| Literature DB >> 32617193 |
Shanshan Wu1, Tam T T N Nguyen2, Olga V Moroz3, Johan P Turkenburg3, Jens E Nielsen4, Keith S Wilson3, Kasper D Rand2, Kaare Teilum1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Several examples have emerged of enzymes where slow conformational changes are of key importance for function and where low populated conformations in the resting enzyme resemble the conformations of intermediate states in the catalytic process. Previous work on the subtilisin protease, Savinase, from Bacillus lentus by NMR spectroscopy suggested that this enzyme undergoes slow conformational dynamics around the substrate binding site. However, the functional importance of such dynamics is unknown.Entities:
Keywords: Hydrogen exchange; Mass spectrometry; NMR spectroscopy; Protein dynamics; X-ray crystallography
Year: 2020 PMID: 32617193 PMCID: PMC7323712 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.9408
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Figure 1Temperature induced chemical shift changes in Savinase.
(A) 15N-HSQC spectra recorded at 18 °C, 22 °C, 26 °C, 30 °C and 34 °C in colours from light to dark red. (B) Temperature coefficients for the backbone amide proton chemical shifts plotted against sequence number. The dashed lines show the average temperature coefficient (Avg) and one standard deviation (−σ). (C) The structure of Savinase is colour coded according to the temperature coefficients shown in panel B. The colour scale is shown to the right of the structure. The metals as shown as spheres, Ca2+ (grey) and Na+ (orange). The catalytic triad in the active site is shown with spheres.
Figure 2HDX analysis of Savinase.
(A–C) Time dependent changes in deuterium content for three peptide fragments, as indicated in the lower right corner of each graph. Data for uninhibited and inhibited Savinase are shown in red and blue, respectively. Maximum labelled controls are shown in black. Error bars indicate standard deviations for time points measured in replicates (n = 3). (D–E) Heat map overview of the normalized local HDX of different regions. The two maps are for uninhibited Savinase (D) and inhibited Savinase (E). The normalized HDX for the four time points indicated on the right are displayed for each peptide segment experimentally resolved on a colour scale from no HDX (blue) over white to full HDX (red).
Figure 3Alternative conformations in the electron density of Savinase.
(A) Main chain heterogeneity in the cryo data of the peptide segment 128–132 with the 2mFo-DFc electron density map plotted at 1σ. Residues 127 and 133 that only show a single conformation are also shown in the figure. (B) Ringer analysis of rotamers of Ser-215. The electron density is plotted as a function of the side-chain χ1 dihedral angle for the RT data (red) and the cryo data (blue). (C) Structure of Ser-215 and surrounding residues with the 2mFo-DFc electron density map of the RT data plotted at 1σ. Two rotamers of the Ser-215 side chain with occupancies of 73% and 27% have been modelled to the electron density.
Figure 4Structure of Savinase from the crystallographic data collected at room temperature.
The width of the backbone trace is scaled with the B-factor. The colour scale is from blue (0 Å2) over white to red (35 Å2). The residues of the catalytic triad are shown as sticks.