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1.
E Tüchsen  C Woodward 《Biochemistry》1987,26(25):8073-8078
Hydrogen-deuterium exchange is measured for the buried primary amide groups of Asn-43 and Asn-44 in bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor. Amide protons trans and cis to the amide carbonyl oxygen (HE and HZ, respectively) exchange at indistinguishable rates. Uncorrelated exchange of HE and HZ is established for both residues by following the nuclear Overhauser enhancement from HE to HZ during the deuterium exchange. The exchange of Asn-43 and Asn-44 side-chain protons differs qualitatively from exchange of primary amide groups in fully solvated model compounds, for which HE generally exchanges faster than HZ. The equal rates for the buried primary amide HE and HZ in BPTI are not a consequence of coupled exchange. The data indicate rapid rotation around the CO-NH2 bond for both Asn-43 and Asn-44 and suggest considerable lability of intramolecular hydrogen bonds. The side chain of Asn-43 has all of its polar atoms integrated into the very stable hydrogen-bonded structure of the protein. Asn-44 is hydrogen-bonded to side chains and to a buried water molecule. Solvent isotope exchange is several orders of magnitude more restricted by protein secondary and tertiary structure than the CO-NH2 rotation, indicating that N delta H2 groups flip many times before hydrogen isotope exchange occurs.  相似文献   
2.
E Tüchsen  C Woodward 《Biochemistry》1987,26(7):1918-1925
New assignments of three previously undetected amide proton NMR resonance lines in bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor are reported. These are the peptide amide proton of Gly-37 and the primary amide protons of Asn-44. Specific assignments of Asn-44 and Asn-43 HE and HZ resonances are also reported. The Gly-37 NH and Asn-44 HZ resonances are shifted upfield to 4.3 and 3.4 ppm, respectively, by the ring current of the Tyr-35 aromatic group, while Asn-44 HE resonates at 7.8 ppm. The abnormal chemical shifts of Asn-44 HZ and Gly-37 NH indicate that both NH's interact with the pi-electron cloud of the Tyr-35 ring. This is consistent with their location in the crystal structure. The resonances are resolved by differential labeling techniques and are studied by combined use of NOE and exchange difference spectroscopy.  相似文献   
3.
Solvent exchange of 18O-labeled buried water in bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (BPTI), trypsin, and trypsin-BPTI complex is measured by high-precision isotope ratio mass spectrometry. Buried water is labeled by equilibration of the protein in 18O-enriched water. Protein samples are then rapidly dialyzed against water of normal isotope composition by gel filtration and stored. The exchangeable 18O label eluting with the protein in 10-300 s is determined by an H2O-CO2 equilibration technique. Exchange of buried waters with solvent water is complete before 10-15 s in BPTI, trypsin, and BPTI-trypsin, as well as in lysozyme and carboxypeptidase measured as controls. When in-exchange dialysis and storage are carried out at pH greater than or equal to 2.5, trypsin-BPTI and trypsin, but not free BPTI, have the equivalent of one 18O atom that exchanges slowly (after 300 s and before several days). This oxygen is probably covalently bound to a specific site in trypsin. When in-exchange dialysis and storage are carried out at pH 1.1, the equivalent of three to seven 18O atoms per molecule is associated with the trypsin-BPTI complex, apparently due to nonspecific covalent 18O labeling of carboxyl groups at low pH. In addition to 18O exchange of buried waters, the hydrogen isotope exchange of buried NH groups H bonded to buried waters was also measured. Their base-catalyzed exchange rate constants are on the order of NH groups that in the crystal are exposed to solvent (static accessibility greater than 0) and hydrogen-bonded main chain O, and their pH min is similar to that for model compounds. The pH dependence of their exchange rate constants suggests that direct exchange with water may significantly contribute to their observed exchange rate.  相似文献   
4.
