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1.
Mean macromolecular dynamics was quantified in vivo by neutron scattering in psychrophile, mesophile, thermophile and hyperthermophile bacteria. Root mean square atomic fluctuation amplitudes determining macromolecular flexibility were found to be similar for each organism at its physiological temperature (~1 Å in the 0.1 ns timescale). Effective force constants determining the mean macromolecular resilience were found to increase with physiological temperature from 0.2 N/m for the psychrophiles, which grow at 4°C, to 0.6 N/m for the hyperthermophiles (85°C), indicating that the increase in stabilization free energy is dominated by enthalpic rather than entropic terms. Larger resilience allows macromolecular stability at high temperatures, while maintaining flexibility within acceptable limits for biological activity.  相似文献   

2.
To explore macromolecular dynamics on the picosecond timescale, we used neutron spectroscopy. First, molecular dynamics were analyzed for the hyperthermophile malate dehydrogenase from Methanococcus jannaschii and a mesophilic homologue, the lactate dehydrogenase from Oryctolagus cunniculus muscle. Hyperthermophiles have elaborate molecular mechanisms of adaptation to extremely high temperature. Using a novel elastic neutron scattering approach that provides independent measurements of the global flexibility and of the structural resilience (rigidity), we have demonstrated that macromolecular dynamics represents one of these molecular mechanisms of thermoadaptation. The flexibilities were found to be similar for both enzymes at their optimal activity temperature and the resilience is higher for the hyperthermophilic protein. Secondly, macromolecular motions were examined in a native and immobilized dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) from Escherichia coli. The immobilized mesophilic enzyme has increased stability and decreased activity, so that its properties are changed to resemble those of the thermophilic enzyme. Are these changes reflected in dynamical behavior? For this study, we performed quasielastic neutron scattering measurements to probe the protein motions. The residence time is 7.95 ps for the native DHFR and 20.36 ps for the immobilized DHFR. The average height of the potential barrier to local motions is therefore increased in the immobilized DHFR, with a difference in activation energy equal to 0.54 kcal/mol, which is, using the theoretical rate equation, of the same order than expected from calculation.  相似文献   

3.
4.
This review of protein dynamics studied by neutron scattering focuses on data collected in the last 10 years. After an introduction to thermal neutron scattering and instrumental aspects, theoretical models that have been used to interpret the data are presented and discussed. Experiments are described according to sample type, protein powders, solutions and membranes. Neutron-scattering results are compared to those obtained from other techniques. The biological relevance of the experimental results is discussed. The major conclusion of the last decade concerns the strong dependence of internal dynamics on the macromolecular environment.  相似文献   

5.
We used small-angle neutron scattering to study the effects of the high hydrostatic pressure on the structure of beta-lactoglobulin. Experiments were carried out at pH 7 on the dimeric form of the protein in a pressure range going from 50 MPa to 300 MPa. These measurements allow the protein size and the interactions between macromolecules to be studied during the application of pressure. Increasing pressure up to 150 MPa leads to a swollen state of the protein that gives rise to an increase of the radius of gyration by about 7%. Within this pressure range, we also show that the interaction between macromolecules weakens although it remains repulsive. The measurements show an aggregation process occurring above 150 MPa. From the spectra analysis, it appears that the aggregation occurs mainly by association of the dimeric units.  相似文献   

6.
The dynamics of lysozyme in the picosecond timescale has been studied when it is in dry and hydrated powder form and when it is embedded in glycerol, glycerol–water, glucose and glucose–water matrices. The investigation has been undertaken through elastic neutron scattering technique on the backscattering spectrometer IN13. The dynamics of dry powder and embedded-in-glucose lysozyme can be considered purely vibrational up to 100 K, where the onset of an anharmonic contribution takes place. This contribution can be attributed to the activation of methyl group reorientations and is described with an Arrhenius trend. An additional source of anharmonic dynamics appears at higher temperatures for lysozyme in hydrated powders and embedded in glycerol, glycerol–water and glucose–water matrices. This second process, also represented with an Arrhenius trend, corresponds to the so-called protein dynamical transition. Both the temperature where such a transition takes place and the magnitude of the protein mean square displacements depend on the environment. The dynamical response of the protein to temperature is put in relationship with its thermal stability.  相似文献   

