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1.
Possible effects of changes in net charge on protein hydrogen exchange rates were investigated by desalting hen egg-white lysozyme, which allowed its net charge to increase with decreasing pH in the acid region. Chloride ion-binding ratios, expressed as ratios of free to total Cl?, were measured with a chloride-specific electrode at pH 5 on a 2.4% solution of a five-time-desalted product. This ratio was used to show a 97% reduction of the 11% Cl? present in a commercial lysozyme preparation upon three passes of the enzyme through a column of ion-retardation resin. Net charges on the purified product were assigned from a combination of electrophoretic mobility and proton titration data gathered under minimal ionic strength conditions. The net charge on the desalted product increased by 1.64 units between pH 5.0 and 3.0. Hydrogendeuterium exchange studies on the purified lysozyme in D2O were obtained using the near-infrared region of a Cary 14R spectrophotometer. The rate-pD profile for k2, the rate constant for the intermediate class of exchanging hydrogens, showed a decrease in the apparent pD of minimum exchange rate of 0.3 units, when compared to that obtained earlier in 0.2 m added NaCl. However, the rate of exchange at pD minimum and the number of hydrogens in the class remained largely unaffected. A similar shift was observed for the rate-pD profile of the class 1 hydrogens. Thus, the effect of an increase in net positive charge is to shift the rate-pD profile to a lower pD. Moreover, the effect extended to the interior peptide hydrogens of this globular protein. Consequently, the exchange rates of all the observable hydrogens are altered by the net charge changes, and the effect appeared uniform. The shift can be accounted for quantitatively by applying electrostatic interaction terms to the acid and base catalytic constants characterizing the exchange process. The calculated electrostatic interaction factors in minimal salt and 0.2 m added NaCl were found to be 29 and 18% lower, respectively, than those obtained theoretically. Therefore, under conditions where changes in net charge may occur for a globular protein, the effect on hydrogen exchange rates can be estimated fairly well theoretically, especially at moderate ionic strengths.  相似文献   

2.
SNARE proteins mediate fusion of intracellular eukaryotic membranes and their α-helical transmembrane domains are known to contribute to lipid bilayer mixing. Synthetic transmembrane domain peptides were previously shown to mimic the function of SNARE proteins in that they trigger liposome fusion in a sequence-specific fashion. Here, we performed a detailed investigation of the conformational dynamics of the transmembrane helices of the presynaptic SNAREs synaptobrevin II and syntaxin 1a. To this end, we recorded deuterium/hydrogen-exchange kinetics in isotropic solution as well as in the membrane-embedded state. In solution, the exchange kinetics of each peptide can be described by three different classes of amide deuteriums that exchange with different rate constants. These are likely to originate from exchange at different domains of the helices. Interestingly, the rate constants of each class vary with the TMD sequence. Thus, the exchange rate is position-specific and sequence-specific. Further, the rate constants correlate with the previously determined membrane fusogenicities. In membranes, exchange is retarded and a significant proportion of amide hydrogens are protected from exchange. We conclude that the conformational dynamics of SNARE TMD helices is mechanistically linked to their ability to drive lipid mixing.  相似文献   

3.
Hydrogen exchange kinetic behavior of human erythrocyte glucose transporter protein in vesicles was studied in the absence and in the presence of D-glucose or a well known inhibitor, cytochalasin B. This is to detect a proposed channel of water penetrating into the protein through which the sugar molecule passes and to monitor any conformational changes induced by the substrate or inhibitor. Analyses of the kinetic data revealed several classes of hydrogens which exchange with readily distinguishable rates. Of 660 hydrogens detected per transporter, approximately 30% exchanged with rates generally characterized as those of free amide hydrogens indicating they are interfaced to solvent water. Since the transporter is known to be embedded deep in the hydrophobic area of the membrane with minimum exposure to the outside of the membrane lipid bilayer, a significant portion of these free amide hydrogens must be at the purported channel rather than outside of the membrane. D-Glucose and cytochalasin B affected the exchange kinetics of these presumably channel-associated free amide hydrogens rather differently. D-Glucose reduced the apparent rate constants, but not the total number. Cytochalasin B on the other hand reduced the total number to one-half without significantly changing the apparent rate constants. The remaining 70% of the labeled hydrogens exchanged with much slower rates which vary 10-10,000-fold, indicating that they are internally structured peptide amide and side chain hydrogens. Both D-glucose and cytochalasin B further reduced the rates of these hydrogens, indicating a global stabilization of the protein structure.  相似文献   

