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1.
2.
Bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (BPTI) is stabilized by 3 disulfide bonds, between cysteines 30-51, 5-55, and 14-38. To better understand the influence of disulfide bonds on local protein structure and dynamics, we have measured amide proton exchange rates in 2 folded variants of BPTI, [5-55]Ala and [30-51; 14-38]V5A55, which share no common disulfide bonds. These proteins resemble disulfide-bonded intermediates that accumulate in the BPTI folding pathway. Essentially the same amide hydrogens are protected from exchange in both of the BPTI variants studied here as in native BPTI, demonstrating that the variants adopt fully folded, native-like structures in solution. However, the most highly protected amide protons in each variant differ, and are contained within the sequences of previously studied peptide models of related BPTI folding intermediates containing either the 5-55 or the 30-51 disulfide bond.  相似文献   

3.
The changes of H-D exchange rates upon protein-protein interactions are generally interpreted as a result of the changes of the dynamic properties of the proteins. The effect of trypsin binding on the H-D exchange kinetics of some trypsin inhibitor amide H's was reported (Simon et al., 1984). In this paper the electrostatic potential originating from the trypsin molecule is calculated at the positions of the studied amide H's in the trypsin-trypsin inhibitor complex. We conclude that the observed decrease of the exchange rates is mainly due to the electrostatic field of the trypsin molecule.  相似文献   

4.
H Roder  G Wagner  K Wüthrich 《Biochemistry》1985,24(25):7396-7407
With the use of one-dimensional 1H nuclear magnetic resonance, two-dimensional correlated spectroscopy, and two-dimensional nuclear Overhauser enhancement spectroscopy, the exchange mechanisms for numerous individual amide protons in the basic pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (BPTI) were investigated over a wide range of p2H and temperature. Correlated exchange under an EX1 regime was observed only for the most slowly exchanging protons in the central hydrogen bonds of the antiparallel beta-sheet and only over a narrow range of temperature and p2H, i.e., above ca. 55 degrees C and between p2H 7 and 9, where the opening rates of the structure fluctuations which promote the exchange of these protons are of the order 0.1 min-1. At p2H below 7, the exchange of this most stable group of protons is uncorrelated and is governed by an EX2 mechanism. At p2H above 9, the exchange is also uncorrelated and occurs via either EX2 or EX1 processes promoted by strictly local structure fluctuations. For all other backbone amide protons in BPTI, the exchange was found to be uncorrelated and by an EX2 mechanism under all conditions of p2H and temperature where quantitative measurements could be obtained with the methods used, i.e., for kex approximately less than 5 min-1. From these observations with BPTI it can be concluded that the amide proton exchange in globular proteins is quite generally via EX2 processes, with rare exceptions for measurements with extremely stable protons at high temperature and basic p2H. This emphasizes the need for further development of suitable concepts for the structural interpretation of EX2 amide proton exchange [Wagner, G. (1983) Q. Rev. Biophys. 16, 1-57; Wagner, G., Stassinopoulou, C. I., & Wüthrich, K. (1984) Eur. J. Biochem. 145, 431-436] and for more detailed investigations of the intrinsic exchange rates for solvent-exposed amide protons in the "open" states of a protein [Roder, H., Wagner, G., & Wüthrich, K. (1985) Biochemistry (following paper in this issue)].  相似文献   

5.
Attenuated total reflection Fourier transform infrared (ATR-FTIR) spectroscopy, combined with hydrogen/deuterium exchange technique and time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy, has been used to investigate the changes in structure and dynamics that underlie the thermodynamic stability differences observed for three closely homologous proteins: dendrotoxins I and K, and bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (BPTI). The experiments were performed on proteins under their native state and a modified form, obtained by selective reduction of a disulfide bond at the surface of the molecule, increasing slightly the backbone flexibility without changing the average structure. The data confirmed the high local as well as global rigidity of BPTI. In protein K, the exchange process was slow during the first 2 h of exchange, presumably reflecting a compact three-dimensional conformation, and then increased rapidly, the internal amide protons of the beta-strands exchanging 10-fold faster than in BPTI or protein I. The most probable destabilizing element was identified as Pro32, in the core of the beta-sheet. Protein I was found to present a 10% more expanded volume than protein K or BPTI, and there is a possible correlation between the resulting increased flexibility of the molecule and the lower thermodynamic stability observed for this protein. Interestingly, the interior amide protons of the beta-sheet structure were found to be as protected against exchange in protein I as in BPTI, suggesting that, although globally more flexible than that of Toxin K or BPTI, the structure of Toxin I could be locally quite rigid. The structural factors suspected to be responsible for the differences in internal flexibility of the two toxins could play a significant role in determining their functional properties.  相似文献   

