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1.
K H Mayo 《Biochemistry》1984,23(17):3960-3973
Mouse epidermal growth factor (mEGF), a protein hormone effector molecule that regulates cellular development and division, has been investigated by using proton nuclear magnetic resonance techniques at 500 MHz. Well-resolved downfield aromatic and alpha-CH proton resonances (5.0-8.0 ppm) and an upfield ring current shifted isoleucine delta-methyl resonance (approximately 0.5 ppm) have been examined by using principally nuclear Overhauser methods. The data are analyzed in terms of model building based on the predictive Chou-Fasman secondary structure algorithm applied to mEGF [Holladay, L. A., Savage, C. R., Cohen, S., & Puett, D. (1976) Biochemistry 15, 2624-2633], which suggests the existence of some beta-structure and little or no alpha-helicity. Proximity relationships derived from nuclear Overhauser data among Tyr-3, -10, and -13, His-22, and Ile-23 allow refinement of some aspects of the predicted secondary structure and render additional information on how the protein backbone in mEGF is folded (i.e., tertiary structure). Nuclear Overhauser effects (NOEs) from irradiation of several alpha-CH proton resonances give evidence for tiered beta-sheet structure in mEGF. Such proximity relationships derived from NOE data place stringent limitations on possible models for the molecule. pH titration data demonstrate a His-22 pKa of 7.1, indicating either a salt bridge or hydrogen-bond formation between His-22 and another residue. The His-22 pKa is also reflected in the chemical shift changes of several other resonances as a function of pH. Nuclear Overhauser methods, used to differentiate direct (protonation) and indirect (conformation) effects on the chemical shift changes in the spectra of mEGF by varying the pH, yield evidence for a pH-induced conformational transition in the protein hormone associated with the breaking of the His-22 salt bridge or hydrogen bond.  相似文献   

2.
G I Rhyu  J L Markley 《Biochemistry》1988,27(7):2529-2539
The solution structure of modified turkey ovomucoid third domain (OMTKY3*) was investigated by high-resolution proton NMR techniques. OMTKY3* was obtained by enzymatic hydrolysis of the scissile reactive site peptide bond (Leu18-Glu19) in turkey ovomucoid third domain (OMTKY3). All of the backbone proton resonances were assigned to sequence-specific residues except the NH's of Leu1 and Glu19, which were not observed. Over 80% of the side-chain protons also were assigned. The secondary structure of OMTKY3*, as determined from assigned NOESY cross-peaks and identification of slowly exchanging amide protons, contains antiparallel beta-sheet consisting of three strands (residues 21-25, 28-32, and 49-54), one alpha-helix (residues 33-44), and one reverse turn (residues 26-28). This secondary structure closely resembles that of OMTKY3 in solution [Robertson, A. D., Westler, W. M., & Markley, J. L. (1988) Biochemistry (preceding paper in this issue)]. On the other hand, changes in the tertiary structure of the protein near to and remote from the cleavage site are indicated by differences in the chemical shifts of numerous backbone protons of OMTKY3 and OMTKY3*.  相似文献   

3.
Nearly complete sequence-specific 1H NMR assignments are presented for amino acid residues 3-81 in the 81-residue globular activation domain of porcine pancreatic procarboxypeptidase B isolated after limited tryptic proteolysis of the zymogen. These resonance assignments are consistent with the chemically determined amino acid sequence. Regular secondary structure elements were identified from nuclear Overhauser effects and the sequence locations of slowly exchanging backbone amide protons. The molecule contains two alpha-helices, including residues 20-30 and approximately residues 58-72, and a three-stranded antiparallel beta-sheet with the individual strands extending approximately from 12 to 17, 50 to 55, and 75 to 77. The identification of these secondary structures and a preliminary analysis of additional long-range NOE distance constraints show that isolated activation domain B forms a stable structure with the typical traits of a globular protein. The data presented here are the basis for the determination of the complete three-dimensional structure of activation domain B, which is currently in progress.  相似文献   