4.
C Sanders  B D Sykes  L B Smillie 《Biochemistry》1988,27(18):7000-7008
The side chain and backbone mobilities of chicken gizzard tropomyosin (TM) and its nonpolymerizable derivative have been investigated by H NMR spectroscopy and amide hydrogen exchange kinetics and compared to those of rabbit cardiac TM and its nonpolymerizable derivative. Analysis of the 300-MHz H NMR spectra of native chicken gizzard and rabbit cardiac TMs and their nonpolymerizable derivatives showed that the line widths of the aromatic and histidine residues were within a factor of 2 for all four proteins, demonstrating that the side chain mobility of these residues is similar in the different TMs. Direct proton exchange-out kinetics were determined in D2O in the pD range 1.5-3.0 at 25 degrees C by H NMR spectroscopy. Multiple exponential fitting of the exchange data indicated the presence in gizzard TM of at least three kinetically distinct classes of amide hydrogens at pD 1.7 with average population sizes of 147, 74, and 61, whose rates were retarded by a factor of 10, 10(3), and 10(5), respectively, relative to the random-coil peptide poly(DL-alanine). Measurement of the direct exchange kinetics of both rabbit cardiac and nonpolymerizable gizzard TMs showed that their rate constants and population sizes were within experimental error of those for the gizzard protein, except that the fast exchanging class for cardiac TM was increased in size while that of the nonpolymerizable gizzard TM was reduced, relative to that for gizzard TM. Comparison of the exchange-out kinetics for the cardiac and gizzard proteins at pH 2.0 and 55 degrees C, where only the two slowly exchanging amide hydrogen sets are measured, again demonstrated the similarity of their kinetic parameters.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
The hydrogen-deuterium exchange kinetics of 37 backbone amide residues in RNase T1 have been monitored at 25, 40, 45, and 50 degrees C at pD 5.6 and at 40 and 45 degrees C at pD 6.6. The hydrogen exchange rate constants of the hydrogen-bonded residues varied over eight orders of magnitude at 25 degrees C with 13 residues showing exchange rates consistent with exchange occurring as a result of global unfolding. These residues are located in strands 2-4 of the central beta-pleated sheet. The residues located in the alpha-helix and the remaining strands of the beta-sheet exhibited exchange behaviors consistent with exchange occurring due to local structural fluctuations. For several residues at 25 degrees C, the global free energy change calculated from the hydrogen exchange data was over 2 kcal/mol greater than the free energy of unfolding determined from urea denaturation experiments. The number of residues showing this unexpected behavior was found to increase with temperature. This apparent inconsistency can be explained quantitatively if the cis-trans isomerization of the two cis prolines, Pro-39 and Pro-55, is taken into account. The cis-trans isomerization equilibrium calculated from kinetic data indicates the free energy of the unfolded state will be 2.6 kcal/mol higher at 25 degrees C when the two prolines are cis rather than trans (Mayr LM, Odefey CO, Schutkowski M, Schmid FX. 1996. Kinetic analysis of the unfolding and refolding of ribonuclease T1 by a stopped-flow double-mixing technique. Biochemistry 35: 5550-5561). The hydrogen exchange results are consistent with the most slowly exchanging hydrogens exchanging from a globally higher free energy unfolded state in which Pro-55 and Pro-39 are still predominantly in the cis conformation. When the conformational stabilities determined by hydrogen exchange are corrected for the proline isomerization equilibrium, the results are in excellent agreement with those from an analysis of urea denaturation curves.  相似文献   

