Title of article
Structure and properties of a dimeric N-terminal fragment of human ubiquitin
Author/Authors
David Bolton، نويسنده , , Philip A Evans، نويسنده , , Katherine Stott، نويسنده , , R. William Broadhurst، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
Pages
15
From page
773
To page
787
Abstract
Previous peptide dissection and kinetic experiments have indicated that in vitro folding of ubiquitin may proceed via transient species in which native-like structure has been acquired in the first 45 residues. A peptide fragment, UQ(1-51), encompassing residues 1 to 51 of ubiquitin was produced in order to test whether this portion has propensity for independent self-assembly. Surprisingly, the construct formed a folded symmetrical dimer that was stabilised by 0.8 M sodium sulphate at 298 K (the S state). The solution structure of the UQ(1-51) dimer was determined by multinuclear NMR spectroscopy. Each subunit of UQ(1-51) consists of an N-terminal β-hairpin followed by an α-helix and a final β-strand, with orientations similar to intact ubiquitin. The dimer is formed by the third β-strand of one subunit interleaving between the hairpin and third strand of the other to give a six-stranded β-sheet, with the two α-helices sitting on top. The helix-helix and strand portions of the dimer interface also mimic related features in the structure of ubiquitin. The structural specificity of the UQ(1-51) peptide is tuneable: as the concentration of sodium sulphate is decreased, near-native alternative conformations are populated in slow chemical exchange. Magnetization transfer experiments were performed to characterize the various species present in 0.35 M sodium sulphate, namely the S state and two minor forms. Chemical shift differences suggest that one minor form is very similar to the S state, while the other experiences a significant conformational change in the third strand. A segmental rearrangement of the third strand in one subunit of the S state would render the dimer asymmetric, accounting for most of our results. Similar small-scale transitions in proteins are often invoked to explain solvent exchange at backbone amide proton sites that have an intermediate level of protection.
Keywords
NMR spectroscopy , Structural specificity , dimer , ubiquitin , protein dissection
Journal title
Journal of Molecular Biology
Serial Year
2001
Journal title
Journal of Molecular Biology
Record number
1241303
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