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8.
Molecular dynamics simulations are performed of bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor in a cryosolution over a range of temperatures from 80 to 300 K and the origins identified of elastic dynamic neutron scattering from the solution. The elastic scattering and mean-square displacement calculated from the molecular dynamics trajectories are in reasonable agreement with experiments on a larger protein in the same solvent. The solvent and protein contributions to the scattering from the simulation model are determined. At lower temperatures (< approximately 200 K) or on shorter timescales ( approximately 10 ps) the scattering contributions are proportional to the isotopic nuclear scattering cross-sections of each component. However, for T > 200 K marked deviations from these cross-sections are seen due to differences in the dynamics of the components of the solution. Rapid activation of solvent diffusion leads to the variation with temperature of the total elastic intensity being determined largely by that of the solvent. At higher temperatures (>240 K) and longer times ( approximately 100 ps) the protein makes the only significant contribution to the scattering, the solvent scattering having moved out of the accessible time-space window. Decomposition of the protein mean-square displacement shows that the observed dynamical transition in the solution at 200-220 K involves activation of both internal motions and external whole-molecule rotational and translational diffusion. The proportion that the external dynamics contributes to the protein mean-square displacement increases to approximately 30 and 60% at 300 K on the 10- and 100-ps timescales, respectively.  相似文献   

9.
Using a microeV neutron spectrometer we have studied the mobility of water in gels formed by two polysaccharides: agarose and hyaluronic acid. Agarose is a nearly uncharged polysaccharide; its gels are fairly stiff, quasi-random networks of fibre bundles. Hyaluronic acid is a highly charged polysaccharide capable of retaining large amounts of water in entangled meshworks with unusual rheological properties. We have analysed sets of quasi-elastic lineshapes broadened by two proton populations with different degrees of freedom. The resulting microscopic mobility parameters and their temperature dependence reveal a complex behaviour. The overall effect of the biopolymer network is to increase translational as well as rotational relaxation times, but the changes observed are not dramatic and cannot fully account for the strikingly different macroscopic properties of these gels. Local electrostatic interactions (over 3 to 20 A) do not appear to influence significantly the rheological behaviour.  相似文献   

10.
《Biophysical journal》2021,120(16):3341-3354
The flexible conformations of a multidomain protein are responsible for its biological functions. Although MurD, a 47-kDa protein that consists of three domains, sequentially changes its domain conformation from an open form to a closed form through a semiclosed form in its enzymatic reaction, the domain dynamics in each conformation remains unclear. In this study, we verify the conformational dynamics of MurD in the corresponding three states (apo and ATP- and inhibitor-bound states) with a combination of small-angle x-ray and neutron scattering (SAXS and SANS), dynamic light scattering (DLS), neutron backscattering (NBS), neutron spin echo (NSE) spectroscopy, and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. Applying principal component analysis of the MD trajectories, twisting and open-closed domain modes are identified as the major collective coordinates. The deviations of the experimental SAXS profiles from the theoretical calculations based on the known crystal structures become smaller in the ATP-bound state than in the apo state, and a further decrease is evident upon inhibitor binding. These results suggest that domain motions of the protein are suppressed step by step of each ligand binding. The DLS and NBS data yield collective and self-translational diffusion constants, respectively, and we used them to extract collective domain motions in nanometer and nanosecond scales from the NSE data. In the apo state, MurD shows both twisting and open-closed domain modes, whereas an ATP binding suppresses twisting domain motions, and a further reduction of open-closed mode is seen in the inhibitor-binding state. These observations are consistent with the structure modifications measured by the small-angle scattering as well as the MD simulations. Such changes in the domain dynamics associated with the sequential enzymatic reactions should be related to the affinity and reaction efficiency with a ligand that binds specifically to each reaction state.  相似文献   

11.
Small-angle neutron scattering was used to examine the effects of molecular crowding on an intrinsically disordered protein, the N protein of bacteriophage λ, in the presence of high concentrations of a small globular protein, bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (BPTI). The N protein was labeled with deuterium, and the D2O concentration of the solvent was adjusted to eliminate the scattering contrast between the solvent and unlabeled BPTI, leaving only the scattering signal from the unfolded protein. The scattering profile observed in the absence of BPTI closely matched that predicted for an ensemble of random conformations. With BPTI added to a concentration of 65 mg/mL, there was a clear change in the scattering profile representing an increase in the mass fractal dimension of the unfolded protein, from 1.7 to 1.9, as expected if crowding favors more compact conformations. The crowding protein also inhibited aggregation of the unfolded protein. At 130 mg/mL BPTI, however, the fractal dimension was not significantly different from that measured at the lower concentration, contrary to the predictions of models that treat the unfolded conformations as convex particles. These results are reminiscent of the behavior of polymers in concentrated melts, suggesting that these synthetic mixtures may provide useful insights into the properties of unfolded proteins under crowding conditions.  相似文献   

