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Lysozyme conformation

T4 Lysozyme Conformational Changes Under Enzymatic Reaction Turnovers... [Pg.472]

Fig. 24.2. Single-molecule recording of T4 lysozyme conformational motions and enzymatic reaction turnovers of hydrolysis of an E. coli B cell wall in real time, (a) This panel shows a pair of trajectories from a fluorescence donor tetramethyl-rhodamine blue) and acceptor Texas Red (red) pair in a single-T4 lysozyme in the presence of E. coli cells of 2.5mg/mL at pH 7.2 buffer. Anticorrelated fluctuation features are evident. (b) The correlation functions (C (t)) of donor ( A/a (0) Aid (f)), blue), acceptor ((A/a (0) A/a (t)), red), and donor-acceptor cross-correlation function ((A/d (0) A/d (t)), black), deduced from the single-molecule trajectories in (a). They are fitted with the same decay rate constant of 180 40s. A long decay component of 10 2s is also evident in each autocorrelation function. The first data point (not shown) of each correlation function contains the contribution from the measurement noise and fluctuations faster than the time resolution. The correlation functions are normalized, and the (A/a (0) A/a (t)) is presented with a shift on the y axis to enhance the view, (c) A pair of fluorescence trajectories from a donor (blue) and acceptor (red) pair in a T4 lysozyme protein without substrates present. The acceptor was photo-bleached at about 8.5 s. (d) The correlation functions (C(t)) of donor ((A/d (0) A/d (t)), blue), acceptor ((A/a (0) A/a (t)), red) derived from the trajectories in (c). The autocorrelation function only shows a spike at t = 0 and drops to zero at t > 0, which indicates that only uncorrelated measurement noise and fluctuation faster than the time resolution recorded (Adapted with permission from [12]. Copyright 2003 American Chemical Society)... Fig. 24.2. Single-molecule recording of T4 lysozyme conformational motions and enzymatic reaction turnovers of hydrolysis of an E. coli B cell wall in real time, (a) This panel shows a pair of trajectories from a fluorescence donor tetramethyl-rhodamine blue) and acceptor Texas Red (red) pair in a single-T4 lysozyme in the presence of E. coli cells of 2.5mg/mL at pH 7.2 buffer. Anticorrelated fluctuation features are evident. (b) The correlation functions (C (t)) of donor ( A/a (0) Aid (f)), blue), acceptor ((A/a (0) A/a (t)), red), and donor-acceptor cross-correlation function ((A/d (0) A/d (t)), black), deduced from the single-molecule trajectories in (a). They are fitted with the same decay rate constant of 180 40s. A long decay component of 10 2s is also evident in each autocorrelation function. The first data point (not shown) of each correlation function contains the contribution from the measurement noise and fluctuations faster than the time resolution. The correlation functions are normalized, and the (A/a (0) A/a (t)) is presented with a shift on the y axis to enhance the view, (c) A pair of fluorescence trajectories from a donor (blue) and acceptor (red) pair in a T4 lysozyme protein without substrates present. The acceptor was photo-bleached at about 8.5 s. (d) The correlation functions (C(t)) of donor ((A/d (0) A/d (t)), blue), acceptor ((A/a (0) A/a (t)), red) derived from the trajectories in (c). The autocorrelation function only shows a spike at t = 0 and drops to zero at t > 0, which indicates that only uncorrelated measurement noise and fluctuation faster than the time resolution recorded (Adapted with permission from [12]. Copyright 2003 American Chemical Society)...
Hayward, S., Berendsen, H.J.C. Systematic analysis of domain motions in proteins from conformational change New results on citrate synthase and T4 lysozyme. Proteins 30 (1998) 144-154. [Pg.36]

FIR Faber, BW Matthews. A mutant T4 lysozyme displays five different crystal conformations. Nature 348 263-266, 1990. [Pg.310]

