Literature DB >> 11456540

Aromatic ring-flipping in supercooled water: implications for NMR-based structural biology of proteins.

J J Skalicky1, J L Mills, S Sharma, T Szyperski.   

Abstract

We have characterized, for the first time, motional modes of a protein dissolved in supercooled water: the flipping kinetics of phenylalanyl and tyrosinyl rings of the 6 kDa protein BPTI have been investigated by NMR at temperatures between -3 and -16.5 degrees C. At T = -15 degrees C, the ring-flipping rate constants of Tyr 23, Tyr 35, and Phe 45 are smaller than 2 s(-1), i.e., flip-broadening of aromatic NMR lines is reduced beyond detection and averaging of NOEs through ring-flipping is abolished. This allows neat detection of distinct NOE sets for the individual aromatic (1)H spins. In contrast, the rings of Phe 4, Tyr 10, Tyr 21, Phe 22, and Phe 33 are flipping rapidly on the chemical shift time scale with rate constants being in the range from approximately 10(2) to 10(5) s(-1) even at T = -15 degrees C. Line width measurements in 2D [(1)H,(1)H]-NOESY showed that flipping of the Phe 4 and Phe 33 rings is, however, slowed to an extent that the onset of associated line broadening in the fast exchange limit is registered. The reduced ring-flipping rate constant of Phe 45 in supercooled water allowed very precise determination of Eyring activation enthalpy and entropy from cross relaxation suppressed 2D [(1)H,(1)H]-exchange spectroscopy. This yielded DeltaH = 14 +/- 0.5 kcal.mol(-1) and DeltaS = -4 +/- 1 cal.mol(-1).K(-1), i.e., values close to those previously derived by Wagner and Wüthrich for the temperature range from 4 to 72 degrees C (DeltaH = 16 +/- 1 kcal.mol(-1) and DeltaS = 6 +/- 2 cal.mol(-1).K(-1)). The preservation of the so far uniquely low value for DeltaS indicates that the distribution of internal motional modes associated with the ring flip of Phe 45 is hardly affected by lowering T well below 0 degrees C. Hence, if a globular protein does not cold denature, aromatic flipping rates, and thus likely also the rates of other conformational and/or chemical exchange processes occurring in supercooled water, can be expected to be well estimated from activation parameters obtained at ambient T. This is of keen interest to predict the impact of supercooling for future studies of biological macromolecules, and shows that our approach enables one to conduct NMR-based structural biology at below 0 degrees C in an unperturbed aqueous environment. A search of the BioMagResBank indicated that the overwhelming majority of the Phe and Tyr rings (>95%) are flipping rapidly on the chemical shift time scale at ambient T, while our data for BPTI and activation parameters available for ring-flipping in Iso-2-cytochrome c reveal that in these smaller proteins a total of six out of seventeen rings ( approximately 35%) are "frozen in" at T = -15 degrees C. This suggests that a large fraction of Tyr and Phe rings in globular proteins that are flipping rapidly on the chemical shift time scale at ambient T can be effectively slowed in supercooled water. The present investigation demonstrates that supercooling of protein solutions appears to be an effective means to (i) harvest potential benefits of stalled ring-flipping for refining NMR solution structures, (ii) recruit additional aromatic rings for investigating protein dynamics, and (iii) use multiple slowly flipping rings to probe cold denaturation. The implications for NMR-based structural biology in supercooled water are addressed.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11456540     DOI: 10.1021/ja003220l

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Am Chem Soc        ISSN: 0002-7863            Impact factor:   15.419


  24 in total

1.  Protein dynamics in supercooled water: the search for slow motional modes.

Authors:  Jeffrey L Mills; Thomas Szyperski
Journal:  J Biomol NMR       Date:  2002-05       Impact factor: 2.835

2.  An efficient and inexpensive refrigerated LC system for H/D exchange mass spectrometry.

Authors:  Theodore R Keppel; Martin E Jacques; Robert W Young; Kenneth L Ratzlaff; David D Weis
Journal:  J Am Soc Mass Spectrom       Date:  2011-05-15       Impact factor: 3.109

3.  Combined NMR-observation of cold denaturation in supercooled water and heat denaturation enables accurate measurement of deltaC(p) of protein unfolding.

Authors:  Thomas Szyperski; Jeffrey L Mills; Dieter Perl; Jochen Balbach
Journal:  Eur Biophys J       Date:  2005-10-21       Impact factor: 1.733

4.  Novel surfactant mixtures for NMR spectroscopy of encapsulated proteins dissolved in low-viscosity fluids.

Authors:  Ronald W Peterson; Maxim S Pometun; Zhengshuang Shi; A Joshua Wand
Journal:  Protein Sci       Date:  2005-09-30       Impact factor: 6.725

5.  NMR spectroscopy of RNA duplexes containing pseudouridine in supercooled water.

Authors:  Kersten T Schroeder; Jack J Skalicky; Nancy L Greenbaum
Journal:  RNA       Date:  2005-07       Impact factor: 4.942

Review 6.  Chemical exchange in biomacromolecules: past, present, and future.

Authors:  Arthur G Palmer
Journal:  J Magn Reson       Date:  2014-04       Impact factor: 2.229

7.  Characterization of conformational and dynamic properties of natively unfolded human and mouse alpha-synuclein ensembles by NMR: implication for aggregation.

Authors:  Kuen-Phon Wu; Seho Kim; David A Fela; Jean Baum
Journal:  J Mol Biol       Date:  2008-03-18       Impact factor: 5.469

8.  Characterization of different water pools in solid-state NMR protein samples.

Authors:  Anja Böckmann; Carole Gardiennet; René Verel; Andreas Hunkeler; Antoine Loquet; Guido Pintacuda; Lyndon Emsley; Beat H Meier; Anne Lesage
Journal:  J Biomol NMR       Date:  2009-11       Impact factor: 2.835

Review 9.  NMR-based structural biology of proteins in supercooled water.

Authors:  Thomas Szyperski; Jeffrey L Mills
Journal:  J Struct Funct Genomics       Date:  2011-05-01

10.  Aromatic Ring Dynamics, Thermal Activation, and Transient Conformations of a 468 kDa Enzyme by Specific 1H-13C Labeling and Fast Magic-Angle Spinning NMR.

Authors:  Diego F Gauto; Pavel Macek; Alessandro Barducci; Hugo Fraga; Audrey Hessel; Tsutomu Terauchi; David Gajan; Yohei Miyanoiri; Jerome Boisbouvier; Roman Lichtenecker; Masatsune Kainosho; Paul Schanda
Journal:  J Am Chem Soc       Date:  2019-07-05       Impact factor: 15.419

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