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1.
Assignments are presented for resonances in the magic-angle spinning solid-state NMR spectra of the major coat protein subunit of the filamentous bacteriophage Pf1. NMR spectra were collected on uniformly 13C and 15N isotopically enriched, polyethylene glycol precipitated samples of fully infectious and hydrated phage. Site-specific assignments were achieved for 231 of the 251 labeled atoms (92%) of the 46-residue-long coat protein, including 136 of the 138 backbone atoms, by means of two- and three-dimensional 15N and 13C correlation experiments. A single chemical shift was observed for the vast majority of atoms, suggesting a single conformation for the 7300 subunits in the 36 MDa virion in its high-temperature form. On the other hand, multiple chemical shifts were observed for the Calpha, Cbeta, and Cgamma atoms of T5 in the helix terminus and the Calpha and Cbeta atoms of M42 in the DNA interaction domain. The chemical shifts of the backbone atoms indicate that the coat protein conformation involves a 40-residue continuous alpha-helix extending from residue 6 to the C-terminus.  相似文献   

2.
Knowledge of chemical shift-structure relationships could greatly facilitate the NMR chemical shift assignment and structure refinement processes that occur during peptide/protein structure determination via NMR spectroscopy. To determine whether such correlations exist for polar side chain containing amino acid residues the serine dipeptide model, For-L-Ser-NH(2), was studied. Using the GIAO-RHF/6-31+G(d) and GIAO-RHF/TZ2P levels of theory the NMR chemical shifts of all hydrogen ((1)H(N), (1)H(alpha), (1)H(beta1), (1)H(beta2)), carbon ((13)C(alpha), (13)C(beta), (13)C') and nitrogen ((15)N) atoms have been computed for all 44 stable conformers of For-L-Ser-NH(2). An attempt was made to establish correlation between chemical shift of each nucleus and the major conformational variables (omega(0), phi, psi, omega(1), chi,(1) and chi(2)). At both levels of theory a linear correlation can be observed between (1)H(alpha)/phi, (13)C(alpha)/phi, and (13)C(alpha)/psi. These results indicate that the backbone and side-chain structures of For-L-Ser-NH(2) have a strong influence on its chemical shifts.  相似文献   

3.
Recently proposed self-consistent 3J coupling analysis (Schmidt, J. M.; Blümel, M.; L?hr, F.; Rüterjans, H. J. Biomol. NMR 1999, 14, 1-12) has been carried out to calibrate Karplus parameters constituting the empirical dependence of 3J coupling constants on the chi1 dihedral angle in amino acid side chains. The procedure involves simultaneous least-squares optimization of six sets of three Karplus coefficients related to all six 3J coupling types accessible in 15N,13C-labeled proteins. A simple concept of fundamental and incremental component couplings is proposed to account for substituent effects, eventually yielding amino acid topology-specific Karplus parameters. The method is exemplified with recombinant Desulfovibrio vulgaris flavodoxin (147 amino acids, 16 kDa) with reference to a total of 749 experimental 3JHalpha,Hbeta, 3JN',Hbeta, 3JC',Hbeta, 3JHalpha,Cgamma, 3JN',Cgamma, and 3JC',Cgamma coupling constants. Unlike other parametrizations, the present method does not make reference to X-ray coordinates, so that the Karplus coefficients obtained are not influenced by differences between solution and crystal states. Cross validation using X-ray torsion angles demonstrates the improvement relative to previous parametrizations. The Karplus coefficients derived are applicable to other proteins, too. Parameter refinement also yields a series of chi1 torsion angles, providing valuable constraints for protein structure determination, as well as optional parameters of local angular mobility in the contexts of Gaussian random fluctuation or a three-site jump model. The procedure permits automatic stereospecific assignments of Hbeta and Cgamma chemical shifts. The majority of the flavodoxin side-chain conformations agrees with high-resolution X-ray structures of the protein. Marked deviations between NMR and X-ray datasets are attributed to different rotameric states due to crystal-packing effects and to conformational equilibria between multiple chi1 rotamers.  相似文献   

