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pH dependence of conformational fluctuations of the protein backbone
Author(s) -
Richman Daniel E.,
Majumdar Ananya,
GarcíaMoreno E Bertrand
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
proteins: structure, function, and bioinformatics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.699
H-Index - 191
eISSN - 1097-0134
pISSN - 0887-3585
DOI - 10.1002/prot.24673
Subject(s) - chemistry , crystallography , hydrogen bond , nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy , side chain , proton , stereochemistry , molecule , organic chemistry , polymer , physics , quantum mechanics
Proton binding equilibria (p K a values) of ionizable groups in proteins are exquisitely sensitive to their microenvironments. Apparent p K a values measured for individual ionizable residues with NMR spectroscopy are actually population‐weighted averages of the p K a in different conformational microstates. NMR spectroscopy experiments with staphylococcal nuclease were used to test the hypothesis that p K a values of surface Glu and Asp residues are affected by pH‐sensitive fluctuations of the backbone between folded and locally unfolded conformations. 15 N spin relaxation studies showed that as the pH decreases from the neutral into the acidic range the amplitudes of backbone fluctuations in the ps‐ns timescale increase near carboxylic residues. Hydrogen exchange experiments suggested that backbone conformational fluctuations promoted by decreasing pH also reflect slower local or sub‐global unfolding near carboxylic groups. This study has implications for structure‐based p K a calculations: (1) The timescale of the backbone's response to ionization events in proteins can range from ps to ms, and even longer; (2) pH‐sensitive fluctuations of the backbone can be localized to both the segment the ionizable residue is attached to or the one that occludes the ionizable group; (3) Structural perturbations are not necessarily propagated through Coulomb interactions; instead, local fluctuations appear to be coupled through the co‐operativity inherent to elements of secondary structure and to networks of hydrogen bonds. These results are consistent with the idea that local conformational fluctuations and stabilities are important determinants of apparent p K a values of ionizable residues in proteins. Proteins 2014; 82:3132–3143. © 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.