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Conformational Ensembles of Calmodulin Revealed by Nonperturbing Site-Specific Vibrational Probe Groups

[Image: see text] Seven native residues on the regulatory protein calmodulin, including three key methionine residues, were replaced (one by one) by the vibrational probe amino acid cyanylated cysteine, which has a unique CN stretching vibration that reports on its local environment. Almost no pertu...

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Autores principales: Kelly, Kristen L., Dalton, Shannon R., Wai, Rebecca B., Ramchandani, Kanika, Xu, Rosalind J., Linse, Sara, Londergan, Casey H.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2018
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5867645/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29400461
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpca.8b00475
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author Kelly, Kristen L.
Dalton, Shannon R.
Wai, Rebecca B.
Ramchandani, Kanika
Xu, Rosalind J.
Linse, Sara
Londergan, Casey H.
author_facet Kelly, Kristen L.
Dalton, Shannon R.
Wai, Rebecca B.
Ramchandani, Kanika
Xu, Rosalind J.
Linse, Sara
Londergan, Casey H.
author_sort Kelly, Kristen L.
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] Seven native residues on the regulatory protein calmodulin, including three key methionine residues, were replaced (one by one) by the vibrational probe amino acid cyanylated cysteine, which has a unique CN stretching vibration that reports on its local environment. Almost no perturbation was caused by this probe at any of the seven sites, as reported by CD spectra of calcium-bound and apo calmodulin and binding thermodynamics for the formation of a complex between calmodulin and a canonical target peptide from skeletal muscle myosin light chain kinase measured by isothermal titration. The surprising lack of perturbation suggests that this probe group could be applied directly in many protein–protein binding interfaces. The infrared absorption bands for the probe groups reported many dramatic changes in the probes’ local environments as CaM went from apo- to calcium-saturated to target peptide-bound conditions, including large frequency shifts and a variety of line shapes from narrow (interpreted as a rigid and invariant local environment) to symmetric to broad and asymmetric (likely from multiple coexisting and dynamically exchanging structures). The fast intrinsic time scale of infrared spectroscopy means that the line shapes report directly on site-specific details of calmodulin’s variable structural distribution. Though quantitative interpretation of the probe line shapes depends on a direct connection between simulated ensembles and experimental data that does not yet exist, formation of such a connection to data such as that reported here would provide a new way to evaluate conformational ensembles from data that directly contains the structural distribution. The calmodulin probe sites developed here will also be useful in evaluating the binding mode of calmodulin with many uncharacterized regulatory targets.
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spelling pubmed-58676452018-03-27 Conformational Ensembles of Calmodulin Revealed by Nonperturbing Site-Specific Vibrational Probe Groups Kelly, Kristen L. Dalton, Shannon R. Wai, Rebecca B. Ramchandani, Kanika Xu, Rosalind J. Linse, Sara Londergan, Casey H. J Phys Chem A [Image: see text] Seven native residues on the regulatory protein calmodulin, including three key methionine residues, were replaced (one by one) by the vibrational probe amino acid cyanylated cysteine, which has a unique CN stretching vibration that reports on its local environment. Almost no perturbation was caused by this probe at any of the seven sites, as reported by CD spectra of calcium-bound and apo calmodulin and binding thermodynamics for the formation of a complex between calmodulin and a canonical target peptide from skeletal muscle myosin light chain kinase measured by isothermal titration. The surprising lack of perturbation suggests that this probe group could be applied directly in many protein–protein binding interfaces. The infrared absorption bands for the probe groups reported many dramatic changes in the probes’ local environments as CaM went from apo- to calcium-saturated to target peptide-bound conditions, including large frequency shifts and a variety of line shapes from narrow (interpreted as a rigid and invariant local environment) to symmetric to broad and asymmetric (likely from multiple coexisting and dynamically exchanging structures). The fast intrinsic time scale of infrared spectroscopy means that the line shapes report directly on site-specific details of calmodulin’s variable structural distribution. Though quantitative interpretation of the probe line shapes depends on a direct connection between simulated ensembles and experimental data that does not yet exist, formation of such a connection to data such as that reported here would provide a new way to evaluate conformational ensembles from data that directly contains the structural distribution. The calmodulin probe sites developed here will also be useful in evaluating the binding mode of calmodulin with many uncharacterized regulatory targets. American Chemical Society 2018-02-05 2018-03-22 /pmc/articles/PMC5867645/ /pubmed/29400461 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpca.8b00475 Text en Copyright © 2018 American Chemical Society This is an open access article published under an ACS AuthorChoice License (http://pubs.acs.org/page/policy/authorchoice_termsofuse.html) , which permits copying and redistribution of the article or any adaptations for non-commercial purposes.
spellingShingle Kelly, Kristen L.
Dalton, Shannon R.
Wai, Rebecca B.
Ramchandani, Kanika
Xu, Rosalind J.
Linse, Sara
Londergan, Casey H.
Conformational Ensembles of Calmodulin Revealed by Nonperturbing Site-Specific Vibrational Probe Groups
title Conformational Ensembles of Calmodulin Revealed by Nonperturbing Site-Specific Vibrational Probe Groups
title_full Conformational Ensembles of Calmodulin Revealed by Nonperturbing Site-Specific Vibrational Probe Groups
title_fullStr Conformational Ensembles of Calmodulin Revealed by Nonperturbing Site-Specific Vibrational Probe Groups
title_full_unstemmed Conformational Ensembles of Calmodulin Revealed by Nonperturbing Site-Specific Vibrational Probe Groups
title_short Conformational Ensembles of Calmodulin Revealed by Nonperturbing Site-Specific Vibrational Probe Groups
title_sort conformational ensembles of calmodulin revealed by nonperturbing site-specific vibrational probe groups
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5867645/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29400461
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpca.8b00475
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