Can Enzyme Engineering Benefit from the Modulation of Protein Motions? Lessons Learned from NMR Relaxation Dispersion Experiments.
Protein Pept Lett. 2011 Jan 11;
Authors:
Despite impressive progress in protein engineering and design, our ability to create new and efficient enzyme activities remains a laborious and time-consuming endeavor. In the past few years, intricate combinations of rational mutagenesis, directed evolution and computational methods have paved the way to exciting engineering examples and are now offering a new perspective on the structural requirements of enzyme activity. However, these structure-function analyses are usually guided by the time-averaged static models offered by enzyme crystal structures, which often fail to describe the functionally relevant 'invisible states' adopted by proteins in space and time. To alleviate such limitations, NMR relaxation dispersion experiments coupled to mutagenesis studies have recently been applied to the study of enzyme catalysis, effectively complementing 'structure-function' analyses with 'flexibility-function' investigations. In addition to offering quantitative, site-specific information to help characterize residue motion, these NMR methods are now being applied to enzyme engineering purposes, providing a powerful tool to help characterize the effects of controlling long-range networks of flexible residues affecting enzyme function. Recent advancements in this emerging field are presented here, with particular attention to mutagenesis reports highlighting the relevance of NMR relaxation dispersion tools in enzyme engineering.
PMID: 21222641 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Measuring (1)H (N) temperature coefficients in invisible protein states by relaxation dispersion NMR spectroscopy.
Measuring (1)H (N) temperature coefficients in invisible protein states by relaxation dispersion NMR spectroscopy.
Measuring (1)H (N) temperature coefficients in invisible protein states by relaxation dispersion NMR spectroscopy.
J Biomol NMR. 2011 Mar 18;
Authors: Bouvignies G, Vallurupalli P, Cordes MH, Hansen DF, Kay LE
A method based on the Carr-Purcell-Meiboom-Gill relaxation dispersion experiment is presented for measuring the temperature coefficients of amide proton chemical shifts of low populated 'invisible' protein states that exchange...
nmrlearner
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03-23-2011 05:41 PM
Measuring 1HN temperature coefficients in invisible protein states by relaxation dispersion NMR spectroscopy
Measuring 1HN temperature coefficients in invisible protein states by relaxation dispersion NMR spectroscopy
Abstract A method based on the Carr-Purcell-Meiboom-Gill relaxation dispersion experiment is presented for measuring the temperature coefficients of amide proton chemical shifts of low populated â??invisibleâ?? protein states that exchange with a â??visibleâ?? ground state on the millisecond time-scale. The utility of the approach is demonstrated with an application to an I58D mutant of the Pfl6 Cro protein that undergoes exchange between the native, folded state and a cold...
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03-22-2011 07:32 PM
[NMR paper] NMR spectroscopic characterization of millisecond protein folding by transverse relaxation dispersion measurements.
NMR spectroscopic characterization of millisecond protein folding by transverse relaxation dispersion measurements.
Related Articles NMR spectroscopic characterization of millisecond protein folding by transverse relaxation dispersion measurements.
J Am Chem Soc. 2005 Sep 28;127(38):13207-12
Authors: Zeeb M, Balbach J
The cold shock protein CspB adopts its native and functional tertiary structure on the millisecond time scale. We employed transverse relaxation NMR methods, which allow a quantitative measurement of the cooperativity of this...
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12-01-2010 06:56 PM
[NMR paper] Backbone motions in a crystalline protein from field-dependent 2H-NMR relaxation and
Backbone motions in a crystalline protein from field-dependent 2H-NMR relaxation and line-shape analysis.
Related Articles Backbone motions in a crystalline protein from field-dependent 2H-NMR relaxation and line-shape analysis.
Biopolymers. 2000 Jan;53(1):9-18
Authors: Mack JW, Usha MG, Long J, Griffin RG, Wittebort RJ
We have used 2H-nmr to study backbone dynamics of the 2H-labeled, slowly exchanging amide sites of fully hydrated, crystalline hen egg white lysozyme. Order parameters are determined from the residual quadrupole coupling and...
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11-18-2010 09:15 PM
Water-Proton-Spin-Lattice-Relaxation Dispersion of Paramagnetic Protein Solutions
Water-Proton-Spin-Lattice-Relaxation Dispersion of Paramagnetic Protein Solutions
Publication year: 2010
Source: Journal of Magnetic Resonance, In Press, Accepted Manuscript, Available online 10 November 2010</br>
Galina, Diakova , Yanina, Goddard , Jean-Pierre, Korb , Robert G., Bryant</br>
The paramagnetic contributions to water proton spin-lattice relaxation rate constants in protein systems spin-labeled with nitroxide radicals were re-examined. As noted by others, the strength of the dipolar coupling between water protons and the protein-bound nitroxide radical often appears to...
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11-11-2010 04:33 PM
Using relaxation dispersion NMR spectroscopy to determine structures of excited, invisible protein states
Using relaxation dispersion NMR spectroscopy to determine structures of excited, invisible protein states
D. Flemming Hansen, Pramodh Vallurupalli and Lewis E. Kay
Journal of Biomolecular NMR; 2008; 41(3); pp 113 - 120
Abstract:
Currently the main focus of structural biology is the determination of static three-dimensional representations of biomolecules that for the most part correspond to low energy (ground state) conformations. However, it is becoming increasingly well recognized that higher energy structures often play important roles in function as well. Because these conformers...
daniel
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08-03-2008 03:16 AM
Suite of Six NMR Relaxation Dispersion Experiments to Study Multiple-Site Exchange in Proteins
http://pubs.acs.org/isubscribe/journals/jacsat/127/i44/figures/ja054550en00001.gif
Multiple-Site Exchange in Proteins Studied with a Suite of Six NMR Relaxation Dispersion Experiments: An Application to the Folding of a Fyn SH3 Domain Mutant
Dmitry M. Korzhnev, Philipp Neudecker, Anthony Mittermaier, Vladislav Yu. Orekhov, and Lewis E. Kay*
Contribution from the Departments of Medical Genetics, Biochemistry, and Chemistry, The University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario M5S 1A8, Canada, and Swedish NMR Center at Göteborg University, Box 465, 405 30 Göteborg, Sweden
J. Am. Chem....