4.
Sequence-specific assignments are reported for the 500-MHz 1H nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectrum of the 48-residue polypeptide neurotoxin I from the sea anemone Stichodactyla helianthus (Sh I). Spin systems were first identified by using two-dimensional relayed or multiple quantum filtered correlation spectroscopy, double quantum spectroscopy, and spin lock experiments. Specific resonance assignments were then obtained from nuclear Overhauser enhancement (NOE) connectivities between protons from residues adjacent in the amino acid sequence. Of a total of 265 potentially observable resonances, 248 (i.e., 94%) were assigned, arising from 39 completely and 9 partially assigned amino acid spin systems. The secondary structure of Sh I was defined on the basis of the pattern of sequential NOE connectivities, NOEs between protons on separate strands of the polypeptide backbone, and backbone amide exchange rates. Sh I contains a four-stranded antiparallel beta-sheet encompassing residues 1-5, 16-24, 30-33, and 40-46, with a beta-bulge at residues 17 and 18 and a reverse turn, probably a type II beta-turn, involving residues 27-30. No evidence of alpha-helical structure was found.  相似文献   

5.
The proton and nitrogen (15NH-H alpha-H beta) resonances of bacteriophage T4 lysozyme were assigned by 15N-aided 1H NMR. The assignments were directed from the backbone amide 1H-15N nuclei, with the heteronuclear single-multiple-quantum coherence (HSMQC) spectrum of uniformly 15N enriched protein serving as the master template for this work. The main-chain amide 1H-15N resonances and H alpha resonances were resolved and classified into 18 amino acid types by using HMQC and 15N-edited COSY measurements, respectively, of T4 lysozymes selectively enriched with one or more of alpha-15N-labeled Ala, Arg, Asn, Asp, Gly, Gln, Glu, Ile, Leu, Lys, Met, Phe, Ser, Thr, Trp, Tyr, or Val. The heteronuclear spectra were complemented by proton DQF-COSY and TOCSY spectra of unlabeled protein in H2O and D2O buffers, from which the H beta resonances of many residues were identified. The NOE cross peaks to almost every amide proton were resolved in 15N-edited NOESY spectra of the selectively 15N enriched protein samples. Residue specific assignments were determined by using NOE connectivities between protons in the 15NH-H alpha-H beta spin systems of known amino acid type. Additional assignments of the aromatic proton resonances were obtained from 1H NMR spectra of unlabeled and selectively deuterated protein samples. The secondary structure of T4 lysozyme indicated from a qualitative analysis of the NOESY data is consistent with the crystallographic model of the protein.  相似文献   

6.
K Akasaka  T Inoue  H Hatano  C K Woodward 《Biochemistry》1985,24(12):2973-2979
The hydrogen isotope exchange kinetics of the 10 slowest exchanging resonances in the 1H NMR spectrum of Streptomyces subtilisin inhibitor (SSI) have been determined at pH 7-11 and 30-60 degrees C. These resonances are assigned to peptide amide protons in the beta-sheet core that comprises the extensive protein-protein interface of the tightly bound SSI dimer. The core protons are atypical in that their exchange rates are orders of magnitude slower than those for all other SSI protons. When they do exchange at temperatures greater than 50 degrees C, they do so as a set and with a very high temperature coefficient. The pH dependence of the exchange rate constants is also atypical. Exchange rates are approximately first order in hydroxyl ion dependence at pH less than 8.5 and greater than 9.5 and pH independent between pH 8.5 and 9.5. The pH dependence and temperature dependence of the SSI proton exchange rates are interpreted by the two-process model [Woodward, C. K., & Hilton, B. D. (1980) Biophys. J. 32, 561-575]. The results suggest that in the average solution structure of SSI, an unusual mobility of secondary structural elements at the protein surface is, in a sense, compensated by an unusual rigidity and inaccessibility of the beta-sheet core at the dimer interface.  相似文献   