E Tüchsen  P E Hansen 《Biochemistry》1988,27(23):8568-8576
The carbonyl region of the natural abundance 13C nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectrum of basic pancreatic trypsin inhibitor is examined, and 65 of the 66 expected signals are characterized at varying pH and temperature. Assignments are reported for over two-thirds of the signals, including those of all buried backbone amide groups with slow proton exchange and all side-chain carbonyl groups. This is the first extensively assigned carbonyl spectrum for any protein. A method for carbonyl resonance assignments utilizing amide proton exchange and isotope effects on nuclear shielding is described in detail. The assignments are made by establishing kinetic correlation between effects of amide proton exchange observed in the carbonyl 13C region with development of isotope effects and in the amide proton region with disappearance of preassigned resonances. Several aspects of protein structure and dynamics in solution may be investigated by carbonyl 13C NMR spectroscopy. Some effects of side-chain primary amide group hydrolysis are described. The main interest is on information about intramolecular hydrogen-bond energies and changes in the protein due to amino acid replacements by chemical modification or genetic engineering.  相似文献   
5.
A recombinant gene for BPTI (bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor) is expressed in Escherichia coli using a MBP (maltose-binding protein) fusion vector. BPTI is fused through an FXa (blood coagulation factor Xa protease) target sequence (Ile-Glu-Gly-Arg) to the C-terminus of MBP. The MBP moiety of the hybrid protein enables purification in one step utilizing MBP's affinity to cross-linked amylose, and the FXa target sequence allows specific cleavage of the hybrid protein. Effective FXa cleavage is achieved by spacing the FXa target sequence and Arg-1 of the BPTI sequence with four residues (Met-Glu-Ala-Glu). The resulting N-terminal extended BPTI is readily converted to the wild-type sequence by trimming with cathepsin C exopeptidase, for the activity of which the spacing tetrapeptide is optimized. FXa cleavage is prohibited when the target sequence is placed next to Arg-1. In this construction, off-target cleavage at a somewhat homologous sequence (Val-Pro-Gly-Arg) results in five- or six-residue extended BPTI, indicating new details of the FXa specificity. The yield of highly purified recombinant BPTI is 3-6 mg/liter of culture, making the MBP-BPTI expression system convenient for the production of sufficient amounts of protein for NMR studies. 1H NMR is used to analyze the N-extended BPTI analogues.  相似文献   
6.
The acid-catalyzed hydrogen exchange rate constants kH, and the base-catalyzed rate constants kOH, have been determined (in the preceding paper) for the 25 most rapidly exchanging NH groups of bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor. Most of these NH groups are at the protein-solvent interface. The correlation of kH, but not kOH, with the static accessibility and hydrogen bonding of the peptide carbonyl O atom indicates that the mechanism of acid catalysis in proteins involves O-protonation. Agreement between the ionic strength dependence observed for kH and kOH and the ionic strength dependence calculated for an O-protonation mechanism supports this conclusion. N-protonation for acid catalysis, as well as N-deprotonation for base catalysis, have traditionally been assumed in the mechanism of the chemical step in peptide amide proton exchange. A preference for the alternative O-protonation mechanism has far-reaching implications in the interpretation of protein hydrogen exchange kinetics. With an O-protonation mechanism, acid-catalyzed rates of surface NH groups are primarily a function of the average solvent accessibility of the carbonyl O atoms in the dynamic solution structure, while base-catalyzed rates of surface NH groups measure solvent accessibility of the peptide N. The relative dynamic accessibilities of peptide O atoms, as measured by relative values of kH (corrected for electrostatic effects), correlate with O static accessibilities in the crystal structure. A lower correlation of static accessibility of N atoms with kOH is observed for surface NH groups in peptide groups in which the carbonyl O is not hydrogen bonded. For some surface NH groups, the observed pH of minimum rate, pHmin, deviates widely from the pHmin of model compounds. This is explained as the combined result of electrostatic effects and of the differences in accessibility of the carbonyl O and N atoms that result in a change in the relative values of kH and kOH as compared to those of model peptides. A mechanism whereby exchange of interior sites is catalyzed by interactions of catalysis ions with protein surface atoms via charge transfer is suggested.  相似文献   
7.