6.
W Gallagher  F Tao  C Woodward 《Biochemistry》1992,31(19):4673-4680
Hydrogen exchange rate constants for the 17 slowest exchanging amide NH groups in bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (BPTI) were measured in solution and in form II and form III crystals. All 17 amide hydrogens are buried and intramolecularly hydrogen bonded in the crystal structure, except Lys 41 which is buried and hydrogen bonded to a buried water. Large-scale crystallization procedures were developed for these experiments, and rate constants for both crystal and solution exchange were measured by 1H NMR spectroscopy of exchange-quenched samples in solution. Two conditions of pH and temperature, pH 9.8 and 35 degrees C, and pH 9.4 and 25 degrees C, bring two groups of hydrogens into the experimental time window (minutes to weeks). One consists of the 10 slowest exchanging hydrogens, all of which are associated with the central beta-sheet of BPTI. The second group consists of seven more rapidly exchanging hydrogens, which are distributed throughout the molecule, primarily in a loop or turn. In both groups, most hydrogens exchange more slowly in crystals, but there is considerable variation in the degree to which the exchange is depressed in crystals. Many differences observed for the more rapidly exchanging hydrogens can be attributed to local surface effects arising from intermolecular contacts in the crystal lattice. Within the slower group, however, a very large effect on exchange of Ile 18 and Tyr 35 appears to be selectively transmitted through the matrix of the molecule.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
An exceedingly simple and convenient method is described for measuring the hydrogen-deuterium exchange behavior of peptide bond-containing molecules by ultraviolet spectrophotometry. The exchange reaction is initiated by diluting a sample from H2O into D2O, or the reverse, and can be followed by an easily observable optical density change in the region of peptide absorbance. The method, unlike infrared and magnetic resonance approaches, requires only small amounts of material and, unlike the tritium-Sephadex method, is not restricted to the study of large molecules. Calibrations are provided for exchange rate as a function of pD and temperature and for the change in absorbance per mole peptide group. With this information, the exchange curve to be expected for any peptide group exposed to solvent can be predicted. Comparison with the measured data can then identify peptide-group hydrogen bonding and can also give a measure of the stability of the hydrogen-bonded structure.  相似文献   

8.
To investigate the determinants of protein hydrogen exchange (HX), HX rates of most of the backbone amide hydrogens of Staphylococcal nuclease were measured by NMR methods. A modified analysis was used to improve accuracy for the faster hydrogens. HX rates of both near surface and well buried hydrogens are spread over more than 7 orders of magnitude. These results were compared with previous hypotheses for HX rate determination. Contrary to a common assumption, proximity to the surface of the native protein does not usually produce fast exchange. The slow HX rates for unprotected surface hydrogens are not well explained by local electrostatic field. The ability of buried hydrogens to exchange is not explained by a solvent penetration mechanism. The exchange rates of structurally protected hydrogens are not well predicted by algorithms that depend only on local interactions or only on transient unfolding reactions. These observations identify some of the present difficulties of HX rate prediction and suggest the need for returning to a detailed hydrogen by hydrogen analysis to examine the bases of structure-rate relationships, as described in the companion paper (Skinner et al., Protein Sci 2012;21:996-1005).  相似文献   

