Abstract

Protein dynamics on the millisecond time scale commonly reflect conformational transitions between distinct functional states. NMR relaxation dispersion experiments have provided important insights into biologically relevant dynamics with site-specific resolution, primarily targeting the protein backbone and methyl-bearing side chains. Aromatic side chains represent attractive probes of protein dynamics because they are over-represented in protein binding interfaces, play critical roles in enzyme catalysis, and form an important part of the core. Here we introduce a method to characterize millisecond conformational exchange of aromatic side chains in selectively 13C labeled proteins by means of longitudinal- and transverse-relaxation optimized CPMG relaxation dispersion. By monitoring 13C relaxation in a spin-state selective manner, significant sensitivity enhancement can be achieved in terms of both signal intensity and the relative exchange contribution to transverse relaxation. Further signal enhancement results from optimizing the longitudinal relaxation recovery of the covalently attached 1H spins. We validated the L-TROSY-CPMG experiment by measuring fast folding–unfolding kinetics of the small protein CspB under native conditions. The determined unfolding rate matches perfectly with previous results from stopped-flow kinetics. The CPMG-derived chemical shift differences between the folded and unfolded states are in excellent agreement with those obtained by urea-dependent chemical shift analysis. The present method enables characterization of conformational exchange involving aromatic side chains and should serve as a valuable complement to methods developed for other types of protein side chains.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1007/s10858-012-9656-z) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Protein dynamics on the millisecond time scale commonly reflect conformational transitions between distinct functional states

  • Aromatic side chains represent attractive probes of protein dynamics because they are over-represented in protein binding interfaces, play critical roles in enzyme catalysis, and form an important part of the core

  • Numerous reports have shown that transiently populated high-energy states play important roles in enzyme catalysis (Cole and Loria 2002; Eisenmesser et al 2002; Sprangers et al 2005; Boehr et al 2006) or ligand binding by conformational selection (Malmendal et al 1999; Bruschweiler et al 2009)

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Summary

Introduction

Protein dynamics on the millisecond time scale commonly reflect conformational transitions between distinct functional states. We introduce a method to characterize millisecond conformational exchange of aromatic side chains in selectively 13C labeled proteins by means of longitudinal- and transverserelaxation optimized CPMG relaxation dispersion.

Results
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