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1.
1H and 31P NMR spectroscopies have been used to examine the effects of limited proteolysis with subtilisin Carlsberg on the global conformation of ovalbumin and on the local environment of phosphoserine 344, a residue two positions removed from the site of proteolysis. Such limited proteolysis has been shown to result in excision of a hexapeptide from the region of the protein that, in other serine protease inhibitors (serpins), contains the reactive center. Based on the structure of the related serpin alpha 1-antitrypsin, it has been predicted that phosphoserine 344 should undergo a large change in environment upon proteolysis of ovalbumin (L?bermann, H., Tokuoka, R., Deisenhofer, J., and Huber, R. (1984) J. Mol. Biol. 177, 531-550). Proteolysis of ovalbumin produces a small upfield shift (0.15 ppm) of the 31P resonance of phosphoserine 344. In addition, the pKa of phosphoserine 344 is raised by 0.1 pH unit. At pH 8.5, phosphoserine 344 in cleaved ovalbumin (plakalbumin) is as accessible to hydrolysis by Escherichia coli alkaline phosphatase as it is in native ovalbumin. 1H NMR shows that dephosphorylation of serine 344 has an imperceptible effect on the protein's conformation. Similarly, little effect on conformation is seen by 1H NMR upon proteolysis of ovalbumin. These findings suggest that ovalbumin does not undergo a marked conformational change analogous to that inferred for the related members of the serpin superfamily, alpha 1-antitrypsin and antithrombin III, nor do the residues close to the site of proteolysis appear to change environment from that of an exposed loop to a buried strand of beta-sheet. These findings are not consistent with the hypothesis of Carrell and Owen ((1985) Nature 317, 730-732) for the role of the exposed loop in serpins of directly facilitating conformational change upon cleavage of the loop. Instead, it is proposed that cleavage of the exposed loop alters the solvent accessibility of residues formerly covered by the loop and that this provides the thermodynamic impetus for conformational change, perhaps by disruption of a salt bridge crucial to the integrity of the native structure.  相似文献   

2.
J Feigon  W Leupin  W A Denny  D R Kearns 《Biochemistry》1983,22(25):5943-5951
In this study two-dimensional NMR techniques (COSY and NOESY) have been used in conjunction with one-dimensional NMR results to complete the assignment of the proton NMR spectrum of the double-stranded DNA decamer, d(ATATCGATAT)2, and to obtain qualitative information about numerous interproton distances in this molecule and some limited information about conformational dynamics. COSY and NOESY measurements have been combined to systematically assign many of the resonances from the H1' and H2',2" sugar protons to specific nucleotides in the double helix. This method relies on the fact that sugar protons within a specific nucleotide are scalar coupled and that base protons (AH8, GH8, TH6, and CH6) in right-handed helices can interact simultaneously with their own H2',2" sugar protons and those of the adjacent (5'-3') nucleotide attached to its 5' side (i.e., XpA not ApX). A COSY experiment is used to identify sugar resonances within a residue whereas the NOESY experiment allows the neighboring sugar to be connected (linked). The CH5 and CH6 resonances in the spectrum can immediately be identified by the COSY experiment. The methyl protons of thymine residues exhibit strong through-space interbase interactions both with their own TH6 proton and with AH8 proton on the adjacent (5'-3') adenine residue. These interactions are used both to make assignments of the spectra and to establish that the thymine methyl groups are in close proximity to the AH8 protons of adjacent adenine residues [Feigon, J., Wright, J. M., Leupin, W., Denny, W. A., & Kearns, D. R. (1982) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 104, 5540].(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
P L Weber  D E Wemmer  B R Reid 《Biochemistry》1985,24(17):4553-4562
The cro repressor protein from bacteriophage lambda has been studied in solution by two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (2D NMR). Following the approach of Wüthrich and co-workers [Wüthrich, K., Wider, G., Wagner, G., & Braun, W. (1982) J. Mol. Biol. 155, 311-319], individual spin systems were identified by J-correlated spectroscopy (COSY) supplemented, where necessary, by relayed coherence transfer spectroscopy (RELAY). Nuclear Overhauser effect spectroscopy (NOESY) was used to obtain sequence-specific assignments. From the two-dimensional spectra, the peptide backbone resonances (NH and C alpha H) for 65 of the 66 amino acids were assigned, as well as most of the side chain resonances. The chemical shifts for the assigned protons are reported at 35 degrees C in 10 mM potassium phosphate, pH 6.8, and in 10 mM potassium phosphate, pH 4.6, 0.2 M KCl, and 0.1 mM EDTA. Small shifts were observed for some resonances upon addition of salt, but no major changes in the spectrum were seen, indicating that no global structural change occurs between these ionic strengths. NOE patterns characteristic of alpha-helices, beta-strands, and turns are seen in various regions of the primary sequence. From the location of these regions the secondary structure of cro in solution appears to be virtually identical with the crystal structure [Anderson, W. F., Ohlendorf, D. H., Takeda, Y., & Matthews, B. W. (1981) Nature (London) 290, 754-758]. Missing assignments include the Pro-59 resonances and the peripheral protons of the eight lysine, the three arginine, and three of the five isoleucine residues.  相似文献   

