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Solution structure of the DNA‐binding domain of the heat shock transcription factor determined by multidimensional heteronuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy
Author(s) -
Damberger Fred F.,
Pelton Jeffrey G.,
Harrison Celia J.,
Nelson Hillary C.M.,
Wemmer David E.
Publication year - 1994
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.5560031020
Subject(s) - heteronuclear molecule , two dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy , chemistry , crystallography , nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy , spectroscopy , antiparallel (mathematics) , nuclear overhauser effect , nuclear magnetic resonance , stereochemistry , physics , quantum mechanics , magnetic field
The solution structure of the 92‐residue DNA‐binding domain of the heat shock transcription factor from Kluyveromyces lactis has been determined using multidimensional NMR methods. Three‐dimensional (3D) triple resonance, 1 H‐ 13 C‐ 13 C‐ 1 H total correlation spectroscopy, and 15 N‐separated total correlation spectroscopy‐heteronuclear multiple quantum correlation experiments were used along with various 2D spectra to make nearly complete assignments for the backbone and side‐chain 1 H, 15 N, and 13 C resonances. Five‐hundred eighty‐three NOE constraints identified in 3D 13 C‐ and l5 N‐separated NOE spectroscopy (NOESY)‐heteronuclear multiple quantum correlation spectra and a 4‐dimensional 13 C/ 13 C‐edited NOESY spectrum, along with 35 ø, 9 χ 1 , and 30 hydrogen bond constraints, were used to calculate 30 structures by a hybrid distance geometry/simulated annealing protocol, of which 24 were used for structural comparison. The calculations revealed that a 3‐helix bundle packs against a small 4‐stranded antiparallel β‐sheet. The backbone RMS deviation (RMSD) for the family of structures was 1.03 ± 0.19 Å with respect to the average structure. The topology is analogous to that of the C‐terminal domain of the catabolite gene activator protein and appears to be in the helix‐turn‐helix family of DNA‐binding proteins. The overall fold determined by the NMR data is consistent with recent crystallographic work on this domain (Harrison CJ, Bohm AA, Nelson HCM, 1994, Science 263 :224) as evidenced by RMSD between backbone atoms in the NMR and X‐ray structures of 1.77 ± 0.20 Å. Several differences were identified some of which may be due to protein‐protein interactions in the crystal.

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