Abstract

The serine receptor of bacterial chemotaxis is an ideal system in which to investigate the molecular mechanism of transmembrane signaling. Solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) techniques such as rotational resonance provide a means for measuring local structure and ligand-induced structural changes in intact membrane proteins bound to native membrane vesicles. A general site-directed biosynthetic (13)C labeling strategy is used to direct the distance measurements to a specific site; the distance is measured between a unique Cys residue and a non-unique, low-abundance residue (Tyr or Phe). A (13)C-(13)C internuclear distance measurement from (13)CO(i) to (13)C beta(i + 3) at the periplasmic edge of the second membrane-spanning helix (TM2) of 5.1 +/- 0.2 A is consistent with the predicted alpha-helical structure and thus demonstrates an accurate long-distance rotational resonance measurement in the 120 kDa membrane-bound receptor. These measurements require a correction for the rotational resonance exchange between the multiple labels of the non-unique amino acid and the natural-abundance (13)C, which is critical to distance measurements in complex systems. A second (13)C-(13)C distance measurement between the transmembrane helices provides a high-resolution measurement of tertiary structure in the transmembrane region. The measured 5.0-5.3 A distance in the presence and absence of ligand is consistent with structural models for the transmembrane region and a proposed signaling mechanism in which ligand binding induces a 1.6 A translation of TM2. This approach can be used for additional measurements of the structure of the transmembrane region and to determine whether the ligand-induced motion is indeed propagated through the transmembrane helices.

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