4.
Two highly conserved amino acid residues near the C-terminus within the gamma subunit of the mitochondrial ATP synthase form a "catch" with an anionic loop on one of the three beta subunits within the catalytic alphabeta hexamer of the F1 segment [Abrahams, J. P., Leslie, A. G. W., Lutter, R., and Walker, J. E. (1994) Nature 370, 621-628]. Forming the catch is considered to be an essential step in cooperative nucleotide binding leading to gamma subunit rotation. The analogous residues, Arg304 and Gln305, in the chloroplast F1 gamma subunit were changed to leucine and alanine, respectively. Each mutant gamma was assembled together with alpha and beta subunits from Rhodospirillum rubrum F1 into a hybrid photosynthetic F1 that carries out both MgATPase and CaATPase activities and ATP-dependent gamma rotation [Tucker, W. C., Schwarcz, A., Levine, T., Du, Z., Gromet-Elhanan, Z., Richter, M. L. and Haran, G. (2004) J. Biol. Chem. 279, 47415-47418]. Surprisingly, changing Arg304 to leucine resulted in a more than 2-fold increase in the kcat for MgATP hydrolysis. In contrast, changing Gln305 to alanine had little effect on the kcat but completely abolished the well-known stimulatory effect of the oxyanion sulfite on MgATP hydrolysis. The MgATPase activities of combined mutants with both residues substituted were strongly inhibited, whereas the CaATPase activities were inhibited, but to a lesser extent. The results indicate that the C-terminus of the photosynthetic F1 gamma subunit, like its mitochondrial counterpart, forms a catch with the alpha and beta subunits that modulates the nucleotide binding properties of the catalytic site(s). The catch is likely to be part of an activation mechanism, overcoming inhibition by free mg2+ ions, but is not essential for cooperative nucleotide exchange.  相似文献   

5.
Complete sequence-specific 1H NMR assignments for human insulin   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
A D Kline  R M Justice 《Biochemistry》1990,29(12):2906-2913
Solvent conditions where human insulin could be studied by high-resolution NMR were determined. Both low pH and addition of acetonitrile were required to overcome the protein's self-association and to obtain useful spectra. Two hundred eighty-six 1H resonances were located and assigned to specific sites on the protein by using two-dimensional NMR methods. The presence and position of numerous dNN sequential NOE's indicate that the insulin conformation seen in crystallographic studies is largely retained under these solution conditions. Slowly exchanging protons were observed for seven backbone amide protons and were assigned to positions A15 and A16 and to positions B15-B19. These amides all occur within helical regions of the protein [Chawdhury, S.A., Dodson, E.J., Dodson, G.G., Reynolds, C.D., Tolley, S.P., Blundell, T.L., Cleasby, A., Pitts, J.E., Tickle, I.J., & Wood, S.P. (1983) Diabetologia 25, 460-464].  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
The human fibrinogen gamma-chain, C-terminal fragment, residues 385-411, i.e., KIIPFNRLTIGEGQQHHLGGAKQAGDV, contains two biologically important functional domains: (1) fibrinogen gamma-chain polymerization center and (2) platelet receptor recognition domain. This peptide was isolated from cyanogen bromide degraded human fibrinogen and was investigated by 1H NMR (500 MHz) spectroscopy. Sequence-specific assignments of NMR resonances were obtained for backbone and side-chain protons via analysis of 2D NMR COSY, double quantum filtered COSY, HOHAHA, and NOESY spectra. The N-terminal segment from residues 385-403 seems to adopt a relatively fixed solution conformation. Strong sequential alpha CH-NH NOESY connectivities and a continuous run of NH-NH NOESY connectivities and several long-lived backbone NH protons strongly suggest the presence of multiple-turn or helix-like structure for residues 390 to about 402. The conformation of residues 403-411 seems to be much less constrained as evidenced by the presence of weaker and sequential alpha CH-NH NOEs, the absence of sequential NH-NH NOEs, and the lack of longer lived amides. Chemical shifts of resonances from backbone and side-chain protons of the C-terminal dodecapeptide, residues 400-411, differ significantly from those of the parent chain, suggesting that some preferred C-terminal conformation does exist.  相似文献   