7.
The solution structure of recombinant wild-type hirudin and of the putative active site mutant Lys-47----Glu has been investigated by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy at 600 MHz. The 1H NMR spectra of the two hirudin variants are assigned in a sequential manner with a combination of two-dimensional NMR techniques. Some assignments made in our previous paper [Sukumaran, D. K., Clore, G. M., Preuss, A., Zarbock, J., & Gronenborn, A. M. (1987) Biochemistry 26, 333-338] were found to be incorrect and are now corrected. Analysis of the NOE data indicates that hirudin consists of an N-terminal compact domain (residues 1-49) held together by three disulfide linkages and a disordered C-terminal tail (residues 50-65) which does not fold back on the rest of the protein. This last observation corrects conclusions drawn by us previously on hirudin extracted from its natural source, the leech Hirudo medicinalis. The improved sensitivity of the 600-MHz spectrometer relative to that of our old 500-MHz spectrometer, the availability of two variants with slightly different chemical shifts, and the additional information arising from stereospecific assignments of methylene beta-protons and methyl protons of valine have permitted the determination of the solution structure of hirudin with much greater precision than before. Structure calculations on the N-terminal domain using the hybrid distance geometry-dynamical simulated annealing method were based on 685 and 661 approximate interproton distance restraints derived from nuclear Overhauser enhancement (NOE) data for the wild-type and mutant hirudin, respectively, together with 16 distance restraints for 8 backbone hydrogen bonds identified on the basis of NOE and amide NH exchange data and 26 phi backbone and 18 chi 1 side-chain torsion angle restraints derived from NOE and three-bond coupling constant data. A total of 32 structures were computed for both the wild-type and mutant hirudin. The structure of residues 2-30 and 37-48 which form the core of the N-terminal domain is well determined in both cases with an average atomic rms difference between the individual structures and the respective mean structures of approximately 0.7 A for the backbone atoms and approximately 1 A for all atoms. As found previously, the orientation of the exposed finger of antiparallel beta-sheet (residues 31-36) with respect to the core could not be determined on the basis of the present data due to the absence of any long-range NOEs between the exposed finger and the core.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
Proton nuclear magnetic resonance (1H NMR) assignments for the murine epidermal growth factor (mEGF) in aqueous solution were determined by using two-dimensional NMR at pH 3.1 and 28 degrees C. The assignments are complete for all backbone hydrogen atoms, with the exception of the N-terminal amino group, and for 46 of the 53 side chains. Among the additional seven amino acid residues, three have complete assignments for all but one side-chain proton, and between two and four protons are missing for the remaining four residues. The sequential assignments by nuclear Overhauser effect spectroscopy are consistent with the chemically determined amino acid sequence. The NMR data show that the conformations of both the Tyr3-Pro4 and Cys6-Pro7 peptide bonds are trans in the predominant solution structure. Proton-deuterium exchange rate constants were also measured for 13 slowly exchanging amide protons. The information presented here has been used elsewhere to determine the three-dimensional structure of mEGF in aqueous solution.  相似文献   

9.
A soluble and fully functional 10.5 kDa fragment of the 18.2 kDa membrane-bound cytochrome c(552) from Paracoccus denitrificans has been heterologously expressed and (13)C/(15)N-labeled to study the structural features of this protein in both redox states. Well-resolved solution structures of both the reduced and oxidized states have been determined using high-resolution heteronuclear NMR. The overall protein topology consists of two long terminal helices and three shorter helices surrounding the heme moiety. No significant redox-induced structural differences have been observed. (15)N relaxation rates and heteronuclear NOE values were determined at 500 and 600 MHz. Several residues located around the heme moiety display increased backbone mobility in both oxidation states, while helices I, III, and V as well as the two concatenated beta-turns between Leu30 and Arg36 apparently form a less flexible domain within the protein structure. Major redox-state-dependent differences of the internal backbone mobility on the picosecond-nanosecond time scale were not evident. Hydrogen exchange experiments demonstrated that the slow-exchanging amide proton resonances mainly belong to the helices and beta-turns, corresponding to the regions with high order parameters in the dynamics data. Despite this correlation, the backbone amide protons of the oxidized cytochrome c(552) exchange considerably faster with the solvent compared to the reduced protein. Using both differential scanning calorimetry as well as temperature-dependent NMR spectroscopy, a significant difference in the thermostabilities of the two redox states has been observed, with transition temperatures of 349.9 K (76.8 degrees C) for reduced and 307.5 K (34.4 degrees C) for oxidized cytochrome c(552). These results suggest a clearly distinct backbone stability between the two oxidation states.  相似文献   

