Anisotropic Molecular Rotational Diffusion in 15N Spin Relaxation Studies of Protein Mobility
- 1 June 1997
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Biochemistry
- Vol. 36 (24) , 7305-7312
- https://doi.org/10.1021/bi963161h
Abstract
The backbone dynamics of the uniformly 15N-labeled N-terminal 63-residue DNA-binding domain of the 434 repressor has been characterized by measurements of the individual 15N longitudinal relaxation times, T1, transverse relaxation times, T2, and heteronuclear 15N[1H]-NOEs at 1H resonance frequencies of 400 and 750 MHz. The dependence of an apparent spherical top correlation time, tauR, on the orientation of the N-H bond vector with respect to the principal axes of the global diffusion tensor of the protein was used to establish the fact that the degree of anisotropy of the global molecular tumbling amounts to 1.2, which is in good agreement with the values obtained from model calculations of the hydrodynamic properties. A model-free analysis showed that even this small anisotropy leads to the implication of artifactual slow internal motions for at least two residues when the assumption of isotropic global motion is used. Additional residues may actually undergo internal motions on the same time scale as the global rotational diffusion, in which case the model-free approach would, however, be inappropriate for quantifying the correlation times and order parameters. Overall, the experiments with 434(1-63) demonstrate that the assumption of isotropic rotational reorientation may result in artifacts of model-free interpretations of spin relaxation data even for proteins with small deviations from spherical shape.Keywords
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- Structural Role of a Buried Salt Bridge in the 434 Repressor DNA-binding DomainJournal of Molecular Biology, 1996
- Interaction of urea with an unfolded protein The DNA‐binding domain of the 434‐repressorFEBS Letters, 1995
- A heteronuclear correlation experiment for simultaneous determination of 15N longitudinal decay and chemical exchange rates of systems in slow equilibriumJournal of Biomolecular NMR, 1994
- Processing of multi-dimensional NMR data with the new software PROSAJournal of Biomolecular NMR, 1992
- Determination of the nuclear magnetic resonance solution structure of the DNA-binding domain (residues 1 to 69) of the 434 repressor and comparison with the X-ray crystal structureJournal of Molecular Biology, 1992
- Intramolecular motions of a zinc finger DNA-binding domain from Xfin characterized by proton-detected natural abundance carbon-13 heteronuclear NMR spectroscopyJournal of the American Chemical Society, 1991
- 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
- Determination of 15N chemical shift tensor via 15N-2H dipolar coupling in Boc-glycylglycyl[15N glycine]benzyl esterJournal of the American Chemical Society, 1988
- Effect of librational motion on fluorescence depolarization and nuclear magnetic resonance relaxation in macromolecules and membranesBiophysical Journal, 1980
- A theory of fluorescence polarization decay in membranesBiophysical Journal, 1977