Four N-terminal extended species of the wild-type bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (WT-BPTI), Arg-BPTI (1-BPTI), Met-Glu-Ala-Glu-BPTI (4-BPTI), Ser-Ile-Glu-Gly-Arg-BPTI (5-BPTI) and Gly-Ser-Ile-Glu-Gly-Arg-BPTI (6-BPTI) have been studied by 1H n.m.r. The overall structure of the protein is largely unaffected by the addition of extension peptides. pH titration effects on the C-terminal Ala 58 H beta chemical shift indicate that the structure of 1-BPTI at neutral pH is very similar to that of the WT protein, with a salt bridge between the main chain terminal charges. A salt bridge interaction is prevented by addition of the longer extension peptides. Temperature stabilities are measured by high temperature hydrogen isotope exchange and by microcalorimetry. The stability of 1-BPTI is equal to that of WT-BPTI. A slight decrease in stability is observed for longer extensions, following the order WT-BPTI = 1-BPTI < 5-BPTI = 6-BPTI < 4-BPTI. Small changes in chemical shift are observed for 30 invariant resonances in 4-, 5- and 6-BPTI and for a subset of this group in 1-BPTI. These protons are distributed over about half of the BPTI molecule. The size of the chemical shift changes for many resonances follow the same ranking as the temperature stability. The chemical shift effects are attributed to charge and dielectric effects from extension peptides that probably share a common orientation on the surface of BPTI.  相似文献   
8.
Summary In native proteins, buried, labile protons undergo isotope exchange with solvent hydrogens, but the kinetics of exchange are markedly slower than in unfolded polypeptides. This indicates that, whereas buried protein atoms are shielded from solvent, the protein fluctuates around the time average structure and occasionally exposes buried sites to solvent. Generally, hydrogen exchange studies are designed to characterize the nature of the fluctuations between conformational substates, to monitor the shift in conformational equilibria among protein substates due to ligand binding or other factors, or to monitor the major cooperative denaturation transition. In this article, we review the recent reports of hydrogen exchange in proteins, focusing on recent advances in methodology, especially with regard to the implications of the results for the mechanism of hydrogen exchange in folded proteins.  相似文献   
9.
The membrane-solvent interface has been investigated through calculations of the solvent accessible surface area (ASA) for simulated membranes of DPPC and POPE. For DPPC at 52 degrees C we found an ASA of 126+/-8 A(2) per lipid molecule, equivalent to twice the projected lateral area. The ASA was dominated by the contribution from the quaternary ammonium ion which accounts for about two thirds of the total value. The remaining ASA is primarily the phosphate moiety (22+/-1 A(2)), and this contribution almost entirely represents the two 'out-of-chain' oxygen atoms. Interestingly, even the most exposed parts of the PC head-group show average ASAs of less than half of its maximal or 'fully hydrated' value. The average ASA of a simulated POPE membrane was 96+/-7 A(2) per lipid. The smaller value than for DPPC reflects much lower ASA of the ammonium ion, which is partially compensated by increased exposure of the ethylene and phosphate moieties. The ASA of the polar moieties of (PO(4), NH(3) and COO) constitutes 65% of the total accessible area for POPE, making this interface more polar than that of DPPC. It is suggested that ASA information can be valuable in attempts to rationalize experimental investigations, particularly molecular interpretations of thermodynamic information.  相似文献   
10.
Deuterium isotope effects on carbonyl 13C magnetic shielding were measured for the backbone carbonyl groups in BPTI (basic pancreatic trypsin inhibitor), and interpreted as a measure of hydrogen bond energies. The effects originate from peptide amide proton deuterium substitution and were observed on carbonyl carbons separated by two or three covalent bonds from the amide H/D. Two-bond isotope effects depend on the energy of the hydrogen bond donated by NH/D. Calibration of the effect with model compound data leads to hydrogen bond enthalpies less than 4.7 kcal/mol. Isotope effects over three bonds from the amide H/D to the carbonyl carbon of the same amino acid residue are observed for seven carbonyl resonances in BPTI. The three-bond isotope effects are highly related to the various backbone conformations. The largest effects are observed for residues with an approximate syn- periplanar conformation of the H-N-C alpha-C = O atoms, as realized for many residues in the BPTI antiparallel beta-sheet. The residues that show measurable three-bond effects have unusually short distances between H and O. The size of this effect decreases rapidly with increased O..H distance in the open five-membered ring. This observation suggests appreciable interactions in these rings.  相似文献   
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