Literature DB >> 15557257

Infrequent cavity-forming fluctuations in HPr from Staphylococcus carnosus revealed by pressure- and temperature-dependent tyrosine ring flips.

Mineyuki Hattori1, Hua Li, Hiroaki Yamada, Kazuyuki Akasaka, Wolfgang Hengstenberg, Wolfram Gronwald, Hans Robert Kalbitzer.   

Abstract

Infrequent structural fluctuations of a globular protein is seldom detected and studied in detail. One tyrosine ring of HPr from Staphylococcus carnosus, an 88-residue phosphocarrier protein with no disulfide bonds, undergoes a very slow ring flip, the pressure and temperature dependence of which is studied in detail using the on-line cell high-pressure nuclear magnetic resonance technique in the pressure range from 3 MPa to 200 MPa and in the temperature range from 257 K to 313 K. The ring of Tyr6 is buried sandwiched between a beta-sheet and alpha-helices (the water-accessible area is less than 0.26 nm2), its hydroxyl proton being involved in an internal hydrogen bond. The ring flip rates 10(1)-10(5) s(-1) were determined from the line shape analysis of H(delta1, delta2) and H(epsilon1,epsilon2) of Tyr6, giving an activation volume DeltaV++ of 0.044 +/- 0.008 nm3 (27 mL mol(-1)), an activation enthalpy DeltaH++ of 89 +/- 10 kJ mol(-1), and an activation entropy DeltaS++ of 16 +/- 2 JK(-1) mol(-1). The DeltaV++) and DeltaH++ values for HPr found previously for Tyr and Phe ring flips of BPTI and cytochrome c fall within the range of DeltaV(double dagger) of 28 to 51 mL mol(-1) and DeltaH++ of 71 to 155 kJ mol(-1). The fairly common DeltaV++ and DeltaH++ values are considered to represent the extra space or cavity required for the ring flip and the extra energy required to create a cavity, respectively, in the core part of a globular protein. Nearly complete cold denaturation was found to take place at 200 MPa and 257 K independently from the ring reorientation process.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15557257      PMCID: PMC2287304          DOI: 10.1110/ps.04877104

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Protein Sci        ISSN: 0961-8368            Impact factor:   6.725


  33 in total

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Review 3.  On-line cell high-pressure nuclear magnetic resonance technique: application to protein studies.

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Review 9.  Low-lying excited states of proteins revealed from nonlinear pressure shifts in 1H and 15N NMR.

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10.  15N and 1H NMR study of histidine containing protein (HPr) from Staphylococcus carnosus at high pressure.

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  18 in total

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7.  A sharp thermal transition of fast aromatic-ring dynamics in ubiquitin.

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8.  Dynamics of Hydrophobic Core Phenylalanine Residues Probed by Solid-State Deuteron NMR.

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