12.
Cycloheximide (CHI) at 10 ng/ml partially inhibited protein synthesis in exponential cultures of Tetrahymena Sp. At 20 ng/ml or greater, inhibition was complete. When protein synthesis was inhibited to any extent, cell division ceased immediately. In all instances where measured, synthesis of RNA and DNA also ceased. After a period of delay, cellular functions reinitiated in the order: (i) protein synthesis, (ii) DNA synthesis and, (iii) RNA synthesis and cell division. The delay in cell division was divided into three phases of: I, zero; II, low; and, III, fully recovered rates of exponential protein synthesis. The length of the three phases increased with increasing concentration of CHI Prior growth of cells for one generation in the presence of 7.5 ng/ml CHI (facilitation) eliminated phase I and slightly decreased phases II and III following subsequent challenge with an inhibitory concentration of CHI. Facilitation for six generations further decreased phases II and III. Protein synthesis and cell division were not inhibited during facilitation In the culture, succinate dehydrogenase activity did not increase during the delay but increased normally at the onset of division. In contrast, NADPH-cytochrome c reductase activity continued to increase for an hour after inhibition of protein synthesis, was constant for a period and did not increase again until an hour after reinitiatoin of cell division and RNA synthesis Inhibition of division of all cells was immediate and reinitiation of synthesis and cell division was non-synchronous.  相似文献   

13.
Proteins that translocate across cell membranes need to overcome a significant hydrophobic barrier. This is usually accomplished via specialized protein complexes, which provide a polar transmembrane pore. Exceptions to this include bacterial toxins, which insert into and cross the lipid bilayer itself. We are studying the mechanism by which large antibacterial proteins enter Escherichia coli via specific outer membrane proteins. Here we describe the use of neutron scattering to investigate the interaction of colicin N with its outer membrane receptor protein OmpF. The positions of lipids, colicin N, and OmpF were separately resolved within complex structures by the use of selective deuteration. Neutron reflectivity showed, in real time, that OmpF mediates the insertion of colicin N into lipid monolayers. This data were complemented by Brewster Angle Microscopy images, which showed a lateral association of OmpF in the presence of colicin N. Small angle neutron scattering experiments then defined the three-dimensional structure of the colicin N-OmpF complex. This revealed that colicin N unfolds and binds to the OmpF-lipid interface. The implications of this unfolding step for colicin translocation across membranes are discussed.  相似文献   

14.
In this work we investigate the dynamic properties of hemoglobin in glycerolD(8)/D(2)O solution using incoherent elastic (ENS) and quasi-elastic (QENS) neutron scattering. Taking advantage of complementary energy resolutions of backscattering spectrometers at ILL (Grenoble), we explore motions in a large space-time window, up to 1 ns and 14 A; moreover, in order to cover the harmonic and anharmonic protein dynamics regimes, the elastic experiments have been performed over the wide temperature interval of 20-300 K. To study the dependence of the measured dynamics upon the protein quaternary structure, both deoxyhemoglobin (in T quaternary conformation) and carbonmonoxyhemoglobin (in R quaternary conformation) have been investigated. From the ENS data the mean square displacements of the non-exchangeable hydrogen atoms of the protein and their temperature dependence are obtained. In agreement with previous results on hydrated powders, a dynamical transition at about 220 K is detected. The results show interesting differences between the two hemoglobin quaternary conformations, the T-state protein appearing more rigid and performing faster motions than the R-state one; however, these differences involve motions occurring in the nanosecond time scale and are not detected when only faster atomic motions in the time scale up to 100 ps are investigated. The QENS results put in evidence a relevant Lorentzian quasi-elastic contribution. Analysis of the dependence of the Elastic Incoherent Structure Factor (EISF) and of the Lorentzian halfwidth upon the momentum transfer suggests that the above quasi-elastic contribution arises from the diffusion inside a confined space, values of confinement radius and local diffusion coefficient being compatible with motions of hydrogen atoms of the amino acid side chains. When averaged over the whole range of momentum transfer the QENS data put in evidence differences between deoxy and carbonmonoxy hemoglobin and confirm the quaternary structure dependence of the protein dynamics in the nanosecond time scale.  相似文献   