6.
On the pH dependence of amide proton exchange rates in proteins.   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
We have analyzed the pH dependencies of published amide proton exchange rates (kex) in three proteins: bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (BPTI), bull seminal plasma proteinase inhibitor IIA (BUSI IIA), and calbindin D9K. The base-catalyzed exchange rate constants (kOH) of solvent exposed amides in BPTI are lower for residues with low peptide carbonyl exposure, showing that the environment around the carbonyl oxygen influences kOH. We also examined the possible importance of an exchange mechanism that involves formations of imidic acid intermediates along chains of hydrogen-bonded peptides in the three proteins. By invoking this "relayed imidic acid exchange mechanism," which should be essentially acid-catalyzed, we can explain the surprisingly high pHmin (the pH value at which kex reaches a minimum) found for the non-hydrogen-bonded amide protons in the beta-sheet in BPTI. The successive increase of pHmin along a chain of hydrogen-bonded peptides from the free amide to the free carbonyl, observed in BPTI, can be explained as an increasing contribution of the proposed mechanism in this direction of the chain. For BUSI IIA (pH 4-5) and calbindin D9K (pH 6-7) the majority of amide protons with negative pH dependence of kex are located in chains of hydrogen-bonded peptides; this situation is shown to be consistent with the proposed mechanism.  相似文献   

7.
H Roder  K Wüthrich 《Proteins》1986,1(1):34-42
A method to be used for experimental studies of protein folding introduced by Schmid and Baldwin (J. Mol. Biol. 135: 199-215, 1979), which is based on the competition between amide hydrogen exchange and protein refolding, was extended by using rapid mixing techniques and 1H NMR to provide site-resolved kinetic information on the early phases of protein structure acquisition. In this method, a protonated solution of the unfolded protein is rapidly mixed with a deuterated buffer solution at conditions assuring protein refolding in the mixture. This simultaneously initiates the exchange of unprotected amide protons with solvent deuterium and the refolding of protein segments which can protect amide groups from further exchange. After variable reaction times the amide proton exchange is quenched while folding to the native form continues to completion. By using 1H NMR, the extent of exchange at individual amide sites is then measured in the refolded protein. Competition experiments at variable reaction times or variable pH indicate the time at which each amide group is protected in the refolding process. This technique was applied to the basic pancreatic trypsin inhibitor, for which sequence-specific assignments of the amide proton NMR lines had previously been obtained. For eight individual amide protons located in the beta-sheet and the C-terminal alpha-helix of this protein, apparent refolding rates in the range from 15 s-1 to 60 s-1 were observed. These rates are on the time scale of the fast folding phase observed with optical probes.  相似文献   

8.
The pH dependence of hydrogen exchange in proteins   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The static accessibility modified discrete charge model for electrostatic interactions in proteins is extended to the prediction of the pH dependence of hydrogen exchange reactions. The exchange rate profiles of buried amide protons are shown to follow the calculated pH dependence of the electrostatic component of protein stability. Rate profiles are calculated for individual buried amide protons in ribonuclease S and bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor. The electrostatic free energy of stabilization of the protein and the energy required to bring the catalytic ion to an exchange site are expressed as an apparent, pH-dependent contribution to the activation energy. Changes in the electrostatic stabilization of the proteins affect the calculated exchange rate for buried amide protons by more than 1000, while local field effects raise or lower the predicted exchange rates by less than 100. The pH dependence of exchangeable protons at the protein surface, such as the C-2 imidazole protons, is shown to follow the estimated energy required to introduce the catalytic ion at the exchange site. These calculations are discussed in terms of current models for proton exchange which incorporate the dynamic nature of the structure to explain exchange data from the interior of a protein.  相似文献   

9.
The vicinal amide proton-C alpha proton spin-spin coupling constants, JHN alpha, in the globular protein basic pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (BPTI) have been measured using phase-sensitive correlated spectroscopy at high digital resolution. In conjunction with the crystal structure of BPTI, these data were used to calibrate the correlation between 3JHN alpha and the dihedral angle phi. The resulting "BPTI curve" is 3JHN alpha = 6.4 cos2 theta - 1.4 cos theta + 1.9 (theta = [phi - 60 degrees]). It is further shown that measurement of the spin-spin couplings 3JHN alpha presents an independent, reliable method for identification of the location of helical structure in the amino acid sequence of proteins.  相似文献   

