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1.
G Hernández  D M LeMaster 《Biochemistry》2001,40(48):14384-14391
Spatially localized differences in the conformational dynamics of the rubredoxins from the hyperthermophile Pyrococcus furiosus (Pf) and the mesophile Clostridium pasteurianum (Cp) are monitored via amide exchange measurements. As shown previously for the hyperthermophile protein, nearly all backbone amides of the Cp rubredoxin exhibit EX(2) hydrogen exchange kinetics with conformational opening rates of >1 s(-)(1). Significantly slower amide exchange is observed for Pf rubredoxin in the region surrounding the metal site and the proximal end of the three-stranded beta-sheet, while for the rest of the structure, the exchange rates at 23 degrees C are similar for both proteins. For the multiple-turn region comprising residues 14-32 in both rubredoxins, the uniformity of both the exchange rate constants and the values of the activation energy at the slowly exchanging sites is consistent with a model of solvent exposure via a subglobal cooperative conformational opening. In contrast to the common expectation of increased rigidity in the hyperthermophile proteins, below room temperature Pf rubredoxin exhibits a larger apparent flexibility in this multiple-turn region. The smaller enthalpy for the conformational opening process of this region in Pf rubredoxin reflects the much weaker temperature dependence of the underlying conformational equilibrium in the hyperthermophile protein.  相似文献   

2.
Hydrogen exchange measurements on Zn(II)-, Ga(III)-, and Ge(IV)-substituted Pyrococcus furiosus rubredoxin demonstrate that the log ratio of the base-catalyzed rate constants (Delta log k(ex)) varies inversely with the distance out to at least 12 A from the metal. This pattern is consistent with the variation of the amide nitrogen pK values with the metal charge-dependent changes in the electrostatic potential. Fifteen monitored amides lie within this range, providing an opportunity to assess the strength of electrostatic interactions simultaneously at numerous positions within the structure. Poisson-Boltzmann calculations predict an optimal effective internal dielectric constant of 6. The largest deviations between the experimentally estimated and the predicted DeltapK values appear to result from the conformationally mobile charged side chains of Lys-7 and Glu-48 and from differential shielding of the peptide units arising from their orientation relative to the metal site.  相似文献   

3.
The tetracysteine metal coordination site of the rubredoxins from Clostridium pasteurianum (Cp) and Pyrococcus furiosus (Pf) are shown to stably bind the inorganic Ge(IV) ion. This is the first characterized coordination complex of tetravalent germanium with a biological macromolecule. Zn(II), Ga(III) and Ge(IV) substitution yields differential NMR chemical shifts for the 1H and 15N amide resonances throughout much of the protein structure. The differential shifts for the six backbone amides that hydrogen bond to the metal-coordinated sulfurs indicate that the pseudo 2-fold symmetry of the active site is more closely maintained in the hyperthermophile Pf rubredoxin than in its mesophile Cp homolog. These three metal substitutions form an isoelectronic series of small diamagnetic proteins for which reference structures are known to 1A resolution. These series provide a promising system to analyze theoretical predictions of the effects of differential charge distribution on chemical shifts from both proximal and long range interactions.  相似文献   

4.
Equilibrium amide hydrogen exchange studies of barstar have been carried out at pH 6.7, 32° SDC using one- and two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance. An unusually large fraction of the backbone amide hydrogens of barstar exchange too fast to be measured, and the exchange rates of only fifteen slow-exchanging amide sites including indole amides of two tryptophans could be measured in the presence of 0 to 1.8 M guanidine hydrochloride (GdnHCl). Measurement of exchange occurring in tens of seconds in the unfolding transition region was possible by the use of a fast stopped-flow mixing method. The observed exchange rates have been simulated in the EX2 limit according to a two-process model that incorporates two exchange-competent states: a transiently unfolded state (U*) in which many amide hydrogens are completely accessible to solvent-exchange, and a near-native locally unfolded state (N*), in which only one or a few amide hydrogens are completely accessible to solvent-exchange. The two-process model appears to account for the observed exchange behavior over the entire range of GdnHCl concentrations studied. For several measurable slow-exchanging amide hydrogens, the free energies of production of exchange-competent states from the exchange-incompetent native state are significantly higher than the free-energy of production of the equilibrium unfolded state from the native state, when the latter is determined from circular dichroism- or fluorescence-monitored equilibrium unfolding curves. The result implies that U*, which forms transiently in the strongly native-like conditions used for the hydrogen exchange studies, is higher in energy than the equilibrium-unfolded state. The higher energy of this transiently unfolded exchange-competent state can be attributed to either proline isomerization or to the presence of residual structure. On the basis of the free energies of production of exchange-competent states, the measured amide sites of barstar appear to define two structural subdomains—a three-helix unit and a two-β-strand unit in the core of the protein. Proteins 30:295–308, 1998. © 1998 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

