Literature DB >> 10826883

Probing hydrogen bonds in the antibody-bound HIV-1 gp120 V3 loop by solid state NMR REDOR measurements.

J J Balbach1, J Yang, D P Weliky, P J Steinbach, V Tugarinov, J Anglister, R Tycko.   

Abstract

We describe solid state NMR measurements on frozen solutions of the complex of the 24-residue HIV-1 gp120 V3 loop peptide RP135 with the Fab fragment of the anti-gp120 antibody 0.5beta, using rotational echo double resonance (REDOR). In order to probe possible hydrogen bonding between arginine side chains and glycine backbone carbonyls in the region of the conserved Gly-Pro-Gly-Arg (GPGR) motif of the V3 loop, RP135 samples were prepared with 15N labels at the eta nitrogen positions of arginine side chains and 13C labels at glycine carbonyl positions and 13C-detected 13C-15N REDOR measurements were performed on peptide/antibody complexes of these labeled samples. Such hydrogen bonding was previously observed in a crystal structure of the V3 loop peptide/antibody complex RP142/59.1 [Ghiara et al. (1994) Science, 264, 82-85], but is shown by the REDOR measurements to be absent in the RP135/0.5beta complex. These results confirm the antibody-dependent conformational differences in the GPGR motif suggested by previously reported solid state NMR measurements of phi and psi backbone dihedral angles in the RP135/0.53 complex. In addition, we describe REDOR measurements on the helical synthetic peptide MB(i+4)EK in frozen solution that establish our ability to detect 13C-15N dipole-dipole couplings in the distance range appropriate to these hydrogen bonding studies. We also report the results of molecular modeling calculations on the central portion RP135, using a combination of the solid state NMR restraints of Weliky et al. [Nat. Struct. Biol., 6, 141-145, 1999] and the liquid state NMR restraints of Tugarinov et al. (Nat. Struct. Biol., 6, 331-335, 1999]. The dynamics calculations demonstrate the mutual compatibility of the two sets of experimental structural restraints and reduce ambiguities in the solid state NMR restraints that result from symmetry and signal-to-noise considerations.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10826883     DOI: 10.1023/a:1008343623240

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biomol NMR        ISSN: 0925-2738            Impact factor:   2.835


  46 in total

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Authors:  E A Stura; R L Stanfield; G G Fieser; S Silver; M Roguska; L M Hincapie; H K Simmerman; A T Profy; I A Wilson
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5.  NMR study of the peptide present in the principal neutralizing determinant (PND) of HIV-1 envelope glycoprotein gp120.

Authors:  A V Sarma; T V Raju; A C Kunwar
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6.  Unusually stable helix formation in short alanine-based peptides.

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7.  Conformation of the principal neutralizing determinant of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 in complex with an anti-gp120 virus neutralizing antibody studied by two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance difference spectroscopy.

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Authors:  W F Vranken; M Budesinsky; J C Martins; F Fant; K Boulez; H Gras-Masse; F A Borremans
Journal:  Eur J Biochem       Date:  1996-02-15

9.  Preparation and properties of Nalpha-9-fluorenylmethyloxycarbonylamino acids bearing tert.-butyl side chain protection.

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10.  Conformational preferences of a chimeric peptide HIV-1 immunogen from the C4-V3 domains of gp120 envelope protein of HIV-1 CAN0A based on solution NMR: comparison to a related immunogenic peptide from HIV-1 RF.

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3.  Oligomeric beta-structure of the membrane-bound HIV-1 fusion peptide formed from soluble monomers.

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4.  Signal assignments and chemical-shift structural analysis of uniformly 13C, 15N-labeled peptide, mastoparan-X, by multidimensional solid-state NMR under magic-angle spinning.

Authors:  Toshimichi Fujiwara; Yasuto Todokoro; Hajime Yanagishita; Midori Tawarayama; Toshiyuki Kohno; Kaori Wakamatsu; Hideo Akutsu
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5.  Protein intrinsic disorder toolbox for comparative analysis of viral proteins.

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  5 in total

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