4.8 Article

Time-resolved DEER EPR and solid-state NMR afford kinetic and structural elucidation of substrate binding to Ca2+-ligated calmodulin

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NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2122308119

关键词

rapid freeze quenching; substrate binding pathways; conformational transitions; coupled folding and binding

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  1. Intramural Program of the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases of the NIH [DK029029, DK029023]

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Recent advances in rapid mixing and freeze quenching have allowed for the study of protein-substrate interactions using time-resolved electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR)-based double electron-electron resonance (DEER) and solid-state NMR. These methods provide valuable information on the kinetic and structural pathways of protein-substrate binding.
Recent advances in rapid mixing and freeze quenching have opened the path for time-resolved electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR)-based double electron-electron resonance (DEER) and solid-state NMR of protein-substrate interactions. DEER, in conjunction with phase memory time filtering to quantitatively extract species populations, permits monitoring time-dependent probability distance distributions between pairs of spin labels, while solid-state NMR provides quantitative residue-specific information on the appearance of structural order and the development of intermolecular contacts between substrate and protein. Here, we demonstrate the power of these combined approaches to unravel the kinetic and structural pathways in the binding of the intrinsically disordered peptide substrate (M13) derived from myosin light-chain kinase to the universal eukaryotic calcium regulator, calmodulin. Global kinetic analysis of the data reveals coupled folding and binding of the peptide associated with large spatial rearrangements of the two domains of calmodulin. The initial binding events involve a bifurcating pathway in which the M13 peptide associates via either its N- or C-terminal regions with the C- or N-terminal domains, respectively, of calmodulin/4Ca(2+) to yield two extended encounter complexes, states A and A*, without conformational ordering of M13. State A is immediately converted to the final compact complex, state C, on a timescale tau = 600 mu s. State A*, however, only reaches the final complex via a collapsed intermediate B (tau similar to 1.5 to 2.5 ms), in which the peptide is only partially ordered and not all intermolecular contacts are formed. State B then undergoes a relatively slow (tau similar to 7 to 18 ms) conformational rearrangement to state C.

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