9.
Using amide hydrogen exchange combined with electrospray ionization mass spectrometry, we have in this study determined the number of amide hydrogens on several peptides that become solvent-inaccessible as a result of their high-affinity interaction with the urokinase-type plasminogen activator receptor (uPAR). These experiments reveal that at least six out of eight amide hydrogens in a synthetic nine-mer peptide antagonist (AE105) become sequestered upon engagement in uPAR binding. Various uPAR mutants with decreased affinity for this peptide antagonist gave similar results, thereby indicating that deletion of the favorable interactions involving the side chains of these residues in uPAR does not affect the number of hydrogen bonds established by the main chain of the peptide ligand. The isolated growth factor-like domain (GFD) of the cognate serine protease ligand for uPAR showed 11 protected amide hydrogens in the receptor complex. Interestingly, a naturally occurring O-linked fucose on Thr(18) confers protection of two additional amide hydrogens in GFD when it forms a complex with uPAR. Dissociation of the uPAR-peptide complexes is accompanied by a correlated exchange of nearly all amide hydrogens on the peptide ligand. This yields bimodal isotope patterns from which dissociation rate constants can be determined. In addition, the distinct bimodal isotope distributions also allow investigation of the exchange kinetics of receptor-bound peptides providing information about the local structural motions at the interface. These exchange experiments therefore provide both structural and kinetic information on the interaction between uPAR and these small peptide antagonists, which in model systems show promise as inhibitors of intravasation of human cancer cells.  相似文献   

10.
Amide exchange rates were measured for Pyrococcus furiosus (Pf) rubredoxin substituted with either Zn(II), Ga(III), or Ge(IV). Base-catalyzed exchange rate constants increase up to 3000-fold per unit charge for the highly protected amides surrounding the active site metal, yielding apparent residue-specific conformational energy decreases of more than 8 kcal/mol in a comparison of the Zn(II)- and Ge(IV)-substituted proteins. However, the exchange kinetics for many of the other amides of the protein are insensitive to these metal substitutions. These differential rates are inversely correlated with the distance between the amide nitrogen and the metal in the X-ray structure, out to a distance of at least 12 A, consistent with an electrostatic potential-dependent shifting of the amide nitrogen pK. This strongly correlated distance dependence is consistent with a nativelike structure for the exchange-competent conformations. The electric field potential within the interior of the rubredoxin structure gives rise to a change of as much as a million-fold in the rate for the exchange-competent state of the individual amide hydrogens. Nevertheless, the strength of these electrostatic interactions in Pf rubredoxin appears to be comparable to those previously reported within other proteins. As a result, contrary to the conventional analysis of hydrogen exchange data, for exchange processes that occur via nonglobal transitions, the residual conformational structure will often modulate the observed rates. Although this necessarily complicates the estimation of the conformational equilibria of these exchange-competent states, this dependence on residual structure can provide insight into the conformation of these transient states.  相似文献   

11.
The NH exchange rates in aqueous media of oxytocin and 8-lysine vasopressin (LVP) have been measured by using transfer of solvent saturation method. The data are consistent with a "highly motile" dynamic equilibrium between folded and highly solvated conformations. The highly-motility limit applies to the exchange of NH hydrogens of oxytocin and LVP. Folded structures are more prevalent in oxytocin than in LVP. Partial shielding is indicated for peptide hydrogens of Asn5 and perhaps also Cys6 of oxytocin and for Cys6 of LVP. It is tentatively proposed that the folded conformation of oxytocin in aqueous media may contain a parallel beta-structure in the tocinamide ring consisting of two hydrogen bonds: one between the Tyr2 C = O and Asn5 peptide NH as originally proposed for the preferred conformation of oxytocin in dimethyl sulfoxide (D. W. Urry and R. Walter), and the second between he Cys1 C = O and the Cys6 NH. In LVP the hydrogen bond between the Tyr2 C = O and Asn5 peptide NH appears to be absent. The acylic tripeptide sequences (-Pro-X-Gly-NH2) of both hormones appear to be predominantly solvated. The second-order rate constants for acid catalyzed exchange of the primary amide hydrogens of Gln4, Asn5, and Gly9 of oxytocin are consistently greater for the trans NH than for the corresponding cis NH. This observation can be rationalized in terms of mechanisms involving protonation of either the amide oxygen, or the amide nitrogen, but with limited rotation about the C - N bond.  相似文献   