15.
F-actin, a helical polymer formed by polymerization of the monomers (G-actin), plays crucial roles in various aspects of cell motility. Flexibility of F-actin has been suggested to be important for such a variety of functions. Understanding the flexibility of F-actin requires characterization of a hierarchy of dynamical properties, from internal dynamics of the actin monomers through domain motions within the monomers and relative motions between the monomers within F-actin to large-scale motions of F-actin as a whole. As a first step toward this ultimate purpose, we carried out elastic incoherent neutron scattering experiments on powders of F-actin and G-actin hydrated with D2O and characterized the internal dynamics of F-actin and G-actin. Well established techniques and analysis enabled the extraction of mean-square displacements and their temperature dependence in F-actin and in G-actin. An effective force constant analysis with a model consisting of three energy states showed that two dynamical transitions occur at ∼150 K and ∼245 K, the former of which corresponds to the onset of anharmonic motions and the latter of which couples with the transition of hydration water. It is shown that behavior of the mean-square displacements is different between G-actin and F-actin, such that G-actin is “softer” than F-actin. The differences in the internal dynamics are detected for the first time between the different structural states (the monomeric state and the polymerized state). The different behavior observed is ascribed to the differences in dynamical heterogeneity between F-actin and G-actin. Based on structural data, the assignment of the differences observed in the two samples to dynamics of specific loop regions involved in the polymerization of G-actin into F-actin is proposed.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Excitation energy transfer (EET) in light-harvesting antennae is a highly efficient key event in photosynthesis, where light-induced dynamics of the antenna pigment-protein complexes may play a functional role. So far, however, the relationship between EET and protein dynamics remains unknown. C-phycocyanin (C-PC) is the main pigment/protein complex present in the cyanobacterial antenna, called "phycobilisome". The aim of the present study was to investigate light-induced C-PC internal thermal motions (ps timescale) measured by inelastic neutron scattering. To synchronize the beginning of the laser flash (6 ns duration) with that of the neutron test pulse ( approximately 87 mus duration), we developed a novel type of "time-resolved" experimental setup on MIBEMOL time-of-flight neutron spectrometer (LLB, France). Data acquisition has been modified to get quasi-simultaneously "light" and "dark" measurements (with and without laser, respectively) and eliminate many spurious effects that could occur on the sample during the experiment. The study was carried out on concentrated C-PC ( approximately 135 g/L protein in D(2)O phosphate buffer), contained in an aluminium/sapphire sample holder (almost "transparent" for neutrons) and homogeneously illuminated inside an "integrating sphere". We observed very similar incoherent dynamical structure factors of C-PC with or without light. The vibrational density of states showed two very slightly increased vibrational modes with light, at approximately 30 and approximately 50 meV ( approximately 240 and approximately 400 cm(-1), respectively). These effects have to be verified by further experiments before probing any temporal evolution, by introducing a time delay between the laser flash and the neutron test pulse.  相似文献   

18.
19.
In order to understand the changes in protein dynamics that occur in the final stages of protein folding, we have used neutron scattering to probe the differences between a protein in its folded state and the molten globule states. The internal dynamics of bovine alpha-lactalbumin (BLA) and its molten globules (MBLA) have been examined using incoherent, quasielastic neutron scattering (IQNS). The IQNS results show length scale dependent, pico-second dynamics changes on length scales from 3.3 to 60 A studied. On shorter-length scales, the non-exchangeable protons undergo jump motions over potential barriers, as those involved in side-chain rotamer changes. The mean potential barrier to local jump motions is higher in BLA than in MBLA, as might be expected. On longer length scales, the protons undergo spatially restricted diffusive motions with the diffusive motions being more restricted in BLA than in MBLA. Both BLA and MBLA have similar mean square amplitudes of high frequency motions comparable to the chemical bond vibrational motions. Bond vibrational motions thus do not change significantly upon folding. Interestingly, the quasielastic scattering intensities show pronounced maxima for both BLA and MBLA, suggesting that "clusters" of atoms are moving collectively within the proteins on picosecond time scales. The correlation length, or "the cluster size", of such atom clusters moving collectively is dramatically reduced in the molten globules with the correlation length being 6.9 A in MBLA shorter than that of 18 A in BLA. Such collective motions may be important for the stability of the folded state, and may influence the protein folding pathways from the molten globules.  相似文献   

20.
Theoretical and practical advantages of neutron scattering for the determination of molecular weights of particles in solution are discussed. The method presented does not use known particles for calibration and is applicable to a wide molecular weight range (104–109); it is not sensitive to assumptions about the partial specific volume of the particles, and the experiments are performed quite easily in standard spectrophotometer cells using 100–500 μg of material. The method is nondestructive and the sample can be recovered totally. The use of D2O in solvents has particular advantages especially for multicomponent particles, for which the in situ molecular weight of each component can be determined separately.  相似文献   

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