5.
The extreme thermal stability of proteins from hyperthermophilic organisms is widely believed to arise from an increased conformational rigidity in the native state. In apparent contrast to this paradigm, both Pyrococcus furiosus (Pf) rubredoxin, the most thermostable protein characterized to date, and its Clostridium pasteurianum (Cp) mesophile homolog undergo a transient conformational opening of their multi-turn segments, which is more favorable in hyperthermophile proteins below room temperature. Substitution of the hyperthermophile multi-turn sequence into the mesophile protein sequence yields a hybrid, (14-33(Pf)) Cp, that exhibits a 12 degrees increase in its reversible thermal unfolding transition midpoint. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) magnetization transfer-based hydrogen exchange was used to monitor backbone conformational dynamics in the subsecond time regime. Despite the substantially increased thermostability, flexibility throughout the entire main chain of the more thermostable hybrid is equal to or greater than that of the wild type mesophile rubredoxin near its normal growth temperature. In comparison to the identical core residues of the (14-33(Pf)) Cp rubredoxin hybrid, six spatially clustered residues in the parental mesophile protein exhibit a substantially larger temperature dependence of exchange. The exchange behavior of these six residues closely matches that observed in the multi-turn segment, consistent with a more extensive conformational process. These six core residues exhibit a much weaker temperature dependence of exchange in the (14-33(Pf)) Cp hybrid, similar to that observed for the multi-turn segment in its parental Pf rubredoxin. These results suggest that differential temperature dependence of flexibility can underlie variations in thermostability observed for mesophile versus hyperthermophile homologs.  相似文献   

6.
pH dependence of hydrogen exchange from backbone peptide amides in apamin   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
C E Dempsey 《Biochemistry》1986,25(13):3904-3911
The kinetics of hydrogen exchange of the 11 most protected backbone amides of bee venom apamin have been measured between pH 1 and pH 8.5 by using time-resolved and saturation-transfer NMR spectroscopy. The five amides most protected from base-catalyzed exchange, those of residues 5 and 12-15, show highly correlated exchange behavior in the base-catalyzed regime. It is proposed that the intramolecular hydrogen bonds stabilizing these amides define a stable cooperative unit of secondary structure in apamin (a C-terminal helix and an N-terminal beta-turn). This conformational unit is further stabilized (by 5-6 kJ mol-1) on titration of the Glu-7 side-chain carboxyl group. The relative contributions of specific intramolecular interactions to this conformational stabilization are estimated. The pHminima in the pH-dependent single amide exchange curves are compared with values predicted by correcting for sequence-dependent contributions to amide exchange rates [Molday, R. S., Englander, S. W., & Kallen, R. G. (1972) Biochemistry 11, 150-158]. The lack of correlation suggests that the "open" conformers from which amide exchange occurs are nonrandom. This conclusion is dependent on the assumption that acid-catalyzed exchange occurs via N-protonation so that residual conformational effects on exchange rates in the open conformers will affect acid- and base-catalyzed rates in approximately equal and opposite ways. A strong correlation between the measured pHminima and the amide proton chemical shifts is observed, however, and this may be most easily accommodated if acid-catalyzed exchange occurs by the imidic acid mechanism (via amide O-protonation).  相似文献   