8.
Two-dimensional proton NMR experiments have been used to sequentially assign resonances to all of the peptide backbone protons of turkey ovomucoid third domain (OMTKY3) except those of the N-terminal alpha-amino group whose signal was not resolved owing to exchange with the solvent. Assignments also have been made for more than 80% of the side-chain protons. Two-dimensional chemical shift correlated spectroscopy (COSY), relayed coherence transfer spectroscopy (RELAY), and two-dimensional homonuclear Hartmann-Hahn spectroscopy (HOHAHA) were used to identify the spin systems of almost half of the residues prior to sequential assignment. Assignments were based on two-dimensional nuclear Overhauser enhancements observed between adjacent residues. The secondary structure of OMTKY3 in solution was determined from additional assigned NOESY cross-peaks; it closely resembles the secondary structure determined by single-crystal X-ray diffraction of OMTKY3 in complex with Streptomyces griseus proteinase B [Fujinaga, M., Read, R.J., Sielecki, A., Ardelt, W., Laskowski, M., Jr., & James, M.N.G. (1982) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 79, 4868-4872]. The NMR data provide evidence for three slowly exchanging amide protons that were not identified as hydrogen-bond donors in the crystal structure.  相似文献   

9.
10.
The asialo biantennary complex type oligosaccharide from human serum transferrin was isolated by hydrazinolysis, a method which results in the quantitative release of the intact oligosaccharide free of all amino acids. The 1H-NMR chemical shifts of the previously assigned anomeric and H-2 protons from the peripheral residues of the glycopeptide are identical to the corresponding values for the reduced oligosaccharide. The chemical shift of GlcNAc-1 H-1 proton in the reduced oligosaccharide was assigned by selective deuteration. Proton J connectivities were determined using two-dimensional 1H-1H correlated high resolution NMR spectroscopy. Twelve new assignments were made within the central envelope of the NMR spectrum and a further six were tentatively proposed. The ability to assign proton resonances in this way should allow further conformational studies of the oligosaccharide using nuclear Overhauser effects between the relevant assigned protons on different saccharide residues (Homans, S.W., Dwek, R.A., Fernandes, D.L. and Rademacher, T.W. (1982) FEBS Lett. 150, 503-506).  相似文献   

11.
An 1H-NMR study of ferric cytochrome P450cam in different paramagnetic states was performed. Assignment of three heme methyl resonances of the isocyanide adduct of cytochrome P450 in the ferric low-spin state was recently performed using electron exchange in the presence of putidaredoxin [Mouro, C., Bondon, A., Jung, C., Hui Bon Hoa, G., De Certaines, J.D., Spencer, R.G.S. & Simonneaux, G. (1999) FEBS Lett. 455, 302-306]. In this study, heme methyl protons of cytochrome P450 in the native high-spin and low-spin states were assigned through one-dimensional and two-dimensional magnetization transfer spectroscopy using the paramagnetic signals enhancement (PASE) method. The order of the methyl proton chemical shifts is inverted between high-spin and low-spin states. The methyl order observed in the ferric low-spin isocyanide complexes is related to the orientation of the cysteinate ligand.  相似文献   

