Search results for "protein dynamics"

showing 10 items of 61 documents

Thermal broadening of the Soret band in heme complexes and in heme-proteins: role of iron dynamics

1994

We report the thermal broadening of the Soret band in heme-CO, heme-OH and protoporphyrin IX in the temperature range 300-20 K. For protoporphyrin IX the temperature dependent Gaussian line broadening follows the behavior predicted by the harmonic approximation in the entire temperature range investigated. In contrast, for heme-CO and heme-OH the harmonic behavior is obeyed only up to about 180 K and an anomalous line broadening increase is observed at higher temperatures. This effect is attributed to the onset of anharmonic motions of the iron atom with respect to the porphyrin plane. Comparison with previously reported analogous data for heme proteins enables us to suggest that the onset …

HemeproteinsHot TemperatureHemeproteinIronBiophysicsProtoporphyrinsHemePhotochemistryMolecular physicsHemoglobinschemistry.chemical_compoundAtomAnimalsHemeProtoporphyrin IXMyoglobinProtein dynamicsAnharmonicityGeneral MedicineAtmospheric temperature rangePorphyrinCarboxyhemoglobinchemistrySpectrophotometryThermodynamicsCattleEuropean Biophysics Journal
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Role of Solvent on Protein-Matrix Coupling in MbCO Embedded in Water-Saccharide Systems: A Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy Study

2006

AbstractEmbedding protein in sugar systems of low water content enables one to investigate the protein dynamic-structure function in matrixes whose rigidity is modulated by varying the content of residual water. Accordingly, studying the dynamics and structure thermal evolution of a protein in sugar systems of different hydration constitutes a tool for disentangling solvent rigidity from temperature effects. Furthermore, studies performed using different sugars may give information on how the detailed composition of the surrounding solvent affects the internal protein dynamics and structural evolution. In this work, we compare Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy measurements (300–20K) o…

Hot TemperatureProtein ConformationBiophysicsLactosechemistry.chemical_compoundProtein structureRaffinosePolysaccharidesSpectroscopy Fourier Transform InfraredCarbohydrate ConformationFourier transform infrared spectroscopySugarSpectroscopyMaltosechemistry.chemical_classificationMyoglobinBiomoleculeProtein dynamicsTrehaloseWaterProteinsTrehaloseSolventCrystallographyGlucosechemistryChemical physicsSolventsMuramidaseBiophysical Journal
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Hydration dependent dynamics in sol-gel encapsulated myoglobin.

2008

In this work we study the effect of hydration on the dynamics of a protein in confined geometry, i.e. encapsulated in a porous silica matrix. Using elastic neutron scattering we investigate the temperature dependence of the mean square displacements of non-exchangeable hydrogen atoms of sol-gel encapsulated met-myoglobin. The study is extended to samples at 0.2, 0.3 and 0.5 g water/g protein fractions and comparison is made with met-myoglobin powders at the same average hydration and with a dry powder sample. Elastic data are analysed using a model of dynamical heterogeneity to take into account deviations of elastic intensity from gaussian behaviour in a large momentum transfer range and r…

HydrogenBiophysicsHydrationchemistry.chemical_elementSol–gelNeutron scatteringELASTIC NEUTRON-SCATTERINGPROTEIN HYDRATIONAnimalsDynamical heterogeneityPorositySol-gelSPECTROSCOPYMyoglobinProtein dynamicsSolvent dynamicMomentum transferTemperatureWaterGeneral MedicineElasticityCrystallographyNeutron DiffractionSolvation shellchemistryChemical physicsProtein dynamicSilica hydrogelsGelsTRANSITIONHydrogenEuropean biophysics journal : EBJ
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Thermal evolution of the CO stretching band in carboxy-myoglobin in the light of neutron scattering and molecular dynamics simulations

2008

Abstract As it is well known, the thermal behaviour of the CO stretching band in MbCO reflects the interconversion among protein’s taxonomic and lower tier substates. We compare here FTIR data on the thermal behaviour of the CO stretching band in MbCO embedded in non-liquid, water–trehalose matrixes, and neutron scattering data on dry and hydrated proteins and nucleic acids. The comparison, also in the light of simulative data, gives relevant information on the relationship between the mean square displacements of hydrogen atoms and the heme pocket thermal rearrangements in MbCO, as experienced by the bound CO, in the temperature region 100–200 K, and at higher temperature when large scale …