12.
Studies with the homodimeric recombinant human macrophage colony-stimulating factor beta (rhM-CSFbeta), show for the first time that a large number (9) of disulfide linkages can be reduced after amide hydrogen/deuterium (H/D) exchange, and the protein digested and analyzed successfully for the isotopic composition by electrospray mass spectrometry. Analysis of amide H/D after exchange-in shows that in solution the conserved four-helix bundle of (rhM-CSFbeta) has fast and moderately fast exchangeable sections of amide hydrogens in the alphaA helix, and mostly slow exchanging sections of amide hydrogens in the alphaB, alphaC, and alphaD helices. Most of the amide hydrogens in the loop between the beta1 and beta4 sheets exhibited fast or moderately fast exchange, whereas in the amino acid 63-67 loop, located at the interface of the two subunits, the exchange was slow. Solvent accessibility as measured by H/D exchange showed a better correlation with the average depth of amide residues calculated from reported X-ray crystallographic data for rhM-CSFalpha than with the average B-factor. The rates of H/D exchange in rhM-CSFbeta appear to correlate well with the exposed surface calculated for each amino acid residue in the crystal structure except for the alphaD helix. Fast hydrogen isotope exchange throughout the segment amino acids 150-221 present in rhM-CSFbeta, but not rhM-CSFalpha, provides evidence that the carboxy-terminal region is unstructured. It is, therefore, proposed that the anomalous behavior of the alphaD helix is due to interaction of the carboxy-terminal tail with this helical segment.  相似文献   

13.
Deuterium exchange was monitored by electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (ESI-MS) to study the slowly exchanging (hydrogen bonded) peptide hydrogens of several alpha-helical peptides and beta-sheet proteins. Polypeptides were synthetically engineered to have mainly disordered, alpha-helical, or beta-sheet structure. For 3 isomeric 31-residue alpha-helical peptides, the number of slowly exchanging hydrogens as measured by ESI-MS in 50% CF3CD2OD (pD 9.5) provided estimates of their alpha-helicities (26%, 40%, 94%) that agreed well with the values (17%, 34%, 98%) measured by circular dichroic spectroscopy in the same nondeuterated solvent. For 3 betabellins containing a pair of beta-sheets and a related disordered peptide, their order of structural stability (12D > 12S > 14D > 14S) shown by their deuterium exchange rates in 10% CD3OD/0.5% CD3CO2D (pD 3.8) as measured by ESI-MS was the same as their order of structural stability to unfolding with increasing temperature or guanidinium chloride concentration as measured by circular dichroic spectroscopy in water. Compared to monitoring deuterium exchange by proton NMR spectrometry, monitoring deuterium exchange by ESI-MS requires much less sample (1-50 micrograms), much shorter analysis time (10-90 min), and no chemical quenching of the exchange reaction.  相似文献   

14.
A new method based on protein fragmentation and directly coupled microbore high-performance liquid chromatography-fast atom bombardment mass spectrometry (HPLC-FABMS) is described for determining the rates at which peptide amide hydrogens in proteins undergo isotopic exchange. Horse heart cytochrome c was incubated in D2O as a function of time and temperature to effect isotopic exchange, transferred into slow exchange conditions (pH 2-3, 0 degrees C), and fragmented with pepsin. The number of peptide amide deuterons present in the proteolytic peptides was deduced from their molecular weights, which were determined following analysis of the digest by HPLC-FABMS. The present results demonstrate that the exchange rates of amide hydrogens in cytochrome c range from very rapid (k > 140 h-1) to very slow (k < 0.002 h-1). The deuterium content of specific segments of the protein was determined as a function of incubation temperature and used to indicate participation of these segments in conformational changes associated with heating of cytochrome c. For the present HPLC-FABMS system, approximately 5 nmol of protein were used for each determination. Results of this investigation indicate that the combination of protein fragmentation and HPLC-FABMS is relatively free of constraints associated with other analytical methods used for this purpose and may be a general method for determining hydrogen exchange rates in specific segments of proteins.  相似文献   