10.
A major goal of this paper was to estimate a dynamic range of equilibrium constant for the opening of a single peptide bond in a model protein, bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (BPTI). Ten mutants of BPTI containing a single Xaa-->Met substitution introduced in different parts of the molecule were expressed in Escherichia coli. The mutants were folded, purified to homogeneity, and cleaved with cyanogen bromide to respective cleaved forms. Conformation of the intact mutants was similar to the wildtype, as judged from their circular dichroism spectra. Substantial conformational changes were observed on the chemical cleavage of three single peptide bonds--Met46-Ser, Met49-Cys, and Met53-Thr--located within the C-terminal helix. Cleavage of those peptide bonds caused a significant destabilization of the molecule, with a drop of the denaturation temperature by 56.4 degrees C to 68 degrees C at pH 4.3. Opening of the remaining seven peptide bonds was related to a 10.8 degrees C to 39.4 degrees C decrease in T(den). Free energies of the opening of 10 single peptide bonds in native mutants (Delta G(op,N)) were estimated from the thermodynamic cycle that links denaturation and cleavage free energies. To calculate those values, we assumed that the free energy of opening of a single peptide bond in the denatured state (Delta G(op,D)) was equal to -2.7 kcal/mole, as reported previously. Calculated Delta G(op,N) values in BPTI were in the range from 0.2 to 10 kcal/mole, which was equivalent to a >1 million-fold difference in equilibrium constants. The values of Delta G(op,N) were the largest for peptide bonds located in the C-terminal helix and significantly lower for peptide bonds in the beta-structure or loop regions. It appears that opening constants for single peptide bonds in various proteins span across 33 orders of magnitude. Typical equilibrium values for a single peptide bond opening in a protein containing secondary structure elements fall into negligibly low values, from 10(-3) to 10(-8), and are efficient to ensure stability against proteolysis.  相似文献   

11.
The stability parameters delta Gst, delta Hst and delta Sst of native basic pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (BPTI) have been characterized by microcalorimetric unfolding studies in various buffer solutions, at different pH values and in the presence of guanidine hydrochloride. The unfolding enthalpy of BPTI, in contrast ot other globular proteins, exhibits a very small dependence on temperature, which results in a characteristic different temperature dependence of the Gibbs energy of stabilization. BPTI has a very high specific Gibbs energy of stabilization, which renders the slow exchange rates of amide protons understandable. Comparison of the unfolding entropy of BPTI at 110 degrees C with corresponding values of other proteins, revealed that the delta S values of BPTI are lower by 2.9 J/(K X residue). This lower value of the unfolding entropy is in good agreement with predictions of a theoretical study by Poland & Scheraga (1965) where the influence of crosslinks on the configurational entropy has been studied. Additionally, we were able to calculate an interaction enthalpy per site of -5.6 kJ/mol based on the measurements of unfolding of BPTI in 6 M-guanidine hydrochloride.  相似文献   

12.
In proteinase inhibitor IIA from bull seminal plasma, which is a small globular protein with 57 amino acid residues, measurements of individual amide proton exchange rates by two-dimensional correlated 1H NMR spectroscopy (COSY) showed that the exchange was slowest for some hydrogen bonded amide groups in an alpha-helix. This contrasts with all other proteins which were so far studied in detail, where the slowest exchange rates were observed for hydrogen bonded amide protons in antiparallel beta-sheets.  相似文献   

13.
E Tüchsen  C Woodward 《Biochemistry》1987,26(25):8073-8078
Hydrogen-deuterium exchange is measured for the buried primary amide groups of Asn-43 and Asn-44 in bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor. Amide protons trans and cis to the amide carbonyl oxygen (HE and HZ, respectively) exchange at indistinguishable rates. Uncorrelated exchange of HE and HZ is established for both residues by following the nuclear Overhauser enhancement from HE to HZ during the deuterium exchange. The exchange of Asn-43 and Asn-44 side-chain protons differs qualitatively from exchange of primary amide groups in fully solvated model compounds, for which HE generally exchanges faster than HZ. The equal rates for the buried primary amide HE and HZ in BPTI are not a consequence of coupled exchange. The data indicate rapid rotation around the CO-NH2 bond for both Asn-43 and Asn-44 and suggest considerable lability of intramolecular hydrogen bonds. The side chain of Asn-43 has all of its polar atoms integrated into the very stable hydrogen-bonded structure of the protein. Asn-44 is hydrogen-bonded to side chains and to a buried water molecule. Solvent isotope exchange is several orders of magnitude more restricted by protein secondary and tertiary structure than the CO-NH2 rotation, indicating that N delta H2 groups flip many times before hydrogen isotope exchange occurs.  相似文献   

