Identification of initiation sites for T4 lysozyme folding using CD and NMR spectroscopy of peptide fragments


Autoria(s): Najbar, L. V.; Craik, D. J.; Wade, J. D.; McLeish, M. J.
Data(s)

01/01/2000

Resumo

Using CD and 2D H-1 NMR spectroscopy, we have identified potential initiation sites for the folding of T4 lysozyme by examining the conformational preferences of peptide fragments corresponding to regions of secondary structure. CD spectropolarimetry showed most peptides were unstructured in water, but adopted partial helical conformations in TFE and SDS solution. This was also consistent with the H-1 NMR data which showed that the peptides were predominantly disordered in water, although in some cases, nascent or small populations of partially folded conformations could be detected. NOE patterns, coupling constants, and deviations from random coil Her chemical shift values complemented the CD data and confirmed that many of the peptides were helical in TFE and SDS micelles. In particular, the peptide corresponding to helix E in the native enzyme formed a well-defined helix in both TFE and SDS, indicating that helix E potentially forms an initiation site for T4 lysozyme folding. The data for the other peptides indicated that helices D, F, G, and H are dependent on tertiary interactions for their folding and/or stability. Overall, the results from this study, and those of our earlier studies, are in agreement with modeling and IID-deuterium exchange experiments, and support an hierarchical model of folding for T4 lysozyme.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:36389

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

American Chemical Society

Palavras-Chave #Biochemistry & Molecular Biology #Protein Secondary Structure #Nuclear-magnetic-resonance #Beta-sheet Protein #Alpha-helix #Hydrogen-exchange #Complete Sequence #Conformational Properties #Circular-dichroism #Aqueous-solution #Terminal Domain #C1 #670403 Treatments (e.g. chemicals, antibiotics) #250302 Biological and Medical Chemistry
Tipo

Journal Article