Two-dimensional1H NMR study of recombinant insect defensin A in water: Resonance assignments, secondary structure and global folding
Author(s) -
JeanMarc Bonmatin,
Jean-Luc Bonnat,
Xavier Gallet,
Françoise Vovelle,
Marius Ptak,
JeanMarc Reichhart,
JeanSébastien Hoffmann,
Elisabeth Keppi,
M Legrain,
Tilman Achstetter
Publication year - 1992
Publication title -
journal of biomolecular nmr
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.346
H-Index - 106
eISSN - 1573-5001
pISSN - 0925-2738
DOI - 10.1007/bf01875319
Subject(s) - chemistry , antiparallel (mathematics) , crystallography , dihedral angle , protein secondary structure , folding (dsp implementation) , stereochemistry , protein folding , resonance (particle physics) , proton nmr , hydrogen bond , molecule , organic chemistry , biochemistry , physics , particle physics , quantum mechanics , engineering , magnetic field , electrical engineering
A 500 MHz 2D 1H NMR study of recombinant insect defensin A is reported. This defense protein of 40 residues contains 3 disulfide bridges, is positively charged and exhibits antibacterial properties. 2D NMR maps of recombinant defensin A were fully assigned and secondary structure elements were localized. The set of NOE connectivities, 3JNH-alpha H coupling constants as well as 1H/2H exchange rates and delta delta/delta T temperature coefficients of NH protons strongly support the existence of an alpha-helix (residues 14-24) and of an antiparallel beta-sheet (residues 27-40). Models of the backbone folding were generated by using the DISMAN program and energy refined by using the AMBER program. This was done on the basis of: (i) 133 selected NOEs, (ii) 21 dihedral restraints from 3JNH-alpha H coupling constants, (iii) 12 hydrogen bonds mostly deduced from 1H/2H exchange rates or temperature coefficients, in addition to 9 initial disulfide bridge covalent constraints. The two secondary structure elements and the two bends connecting them involve approximately 70% of the total number of residues, which impose some stability in the C-terminal part of the molecule. The remaining N-terminal fragment forms a less well defined loop. This spatial organization, in which a beta-sheet is linked to an alpha-helix by two disulfide bridges and to a large loop by a third disulfide bridge, is rather similar to that found in scorpion charybdotoxin and seems to be partly present in several invertebrate toxins.
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