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The use of dipolar couplings for determining the solution structure of rat apo-S100B(betabeta).


ABSTRACT: The relative orientations of adjacent structural elements without many well-defined NOE contacts between them are typically poorly defined in NMR structures. For apo-S100B(betabeta) and the structurally homologous protein calcyclin, the solution structures determined by conventional NMR exhibited considerable differences and made it impossible to draw unambiguous conclusions regarding the Ca2+-induced conformational change required for target protein binding. The structure of rat apo-S100B(betabeta) was recalculated using a large number of constraints derived from dipolar couplings that were measured in a dilute liquid crystalline phase. The dipolar couplings orient bond vectors relative to a single-axis system, and thereby remove much of the uncertainty in NOE-based structures. The structure of apo-S100B(betabeta) indicates a minimal change in the first, pseudo-EF-hand Ca2+ binding site, but a large reorientation of helix 3 in the second, classical EF-hand upon Ca2+ binding.

SUBMITTER: Drohat AC 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC2144316 | biostudies-other | 1999 Apr

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-other

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The use of dipolar couplings for determining the solution structure of rat apo-S100B(betabeta).

Drohat A C AC   Tjandra N N   Baldisseri D M DM   Weber D J DJ  

Protein science : a publication of the Protein Society 19990401 4


The relative orientations of adjacent structural elements without many well-defined NOE contacts between them are typically poorly defined in NMR structures. For apo-S100B(betabeta) and the structurally homologous protein calcyclin, the solution structures determined by conventional NMR exhibited considerable differences and made it impossible to draw unambiguous conclusions regarding the Ca2+-induced conformational change required for target protein binding. The structure of rat apo-S100B(betab  ...[more]

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