14.
The backbone amide proton exchange with the solvent was investigated in 2H2O solutions of the basic pancreatic trypsin inhibitor and two chemical modifications thereof, which were obtained by transamination of the N-terminus and by cleavage of the disulfide bond 14-38, respectively. The three proteins have nearly identical conformations, but the stability with respect to thermal denaturation is markedly different. Exchange rates for a large number of individually assigned amide protons located both in central and peripheral parts of the protein structures were measured by two-dimensional correlated spectroscopy (COSY). From analysis of the individual proton exchange rates in the three proteins at different temperatures, an interplay of global and local structure fluctuations was characterized, which promote hydrogen exchange in distinct regions of the molecules. The exchange of particular amide protons may be governed by different motional processes at different temperatures. As a general trend, global fluctuations involving breakage of numerous hydrophilic secondary bonds appear to be dominant at higher temperatures, whereas at lower temperatures the influence of local fluctuations in hydrophobic regions of the protein structures is also clearly noticeable.  相似文献   

15.
Q W Wang  A D Kline  K Wüthrich 《Biochemistry》1987,26(20):6488-6493
The individual amide proton exchange rates in Tendamistat at pH 3.0 and 50 degrees C were measured by using two-dimensional 1H nuclear magnetic resonance. Overall, it was found that the distribution of exchange rates along the sequence is dominated by the interstrand hydrogen bonds of the beta-sheet structures. The slowly exchanging protons in the core of the two beta-sheets were shown to exchange via an EX2 mechanism. Further analysis of the data indicates that different large-scale structure fluctuations are responsible for the exchange from the two beta-sheets, even though the three-dimensional structure of Tendamistat appears to consist of a single structural domain.  相似文献   

16.
The exchange kinetics of the slowest exchanging BPTI beta-sheet protons are complex compared to model peptides; the activation energy, E alpha, and the pH dependence are temperature dependent. We have measured the exchange kinetics in the range pH 1--11, 33--71 degrees C, particularly the temperature dependence. The data are fit to a model in which exchange of each proton is determined by two discrete dynamical processes, one with E alpha approximately 65 kcal/mol and less than first order dependence on catalyst ion, and one with E alpha 20--30 kcal/mol and approaching first order in catalyst ion. The low activation energy process is the mechanism of interest in the native conformation of globular proteins and involves low energy, small amplitude fluctuations; the high activation energy process involves major unfolding. The model is simple, has a precedent in the hydrogen exchange literature, and explains quantitatively the complex feature of the exchange kinetics of single protons in BPTI, including the following. For the slowest exchanging protons, in the range 36 degrees--68 degrees C, E alpha is approximately 65 kcal/mol at pH approximately 4, 20--30 kcal/mol at pH greater than 10, and rises to approximately 65 kcal/mol with increasing temperature at pH 6--10; the Arrhenius plots converge around 70 degrees C; the pH of minimum rate, pHmin, is greater than 1 pH unit higher at 68 degrees C than for model compounds; and at high pH, the pH-rate profiles shift to steeper slope; the exchange rates around pHmin are correlated to the thermal unfolding temperature in BPTI derivatives (Wagner and Wüthrich, 1979, J. Mol. Biol. 130:31). For the more rapidly exchanging protons in BPTI the model accounts for the observation of normal pHmin and E alpha of 20--30 kcal/mol at all pH's. The important results of our analysis are (a) rates for exchange from the folded state of proteins are not correlated to thermal lability, as proposed by Wuthrich et al. (1979, J. Mol. Biol. 134:75); (b) the unfolding rate for the BPTI cooperative thermal transition is equal to the observed exchange rates of the slowest exchanging protons between pH 8.4--9.6, 51 degrees C; (c) the rates for exchange of single protons from folded BPTI are consistent with our previous hydrogen-tritium exchange results and with a penetration model of the dynamic processes limiting hydrogen exchange.  相似文献   

