Abstract

Phospholamban (PLN) is a dynamic single-pass membrane protein that inhibits the flow of Ca 2+ ions into the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) of heart muscle by directly binding to and inhibiting the SR Ca 2+ATPase (SERCA). The PLN monomer is the functionally active form that exists in equilibrium between ordered (T state) and disordered (R state) states. While the T state has been fully characterized using a hybrid solution/solid-state NMR approach, the R state structure has not been fully portrayed. It has, however, been detected by both NMR and EPR experiments in detergent micelles and lipid bilayers. In this work, we quantitatively probed the μs to ms dynamics of the PLN excited states by observing the T state in DPC micelles using CPMG relaxation dispersion NMR spectroscopy under functional conditions for SERCA. The 15N backbone and 13C δ1 Ile-methyl dispersion curves were fit using a two-state equilibrium model, and indicate that residues within domain Ia (residues 1–16), the loop (17–22), and domain Ib (23–30) of PLN undergo μs-ms dynamics ( k ex = 6100 ±800 s - 1 at 17 °C). We measured k ex at additional temperatures, which allowed for a calculation of activation energy equal to ∼ 5 kcal/mol. This energy barrier probably does not correspond to the detachment of the amphipathic domain Ia, but rather the energy needed to unwind domain Ib on the membrane surface, likely an important mechanism by which PLN converts between high and low affinity states for its binding partners.

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