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NMR determination of p K a values in α‐synuclein
Author(s) -
Croke Robyn L.,
Patil Sharadrao M.,
Quevreaux Jason,
Kendall Debra A.,
Alexandrescu Andrei T.
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
protein science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.353
H-Index - 175
eISSN - 1469-896X
pISSN - 0961-8368
DOI - 10.1002/pro.556
Subject(s) - chemistry , micelle , heteronuclear single quantum coherence spectroscopy , random coil , electrostatics , crystallography , salt bridge , histidine , titration , circular dichroism , titration curve , peptide , protein folding , residue (chemistry) , mutant , biophysics , nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy , stereochemistry , biochemistry , amino acid , inorganic chemistry , aqueous solution , organic chemistry , biology , gene
The intrinsically unfolded protein α‐synuclein has an N‐terminal domain with seven imperfect KTKEGV sequence repeats and a C‐terminal domain with a large proportion of acidic residues. We characterized p K a values for all 26 sites in the protein that ionize below pH 7 using 2D 1 H‐ 15 N HSQC and 3D C(CO)NH NMR experiments. The N‐terminal domain shows systematically lowered p K a values, suggesting weak electrostatic interactions between acidic and basic residues in the KTKEGV repeats. By contrast, the C‐terminal domain shows elevated p K a values due to electrostatic repulsion between like charges. The effects are smaller but persist at physiological salt concentrations. For α‐synuclein in the membrane‐like environment of sodium dodecylsulfate (SDS) micelles, we characterized the p K a of His50, a residue of particular interest since it is flanked within one turn of the α‐helix structure by the Parkinson's disease‐linked mutants E46K and A53T. The p K a of His50 is raised by 1.4 pH units in the micelle‐bound state. Titrations of His50 in the micelle‐bound states of the E46K and A53T mutants show that the p K a shift is primarily due to interactions between the histidine and the sulfate groups of SDS, with electrostatic interactions between His50 and Glu46 playing a much smaller role. Our results indicate that the p K a values of uncomplexed α‐synuclein differ significantly from random coil model peptides even though the protein is intrinsically unfolded. Due to the long‐range nature of electrostatic interactions, charged residues in the α‐synuclein sequence may help nucleate the folding of the protein into an α‐helical structure and confer protection from misfolding.