HydrogenChemistryProtein dynamicsAnalytical chemistryGeneral Physics and Astronomychemistry.chemical_elementmyoglobin trehaloseNeutron scatteringtrehalose neutron simulationMolecular dynamicschemistry.chemical_compoundMyoglobinChemical physicsThermalPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryFourier transform infrared spectroscopyRelevant informationChemical Physics
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Myoglobin on Silica: A Case Study of the Impact of Adsorption on Protein Structure and Dynamics

2013

International audience; If protein structure and function changes upon adsorption are well documented, modification of adsorbed protein dynamics remains a blind spot, despite its importance in biological processes. The adsorption of metmyoglobin on a silica surface was studied by isotherm measurements, microcalorimetry, circular dichroïsm, and UV-visible spectroscopy to determine the thermodynamic parameters of protein adsorption and consequent structure modifications. The mean square displacement and the vibrational densities of states of the adsorbed protein were measured by elastic and inelastic neutron scattering experiments. A decrease of protein flexibility and depletion in low freque…

Isothermal microcalorimetrytrypsin inhibitorCircular dichroismspectroscopySurface Propertiesserum albuminwaterAnalytical chemistrymetmyoglobin02 engineering and technology010402 general chemistry01 natural sciencesCondensed Matter::Materials Sciencechemistry.chemical_compoundAdsorptionProtein structureElectrochemistryAnimalsGeneral Materials Science[SDV.BBM]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Biochemistry Molecular BiologyPhysics::Chemical PhysicsQuantitative Biology::BiomoleculesProtein dynamicsnanoparticleneutron scatteringtransitionSurfaces and Interfacesstability021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyCondensed Matter PhysicsSilicon Dioxide0104 chemical sciencesCondensed Matter::Soft Condensed MatterMyoglobinchemistryMetmyoglobinChemical physicsNanoparticlesThermodynamicsnormal modeAdsorption0210 nano-technologyProtein adsorption
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Effects of nucleotide binding to LmrA: A combined MAS-NMR and solution NMR study

2015

ABC transporters are fascinating examples of fine-tuned molecular machines that use the energy from ATP hydrolysis to translocate a multitude of substrates across biological membranes. While structural details have emerged on many members of this large protein superfamily, a number of functional details are still under debate. High resolution structures yield valuable insights into protein function, but it is the combination of structural, functional and dynamic insights that facilitates a complete understanding of the workings of their complex molecular mechanisms. NMR is a technique well-suited to investigate proteins in atomic resolution while taking their dynamic properties into account…

Magnetic Resonance SpectroscopyBiophysicsATP-binding cassette transporterProtein dynamicsCrystallography X-RayBiochemistryLmrABacterial ProteinsNucleotide bindingMagic angle spinningSolution NMRNucleotidesChemistryWalker motifsCell BiologyNuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopyProtein superfamilyBiochemistryCyclic nucleotide-binding domainBiophysicsMAS NMRABC transporterMultidrug Resistance-Associated ProteinsMultidrug Resistance-Associated ProteinsHeteronuclear single quantum coherence spectroscopyProtein BindingBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Biomembranes
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Tracking the structural dynamics of proteins in solution using time-resolved wide-angle X-ray scattering

2008

We demonstrate tracking of protein structural changes with time-resolved wide-angle X-ray scattering (TR-WAXS) with nanosecond time resolution. We investigated the tertiary and quaternary conformational changes of human hemoglobin under nearly physiological conditions triggered by laser-induced ligand photolysis. We also report data on optically induced tertiary relaxations of myoglobin and refolding of cytochrome c to illustrate the wide applicability of the technique. By providing insights into the structural dynamics of proteins functioning in their natural environment, TR-WAXS complements and extends results obtained with time-resolved optical spectroscopy and X-ray crystallography.