7.
The exchange rates of the static solvent-accessible amide hydrogens of Pyrococcus furiosus rubredoxin range from near the diffusion-limited rate to a billion-fold slower for the non-hydrogen-bonded Val 38 (eubacterial numbering). Hydrogen exchange directly monitors the kinetic acidity of the peptide nitrogen. Electrostatic solvation free energies were calculated by Poisson-Boltzmann methods for the individual peptide anions that form during the hydroxide-catalyzed exchange reaction to examine how well the predicted thermodynamic acidities match the experimentally determined kinetic acidities. With the exception of the Ile 12 amide, the differential exchange rate constant for each solvent-exposed amide proton that is not hydrogen bonded to a backbone carbonyl can be predicted within a factor of 6 (10 (0.78)) root-mean-square deviation (rmsd) using the CHARMM22 electrostatic parameter set and an internal dielectric value of 3. Under equivalent conditions, the PARSE parameter set yields a larger rmsd value of 1.28 pH units, while the AMBER parm99 parameter set resulted in a considerably poorer correlation. Either increasing the internal dielectric value to 4 or reducing it to a value of 2 significantly degrades the quality of the prediction. Assigning the excess charge of the peptide anion equally between the peptide nitrogen and the carbonyl oxygen also reduces the correlation to the experimental data. These continuum electrostatic calculations were further analyzed to characterize the specific structural elements that appear to be responsible for the wide range of peptide acidities observed for these solvent-exposed amides. The striking heterogeneity in the potential at sites along the protein-solvent interface should prove germane to the ongoing challenge of quantifying the contribution that electrostatic interactions make to the catalytic acceleration achieved by enzymes.  相似文献   

8.

Background  

Chimeric hybrids derived from the rubredoxins of Pyrococcus furiosus (Pf) and Clostridium pasteurianum (Cp) provide a robust system for the characterization of protein conformational stability and dynamics in a differential mode. Interchange of the seven nonconserved residues of the metal binding site between the Pf and Cp rubredoxins yields a complementary pair of hybrids, for which the sum of the thermodynamic stabilities is equal to the sum for the parental proteins. Furthermore, the increase in amide hydrogen exchange rates for the hyperthermophile-derived metal binding site hybrid is faithfully mirrored by a corresponding decrease for the complementary hybrid that is derived from the less thermostable rubredoxin, indicating a degree of additivity in the conformational fluctuations that underlie these exchange reactions.  相似文献   

9.
LeMaster DM  Tang J  Hernández G 《Proteins》2004,57(1):118-127
The striking kinetic stability of many proteins derived from hyperthermophilic organisms has led to the proposal that such stability may result from a heightened activation barrier for unfolding independent of a corresponding increase in the thermodynamic stability. This in turn implies a corresponding retardation of the folding reaction. A commonly cited model for kinetic thermal stabilization is the rubredoxin from Pyrococcus furiosus (Pf), which exhibits an irreversible denaturation lifetime at 100 degrees C of nearly a week. Utilizing protein resonances shifted well outside of the random coil chemical shift envelope, nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) chemical exchange measurements on Pf rubredoxin as well as on the mesophile Clostridium pasteurianum (Cp) rubredoxin demonstrate reversible thermal transition temperatures of 144 degrees C (137 degrees C for the N-terminal modified A2K variant) and 104 degrees C, respectively, with similar (un)folding rates of approximately 25,000 s(-1), only modestly slower than the diffusion controlled rate. The absence of a substantial activation barrier to rubredoxin folding as well as the similar folding kinetics of the mesophile protein indicate that kinetic stabilization has not been utilized by the hyperthermophile rubredoxin in achieving its extreme thermal stability. The two-state folding kinetics observed for Pf rubredoxin contradict a previous assertion of multiphasic folding based on hydrogen exchange data extrapolated to an estimated midpoint of transition temperature (T(m)) of nearly 200 degrees C. This discrepancy is resolved by the observation that the base-catalyzed hydrogen exchange of the model dipeptide (N-acetyl-L-cysteine-N-methylamide)4-Cd2+ is 23-fold slower than that of the free cysteine model dipeptide used to normalize the Pf rubredoxin hydrogen exchange data.  相似文献   

