ESEEM Reveals Bound Substrate Histidine in the ABC Transporter HisQMP2


Дәйексөз келтіру

Толық мәтін

Ашық рұқсат Ашық рұқсат
Рұқсат жабық Рұқсат берілді
Рұқсат жабық Тек жазылушылар үшін

Аннотация

Localization of substrates in membrane proteins is an important but challenging task. In this paper, we show that deuterium electron spin echo envelope modulation spectroscopy (2H ESEEM) combined with site-directed spin labeling is a powerful tool to localize the substrate, histidine-d5, in the ABC transporter HisQMP2. Based on a homology model and spin label rotamer analyses, we calculated 2H ESEEM spectra for eight possible labeling positions close to the putative substrate-binding site. Experimental 2H ESEEM spectra were determined with spin labels bound either at position 169 of HisM, for which a detectable 2H ESEEM signal was calculated, or with a spin label bound at position 54 of HisQ as a negative control. The agreement between the calculated and experimental ESEEM spectra provides strong evidence for the histidine located in a binding site primarily liganded by residues of HisM as proposed by the homology model.

Авторлар туралы

Nikolay Isaev

Voevodsky Institute of Chemical Kinetics and Combustion SB RAS; Fachbereich Physik, Universität Osnabrück

Email: hsteinho@uos.de
ORCID iD: 0000-0002-5888-0157
Ресей, Novosibirsk; Osnabrück, 49069

Johanna Heuveling

Institut für Biologie/Physiologie der Mikroorganismen, Humboldt Universität zu Berlin

Email: hsteinho@uos.de
Германия, Berlin, 10115

Nikita Ivanisenko

The Federal Research Center Institute of Cytology and Genetics SB RAS; Novosibirsk State University

Email: hsteinho@uos.de
Ресей, Novosibirsk; Novosibirsk

Erwin Schneider

Institut für Biologie/Physiologie der Mikroorganismen, Humboldt Universität zu Berlin

Email: hsteinho@uos.de
Германия, Berlin, 10115

Heinz-Jürgen Steinhoff

Fachbereich Physik, Universität Osnabrück

Хат алмасуға жауапты Автор.
Email: hsteinho@uos.de
Германия, Osnabrück, 49069

Қосымша файлдар

Қосымша файлдар
Әрекет
1. JATS XML

© Springer-Verlag GmbH Austria, part of Springer Nature, 2019