10.
Reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography of mouse epidermal growth factor (mEGF) purified by the method of Savage and Cohen allows resolution of four forms of the protein hormone: alpha, beta, gamma and delta. alpha-mEGF, the major form isolated by HPLC, is the parent mEGF originally sequenced by Savage and Cohen, and beta-mEGF is des-asparaginyl1-alpha-mEGF. Proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy has been used to investigate structural and dynamical differences among the alpha, beta and gamma forms of the peptide. Based on these data, gamma-mEGF can be tentatively identified as des-Asn1, Ser2-mEGF. Comparative nuclear Overhauser experiments on amide and aromatic proton resonances suggest that there are significant conformational changes in the peptide structure on cleavage of the N-terminal residues. Backbone amide proton/deuteron exchange rates in gamma-mEGF and beta-mEGF are significantly faster than those in alpha-mEGF suggesting that structural dynamics are enhanced in the minor forms; this interpretation is supported by the decrease in Tyr(2,6)-(3,5) intraresidue NOE magnitudes on going from alpha to beta to gamma forms. These data suggest that the average conformations of beta and gamma-mEGF favor a more open or denatured state of the protein and that the N terminus is critical to the structural integrity of the parent protein.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
X L Zhang  M E Selsted  A Pardi 《Biochemistry》1992,31(46):11348-11356
Two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy has been used to make resonance assignments of the proton spectra of two defensin antimicrobial peptides, human neutrophil peptide HNP-1 and rabbit neutrophil peptide NP-2. The secondary structures of these peptides were determined from analysis of the proton-proton NOEs and from the positions of slowly exchanging amide protons. Both peptides contain a long stretch of a double-stranded antiparallel beta-sheet in a hairpin conformation that contains a beta-bulge, a short region of triple-stranded beta-sheet, and several tight turns. The NMR results clearly show that HNP-1 forms a dimer or higher order aggregate in solution and that Pro8 exists as a cis peptide bond. The NMR data on these peptides are compared with NMR data for a homologous peptide NP-5 [Bach, A. C., Selsted, M. E., & Pardi, A. (1987) Biochemistry 26, 4389-4397]. Analysis of the conformation-dependent proton chemical shifts shows that it is not possible to confidently judge the structural similarity of the three defensins from chemical shift data alone. However, comparison of the 3JHN alpha coupling constants in NP-2 and NP-5 indicates that the backbone conformations for these peptides are very similar. A more detailed comparison of the solution conformations of the defensins peptides is made in the following paper in this issue where the NMR data are used as input for distance geometry and molecular dynamics calculations to determine the three-dimensional structures of HNP-1 and NP-2.  相似文献   

13.
The determination by NMR of the solution structure of the phosphorylated enzyme IIB (P-IIB(Chb)) of the N,N'-diacetylchitobiose-specific phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent phosphotransferase system of Escherichia coli is presented. Most of the backbone and side-chain resonances were assigned using a variety of mostly heteronuclear NMR experiments. The remaining resonances were assigned with the help of the structure calculations.NOE-derived distance restraints were used in distance geometry calculations followed by molecular dynamics and simulated annealing protocols. In addition, combinations of ambiguous restraints were used to resolve ambiguities in the NOE assignments. By combining sets of ambiguous and unambiguous restraints into new ambiguous restraints, an error function was constructed that was less sensitive to information loss caused by assignment uncertainties. The final set of structures had a pairwise rmsd of 0.59 A and 1.16 A for the heavy atoms of the backbone and side-chains, respectively.Comparing the P-IIB(Chb) solution structure with the previously determined NMR and X-ray structures of the wild-type and the Cys10Ser mutant shows that significant differences between the structures are limited to the active-site region. The phosphoryl group at the active-site cysteine residue is surrounded by a loop formed by residues 10 through 16. NOE and chemical shift data suggest that the phosphoryl group makes hydrogen bonds with the backbone amide protons of residues 12 and 15. The binding mode of the phosphoryl group is very similar to that of the protein tyrosine phosphatases. The differences observed are in accordance with the presumption that IIB(Chb) has to be more resistant to hydrolysis than the protein tyrosine phosphatases. We propose a proton relay network by which a transfer occurs between the cysteine SH proton and the solvent via the hydroxyl group of Thr16.  相似文献   