10.
The four-helical immunity protein Im7 folds through an on-pathway intermediate that has a specific, but partially misfolded, hydrophobic core. In order to gain further insight into the structure of this species, we have identified the backbone hydrogen bonds formed in the ensemble by measuring the amide exchange rates (under EX2 conditions) of the wild-type protein and a variant, I72V. In this mutant the intermediate is significantly destabilised relative to the unfolded state (deltadeltaG(ui) = 4.4 kJ/mol) but the native state is only slightly destabilised (deltadeltaG(nu) = 1.8 kJ/mol) at 10 degrees C in 2H2O, pH* 7.0 containing 0.4 M Na2SO4, consistent with the view that this residue forms significant non-native stabilising interactions in the intermediate state. Comparison of the hydrogen exchange rates of the two proteins, therefore, enables the state from which hydrogen exchange occurs to be identified. The data show that amides in helices I, II and IV in both proteins exchange slowly with a free energy similar to that associated with global unfolding, suggesting that these helices form highly protected hydrogen-bonded helical structure in the intermediate. By contrast, amides in helix III exchange rapidly in both proteins. Importantly, the rate of exchange of amides in helix III are slowed substantially in the Im7* variant, I72V, compared with the wild-type protein, whilst other amides exchange more rapidly in the mutant protein, in accord with the kinetics of folding/unfolding measured using chevron analysis. These data demonstrate, therefore, that local fluctuations do not dominate the exchange mechanism and confirm that helix III does not form stable secondary structure in the intermediate. By combining these results with previously obtained Phi-values, we show that the on-pathway folding intermediate of Im7 contains extensive, stable hydrogen-bonded structure in helices I, II and IV, and that this structure is stabilised by both native and non-native interactions involving amino acid side-chains in these helices.  相似文献   

11.
The backbone dynamics of the EF-hand Ca(2+)-binding protein, calbindin D9k, has been investigated in the apo, (Cd2+)1 and (Ca2+)2 states by measuring the rate constants for amide proton exchange with solvent. 15N-1H correlation spectroscopy was utilized to follow direct 1H-->2H exchange of the slowly exchanging amide protons and to follow indirect proton exchange via saturation transfer from water to the rapidly exchanging amide protons. Plots of experimental rate constants versus intrinsic rate constants have been analyzed to give qualitative insight into the opening modes of the protein that lead to exchange. These results have been interpreted within the context of a progressive unfolding model, wherein hydrophobic interactions and metal chelation serve to anchor portions of the protein, thereby damping fluctuations and retarding amide proton exchange. The addition of Ca2+ or Cd2+ was found to retard the exchange of many amide protons observed to be in hydrogen-bonding environments in the crystal structure of the (Ca2+)2 state, but not of those amide protons that were not involved in hydrogen bonds. The largest changes in rate constant occur for residues in the ion-binding loops, with substantial effects also found for the adjacent residues in helices I, II and III, but not helix IV. The results are consistent with a reorganization of the hydrogen-bonding networks in the metal ion-binding loops, accompanied by a change in the conformation of helix IV, as metal ions are chelated. Further analysis of the results obtained for the three states of metal occupancy provides insight into the nature of the changes in conformational fluctuations induced by ion binding.  相似文献   

12.
Native-state hydrogen exchange (HX) studies, used in conjunction with NMR spectroscopy, have been carried out on Escherichia coli thioredoxin (Trx) for characterizing two folding subdomains of the protein. The backbone amide protons of only the slowest-exchanging 24 amino acid residues, of a total of 108 amino acid residues, could be followed at pH 7. The free energy of the opening event that results in an amide hydrogen exchanging with solvent (DeltaG(op)) was determined at each of the 24 amide hydrogen sites. The values of DeltaG(op) for the amide hydrogens belonging to residues in the helices alpha(1), alpha(2), and alpha(4) are consistent with them exchanging with the solvent only when the fully unfolded state is sampled transiently under native conditions. The denaturant-dependences of the values of DeltaG(op) provide very little evidence that the protein samples partially unfolded forms, lower in energy than the unfolded state. The amide hydrogens belonging to the residues in the beta strands, which form the core of the protein, appear to have higher values of DeltaG(op) than amide hydrogens belonging to residues in the helices, suggesting that they might be more stable to exchange. This apparently higher stability to HX of the beta strands might be either because they exchange out their amide hydrogens in a high energy intermediate preceding the globally unfolded state, or, more likely, because they form residual structure in the globally unfolded state. In either case, the central beta strands-beta(3,) beta(2), and beta(4)-would appear to form a cooperatively folding subunit of the protein. The native-state HX methodology has made it possible to characterize the free energy landscape that Trx can sample under equilibrium native conditions.  相似文献   

