Characterization of the internal motions of a chimeric protein by 13C NMR highlights the important dynamic consequences of the engineering on a millisecond time scale - Institut Pasteur Accéder directement au contenu
Article Dans Une Revue European Journal of Biochemistry Année : 2000

Characterization of the internal motions of a chimeric protein by 13C NMR highlights the important dynamic consequences of the engineering on a millisecond time scale

Résumé

By transferring the central curaremimetic beta hairpin of the snake toxin alpha into the scaffold of the scorpion charybdotoxin, a chimeric protein was constructed that reproduced the three-dimensional structure and partially reproduced the function of the parent beta hairpin, without perturbing the three-dimensional structure of the scaffold [1]. Picosecond to hour time scale motions of charybdotoxin and the engineered protein were observed, in order to evaluate the dynamic consequences of the six deletions and eight mutations differentiating the two molecules. The chimeric protein dynamics were also compared to that of toxin alpha, in order to examine the beta hairpin motions in both structural contexts. Thus, 13C R1, R1rho and 1H-->13C nOe were measured for all the CalphaHalpha and threonine CbetaHbeta vectors. As the proteins were not labeled, accordion techniques combined to coherence selection by pulsed field gradients and preservation of magnetization following equivalent pathways were used to considerably reduce the spectrometer time needed. On one hand, we observed that the chimeric protein and charybdotoxin are subjected to similar picosecond to nanosecond time scale motions except around the modified beta sheet region. The chimeric protein also exhibits an additional millisecond time scale motion on its whole sequence, and its beta structure is less stable on a minute to hour time scale. On the other hand, when the beta hairpin dynamics is compared in two different structural contexts, i.e. in the chimeric protein and the curaremimetic toxin alpha, the picosecond to nanosecond time scale motions are fairly conserved. However, the microsecond to millisecond time scale motions are different on most of the beta hairpin sequence, and the beta sheet seems more stable in toxin alpha than in the chimera. The slower microsecond to hour time scale motions seem to be extremely sensitive to the structural context, and thus poorly transferred from one protein to another.
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Dates et versions

pasteur-02884050 , version 1 (29-06-2020)

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Citer

Nicolas Wolff, Marc Guenneugues, Bernard Gilquin, Eugenia Drakopoulou, Claudio Vita, et al.. Characterization of the internal motions of a chimeric protein by 13C NMR highlights the important dynamic consequences of the engineering on a millisecond time scale. European Journal of Biochemistry, 2000, 267 (22), pp.6519-6533. ⟨10.1046/j.1432-1327.2000.01723.x⟩. ⟨pasteur-02884050⟩

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