14.
Active fragments of the heat-stable enterotoxin ST I of Escherichia coli were chemically synthesized with the sequence Cys-Cys-Glu-Leu-Cys-Cys-Asn-Pro-Ala-Cys-Thr-Gly-Cys-(Tyr) and studied by proton (1H NMR) and carbon-13 (13C NMR) nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy as a function of pH and temperature. All of the nonexchangeable protons in the 1H NMR spectrum were assigned. Although all amide protons were present at temperatures below 25 degrees C and and pH values below 6, some of the resonances are broad and could not be assigned. The temperature dependence of these broad resonances indicates a change in conformation that is localized in the N-terminus. Other amide protons disappear at higher temperatures owing to chemical exchange with the solvent. Sufficient resonance assignments can be made at high and low temperatures to permit structural conclusions to be made. The chemical shifts of the alpha-carbon protons indicate the presence of substantial structure, which was further defined with the observed pattern of nuclear Overhauser enhancements (NOEs), coupling constants, and exchange rates. The NMR data identify a turn from Ala-14 to Cys-18. A second likely turn is centered around the proline residue. An interresidue NOE between the alpha-carbon protons of Asn-12 and Gly-17 indicates that the molecule folds back on itself. The NMR information is sufficient to define the structure of the C-terminal region of ST I. Manual model building then indicated that one arrangement of the three disulfides is particularly compatible with the NMR data and van der Waals constraints. A model incorporating the disulfide arrangement proposed by Houghten and his co-workers [Houghten, R.A., Ostresh, J.M., & Klipstein, F.A. (1984) Eur. J. Biochem. 145, 157-162] and the NMR constraints was derived with the programs PROTO [Frayman, F. (1985) Ph.D. Thesis, Northwestern University] and NOEMOT [Lane, A.N., Lefévre, J.-F., & Jardetsky, O. (1986) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 867, 45-56].  相似文献   

15.
Summary The backbone 1H and 15N resonances of the N-terminal SH3 domain of the Drosophila signaling adapter protein, drk, have been assigned. This domain is in slow exchange on the NMR timescale between folded and predominantly unfolded states. Data were collected on both states simultaneously, on samples of the SH3 in near physiological buffer exhibiting an approximately 1:1 ratio of the two states. NMR methods which exploit the chemical shift dispersion of the 15N resonances of unfolded states and pulsed field gradient water suppression approaches for avoiding saturation and dephasing of amide protons which rapidly exchange with solvent were utilized for the assignment.Abbreviations 2D, 3D two-, three-dimensional - drkN SH3 N-terminal SH3 domain of Drosophila drk - HSQC heteronuclear single-quantum spectroscopy - NOE nuclear Overhauser enhancement - SH3 Src homology domain 3 - TOCSY total correlation spectroscopy  相似文献   

16.
2D 1H-NMR spectra of des-Gly9-[Arg8]vasopressin in dimethylsulfoxide have been taken and the 1H resonances have been assigned. The coupling constants and amide proton temperature coefficients (delta delta/delta T) have been measured and the NOE cross-peaks in the NOESY spectrum have been analyzed. The most essential information on the spatial structure of des-Gly9-[Arg8]vasopressin is extracted from the low delta delta/delta T value for Asn5 amide proton and from the NOE between the Cys1 and Cys6 alpha-protons. A diminished accessibility of the Asn5 NH proton for the solvent is ascribed to the presence of a beta-turn in the fragment 2-5. The distance between the Cys1 and Cys6 C alpha H protons seems to be less than 4 A. These constraints were taken into account in the conformational analysis of the title peptide. The derived set of the low-energy backbone conformations was analyzed against the background of the all available NMR data. The most probable conformation of the cyclic moiety in des-Gly9-[Arg8]vasopressin was found to be the type III beta-turn. The corner positions are occupied by the residues 3, 4, while the residues 1-2 and 5-6 are at the extended sites. Some NMR data indicate that this structure is in a dynamic equilibrium with other minor conformers.  相似文献   

17.
The solution structure of neuronal bungarotoxin (nBgt) has been studied by using two-dimensional 1H NMR spectroscopy. Sequence-specific assignments for over 95% of the backbone resonances and 85% of the side-chain resonances have been made by using a series of two-dimensional spectra at four temperatures. From these assignments over 75% of the NOESY spectrum has been assigned, which has in turn provided 582 distance constraints. Twenty-seven coupling constants (NH-alpha CH) were determined from the COSY spectra, which have provided dihedral angle constraints. In addition, hydrogen exchange experiments have suggested the probable position of hydrogen bonds. The NOE constraints, dihedral angle constraints, and the rates of amide proton exchange suggest that a triple-stranded antiparallel beta sheet is the major component of secondary structure, which includes 25% of the amino acid residues. A number of NOE peaks were observed that were inconsistent with the antiparallel beta-sheet structure. Because we have confirmed by sedimentation equilibrium that nBgt exists as a dimer, we have reinterpreted these NOE constraints as intermolecular interactions. These constraints suggest that the dimer consists of a six-stranded antiparallel beta sheet (three from each monomer), with residues 55-59 forming the dimer interface.  相似文献   