13.
Dynein light chain (DLC8) is the smallest subunit of the dynein motor complex, which is known to act as a cargo adaptor in intracellular trafficking. The protein exists as a pure dimer at physiological pH and a completely folded monomer below pH 4. Here, we have determined the energy landscape of the dimeric protein using a combination of optical techniques and native-state hydrogen exchange of amide groups, the former giving the global features and the latter yielding the residue level details. The data indicated the presence of intermediates along the equilibrium unfolding transition. The hydrogen exchange data suggested that the molecule has differential stability in its various segments. We deduce from the free energy data that the antiparallel beta-sheets (beta4 and beta5) that form the hydrophobic core of the protein and the alpha2 helix, all of which are highly protected with regard to hydrogen exchange, contribute significantly to the initial step of the protein folding mechanism. Denaturant-dependent hydrogen exchange indicated further that some amides exchange via local fluctuations, whereas there are others which exchange via global unfolding events. Implications of these to cargo adaptability of the dimer are discussed.  相似文献   

14.
At equilibrium, every energetically feasible conformation of a protein occurs with a non-zero probability. Quantitative analysis of protein flexibility is thus synonymous with determining the proper Boltzmann-weighting of this conformational distribution. The exchange reactivity of solvent-exposed amide hydrogens greatly varies with conformation, while the short-lived peptide anion intermediate implies an insensitivity to the dynamics of conformational motion. Amides that are well-exposed in model conformational ensembles of ubiquitin vary a million-fold in exchange rates which continuum dielectric methods can predict with an rmsd of 3. However, the exchange rates for many of the more rarely exposed amides are markedly overestimated in the PDB-deposited 2K39 and 2KN5 ubiquitin ensembles, while the 2NR2 ensemble predictions are largely consistent with those of the Boltzmann-weighted conformational distribution sampled at the level of 1%. The correlation between the fraction of solvent-accessible conformations for a given amide hydrogen and the exchange rate constant for that residue provides a useful monitor of the degree of completeness with which a given ensemble has sampled the energetically accessible conformational space. These exchange predictions correlate with the degree to which each ensemble deviates from a set of 46 ubiquitin X-ray structures. Kolmogorov-Smirnov analysis for the distribution of intra- and inter-ensemble pairwise structural rmsd values assisted the identification of a subensemble of 2K39 that eliminates the overestimations of hydrogen exchange rates observed for the full ensemble. The relative merits of incorporating experimental restraints into the conformational sampling process are compared to using these restraints as filters to select subpopulations consistent with the experimental data.  相似文献   

