Coupled motion in proteins revealed by pressure perturbation

Fu, Y., Kasinath, V., Moorman, V. R., Nucci, N. V., Hilser, V. J. and Wand, A. J. (2012) Coupled motion in proteins revealed by pressure perturbation. Journal of the American Chemical Society, 134(20), pp. 8543-8550. (doi: 10.1021/ja3004655)

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Publisher's URL: http://dx.doi.org/dx.doi.org/10.1021/ja3004655

Abstract

The cooperative nature of protein substructure and internal motion is a critical aspect of their functional competence about which little is known experimentally. NMR relaxation is used here to monitor the effects of high pressure on fast internal motion in the protein ubiquitin. In contrast to the main chain, the motions of the methyl-bearing side chains have a large and variable pressure dependence. Within the core, this pressure sensitivity correlates with the magnitude of motion at ambient pressure. Spatial clustering of the dynamic response to applied hydrostatic pressure is also seen, indicating localized cooperativity of motion on the sub-nanosecond time scale and suggesting regions of variable compressibility. These and other features indicate that the native ensemble contains a significant fraction of members with characteristics ascribed to the recently postulated “dry molten globule”. The accompanying variable side-chain conformational entropy helps complete our view of the thermodynamic architecture underlying protein stability, folding, and function.

Item Type:Articles
Status:Published
Refereed:Yes
Glasgow Author(s) Enlighten ID:Fu, Dr Yinan
Authors: Fu, Y., Kasinath, V., Moorman, V. R., Nucci, N. V., Hilser, V. J., and Wand, A. J.
College/School:College of Medical Veterinary and Life Sciences > School of Molecular Biosciences
Journal Name:Journal of the American Chemical Society
Publisher:American Chemical Society
ISSN:0002-7863
ISSN (Online):1520-5126

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