4.
High-resolution solution NMR spectra have been obtained for bacteriochlorophyll (BChl) a molecules in a biologically functional subunit of a bacterial core light-harvesting complex based on a modified reconstitution method. The reconstituted subunit of pigment-integral membrane polypeptides is stable and homogeneous at high concentrations at room temperature and exhibits a Q(y) absorption peak at 818 nm. (1)H and (13)C chemical shifts have been specifically assigned for BChl a using the fully and selectively (13)C-labeled pigments incorporated with natural abundance polypeptides in deuterated detergent solution. Remarkable signal broadening has been observed upon reconstitution, where the bacteriochlorin macrocycle is shown in a highly restricted molecular motion while the phytol side chain remains relatively mobile. Two sets of resonances are revealed for 3(2), 8(1), 10, 12(1), and 13(4) protons, and 8(2) methyl protons exhibit four resonances with large upfield complexation shifts. The result indicates a nonequivalent state for the two BChl a molecules in the subunit and can be best interpreted in terms of a parallel face-to-face configuration with partial overlap over the pyrrolic rings II, III, and V. In comparison with BChl a in acetone, 8(2), 13(2), and 13(4) protons are largely perturbed, and the propionic and phytol side chain may adopt a different conformation in the reconstituted subunit. The (13)C chemical shift of 3(1) carbonyl carbon shows a large change downfield, indicating strong hydrogen bonding for all the acetyl carbonyls. Carbonyl carbons at 13(1) give rise to two (13)C resonances with equal intensities, suggesting that the keto carbonyl in one BChl a molecule within a subunit forms a stronger hydrogen bond than that in another BChl a molecule.  相似文献   

5.
Chemical shielding anisotropy tensors have been determined for all twenty-seven characteristic conformers of For-L-Val-NH2 using the GIAO-RHF formalism with the 6-31 + G* and TZ2P basis sets. The individual chemical shifts and their conformational averages have been compared to their experimental counterparts taken from the BioMagnetic Resonance Bank (BMRB). At the highest level of theory applied, for all nuclei but the amide proton, deviations between statistically averaged theoretical and experimental chemical shifts are as low as 1-3%. Correlated chemical shift plots of selected nuclei, as function of the respective phi, psi, chi1, and chi2 torsional angles, have been generated. On two-dimensional chemical shift-chemical shift plots, for example, 1H(NH)-15N(NH) and 15N(NH)-13Calpha, regions corresponding to major conformational clusters have been identified, providing a basis for the quantitative identification of conformers from NMR shift data. Experimental NMR resonances of nuclei of valine residues have been deduced from 18 selected proteins, resulting in 93 1Halpha-13Calpha chemical shift pairs. These experimental results have been compared to relevant ab initio values revealing remarkable correlation between the two sets of data. Correlations of 1Halpha and 13Calpha values with backbone conformational parameters (phi and psi) have also been found for all pairs (e.g. 1Halpha/phi and 13Calpha/phi) but 1Halpha/psi. Overall, the appealing idea of establishing backbone folding of proteins by employing chemical shift information alone, obtained from selected multiple-pulse NMR experiments (e.g. 2D-HSQC, 2D-HMQC, and 3D-HNCA), has received further support.  相似文献   

6.
Magic-angle spinning solid-state NMR (SSNMR) studies of the beta1 immunoglobulin binding domain of protein G (GB1) are presented. Chemical shift correlation spectra at 11.7 T (500 MHz 1H frequency) were employed to identify signals specific to each amino acid residue type and to establish backbone connectivities. High sensitivity and resolution facilitated the detection and assignment of every 15N and 13C site, including the N-terminal (M1) 15NH3, the C-terminal (E56) 13C', and side-chain resonances from residues exhibiting fast-limit conformational exchange near room temperature. The assigned spectra lend novel insight into the structure and dynamics of microcrystalline GB1. Secondary isotropic chemical shifts report on conformation, enabling a detailed comparison of the microcrystalline state with the conformation of single crystals and the protein in solution; the consistency of backbone conformation in these three preparations is the best among proteins studied so far. Signal intensities and line widths vary as a function of amino acid position and temperature. High-resolution spectra are observed near room temperature (280 K) and at <180 K, whereas resolution and sensitivity greatly degrade substantially near 210 K; the magnitude of this effect is greatest among the side chains of residues at the intermolecular interface of the microcrystal lattice, which we attribute to intermediate-rate translational diffusion of solvent molecules near the glass transition. These features of GB1 will enable its use as an excellent model protein not only for SSNMR methods development but also for fundamental studies of protein thermodynamics in the solid state.  相似文献   

