Search results for "protein dynamics"

showing 10 items of 61 documents

Neutron Scattering Reveals Enhanced Protein Dynamics in Concanavalin A Amyloid Fibrils

2012

Protein aggregation is one of the most challenging topics in life sciences, and it is implicated in several human pathologies. The nature and the role of toxic species is highly debated, with amyloid fibrils being among the most relevant species for their peculiar structural and functional properties. Protein dynamics and in particular the ability to fluctuate through a large number of conformational substates are closely related to protein function. This Letter focuses on amyloid fibril dynamics, and, to our knowledge, it is the first neutron scattering study on a protein (Concanavalin A) isolated in its fibril state. Our results reveal enhanced atomic fluctuations in amyloid fibrils and i…

Protein functionbiologyChemistryProtein dynamicsmean square displacementsA proteinatomic fluctuationsmacromolecular substancesProtein aggregationNeutron scatteringFibrilAmyloid fibrilatomic fluctuationprotein aggregationCrystallographyConcanavalin ABiophysicsbiology.proteinGeneral Materials SciencePhysical and Theoretical Chemistry
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Inter- and intramolecular motions in proteins

1992

The use of 57 Fe Mossbauer radiation allows the study of protein crystal dynamics by a time-resolved analysis of X-ray scattering. In myoglobin crystals, the main source of the root mean squared amplitude of motions come from intramolecular protein dynamics. Segments of the size of an α-helix move collectively. Long-range correlated motions give only a minor contribution. Comparison with Mossbauer absorption spectroscopy shows that protein-specific dynamics is frozaen out below 200 K and the lattice dynamics in mainly responsible for the low-temperature behavior

Quantitative Biology::BiomoleculesAbsorption spectroscopyScatteringProtein dynamicsCondensed Matter PhysicsAtomic and Molecular Physics and OpticsRoot mean squarechemistry.chemical_compoundAmplitudeNuclear magnetic resonanceMyoglobinchemistryChemical physicsIntramolecular forcePhysical and Theoretical ChemistryProtein crystallizationInternational Journal of Quantum Chemistry
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Incoherent elastic and quasi-elastic neutron scattering investigation of hemoglobin dynamics.

2005

In this work we investigate the dynamic properties of hemoglobin in glycerolD(8)/D(2)O solution using incoherent elastic (ENS) and quasi-elastic (QENS) neutron scattering. Taking advantage of complementary energy resolutions of backscattering spectrometers at ILL (Grenoble), we explore motions in a large space-time window, up to 1 ns and 14 A; moreover, in order to cover the harmonic and anharmonic protein dynamics regimes, the elastic experiments have been performed over the wide temperature interval of 20-300 K. To study the dependence of the measured dynamics upon the protein quaternary structure, both deoxyhemoglobin (in T quaternary conformation) and carbonmonoxyhemoglobin (in R quater…

Quantitative Biology::BiomoleculesChemistryProtein dynamicsOrganic ChemistryNeutron diffractionMomentum transferAnharmonicityBiophysicsTemperatureProtein dynamicsHemoglobin quaternary structureMean square displacementDynamical transitionNeutron scatteringBiochemistryElasticityMean squared displacementOxygenHemoglobinsNeutron DiffractionHumansDiffusion (business)Atomic physicsStructure factorHydrogenBiophysical chemistry
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A benchmark for protein dynamics: Ribonuclease A measured by neutron scattering in a large wavevector-energy transfer range

2008

The dynamics of Ribonuclease A was explored in the full range of time and length-scales accessible by neutron spectroscopy, on time-of-flight, backscattering and spin-echo spectrometers. Samples were examined in dry and hydrated powder forms and in concentrated and dilute solutions. The aim of the study was an experimental characterisation of the full variety of protein dynamics arising from stabilisation forces. The results provide a benchmark against which other sample dynamics can be compared.

