Search results for "protein dynamic"
showing 10 items of 82 documents
Exploring Chemical Reactivity in Enzyme Catalyzed Processes Using QM/MM Methods: An Application to Dihydrofolate Reductase
2015
Enzymes are the catalysts used by living organisms to accelerate chemical processes under physiological conditions. In this chapter, we illustrate the current view about the origin of their extraordinary rate enhancement based on molecular simulations and, in particular, on methods based on the combination of Quantum Mechanics and Molecular Mechanics potentials which provide a solution to treat the chemical reactivity of these large and complex molecular systems. Computational studies on Dihydrofolate Reductase have been selected as a conductor wire to present the evolution and difficulties to model chemical reactivity in enzymes. The results discussed here show that experimental observatio…
Direct Evidence of the Amino Acid Side Chain and Backbone Contributions to Protein Anharmonicity
2010
Elastic incoherent neutron scattering has been used to study the temperature dependence of the mean-square displacements of nonexchangeable hydrogen atoms in powders of a series of homomeric polypeptides (polyglycine, polyalanine, polyphenylalanine and polyisoleucine) in comparison with myoglobin at the same hydration level (h = 0.2). The aim of the work was to measure the dynamic behavior of different amino acid residues separately and assess the contribution of each type of side chain to the anharmonic dynamics of proteins. The results provide direct experimental evidence that the first anharmonic activation, at approximately 150 K, is largely due to methyl group rotations entering the ti…
Rigid versus Flexible Protein Matrix: Light-Harvesting Complex II Exhibits a Temperature-Dependent Phonon Spectral Density
2018
Dynamics-function correlations are usually inferred when molecular mobility and protein function are simultaneously impaired at characteristic temperatures or hydration levels. In this sense, excitation energy transfer in the photosynthetic light-harvesting complex II (LHC II) is an untypical example because it remains fully functional even at cryogenic temperatures relying mainly on interactions of electronic states with protein vibrations. Here, we study the vibrational and conformational protein dynamics of monomeric and trimeric LHC II from spinach using inelastic neutron scattering (INS) in the temperature range of 20-305 K. INS spectra of trimeric LHC II reveal a distinct vibrational …
Conformational substates of ferricytochrome c revealed by combined optical absorption and electronic circular dichroism spectroscopy at cryogenic tem…
2010
We have investigated the heterogeneity of the Fe(III)–Met80 linkage of horse heart ferricytochrome c by probing the 695 nm charge transfer band with absorption and electronic circular dichroism (ECD) spectroscopy. In order to verify the connection between conformational substates of the Fe(III)–Met80 linkage and the 695 nm band spectral heterogeneity, we have performed experiments as a function of pH (neutral and acidic) and temperature (room and 20 K). At room temperature, the ECD spectrum is blue shifted with respect to the absorption one; the shift is more pronounced at acidic pH and is compatible with the presence of sub-bands. ECD measurements at 20 K highlighted the heterogeneous natu…
Quaternary transition pathway in sol–gel encapsulated haemoglobin tracked by NIR and UV spectral relaxations
2008
→T structural transition of haemoglobin (hb), the protein responsible for oxygen (o) transport in the red blood cells of vertebrates, is the hall mark example. This transition, which regu lates o2 uptake in the lungs and o2 release in the tissues, is a switch in the quaternary structure of the protein from a low-affinity state (T) to a high-affinity state (R), two well-characterised structures. The struc tural pathway connecting the end states of this transition remains unclear, however, although recently several experimental 1 or
The effect of water on protein dynamics
2004
Neutron diffraction and spectroscopy were applied to describe the hydration and dynamics of a soluble protein and a natural membrane from extreme halophilic Archaea. The quantitative dependence of protein motions on water activity was clearly illustrated, and it was established that a minimum hydration shell is required for the systems to access their functional resilience, i.e. a dynamics state that allows biological activity.
Dynamics of homomeric polypeptides studied with neutron scattering, dielectric spectroscopy and calorimetry
2012
Molecular origin and hydration dependence of protein anharmonicity: an elastic neutron scattering study.
2010
Two main onsets of anharmonicity are present in protein dynamics. Neutron scattering on protein hydrated powders revealed a first onset at about 150 K and a second one at about 230 K (the so called dynamical transition). In order to assess the molecular origin of protein anharmonicity, we study different homomeric polypeptides by incoherent elastic neutron scattering, thus disentangling the contribution of different molecular groups in proteins. We show that methyl group rotations are the main contributors to the low temperature onset. Concerning the dynamical transition, we show that it also occurs in absence of side chains; however, the presence and mobility of side chains substantially i…
Hemoglobin dynamics in rat erythrocytes investigated by M�ssbauer spectroscopy
1991
Rats have been enriched in 57Fe and erythrocytes were isolated from the blood. Mössbauer absorption spectroscopy on the hemoglobin of these erythrocytes has shown rather similar dynamics as found earlier in crystals of myoglobin, in frozen solutions of human hemoglobin and in a number of other proteins. The results strongly indicate that the motion of the heme and presumably some part of the F-helix is mainly influenced by the average viscosity of the sample determined by a network of hydrogen bridges and other weak interactions. Extrapolations of Mössbauer results from protein crystals to proteins in their physiological surroundings seem to be suitable for heme proteins.
Dynamics of myoglobin in confinement: An elastic and quasi-elastic neutron scattering study
2008
In order to clarify the role of hard confinement on protein dynamics, elastic and quasi-elastic neutron scattering experiments have been performed on ferric horse myoglobin in two different systems: the protein embedded in a porous silica matrix, and the corresponding hydrated protein powder. Elastic data have been analysed using two different models (dynamical heterogeneity and anharmonic double-well potential) that take into account deviations of elastic intensity from Gaussian behaviour. The profile of quasi-elastic spectra has been approximated by a combination of Lorentzian and Gaussian components. Comparison between the data relative to the two different samples indicates that geometr…