Proton nuclear magnetic resonance studies of the effects of ligand binding on tryptophan residues of selectively deuterated dihydrofolate reductase from Lactobacillus casei
- 1 May 1980
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Biochemistry
- Vol. 19 (11) , 2316-2321
- https://doi.org/10.1021/bi00552a006
Abstract
A selectively deuterated dihydrofolate reductase was prepared in which all the aromatic protons except the C(2) protons of tryptophan were replaced by deuterium and have examined the 1H NMR spectra of its complexes with folate, trimethoprim, methotrexate, NADP+ and NADPH. One of the 4 Trp C(2)-proton resonance signals (signal P at 3.66 ppm from dioxane) was assigned to Trp-21 by examining the NMR spectrum of a selectively deuterated N-bromosuccinimide-modified dihydrofolate reductase. This signal is not perturbed by NADPH, indicating that the coenzyme is not binding close to the 2 position of Trp-21. This contrasts markedly with the 19F shift (2.7 ppm) observed for the 19F signal of Trp-21 in the NADPH complex with the 6-fluorotryptophan-labeled enzyme. In fact the crystal structure of the enzyme-methotrexate .cntdot. NADPH shows that the carboxamide group of the reduced nicotinamide ring is near to the 6 position of Trp-21 but remote from its 2 position. The nonadditivity of the 1H chemical-shift contributions for signals tentatively assigned to Trp-5 and -133 indicates that these residues are influenced by ligand-induced conformational changes.This publication has 1 reference indexed in Scilit:
- 13C NMR evidence of the slow exchange of tryptophans in dihydrofolate reductase between stable conformationsBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1979