Materials scienceProtein ConformationCrystallography X-RayBiochemistrySensitivity and SpecificityArticlechemistry.chemical_compoundHemoglobinsProtein structureScattering RadiationSpectroscopyWide-angle X-ray scatteringMolecular Biologyprotein dynamics conformational changes hemoglobin myoglobin cytochrome cScatteringMyoglobinX-RaysResolution (electron density)Cytochromes cCell BiologyNanosecondMyoglobinchemistryChemical physicsProtein quaternary structuresense organsBiotechnology
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Unraveling the role of protein dynamics in dihydrofolate reductase catalysis

2013

Protein dynamics have controversially been proposed to be at the heart of enzyme catalysis, but identification and analysis of dynamical effects in enzyme-catalyzed reactions have proved very challenging. Here, we tackle this question by comparing an enzyme with its heavy ((15)N, (13)C, (2)H substituted) counterpart, providing a subtle probe of dynamics. The crucial hydride transfer step of the reaction (the chemical step) occurs more slowly in the heavy enzyme. A combination of experimental results, quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics simulations, and theoretical analyses identify the origins of the observed differences in reactivity. The generally slightly slower reaction in the heavy e…

Models MolecularComputational chemistryStereochemistryKineticsBiophysicsMolecular Dynamics SimulationTritiumCatalysisEnzyme catalysisReaction coordinateReaction rateMolecular dynamicsQuantum biologyEscherichia coliReactivity (chemistry)Carbon IsotopesQuantum biologyMultidisciplinaryNitrogen IsotopesChemistryProtein dynamicsBiological chemistryProteinsTetrahydrofolate DehydrogenaseKineticsChemical physicsPhysical Sciences
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Molecular dynamics simulation of sucrose- and trehalose-coated carboxy-myoglobin

2005

We performed a room temperature molecular dynamics (MD) simulation on a system containing 1 carboxy-myoglobin (MbCO) molecule in a sucrose–water matrix of identical composition (89% [sucrose/(sucrose + water)] w/w) as for a previous trehalose–water–MbCO simulation (Cottone et al., Biophys J 2001;80:931–938). Results show that, as for trehalose, the amplitude of protein atomic mean-square fluctuations, on the nanosecond timescale, is reduced with respect to aqueous solutions also in sucrose. A detailed comparison as a function of residue number evidences mobility differences along the protein backbone, which can be related to a different efficacy in bioprotection. Different heme pocket struc…

Models MolecularInfrared spectroscopyDisaccharidesBiochemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundMolecular dynamicsStructural BiologyCarbohydrate ConformationMoleculeComputer Simulationheme pocket; hydrogen bond; mean-square fluctuations; protein dynamics; sucrose; trehaloseheme pocketMolecular Biologytrehalosehydrogen bondAqueous solutionBinding SitesHydrogen bondMyoglobinProtein dynamicssucroseTrehaloseCrystallographyKineticschemistryMyoglobinprotein dynamicsmolecular dynamics myoglobin disaccharidemean-square fluctuations
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The hairpin extension controls solvent access to the chromophore binding pocket in a bacterial phytochrome: a UV-vis absorption spectroscopy study.

2021

AbstractSolvent access to the protein interior plays an important role in the function of many proteins. Phytochromes contain a specific structural feature, a hairpin extension that appears to relay structural information from the chromophore to the rest of the protein. The extension interacts with amino acids near the chromophore, and hence shields the chromophore from the surrounding solvent. We envision that the detachment of the extension from the protein surface allows solvent exchange reactions in the vicinity of the chromophore. This can facilitate for example, proton transfer processes between solvent and the protein interior. To test this hypothesis, the kinetics of the protonation…

Models MolecularProtein ConformationProtonation010402 general chemistryPhotochemistry01 natural sciencespH jump03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundPhytochrome ADeprotonationBacterial ProteinsPhotostationary statePhysical and Theoretical Chemistrychromophore protein systems030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesBiliverdinBinding SitesPhytochromeProtein dynamicsBiliverdineconformational substatesChromophoreHydrogen-Ion Concentrationsolvent gating0104 chemical sciencesKineticschemistryprotein dynamicsSolventsSpectrophotometry UltravioletproteiinitvalokemiaDeinococcusPhytochromeProtonsPhotochemicalphotobiological sciences : Official journal of the European Photochemistry Association and the European Society for Photobiology
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