12.
A two-dimensional NMR study has been carried out on the four-iron clusters of a bacterial oxidized ferredoxin for the purpose of investigating the relationship between contact shift patterns and the orientation of the individual coordinated cysteines. The ferredoxin from Clostridium pasteurianum, CpFdox, was selected because of its extensive sequence homology, and likely close structural similarity, to the crystallographically characterized ferredoxin from Peptococcus aerogenes, Pa Fdox (Adman, E.T., Sieker, L.C., and Jensen, L. H. (1973) J. Biol. Chem. 248, 3987-3996). Rapid data collection rates with minimal but adequate acquisition time allowed the detection of numerous CpFdox cross-peaks from the contact-shifted and strongly relaxed coordinated cysteinyl C beta H protons in the resolved 10-20 ppm window. Relatively strong magnitude COSY cross peaks from the resolved eight cysteinyl C beta H resonance unambiguously locate the geminal C beta H partner for each residue; weaker cross-peaks locate the C alpha Hs from three of the residues. The geminal nature of the magnitude-COSY detected partners to the resolved C beta H peaks is confirmed by strong NOESY cross-peaks. The NOESY spectra, moreover, assign an additional two cysteinyl C alpha H resonances. The present results confirm some previous one-dimensional NOE assignments, revise others, and locate resonances previously undetected (Bertini, I., Briganti, F., Luchinat, C., and Scozzafara, A. (1990) Inorg. Chem. 29, 1874-1880). A striking pairwise pseudo-symmetry in cysteinyl contact shift patterns is observed which is attributed to the previously recognized pseudo-symmetry in the crystal of PaFdox. A detailed analysis of the structural/electronic determinants of the coordinated cysteine C beta H contact shift pattern is made, and the NMR data necessary for unique interpretation are identified. It is shown that analysis of the relaxation properties of cysteine beta-methylene protons provides the stereospecific assignments necessary for comparison of shift ratios with crystallographic structural data. The available structural data on PaFdox (Backes, G., Mino, Y., Loehr, T., Meyer, T., Cusanovich, M., Sweeney, W., Adman, E., and Sanders-Loehr, J. (1991) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 13, 2055-2064) are qualitatively but not quantitatively consistent with the observed cysteinyl contact shift pattern, with the NMR data reflecting more asymmetry than previous studies. A tentative assignment of a single pair of symmetry-related cysteines is proposed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
The heme molecular structure of the met-azido form of the myoglobin from the shark Galeorhinus japonicus has been investigated by 1H NMR. A nuclear Overhauser effect (NOE) was clearly observed among the heme peripheral side-chain proton signals of this complex, which undergoes thermal spin equilibrium between high-spin (S = 5/2) and low-spin (S = 1/2) states, and the NOE connectivities provided the assignment of the resonances from the heme C13(1)H2 and C17(1)H2 protons. Chemical shift inequivalence of these proton resonances not only provided information about the orientation of these methylene protons with respect to the heme plane, but also allowed characterization of the time-dependent build-up of the NOE between them, which yields the correlation time for the internal motion of the inter-proton vector. The relatively large mobility found for the C17(1)H2 group suggests that the carboxyl oxygen of the heme C17 propionate is not anchored to the apo-protein by a salt bridge. It has been shown that the ferric high-spin form of G. japonicus Mb possesses a penta-coordinated heme [Suzuki, T. (1987) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 914, 170-176; Yamamoto, Y., Osawa, A., Inoue, Y., Ch?j?, R. & Suzuki, T. (1990) Eur. J. Biochem. 192, 225-229] and that the conformation of both heme propionate groups is fixed with respect to the heme, as well as the apo-protein, by a salt bridge [Yamamoto, Y., Inoue, Y., Ch?j?, R. & Suzuki, T. (1990) Eur. J. Biochem. 189, 567-573]. Therefore the weakening or interruption of the interaction between the C17 propionate and His FG3 upon the changes of the coordination and spin state of the heme iron, during azide ion binding to ferric high-spin G. japonicus Mb, is attributed to the displacement of the FG corner of the apoprotein away from the heme C17 propionate group. A similar structural alteration has been revealed by X-ray structural analyses of unliganded and liganded forms of ferrous hemoproteins [Baldwin, J. & Chothia, C. (1979) J. Mol. Biol. 129, 175-220; Phillips, S.E.V. (1980) J. Mol. Biol. 142, 531-554].  相似文献   

