribution, arising from the slow rate of "flipping" about the C7-C1' bond of bound trimethoprim. The transfer of saturation measurements were also used to determine the dissociation rate constants of the complexes. In the course of these experiments, a decrease in intensity of the resonance of the 2',6'-proton resonance of free trimethoprim on irradiation at the resonance of the 6 proton of free trimethoprim was observed, which only occurred in the presence of the enzyme. This is interpreted as a nuclear Overhauser effect between two protons of the bound ligand transferred to those of the free ligand by the exchange of the ligand between the two states. The chemical shift changes observed on the binding of trimethoprim to dihydrofolate reductase are interpreted in terms of the ring-current shift contributions from the two aromatic rings of trimethoprim and from that of phenylalanine-30. On the basis of this analysis of the chemical shifts, a model for the structure of the enzyme-trimethoprim complex is proposed. This model is consistent with the (indirect) observation of a nuclear Overhauser effect between the 2',6' and 6 protons of bound trimethoprim.  相似文献   

16.
Transferred nuclear Overhauser effect (trNOE) experiments have been performed to investigate the conformations of the competitive inhibitors, methyl 5'-thio-4-N-alpha-maltoside 3a and methyl 5'-thio-4-S-alpha-maltoside 4 when bound to the catalytic subunit of the enzyme glucoamylase. These NMR data suggest that, although each of the free ligands populates two conformational families, both heteroanalogues are bound by the enzyme in conformations in the area of the global energy minimum. These conformations have been used as initial points for docking into the active site of the enzyme taken from a X-ray crystal structure of the related glucoamylase-D-gluco-dihydroacarbose 2 complex. Minimization of the resulting complexes has yielded structures for the bound complexes. Corroboration of the structures is provided by fast T(1)(rho)-relaxation effects for certain ligand protons as a result of close contacts with protons in the enzyme active site. The results auger well for the combined use of transferred NOE spectroscopy and molecular modeling based on X-ray crystal structures of complexes of suitable congeners for the rapid analysis of ligand-receptor interactions.  相似文献   

17.
The signal transduction protein phospholipase C-gamma1 (PLC-gamma1) is activated when its C-terminal SH2 domain (PLCC) binds the phosphorylated Tyr-1021 site (pTyr-1021) in the beta-platelet-derived growth factor receptor (PDGFR). To better understand the contributions that dynamics make to binding, we have used NMR relaxation experiments to investigate the motional properties of backbone amide and side chain methyl groups in a peptide derived from the pTyr-1021 site of PDGFR, both free and in complex with the PLCC SH2 domain. The free peptide has relaxation properties that are typical for a small, unstructured polymer, while the backbone of the bound peptide is least flexible for residues in the central portion of the binding site with the amplitude of pico- to nanosecond time scale motions increasing toward the C-terminus of the peptide. The increase in large amplitude motion toward the end of the pY1021 peptide is consistent with the bound peptide existing as an ensemble of states with C-terminal residues having the broadest distribution of backbone conformations, while residues in the central binding site are the most restricted. Deuterium spin relaxation experiments establish that the protein-peptide interface is highly dynamic, and this mobility may play an important role in modulating the affinity of the interaction.  相似文献   

18.
Peptide GFSKAELAKARAAKRGGY folds in an alpha-helical conformation that is stabilized by formation of a hydrophobic staple motif and an N-terminal capping box (Munoz V. Blanco FJ, Serrano L, 1995, Struct Biol 2:380-385). To investigate backbone and side-chain internal motions within the helix and hydrophobic staple, residues F2, A5, L7, A8, and A10 were selectively 13C- and 15N-enriched and NMR relaxation experiments were performed in water and in water/trifluoroethanol (TFE) solution at four Larmor frequencies (62.5, 125, 150, and 200 MHz for 13C). Relaxation data were analyzed using the model free approach and an anisotropic diffusion model. In water, angular variances of motional vectors range from 10 to 20 degrees and backbone phi,psi bond rotations for helix residues A5, L7, A8, and A10 are correlated indicating the presence of Calpha-H, Calpha-Cbeta, and N-H rocking-type motions along the helix dipole axis. L7 side-chain CbetaH2 and CgammaH motions are also correlated and as motionally restricted as backbone CalphaH, suggesting considerable steric hindrance with neighboring groups. In TFE which stabilizes the fold, internal motional amplitudes are attenuated and rotational correlations are increased. For the side chain of hydrophobic staple residue F2, wobbling-in-a-cone type motions dominate in water, whereas in TFE, the Cbeta-Cgamma bond and phenyl ring fluctuate more simply about the Calpha-Cbeta bond. These data support the Daragan-Mayo model of correlated bond rotations (Daragan VA, Mayo KH, 1996, J Phys Chem 100:8378-8388) and contribute to a general understanding of internal motions in peptides and proteins.  相似文献   

19.
L P Kelsh  J F Ellena  D S Cafiso 《Biochemistry》1992,31(22):5136-5144
Alamethicin is a channel-forming peptide antibiotic that produces a highly voltage-dependent conductance in planar bilayers. To provide insight into the mechanisms for its voltage dependence, the dynamics of the peptide were examined in solution using nuclear magnetic resonance. Natural-abundance 13C spin-lattice relaxation rates and 13C-1H nuclear Overhauser effects of alamethicin were measured at two magnetic field strengths in methanol. This information was interpreted using a model-free approach to obtain values for the overall correlation times as well as the rates and amplitudes of the internal motions of the peptide. The picosecond, internal motions of alamethicin are highly restricted along the peptide backbone and indicate that it behaves as a rigid helical rod in solution. The side chain carbons exhibit increased segmental motion as their distance from the peptide backbone is increased; however, these motions are not unrestricted. Methyl group dynamics are also consistent with the restricted motions observed for the backbone carbons. There is no evidence from these dynamics measurements for a hinged motion of the peptide about proline-14. Alamethicin appears to be slightly less structured in methanol than in the membrane; as a result, alamethicin is also expected to behave as a rigid helix in the membrane. This suggests that the gating of this peptide involves changes in the orientation of the entire helix, rather than the movement of a segment of the peptide backbone.  相似文献   

20.
Crystallographic, isotopic labeling nmr and transferred nuclear Overhauser effect studies have highlighted the extended conformation as a very important element of secondary structure at the binding site of many peptide/protein complexes including peptide inhibitors–enzymes, B-cell epitopes–antibodies, and T-cell epitopes–major histocompatibility complex (MHC) of class I and II complexes. This paper discusses the peptide ligand conformation consequences of these findings particularly in view of the identification of the PII conformation (left-handed extended polyproline II) in free solution. © 1994 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

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