| Literature DB >> 22408386 |
Hao Zhang1, Jianzhong Wen, Richard Y-C Huang, Robert E Blankenship, Michael L Gross.
Abstract
Protein structure determines function in biology, and a variety of approaches have been employed to obtain structural information about proteins. Mass spectrometry-based protein footprinting is one fast-growing approach. One labeling-based footprinting approach is the use of a water-soluble carbodiimide, 1-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl)carbodiimide (EDC) and glycine ethyl ester (GEE) to modify solvent-accessible carboxyl groups on glutamate (E) and aspartate (D). This paper describes method development of carboxyl-group modification in protein footprinting. The modification protocol was evaluated by using the protein calmodulin as a model. Because carboxyl-group modification is a slow reaction relative to protein folding and unfolding, there is an issue that modifications at certain sites may induce protein unfolding and lead to additional modification at sites that are not solvent-accessible in the wild-type protein. We investigated this possibility by using hydrogen deuterium amide exchange (H/DX). The study demonstrated that application of carboxyl group modification in probing conformational changes in calmodulin induced by Ca(2+) binding provides useful information that is not compromised by modification-induced protein unfolding.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22408386 PMCID: PMC3293472 DOI: 10.1016/j.ijms.2011.07.015
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mass Spectrom ISSN: 1387-3806 Impact factor: 1.986