14.
P Gettins 《Biochemistry》1987,26(5):1391-1398
1H NMR has been used to characterize and compare the structures of antithrombin III from human, bovine, and porcine plasma as well as to investigate the interactions of each of these proteins with heparin fragments of defined length. The amino acid compositions of the three proteins are very similar, which is reflected in the gross features of their 1H NMR spectra. In addition, aromatic and methyl proton resonances in upfield-shifted positions appear to be common to all three proteins and suggest similar tertiary structures. Human antithrombin III has five histidine residues, bovine has six, and porcine has five. The C(2) proton from each of these residues gives a narrow resonance and titrates with pH; the pKa's are in the range 5.15-7.25. It is concluded that all histidines in each protein are surface residues with considerable independent mobility. The carbohydrate chains in each protein also give sharp resonances consistent with a surface location and motional flexibility. The 1H spectra are sensitive to heparin binding. Although heparin resonances obscure protein resonances in the region 3.2-6.0 ppm, difference spectra between antithrombin III with and without heparin show clear perturbation of a small number of aromatic and aliphatic protein protons. These resonances include those of histidine C(2) and C(4) protons, of 10-20 other aromatic protons, of a methyl group, and also of protons with chemical shifts similar to those of lysine and/or arginine side chains. For human antithrombin III, it was shown that heparin fragments 8, 10, and 16 sugar residues in length result in almost identical perturbations to the protein. In contrast, tetrasaccharide results in fewer perturbations.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
B H Oh  J L Markley 《Biochemistry》1990,29(16):3993-4004
Complete sequence-specific assignments were determined for the diamagnetic 1H resonances from Anabaena 7120 ferredoxin (Mr = 11,000). A novel assignment procedure was followed whose first step was the identification of the 13C spin systems of the amino acids by a 13C(13C) double quantum correlation experiment [Oh, B.-H., Westler, M. W., Darba, P., & Markley, J. L. (1988) Science 240, 908-911]. Then, the 1H spin systems of the amino acids were identified from the 13C spin systems by means of direct and relayed 1H(13C) single-bond correlations [Oh, B.-H., Westler, W. M., & Markley, J. L. (1989) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 111, 3083-3085]. The sequential resonance assignments were based mainly on conventional interresidue 1H alpha i-1HNi + 1 NOE connectivities. Resonances from 18 residues were not resolved in two-dimensional 1H NMR spectra. When these residues were mapped onto the X-ray crystal structure of the homologous ferredoxin from Spirulina platensis [Fukuyama, K., Hase, T., Matsumoto, S., Tsukihara, T., Katsube, Y., Tanaka, N., Kakudo, M., Wada, K., & Matsubara, H. (1980) Nature 286, 522-524], it was found that they correspond to amino acids close to the paramagnetic 2Fe.2S* cluster. Cross peaks in two-dimensional homonuclear 1H NMR spectra were not observed for any protons closer than about 7.8 A to both iron atoms. Secondary structural features identified in solution include two antiparallel beta-sheets, one parallel beta-sheet, and one alpha-helix.  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
The three-dimensional structure of the complex between calmodulin (CaM) and a peptide corresponding to the N-terminal portion of the CaM-binding domain of the plasma membrane calcium pump, the peptide C20W, has been solved by heteronuclear three-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. The structure calculation is based on a total of 1808 intramolecular NOEs and 49 intermolecular NOEs between the peptide C20W and calmodulin from heteronuclear-filtered NOESY spectra and a half-filtered experiment, respectively. Chemical shift differences between free Ca(2+)-saturated CaM and its complex with C20W as well as the structure calculation reveal that C20W binds solely to the C-terminal half of CaM. In addition, comparison of the methyl resonances of the nine assigned methionine residues of free Ca(2+)-saturated CaM with those of the CaM/C20W complex revealed a significant difference between the N-terminal and the C-terminal domain; i.e., resonances in the N-terminal domain of the complex were much more similar to those reported for free CaM in contrast to those in the C-terminal half which were significantly different not only from the resonances of free CaM but also from those reported for the CaM/M13 complex. As a consequence, the global structure of the CaM/C20W complex is unusual, i.e., different from other peptide calmodulin complexes, since we find no indication for a collapsed structure. The fine modulation in the peptide protein interface shows a number of differences to the CaM/M13 complex studied by Ikura et al. [Ikura, M., Clore, G. M., Gronenborn, A. M., Zhu, G., Klee, C. B., and Bax, A. (1992) Science 256, 632-638]. The unusual binding mode to only the C-terminal half of CaM is in agreement with the biochemical observation that the calcium pump can be activated by the C-terminal half of CaM alone [Guerini, D., Krebs, J., and Carafoli, E. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 15172-15177].  相似文献   