7.
To determine the moiety that behaves as the steric trigger to activate the CB(1) cannabinoid receptor, conformational properties of the nonclassical cannabinoid CP55244, one of the most potent CB(1) receptor agonists, were characterized by conformational analysis, rotational barrier calculations, and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. It was shown from the present MD simulations that the torsion angles phi1 and phi4 of the C3 side chain showed the most dramatic change when compared with the ground-state receptor-bound conformation, indicating that rotation around these torsion angles is responsible for releasing the ligand strain energy. Multiple stages would be involved in the ligand conformational change. As a molecular mechanism for the ligand-induced CB(1) receptor conformational change, we propose that the C3 side chain serves as the steric trigger, while the ACD-ring moiety of CP55244 serves as the plug. Steric clash with helices within the binding pocket would induce microconformational adaptation within the protein. This mechanism would suggest that rotational flexibility in a ligand may be as important a determinant of agonist activity as the pharmacophoric elements that can be identified.  相似文献   

8.
The structural and energetic determinants for kinking a basepair step by minor groove-insertion of the protein side chains of PurR, LacI, LEF-1, IHF, Sac7d, and Sso7d, have been calculated by molecular dynamics/potential of mean force simulations. The structural determinants of the kinked structures are: two contiguous furanose rings achieve different conformations, in the region of C3'endo (A-DNA) and C2'endo (B-DNA); the chi torsion angle always takes values characteristic of the C2'endo conformation of B-DNA, independently of sugar puckering; and protein side chain insertion increases slide (from negative to positive values), rise, and roll, and decreases twist. The energetic determinants of DNA kinking are: the conformational transition of the sugar-phosphate backbone is not energetically demanding; the relative importance of the interbase parameters in the free energy penalty is slide, followed by twist and rise, and concluding with shift and roll; and the characteristic increase of roll and decrease of twist, upon side chain insertion, tends to stabilize the process of DNA kinking.  相似文献   

9.
The 13C spectra of α-thujene ( 1 ), isothujone ( 2 ), (?)isothujol ( 3 ), (+)neoisothujol ( 4 ), sabinol ( 5 ), dihydroumbellulone ( 6 ) and umbellulone ( 7 ) and the alcohol acetates are recorded and assigned. The C-6 chemical shift may be used in conjunction with the steric shift mechanism as a conformational probe in these molecules. The results obtained indicate that isothujol, neoisothujol, isothujone and dihydroumbellulone adopt boat-like conformations whilst sabinol has a much flatter conformation. Conjugation of the isolated double bond of α-thujene and the carbonyl group of dihydroumbellulone with the cyclopropane ring has virtually no effect on the 13C shifts, but those of umbellulone itself are anomalous, indicating conjugation of the α,β unsaturated ketone system with the cyclopropyl ring.  相似文献   

10.
A study of several linear and branched alkanes indicates that the temperature dependence of 13C chemical shifts is a complex phenomenon in which several non-additive effects may be operative. The chemical shift temperature coefficients dδ/dT do, however, reveal some systematic trends which could be helpful in the assignments of 13C resonances. An empirical equation is proposed (akin to that of Grant and Paul for 13C chemical shifts) which accurately correlates all the data obtained near ambient temperatures.  相似文献   