18.
M Ikura  O Minowa  K Hikichi 《Biochemistry》1985,24(16):4264-4269
The C-terminal half-fragment (residues 78-148) of scallop testis calmodulin was investigated by 500-MHz two-dimensional proton NMR in order to clarify the structure and the structural change accompanying Ca2+ binding. The sequential resonance assignment to individual amino acid residues was made in part (27 out of 71 residues) by a combination of correlated spectroscopy and nuclear Overhauser effect spectroscopy of a 90% H2O solution. In the Ca2+-bound state, resonances of backbone amide protons of Gly-98, Gly-134, Ile-100, Asn-137, and Val-136 appear at extremely low fields. These findings suggest that amide protons of these residues are hydrogen bonded. In the Ca2+-free state, the amide resonances of Ile-100 and Gly-134 disappear into the crowded normal shift region. This observation indicates that two hydrogen bonds of Ile-100 and Gly-134 are destroyed (or weakened) as Ca2+ ions are removed from two Ca2+-binding sites. Chemical shifts of amide and alpha-protons of residues located in the Ca2+-binding loop of domain III are similar to those of domain IV. These results suggest that the conformations of the two loops are very similar. The present results can be interpreted in terms of a structure predicted by Kretsinger [Kretsinger, R.H. (1980) Ann. N.Y. Acad. Sci. 356, 14].  相似文献   

19.
Khare D  Alexander P  Orban J 《Biochemistry》1999,38(13):3918-3925
Protium-deuterium fractionation factors (phi) were determined for more than 85% of the backbone amide protons in the IgG binding domains of protein G, GB1 and GB2, from NMR spectra recorded over a range of H2O/D2O solvent ratios. Previous studies suggest a correlation between phi and hydrogen bond strength; amide and hydroxyl groups in strong hydrogen bonds accumulate protium (phi < 1), while weak hydrogen bonds accumulate deuterium (phi > 1). Our results show that the alpha-helical residues have slightly lower phi values (1.03 +/- 0.05) than beta-sheet residues (1.12 +/- 0.07), on average. The lowest phi value obtained (0.65) does not involve a backbone amide but rather is for the interaction between two side chains, Y45 and D47. Fractionation factors for solvent-exposed residues are between the alpha-helix and beta-sheet values, on average, and are close to those for random coil peptides. Further, the difference in phiav between alpha-helix and solvent-exposed residues is small, suggesting that differences in hydrogen bond strength for intrachain hydrogen bonds and amide...water hydrogen bonds are also small. Overall, the enrichment for deuterium suggests that most backbone...backbone hydrogen bonds are weak.  相似文献   

20.
The solution structure of murine epidermal growth factor (mEGF) at pH 3.1 and a temperature of 28 degrees C has been determined from NMR data, using distance geometry calculations and restrained energy minimization. The structure determination is based on 730 conformational constraints derived from NMR data, including 644 NOE-derived upper bound distance constraints, constraints on the ranges of 32 dihedral angles based on measurements of vicinal coupling constants, and 54 upper and lower bound constraints associated with nine hydrogen bonds and the three disulfide bonds. The distance geometry interpretation of the NMR data is based on previously published sequence-specific 1H resonance assignments [Montelione et al. (1988) Biochemistry 27, 2235-2243], supplemented here with individual assignments for some side-chain amide, methylene, and isopropyl methyl protons. The molecular architecture of mEGF is the same as that described previously [Montelione et al. (1987) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 84, 5226-5230], but the structure is overall more precisely determined by a more extensive set of NMR constraints. Analysis of proton NMR line widths, amide proton exchange rates, and side-chain 3J(H alpha-H beta) coupling constants provides evidence for internal motion in several regions of the mEGF molecule. Because mEGF is one member of a large family of homologous growth factors and protein domains for which X-ray crystal structures are not yet available, the atomic coordinates resulting from the present structure refinement (which we have deposited in the Brookhaven Protein Data Bank) are important data for understanding the structures of EGF-like proteins and for further detailed comparisons of these structures with mEGF.  相似文献   

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