15.
The hydrogen exchange behavior of rhodopsin was re-examined by studies of the protein in the disc membrane and after solubilization in octyl glucoside. The methods used measure either the peptide hydrogens alone (hydrogen-deuterium exchange by infrared spectroscopy) or all slowly exchanging hydrogens (hydrogen-tritium exchange by hel filtration). Under mild exchange conditions, disc membranes and solubilized lipid-free proteins show very similar exchange behavior, indicating the absence of slowly exchanging lipid protons. At high temperature, exchange of an additional large group of very slow peptide NH can be detected. The total number of slow hydrogens significantly exceeds the amide content, and apparently includes slowly exchanging protons from perhaps 40% of the protein's non-amide side chains. This is thought to require the involvement of many polar side chains in internal H-bonding. The exchange rates of the non-amide side chains sites have not been determined. However, to the extent that these contribute to the fast time region of the measured kinetic H-exchange curve, previously identified with exposed, non-H-bonded peptides, the estimate of freely exposed rhodopsin peptides must be reduced. The fraction of free peptides could range from a remarkably high value of 70% down to about 45%.  相似文献   

16.
Two dimensional nmr spectra [correlated spectroscopy (COSY), homonuclear Hartmann-Hahn (HOHAHA), nuclear Overhauser effect spectroscopy (NOESY)] have been observed for cross-linked lysozyme, a chemically modified lysozyme derivative with an extra ester cross-link between residues E35 and W108. Eight shifted cross-peaks were found in the fingerprint region of COSY spectra. By searching COSY, HOHAHA and NOESY spectra, they have been assigned to A32, E35, S36, I58, A107, W108, V109, and A110. The NOE connectivities (dNN and dαN) found for the cross-linked lysozyme are quite similar to those for the intact lysozyme. Exchange behavior of amide hydrogens has been studied for both intact and cross-linked lysozymes by observing the fingerprint region of COSY spectra. Hydrogen exchange reactions were carried out at pH 7.0 and at several temperatures. There exist 41 amide hydrogens whose exchange reactions are detectable under this experimetal conditon. Not only exchange rates but also their activation enthalpies were determined for individual amide hydrogens. They are classified into two groups, which are called categories III and IV. Category III hydrogens are distributed in relatively flexible peripheral parts of protein, and category IV hydrogens are deeply buried in the core region of protein. Category III hydrogens are exchanged through localized unfolding around their sites with a low activation enthalpy ranging from 10 to 25 kcal/mol. The formation of an extra cross-link affects neither the exchange rate nor the activation enthalpy of category III hydrogens. However, amide hydrogens of residues 34–39 in the vicinity of the hinge are exceptions. They are easily exchanged in the intact lysozyme but their exchange rates are drastically retarded by cross-linking. In the intact lysozyme, structural fluctuations mediating the exchange of category IV hydrogens are highly cooperative with a large activation enthalpy. These large-scale structural fluctuations are the global unfolding of the overall structure and also concerted motions within a domain. Especially near 38°C, it was found that the dominant fluctuation occurring in the α-domain is different from that in the β-domain. However, these concerted motions are strongly quenched by the formation of the cross-link because of the cooperativity of such a large-scale fluctuation. The stabilization of a localized area of protein by cross-linking results in the great suppression of large-scale and concerted motions. The exchange rates of category IV hydrogens are extremely retarded in the cross-linked lysozyme, so that they are exchanged through the so-called penetration mechanism characterized by a low activation enthalpy. These expeimental results are discussed with regard to the contribution of cross-linking to the stabilization of the folded structure of protein. © 1997 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