11.
We demonstrate constraint of peptide backbone and side-chain conformation with 3D (1)H-(15)N-(13)C-(1)H dipolar chemical shift, magic-angle spinning NMR experiments. In these experiments, polarization is transferred from (15)N[i] by ramped SPECIFIC cross polarization to the (13)C(alpha)[i], (13)C(beta)[i], and (13)C(alpha)[i - 1] resonances and evolves coherently under the correlated (1)H-(15)N and (1)H-(13)C dipolar couplings. The resulting set of frequency-labeled (15)N(1)H-(13)C(1)H dipolar spectra depend strongly upon the molecular torsion angles phi[i], chi1[i], and psi[i - 1]. To interpret the data with high precision, we considered the effects of weakly coupled protons and differential relaxation of proton coherences via an average Liouvillian theory formalism for multispin clusters and employed average Hamiltonian theory to describe the transfer of (15)N polarization to three coupled (13)C spins ((13)C(alpha)[i], (13)C(beta)[i], and (13)C(alpha)[i - 1]). Degeneracies in the conformational solution space were minimized by combining data from multiple (15)N(1)H-(13)C(1)H line shapes and analogous data from other 3D (1)H-(13)C(alpha)-(13)C(beta)-(1)H (chi1), (15)N-(13)C(alpha)-(13)C'-(15)N (psi), and (1)H-(15)N[i]-(15)N[i + 1]-(1)H (phi, psi) experiments. The method is demonstrated here with studies of the uniformly (13)C,(15)N-labeled solid tripeptide N-formyl-Met-Leu-Phe-OH, where the combined data constrains a total of eight torsion angles (three phi, three chi1, and two psi): phi(Met) = -146 degrees, psi(Met) = 159 degrees, chi1(Met) = -85 degrees, phi(Leu) = -90 degrees, psi(Leu) = -40 degrees, chi1(Leu) = -59 degrees, phi(Phe) = -166 degrees, and chi1(Phe) = 56 degrees. The high sensitivity and dynamic range of the 3D experiments and the data analysis methods provided here will permit immediate application to larger peptides and proteins when sufficient resolution is available in the (15)N-(13)C chemical shift correlation spectra.  相似文献   

12.
A number of phenol- and catechol- amines has been studied in aqueous solutions at acidic and alkaline pD by means of 13C NMR. Resonance assignments are achieved for the fully protonated forms and the influence of the side chain on the aromatic carbons is studied. The shielding effects associated with the various types of side chain tend to follow an additive relationship. The pD dependence of the ring and side chain carbon resonances in phenolamines is accounted for by considering the sum of two separate and opposite effects related to ring and side chain deprotonations. Such a simple model fails to apply to the catechol derivatives. This difference is discussed in terms of the orientational dependence of the deprotonation shifts. It is shown that the protonated amino group is the less acidic group in phenol- and catechol-amines.  相似文献   

13.
NMR--chemical shift structure correlations were investigated by using GIAO-RB3LYP/6-311++G(2d,2p) formalism. Geometries and chemical shifts (CSI values) of 103 different conformers of N'-formyl-L-histidinamide were determined including both neutral and charged protonation forms. Correlations between amino acid torsional angle values and chemical shifts were investigated for the first time for an aromatic and polar amino acid residue whose side chain may carry different charges. Linear correlation coefficients of a significant level were determined between chemical shifts and dihedral angles for CSI[(1)H(alpha)]/phi, CSI[(13)C(alpha)]/phi, and CSI[(13)C(alpha)]/psi. Protonation of the imidazole ring induces the upfield shift of CSI[(13)C(alpha)] for positively charged histidines and an opposite effect for the negative residue. We investigated the correspondence of theoretical and experimental (13)C(alpha), (13)C(beta), and (1)H(alpha) chemical shifts and the nine basic conformational building units characteristic for proteins. These three chemical shift values allow the identification of conformational building units at 80% accuracy. These results enable the prediction of additional regular secondary structural elements (e.g., polyProlineII, inverse gamma-turns) and loops beyond the assignment of chemical shifts to alpha-helices and beta-pleated sheets. Moreover, the location of the His residue can be further specified in a beta-sheet. It is possible to determine whether the appropriate residue is located at the middle or in a first/last beta-strand within a beta-sheet based on calculated CSI values. Thus, the attractive idea of establishing local residue specific backbone folding parameters in peptides and proteins by employing chemical shift information (e.g., (1)H(alpha) and (13)C(alpha)) obtained from selected heteronuclear correlation NMR experiments (e.g., 2D-HSQC) is reinforced.  相似文献   

