Residual Ligand Entropy in the Binding of p-Substituted Benzenesulfonamide Ligands to Bovine Carbonic Anhydrase II
Author(s) -
Henning Stöckmann,
Agnieszka K. Bronowska,
Neil R. Syme,
Gary S. Thompson,
Arnout P. Kalverda,
Stuart L. Warriner,
Steve W. Homans
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
journal of the american chemical society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 7.115
H-Index - 612
eISSN - 1520-5126
pISSN - 0002-7863
DOI - 10.1021/ja803755m
Subject(s) - chemistry , carbonic anhydrase ii , heteronuclear molecule , isothermal titration calorimetry , ligand (biochemistry) , carbonic anhydrase , conformational entropy , crystallography , entropy (arrow of time) , thermodynamics , residual entropy , stereochemistry , computational chemistry , configuration entropy , nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy , molecule , enzyme , biochemistry , organic chemistry , receptor , physics
In studies on the thermodynamics of ligand-protein interactions, it is often assumed that the configurational and conformational entropy of the ligand is zero in the bound state (i.e., the ligand is rigidly fixed in the binding pocket). However, there is little direct experimental evidence for this assumption, and in the case of binding of p-substituted benzenesulfonamide inhibitors to bovine carbonic anhydrase II (BCA II), the observed thermodynamic binding signature derived from isothermal titration calorimetry experiments leads indirectly to the conclusion that a considerable degree of residual entropy remains in the bound ligand. Specifically, the entropy of binding increases with glycine chain length n, and strong evidence exists that this thermodynamic signature is not driven by solvent reorganization. By use of heteronuclear (15)N NMR relaxation measurements in a series (n = 1-6) of (15)N-glycine-enriched ligands, we find that the observed thermodynamic binding signature cannot be explained by residual ligand dynamics in the bound state, but rather results from the indirect influence of ligand chain length on protein dynamics.
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