Methyl Dynamics in Proteins from NMR Slowly Relaxing Local Structure Spin Relaxation Analysis: A New Perspective
- 27 September 2006
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in The Journal of Physical Chemistry B
- Vol. 110 (41) , 20615-20628
- https://doi.org/10.1021/jp061403+
Abstract
NMR spin relaxation of 2H nuclei in 13CH2D groups is a powerful method for studying side-chain motion in proteins. The analysis is typically carried out with the original model-free (MF) approach adapted to methyl dynamics. The latter is described in terms of axial local motions around, and of, the methyl averaging axis, mutually decoupled and independent of the global motion of the protein. Methyl motion is characterized primarily by the axial squared order parameter, , associated with fluctuations of the methyl averaging axis. This view is shown to be oversimplified by applying to typical experimental data the slowly relaxing local structure (SRLS) approach of Polimeno and Freed (Adv. Chem. Phys. 1993, 83, 89) which can be considered the generalization of the MF approach. Neglecting mode coupling and the asymmetry of the local ordering and treating approximately features of local geometry imply inaccurate values of , hence of the residual configurational entropy derived from it. , interpreted as amplitude of motion, was found to range from near disorder to almost complete order. Contrary to this picture, we find with the SRLS approach a moderate distribution in the magnitude of asymmetric local ordering and significant variation in its symmetry. The latter important property can be associated implicitly with the contribution of side-chain rotamer jumps. This is consistent with experimental residual dipolar coupling studies and theoretical work based on molecular dynamics simulations and molecular mechanics considerations. Configurational entropy is obtained in the SRLS approach directly from experimentally determined asymmetric potentials. Inconsistency between order parameters from 2H relaxation and from ηHC-HH cross-correlation and increase in order parameters with increasing temperature were observed with the MF approach. These discrepancies are reconciled, and physically tenable temperature dependence is obtained with the SRLS approach.Keywords
This publication has 39 references indexed in Scilit:
- Protein Dynamics from NMR: The Slowly Relaxing Local Structure Analysis Compared with Model-Free AnalysisThe Journal of Physical Chemistry A, 2006
- Temperature Dependence of NMR Order Parameters and Protein DynamicsJournal of the American Chemical Society, 2003
- The main-chain dynamics of the dynamin pleckstrin homology (PH) domain in solution: analysis of 15N relaxation with monomer/dimer equilibrationJournal of Molecular Biology, 1997
- Contributions to Conformational Entropy Arising from Bond Vector Fluctuations Measured from NMR-Derived Order Parameters: Application to Protein FoldingJournal of Molecular Biology, 1996
- Backbone Dynamics of Ribonuclease HI: Correlations with Structure and Function in an Active EnzymeJournal of Molecular Biology, 1995
- NMR order parameters and free energy: an analytical approach and its application to cooperative calcium(2+) binding by calbindin D9kJournal of the American Chemical Society, 1993
- Dynamics of methyl groups in proteins as studied by proton-detected carbon-13 NMR spectroscopy. Application to the leucine residues of staphylococcal nucleaseBiochemistry, 1992
- Deviations from the simple two-parameter model-free approach to the interpretation of nitrogen-15 nuclear magnetic relaxation of proteinsJournal of the American Chemical Society, 1990
- Influence of vibrational motion on solid state line shapes and NMR relaxationThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1985
- Stochastic-molecular theory of spin–relaxation for liquid crystalsThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1977