The structure of lysozyme in the complex is the same as that in crystals of free lysozyme, and no conformational changes are seen even in the regions... [Pg.310]

We will discuss three different approaches to engineer a more thermostable protein than wild-type T4 lysozyme, namely (1) reducing the difference in entropy between folded and unfolded protein, which in practice means reducing the number of conformations in the unfolded state, (2) stabilizing tbe a helices, and (3) increasing the number of bydropbobic interactions in tbe interior core. [Pg.354]

Yang JJ, Pitkeathly M, Radford SE (1994) Far-uv circular-dichroism reveals a conformational switch in a peptide fragment Irom the beta-sheet of hen lysozyme. Biochemistry 33 7345-7353... [Pg.164]

The ROA spectra of partially unfolded denatured hen lysozyme and bovine ribonuclease A, prepared by reducing all the disulfide bonds and keeping the sample at low pH, together with the ROA spectra of the corresponding native proteins, are displayed in Figure 5. As pointed out in Section II,B, the short time scale of the Raman scattering event means that the ROA spectrum of a disordered system is a superposition of snapshot ROA spectra from all the distinct conformations present at equilibrium. Because of the reduced ROA intensities and large... [Pg.91]

A recent NMR study of the structure and dynamics of two amyloido-genic variants of human lysozyme (Chamberlain et al., 2001) showed that, although one variant destabilized the /6-domain much more than the other, it had no greater propensity to form amyloid fibrils. It was concluded that the increased ability of the variants to access substantially unfolded conformations of the protein is the origin of their amy-loidogenicity. This appears to reinforce the conclusions from ROA that a destabilized a-domain is involved in fibril formation. [Pg.98]

The conformational plasticity supported by mobile regions within native proteins, partially denatured protein states such as molten globules, and natively unfolded proteins underlies many of the conformational (protein misfolding) diseases (Carrell and Lomas, 1997 Dobson et al., 2001). Many of these diseases involve amyloid fibril formation, as in amyloidosis from mutant human lysozymes, neurodegenerative diseases such as Parkinson s and Alzheimer s due to the hbrillogenic propensities of a -synuclein and tau, and the prion encephalopathies such as scrapie, BSE, and new variant Creutzfeldt-Jacob disease (CJD) where amyloid fibril formation is triggered by exposure to the amyloid form of the prion protein. In addition, aggregation of serine protease inhibitors such as a j-antitrypsin is responsible for diseases such as emphysema and cirrhosis. [Pg.105]

It has been suggested recently that PPII helix may be the killer conformation in such diseases (Blanch et al., 2000). This was prompted by the observation, described in Section III,B, of a positive band at 1318 cm-1, not present in the ROA spectrum of the native state, that dominates the ROA spectrum of a destabilized intermediate of human lysozyme (produced by heating to 57°C at pH 2.0) that forms prior to amyloid fibril formation. Elimination of water molecules between extended polypeptide chains with fully hydrated 0=0 and N—H groups to form... [Pg.105]

Kamatari YO, Konno T, Kataoka M, et al. The methanol-induced transition and the expanded helical conformation in hen lysozyme. Protein Sci. 1998 7 681-688. [Pg.283]

Now that about 70 different disulfides have been seen in proteins and more than 20 of those have been refined at high resolution, it is possible to examine disulfide conformation in more detail, as it occurs in proteins. Many examples resemble the left-handed small-molecule structures extremely closely Fig. 46 shows the Cys-30-Cys-115 disulfide from egg white lysozyme. The x > Xs and x dihedral angles and the Ca-Ca distance can be almost exactly superimposed on Fig. 45 the only major difference is in Xi All of the small-molecule structures have Xi close to 60°. Figure 47 shows the Xi values for halfcystines found in proteins. The preferred value is -60° (which puts S-y trans to the peptide carbonyl), while 60° is quite rare since it produces unfavorable bumps between S-y and the main chain except with a few specific combinations of x value and backbone conformation. [Pg.224]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.89 ]




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