17.
S Segawa  K Kume 《Biopolymers》1986,25(10):1981-1996
The hydrogen-exchange reactions of peptide NH groups in lysozyme were studied by the change in the intensity of the amide II band in the ir spectrum. The slowest exchanging hydrogens, which are involved in intramolecular hydrogen bonding, are further divided into two groups at lower temperatures; half of them are exchanged through local unfolding and the other half through major cooperative unfolding. In order to study the correlation of the change in hydrogen-exchange rates with the change in the unfolding rate constant, we observed the effects of intrachain cross-linking, the addition of denaturant and ligand binding on the exchange rates through local unfolding. Although the exchange rate through major unfolding is greatly decreased by intrachain cross-linking between Glu 35 and Trp 108 (1/22000), the exchange rate through local unfolding is only slightly decreased (1/20). Even at higher temperatures, where most intact lysozyme molecules unfold, the folded conformation of cross-linked lysozyme remains compact, and no intermediate exists in which many side-chain atoms are packed loosely so that the hydrogen-exchange reaction occurs rapidly. Neither the addition of 2-PrOD molecules nor (NAG)3 binding affects the exchange rates through local unfolding. Our experiments confirm that the change in the unfolding rate constant does not correlate with the change in fluctuations in the relatively flexible hydrogen-bonded structure through which the exchange of peptide hydrogens takes place.  相似文献   

18.
M F Jeng  S W Englander  G A El?ve  A J Wand  H Roder 《Biochemistry》1990,29(46):10433-10437
Hydrogen exchange and two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance (2D NMR) techniques were used to characterize the structure of oxidized horse cytochrome c at acid pH and high ionic strength. Under these conditions, cytochrome c is known to assume a globular conformation (A state) with properties resembling those of the molten globule state described for other proteins. In order to measure the rate of hydrogen-deuterium exchange for individual backbone amide protons in the A state, samples of oxidized cytochrome c were incubated at 20 degrees C in D2O buffer (pD 2.2, 1.5 M NaCl) for time periods ranging from 2 min to 500 h. The exchange reaction was then quenched by transferring the protein to native conditions (pD 5.3). The extent of exchange for 44 amide protons trapped in the refolded protein was measured by 2D NMR spectroscopy. The results show that this approach can provide detailed information on H-bonded secondary and tertiary structure in partially folded equilibrium forms of a protein. All of the slowly exchanging amide protons in the three major helices of native cytochrome c are strongly protected from exchange at acid pH, indicating that the A state contains native-like elements of helical secondary structure. By contrast, a number of amide protons involved in irregular tertiary H-bonds of the native structure (Gly37, Arg38, Gln42, Ile57, Lys79, and Met80) are only marginally protected in the A state, indicating that these H-bonds are unstable or absent. The H-exchange results suggest that the major helices of cytochrome c and their common hydrophobic domain are largely preserved in the globular acidic form while the loop region of the native structure is flexible and partly disordered.  相似文献   

19.
NMR-detected hydrogen/deuterium (H/D) exchange of amide protons is a powerful way for investigating the residue-based conformational stability and dynamics of proteins in solution. Maize ferredoxin-NADP(+) reductase (FNR) is a relatively large protein with 314 amino acid residues, consisting of flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) and nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADP(+))-binding domains. To address the structural stability and dynamics of FNR, H/D exchange of amide protons was performed using heteronuclear NMR at pD(r) values 8.0 and 6.0, physiologically relevant conditions mimicking inside of chloroplasts. At both pD(r) values, the exchange rate varied widely depending on the residues. The profiles of protected residues revealed that the highly protected regions matched well with the hydrophobic cores suggested from the crystal structure, and that the NADP(+)-binding domain can be divided into two subdomains. The global stability of FNR obtained by H/D exchange with NMR was higher than that by chemical denaturation, indicating that H/D exchange is especially useful for analyzing the residue-based conformational stability of large proteins, for which global unfolding is mostly irreversible. Interestingly, more dynamic conformation of the C-terminal subdomain of the NADP(+)-binding domain at pD(r) 8.0, the daytime pH in chloroplasts, than at pD(r) 6.0 is likely to be involved in the increased binding of NADP(+) for elevating the activity of FNR. In light of photosynthesis, the present study provides the first structure-based relationship of dynamics with function for the FNR-type family in solution.  相似文献   

20.
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   

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