15.
The hydrogen exchange kinetics of 68 individual amide protons in the native state of hen lysozyme have been measured at pH 7.5 and 30 degrees C by 2D NMR methods. These constitute the most protected subset of amides, with exchange half lives some 10(5)-10(7) times longer than anticipated from studies of small model peptides. The observed distribution of rates under these conditions can be rationalized to a large extent in terms of the hydrogen bonding of individual amides and their burial from bulk solvent. Exchange rates have also been measured in a reversibly denatured state of lysozyme; this was made possible under very mild conditions, pH 2.0 35 degrees C, by lowering the stability of the native state through selective cleavage of the Cys-6-Cys-127 disulfide cross-link (CM6-127 lysozyme). In this state the exchange rates for the majority of amides approach, within a factor of 5, the values anticipated from small model peptides. For a few amides, however, there is evidence for significant retardation (up to nearly 20-fold) relative to the predicted rates. The pattern of protection observed under these conditions does not reflect the behavior of the protein under strongly native conditions, suggesting that regions of native-like structure do not persist significantly in the denatured state of CM6-127 lysozyme. The pattern of exchange rates from the native protein at high temperature, pH 3.8 69 degrees C, resembles that of the acid-denatured state, suggesting that under these conditions the exchange kinetics are dominated by transient global unfolding. The rates of folding and unfolding under these conditions were determined independently by magnetization transfer NMR methods, enabling the intrinsic exchange rates from the denatured state to be deduced on the basis of this model, under conditions where the predominant equilibrium species is the native state. Again, in the case of most amides these rates showed only limited deviation from those predicted by a simple random coil model. This reinforces the view that these denatured states of lysozyme have little persistent residual order and contrasts with the behavior found for compact partially folded states of proteins, including an intermediate detected transiently during the refolding of hen lysozyme.  相似文献   

16.
Tan ML  Kang C  Ichiye T 《Proteins》2006,62(3):708-714
Rubredoxins may be separated into high and low reduction potential classes, with reduction potentials differing by approximately 50 mV. Our previous work showed that a local shift in the polar backbone due to an A(44) versus V(44) side-chain size causes this reduction potential difference. However, this work also indicated that in the low potential Clostridium pasteurianum (Cp) rubredoxin, a V(44) --> A(44) mutation causes larger local backbone flexibility, because the V(44) side-chain present in the wild-type (wt) is no longer present to interlock with neighboring residues to stabilize the subsequent G(45). Since Pyrococcus furiosus (Pf) and other high potential rubredoxins generally have a P(45), it was presumed that a G(45) --> P(45) mutation might stabilize a V(44) --> A(44) mutation in Cp rubredoxin. Here crystal structure analysis, energy minimization, and molecular dynamics (MD) were performed for wt V(44)G(45), single mutant A(44)G(45) and double mutant A(44)P(45) Cp, and for wt A(44)P(45) Pf rubredoxins. The local structural, dynamical, and electrostatic properties of Cp gradually approach wt Pf in the order wt Cp to single to double mutant because of greater sequence similarity, as expected. The double mutant A(44)P(45) Cp exhibits increased backbone stability near residue 44 and thus enhances the probability that the backbone dipoles point toward the redox site, which favors an increase in the electrostatic contribution to the reduction potential. It appears that the electrostatic potential of residue 44 and the solvent accessibility to the redox are both determinants for the reduction potentials of homologous rubredoxins. Overall, these results indicate that an A(44) in a rubredoxin may require a P(45) for backbone stability whereas a V(44) can accommodate a G(45), since the valine side-chain can interlock with its neighbors.  相似文献   

17.
Based on 2D 1H-1H and 2D and 3D 1H-15N NMR spectroscopies, complete 1H NMR assignments are reported for zinc-containing Clostridium pasteurianum rubredoxin (Cp ZnRd). Complete 1H NMR assignments are also reported for a mutated Cp ZnRd, in which residues near the N-terminus, namely, Met 1, Lys 2, and Pro 15, have been changed to their counterparts, (-), Ala and Glu, respectively, in rubredoxin from the hyperthermophilic archaeon, Pyrococcus furiosus (Pf Rd). The secondary structure of both wild-type and mutated Cp ZnRds, as determined by NMR methods, is essentially the same. However, the NMR data indicate an extension of the three-stranded beta-sheet in the mutated Cp ZnRd to include the N-terminal Ala residue and Glu 15, as occurs in Pf Rd. The mutated Cp Rd also shows more intense NOE cross peaks, indicating stronger interactions between the strands of the beta-sheet and, in fact, throughout the mutated Rd. However, these stronger interactions do not lead to any significant increase in thermostability, and both the mutated and wild-type Cp Rds are much less thermostable than Pf Rd. These correlations strongly suggest that, contrary to a previous proposal [Blake PR et al., 1992, Protein Sci 1:1508-1521], the thermostabilization mechanism of Pf Rd is not dominated by a unique set of hydrogen bonds or electrostatic interactions involving the N-terminal strand of the beta-sheet. The NMR results also suggest that an overall tighter protein structure does not necessarily lead to increased thermostability.  相似文献   