18.
Proton resonance assignments of horse ferricytochrome c   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
Two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (2D NMR) was used to obtain extensive resonance assignments in the 1H NMR spectrum of horse ferricytochrome c. Assignments were made for the main-chain and C beta protons of 102 residues (all except Pro-44 and Gly-84) and the majority of side-chain protons. As starting points for the assignment of the oxidized protein, a limited set of protons was initially assigned by use of 2D NMR magnetization transfer methods to correlate resonances in the oxidized form with assigned resonances in the reduced form [Wand, A. J., Di Stefano, D. L., Feng, Y., Roder, H., & Englander, S. W. (1989) Biochemistry (preceding paper in this issue)]. Given the complexity of the spectrum due to the size of this protein (104 residues) and its paramagnetic center, the initial search for side-chain spin systems in J-correlated spectra was successful only for the simplest side chains, but the majority of NH-C alpha H-C beta H subspin systems (NAB sets) could be identified at this stage. The subsequent search for sequential NOE connectivities focused on NAB sets, with use of previously assigned residues to place NOE-connected segments within the amino acid sequence. Selective proton labeling of either the slowly or the rapidly exchanging amide sites was used to simplify the spectra, and systematic work at two temperatures was used to resolve ambiguities in the 2D NMR spectra. These approaches, together with the use of magnetization transfer methods to correlate reduced and oxidized cytochrome c spectra, provide multiple cross-checks to verify assignments.  相似文献   

19.
T A Holak  J H Prestegard 《Biochemistry》1986,25(19):5766-5774
Sequence-specific assignments of 1H NMR resonances were obtained for the backbone protons in acyl carrier protein (ACP) from Escherichia coli, a protein of 77 residues. The observations, in the NOESY spectra, of 1H-1H sequential and medium-range connectivities indicate the presence of three or four alpha-helical segments joined by short sequences of mixed conformations. The observations are used to refine a secondary structure model previously proposed on the basis of a Chou-Fasman algorithm [Rock, C. O., & Cronan, J. E., Jr. (1979) J. Biol. Chem. 254, 9778-9785].  相似文献   

20.
The complex of Lactobacillus casei dihydrofolate reductase with the substrate folate and the coenzyme NADP+ has been shown to exist in solution as a mixture of three slowly interconverting conformations whose proportions are pH-dependent [Birdsall, B., Gronenborn, A. M., Hyde, E. I., Clore, G. M., Roberts, G. C. K., Feeney, J., & Burgen, A. S. V. (1982) Biochemistry 21, 5831]. The assignment of the resonances of all the aromatic protons of the ligand molecules in all three conformational states of the complex has now been completed by using a variety of NMR methods, particularly two-dimensional exchange experiments. The resonances of the nicotinamide protons of the coenzyme and the pteridine 7-proton of the folate have different chemical shifts in the three conformations, in some cases differing by more than 1 ppm. Comparison of the COSY spectra of the complex at low pH (conformation I) and high pH (conformations IIa and IIb) with that of the enzyme-methotrexate-NADP+ complex shows only slight differences in the conformation of the protein. The pattern of chemical shift changes in the ligand and the protein indicates that the structural differences are localized within the active site of the enzyme. Nuclear Overhauser effects (NOEs) are observed between the nicotinamide 5- and 6-protons and the methyl resonance of Thr 45 at both low and high pH, indicating that there is no major movement of the nicotinamide ring. By contrast, NOEs are observed between the pteridine 7-proton and the methyl protons of Leu 19 and Leu 27 in conformations I and IIa but not in conformation IIb.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

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