14.
A novel approach for detection of ligand binding to a protein in solid samples is described. Hydrated precipitates of the anti-apoptotic protein Bcl-xL show well-resolved (13)C-(13)C 2D solid-state NMR spectra that allow site-specific assignment of resonances for many residues in uniformly (13)C-enriched samples. Binding of a small peptide or drug-like organic molecule leads to changes in the chemical shift of resonances from multiple residues in the protein that can be monitored to characterize binding. Differential chemical shifts can be used to distinguish between direct protein-ligand contacts and small conformational changes of the protein induced by ligand binding. The agreement with prior solution-state NMR results indicates that the binding pocket in solid and liquid samples is similar for this protein. Advantages of different labeling schemes involving selective (13)C enrichment of methyl groups of Ala, Val, Leu, and Ile (Cdelta1) for characterizing protein-ligand interactions are also discussed. It is demonstrated that high-resolution solid-state NMR spectroscopy on uniformly or extensively (13)C-enriched samples has the potential to screen proteins of moderate size ( approximately 20 kDa) for ligand binding as hydrated solids. The results presented here suggest the possibility of using solid-state NMR to study ligand binding in proteins not amenable to solution NMR.  相似文献   

15.
In this investigation, semiempirical NMR chemical shift prediction methods are used to evaluate the dynamically averaged values of backbone chemical shifts obtained from unbiased molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of proteins. MD-averaged chemical shift predictions generally improve agreement with experimental values when compared to predictions made from static X-ray structures. Improved chemical shift predictions result from population-weighted sampling of multiple conformational states and from sampling smaller fluctuations within conformational basins. Improved chemical shift predictions also result from discrete changes to conformations observed in X-ray structures, which may result from crystal contacts, and are not always reflective of conformational dynamics in solution. Chemical shifts are sensitive reporters of fluctuations in backbone and side chain torsional angles, and averaged (1)H chemical shifts are particularly sensitive reporters of fluctuations in aromatic ring positions and geometries of hydrogen bonds. In addition, poor predictions of MD-averaged chemical shifts can identify spurious conformations and motions observed in MD simulations that may result from force field deficiencies or insufficient sampling and can also suggest subsets of conformational space that are more consistent with experimental data. These results suggest that the analysis of dynamically averaged NMR chemical shifts from MD simulations can serve as a powerful approach for characterizing protein motions in atomistic detail.  相似文献   

16.
NMR chemical shifts are highly sensitive probes of local molecular conformation and environment and form an important source of structural information. In this study, the relationship between the NMR chemical shifts of nucleic acids and the glycosidic torsion angle, χ, has been investigated for the two commonly occurring sugar conformations. We have calculated by means of DFT the chemical shifts of all atoms in the eight DNA and RNA mono-nucleosides as a function of these two variables. From the DFT calculations, structures and potential energy surfaces were determined by using constrained geometry optimizations at the BP86/TZ2P level of theory. The NMR parameters were subsequently calculated by single-point calculations at the SAOP/TZ2P level of theory. Comparison of the (1) H and (13) C?NMR shifts calculated for the mono-nucleosides with the shifts determined by NMR spectroscopy for nucleic acids demonstrates that the theoretical shifts are valuable for the characterization of nucleic acid conformation. For example, a clear distinction can be made between χ angles in the anti and syn domains. Furthermore, a quantitative determination of the χ angle in the syn domain is possible, in particular when (13) C and (1) H chemical shift data are combined. The approximate linear dependence of the C1' shift on the χ angle in the anti domain provides a good estimate of the angle in this region. It is also possible to derive the sugar conformation from the chemical shift information. The DFT calculations reported herein were performed on mono-nucleosides, but examples are also provided to estimate intramolecularly induced shifts as a result of hydrogen bonding, polarization effects, or ring-current effects.  相似文献   