18.
J D O'Neil  B D Sykes 《Biochemistry》1989,28(2):699-707
Backbone amide hydrogen exchange measurements are an important source of information about the internal dynamics of proteins. Before such measurements can be interpreted unambiguously, contributions to hydrogen exchange rates from the chemical and physical environment of the amides must be taken into account. Membrane proteins are often solubilized in detergents, yet there have not been any systematic investigations of the possible effects detergents may have on the amide hydrogen exchange rates of proteins. To address this question, we have measured individual backbone and carboxyl-terminal amide exchange rates for the amphipathic tripeptide Leu-Val-Ile-amide dissolved in water and dodecyl sulfate micelles. 1H NMR spectroscopy was used to measure exchange using the direct exchange-out into D2O technique at 5 degrees C and using an indirect steady-state saturation-transfer technique at 25 degrees C. The broadening effect of micelle-incorporated spin-labeled fatty acid (12-doxylstearate) on the 1H NMR spectra of both the detergent and the peptide resonances was used to demonstrate that the tripeptide is intimately associated with the micelle. The resonance from formate ion, which is excluded from the micelle, was unperturbed by the spin label. The detergent did not retard the exchange rates of either the primary (terminal) or secondary (backbone) amides of the tripeptide. This suggests that the micelle/peptide interaction does not restrict access of charged catalysts and water to these amides and shows that the peptide amides are not hydrogen bonded. However, the pH for the exchange minima of these amides in detergent was increased between 1.2 and 1.7 units compared to exchange in water.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
Rubredoxins are small, soluble proteins that display a wide variation in thermostability, despite having a high degree of sequence similarity They also vary in the extent to which they are stabilized by solutes such as diglycerol phosphate. Hence, they provide excellent models for studying the mechanisms of thermostabilization. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy can be used to investigate interactions between molecules, as well as subtle changes in conformation in solution, and also provides a means to measure protein stability. The assignment of the proton NMR spectrum of the zinc rubredoxin from Desulfovibrio gigas is presented, together with its structure in solution. The stabilizing effect of diglycerol phosphate on rubredoxin is demonstrated and assessed by determining selected amide proton exchange rates; diglycerol phosphate at 100 mM concentration caused an additional structural stabilization of 1.2 +/-0.4 kJ/mol. The pattern of effects on the exchange rates is discussed in relation to the protein structure.  相似文献   

20.
The rubredoxin from the cryptomonad Guillardia theta is one of the first examples of a rubredoxin encoded in a eukaryotic organism. The structure of a soluble zinc-substituted 70-residue G. theta rubredoxin lacking the membrane anchor and the thylakoid targeting sequence was determined by multidimensional heteronuclear NMR, representing the first three-dimensional (3D) structure of a eukaryotic rubredoxin. For the structure calculation a strategy was applied in which information about hydrogen bonds was directly inferred from a long-range HNCO experiment, and the dynamics of the protein was deduced from heteronuclear nuclear Overhauser effect data and exchange rates of the amide protons. The structure is well defined, exhibiting average root-mean-square deviations of 0.21 A for the backbone heavy atoms and 0.67 A for all heavy atoms of residues 7-56, and an increased flexibility toward the termini. The structure of this core fold is almost identical to that of prokaryotic rubredoxins. There are, however, significant differences with respect to the charge distribution at the protein surface, suggesting that G. theta rubredoxin exerts a different physiological function compared to the structurally characterized prokaryotic rubredoxins. The amino-terminal residues containing the putative signal peptidase recognition/cleavage site show an increased flexibility compared to the core fold, but still adopt a defined 3D orientation, which is mainly stabilized by nonlocal interactions to residues of the carboxy-terminal region. This orientation might reflect the structural elements and charge pattern necessary for correct signal peptidase recognition of the G. theta rubredoxin precursor.  相似文献   

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