17.
G D Henry  J H Weiner  B D Sykes 《Biochemistry》1987,26(12):3626-3634
Hydrogen-exchange rates have been measured for individual assigned amide protons in M13 coat protein, a 50-residue integral membrane protein, using a 13C nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) equilibrium isotope shift technique. The locations of the more rapidly exchanging amides have been determined. In D2O solutions, a peptide carbonyl resonance undergoes a small upfield isotope shift (0.08-0.09 ppm) from its position in H2O solutions; in 1:1 H2O/D2O mixtures, the carbonyl line shape is determined by the exchange rate at the adjacent nitrogen atom. M13 coat protein was labeled biosynthetically with 13C at the peptide carbonyls of alanine, glycine, phenylalanine, proline, and lysine, and the exchange rates of 12 assigned amide protons in the hydrophilic regions were measured as a function of pH by using the isotope shift method. This equilibrium technique is sensitive to the more rapidly exchanging protons which are difficult to measure by classical exchange-out experiments. In proteins, structural factors, notably H bonding, can decrease the exchange rate of an amide proton by many orders of magnitude from that observed in the freely exposed amides of model peptides such as poly(DL-alanine). With corrections for sequence-related inductive effects [Molday, R. S., Englander, S. W., & Kallen, R. G. (1972) Biochemistry 11, 150-158], the retardation of amide exchange in sodium dodecyl sulfate solubilized coat protein has been calculated with respect to poly(DL-alanine). The most rapidly exchanging protons, which are retarded very little or not at all, are shown to occur at the N- and C-termini of the molecule.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
Several approaches were investigated with the goal to obtain disulfide-free circularized analogues of the 58-residue small protein bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (BPTI). These approaches include (1) a semisynthesis that uses as a starting point naturally occurring BPTI and takes advantage of the native proximity of the C- and N-termini; (2) a synthesis in which a peptide thioester prepared by stepwise Fmoc solid-phase chemistry is cyclized by a solution native chemical ligation step; (3) a stepwise Fmoc solid-phase synthesis of a protected circularly permuted linear sequence, followed by an attempted selective activation and head-to-tail cyclization; and (4) a stepwise Fmoc solid-phase synthesis of the same analogue, but using a different disconnection point, that features backbone amide linker (BAL) anchoring and attempted on-resin cyclization. The first two of these approaches were indeed successful in providing the desired target molecules in excellent purities and respectable yields, and could well be amenable to generalization. It is not yet clear whether or not the latter two approaches could be salvaged by modifications in the details of the chemical procedures applied.Taken in part from the February 2004 Ph.D. thesis of Judit Tulla-Puche. A preliminary report of portions of this work has appeared (Tulla-Puche et al., 2004).Dedicated to the memory of Bruce Merrifield (July 15, 1921--May 14, 2006), mentor and friend, whose conceptualization and development of solid-phase peptide synthesis opened new chapters of the chemical and biological sciences  相似文献   

19.
The attempt is made to find new correlations between local structural characteristics of proteins and the hydrogen exchange rates of their individual main-chain amides, and to relate such correlations to possible mechanisms of hydrogen exchange. It is found that in bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (BPTI) the surface area buried by a particular residue and its neighbors correlates with the exchange rate of the main-chain amide of that residue. As the area buried by a particular fragment can be associated with the stabilization of the protein structure by this fragment, the correlation suggests a role for the energetics of the local unfolding in the mechanism of hydrogen exchange. Calculations based on the assumption that the exchange mechanism involves local unfolding lead to quantitative agreement between the calculated and experimentally measured exchange rates for 80% of the amides of BPTI that are buried or hydrogen bonded to the main-chain or to internal water molecules. The same degree of correlation is found between the calculated exchange rates and partial exchange data for ribonuclease S, hen lysozyme and cytochrome c. A similarly strong correlation is found between calculated exchange rates and the exchange rates of ribonuclease A determined by neutron diffraction in the crystal. The criteria of correlation are, however, less stringent in this case because of the experimental errors, which are larger than for solution data. It is suggested that the observed correlation be used for predictions of hydrogen exchange rates in proteins.  相似文献   

20.
Four N-terminal extended species of the wild-type bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (WT-BPTI), Arg-BPTI (1-BPTI), Met-Glu-Ala-Glu-BPTI (4-BPTI), Ser-Ile-Glu-Gly-Arg-BPTI (5-BPTI) and Gly-Ser-Ile-Glu-Gly-Arg-BPTI (6-BPTI) have been studied by 1H n.m.r. The overall structure of the protein is largely unaffected by the addition of extension peptides. pH titration effects on the C-terminal Ala 58 H beta chemical shift indicate that the structure of 1-BPTI at neutral pH is very similar to that of the WT protein, with a salt bridge between the main chain terminal charges. A salt bridge interaction is prevented by addition of the longer extension peptides. Temperature stabilities are measured by high temperature hydrogen isotope exchange and by microcalorimetry. The stability of 1-BPTI is equal to that of WT-BPTI. A slight decrease in stability is observed for longer extensions, following the order WT-BPTI = 1-BPTI < 5-BPTI = 6-BPTI < 4-BPTI. Small changes in chemical shift are observed for 30 invariant resonances in 4-, 5- and 6-BPTI and for a subset of this group in 1-BPTI. These protons are distributed over about half of the BPTI molecule. The size of the chemical shift changes for many resonances follow the same ranking as the temperature stability. The chemical shift effects are attributed to charge and dielectric effects from extension peptides that probably share a common orientation on the surface of BPTI.  相似文献   

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