17.
The M2 transmembrane peptide (M2TMP) of the influenza A virus forms a tetrameric helical bundle that acts as a proton-selective channel important in the viral life cycle. The side-chain conformation of the peptide is largely unknown and is important for elucidating the proton-conducting mechanism and the channel stability. Using a 19F spin diffusion NMR technique called CODEX, we have measured the oligomeric states and interhelical side chain-side chain 19F-19F distances at several residues using singly fluorinated M2TMP bound to DMPC bilayers. 19F CODEX data at a key residue of the proton channel, Trp41, confirm the tetrameric state of the peptide and yield a nearest-neighbor interhelical distance of approximately 11 A under both neutral and acidic pH. Since the helix orientation is precisely known from previous 15N NMR experiments and the backbone channel diameter has a narrow allowed range, this 19F distance constrains the Trp41 side-chain conformation to t90 (chi1 approximately 180 degrees , chi2 approximately 90 degrees ). This Trp41 rotamer, combined with a previously measured 15N-13C distance between His37 and Trp411, suggests that the His37 rotamer is t-160. The implication of the proposed (His37, Trp41) rotamers to the gating mechanism of the M2 proton channel is discussed. Binding of the antiviral drug amantadine to the peptide does not affect the F-F distance at Trp41. Interhelical 19F-19F distances are also measured at residues 27 and 38, each mutated to 4-19F-Phe. For V27F-M2TMP, the 19F-19F distances suggest a mixture of dimers and tetramers, whereas the L38F-M2TMP data indicate two tetramers of different sizes, suggesting side chain conformational heterogeneity at this lipid-facing residue. This work shows that 19F spin diffusion NMR is a valuable tool for determining long-range intermolecular distances that shed light on the mechanism of action and conformational heterogeneity of membrane protein oligomers.  相似文献   

18.
NMR relaxation data on disordered proteins can provide insight into both structural and dynamic properties of these molecules. Because of chemical shift degeneracy in correlation spectra, detailed site-specific analyses of side chain dynamics have not been possible. Here, we present new experiments for the measurement of side chain dynamics in methyl-containing residues in unfolded protein states. The pulse schemes are similar to recently proposed methods for measuring deuterium spin relaxation rates in (13)CH(2)D methyl groups in folded proteins.(1) However, because resolution in (1)H-(13)C correlation maps of unfolded proteins is limiting, relaxation data are recorded as a series of (1)H-(15)N spectra. The methodology is illustrated with an application to the study of side chain dynamics in delta131delta, a large disordered fragment of staphylococcal nuclease containing residues 1-3 and 13-140 of the wide-type protein. A good correlation between the order parameters of the symmetry axes of the methyl groups and the backbone (1)H-(15)N bond vectors of the same residue is observed. Simulations establish that such a correlation is only possible if the unfolded state is comprised of an ensemble of structures which are not equiprobable. A motional model, which combines wobbling-in-a-cone and Gaussian axial fluctuations, is proposed to estimate chi(1) torsion angle fluctuations, sigma(chi)()1, of Val and Thr residues on the basis of the backbone and side chain order parameters. Values of sigma(chi)()1 are approximately 10 degrees larger than what has previously been observed in folded proteins. Of interest, the value of sigma(chi)()1 for Val 104 is considerably smaller than for other Val or Thr residues, suggesting that it may be part of a hydrophobic cluster. Notably large (15)N transverse relaxation rates are observed in this region. To our knowledge, this is the first time that side chain dynamics in an unfolded state have been studied in detail by NMR.  相似文献   

19.
The three‐dimensional solution conformation of teicoplanin aglycone was determined using NMR spectroscopy. A combination of NOE and dihedral angle restraints in a DMSO solvation model was used to calculate an ensemble of structures having a root mean square deviation of 0.17 Å. The structures were generated using systematic searches of conformational space for optimal satisfaction of distance and dihedral angle restraints. Comparison of the NMR‐derived structure of teicoplanin aglycone with the X‐ray structure of a teicoplanin aglycone analog revealed a common backbone conformation with deviation of two aromatic side chain substituents. Experimentally determined backbone 13C chemical shifts showed good agreement with those computed at the density functional level of theory, providing a cross validation of the backbone conformation. The flexible portion of the molecule was consistent with the region that changes conformation to accommodate protein binding. The results showed that a hydrogen‐bonded DMSO molecule in combination with NMR‐derived restraints together enabled calculation of structures that satisfied experimental data. Copyright © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

20.
High-resolution 13Carbon nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectra of Nylons 4, 6, and 66 in the solid state were measured over a wide range of temperature. From the results, it was found that resonance lines of crystalline and noncrystalline components were separable and their chemical shifts were determined. The 13C chemical shift behavior is closely related to their conformation. The origin of the conformational effects on the chemical shifts is discussed.  相似文献   

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