Quantitative Biology::BiomoleculesRange (particle radiation)SpectrometerChemistryProtein dynamicsDynamics (mechanics)General Physics and AstronomyNeutron scatteringMolecular physicsNeutron spectroscopyBenchmark (computing)Wave vectorPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryAtomic physicsChemical Physics
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Anharmonic activations in proteins and peptide model systems and their connection with supercooled water thermodynamics

2016

International audience; — Proteins, the nano-machines of living systems, are highly dynamic molecules. The timescale of functionally relevant motions spans over a very broad range, from femtoseconds to several seconds. In particular, the pico-to nanoseconds region is characterized by side-chain and backbone anharmonic fluctuations that are responsible for many biological tasks like ligand binding, substrate recognition and enzymatic activity. Neutron scattering on hydrated protein powders reveals two main activations of anharmonic dynamics, characterized by different onset temperature and amplitude. Here we review our work on synthetic polypeptides, native proteins, and single amino acids t…

Quantitative Biology::Biomolecules[SDV.BBM.BS]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Biochemistry Molecular Biology/Structural Biology [q-bio.BM][SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio][SDV.BBM]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Biochemistry Molecular BiologyNeutron scatteringProtein dynamicsLiquid-liquid crossoverComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUSHydration waterSettore FIS/07 - Fisica Applicata(Beni Culturali Ambientali Biol.e Medicin)
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Proton Transfer and Protein Conformation Dynamics in Photosensitive Proteins by Time-resolved Step-scan Fourier-transform Infrared Spectroscopy

2014

Monitoring the dynamics of protonation and protein backbone conformation changes during the function of a protein is an essential step towards understanding its mechanism. Protonation and conformational changes affect the vibration pattern of amino acid side chains and of the peptide bond, respectively, both of which can be probed by infrared (IR) difference spectroscopy. For proteins whose function can be repetitively and reproducibly triggered by light, it is possible to obtain infrared difference spectra with (sub)microsecond resolution over a broad spectral range using the step-scan Fourier transform infrared technique. With -10(2)-10(3) repetitions of the photoreaction, the minimum num…

RhodopsinMaterials scienceproton transferProtein ConformationGeneral Chemical EngineeringBiophysicsAnalytical chemistryInfrared spectroscopymembrane proteinsProtonationtime-resolved spectroscopyGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biologychannelrhodopsinattenuated total reflectionProtein structureSpectroscopy Fourier Transform InfraredFourier transform infrared spectroscopyinfrared spectroscopySpectroscopyIssue 88biologyGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologybacteriorhodopsinGeneral Neurosciencesingular value decompositionstep-scanProteinsEspectroscòpia infrarojaBacteriorhodopsinPhotochemical ProcessesBacteriorhodopsinsAttenuated total reflectionprotein dynamicsbiology.proteinProtonsTime-resolved spectroscopyProteïnesJournal of Visualized Experiments
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Protein and solvent dynamics of the water-soluble chlorophyll-binding protein (WSCP)

2015

This study presents quasielastic neutron scattering data of the water-soluble chlorophyll-binding protein (WSCP) and the corresponding buffer solution at room temperature. The contributions of protein and buffer solution to the overall scattering are carefully separated. Otherwise, the fast water dynamics dominating the buffer contribution is likely to mask the slow protein dynamics. In the case of WSCP, the protein scattering can be described by two contributions: i) internal protein dynamics represented by a diffusion in a sphere with an average radius of 2.7 u A and ii) global (Brownian) diffusion of the WSCP macromolecule with an upper limit for the translational diffusion coefficient o…

ScatteringPhysicsQC1-999Protein dynamicsDiffusionAnalytical chemistryBuffer solutionSolventCrystallographychemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryQuasielastic neutron scatteringChlorophyll bindingMacromoleculeEPJ Web of Conferences
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Increased dynamic effects in a catalytically compromised variant of Escherichia coli dihydrofolate reductase

2013

Isotopic substitution (15N, 13C, 2H) of a catalytically compromised variant of Escherichia coli dihydrofolate reductase, EcDHFR-N23PP/S148A, has been used to investigate the effect of these mutations on catalysis. The reduction of the rate constant of the chemical step in the EcDHFR-N23PP/S148A catalyzed reaction is essentially a consequence of an increase of the quasi-classical free energy barrier and to a minor extent of an increased number of recrossing trajectories on the transition state dividing surface. Since the variant enzyme is less well set up to catalyze the reaction, a higher degree of active site reorganization is needed to reach the TS. Although millisecond active site motion…

StereochemistryCoupled motionsKnockoutHydride transferProtein dynamicsChemical stepmedicine.disease_causeTemperature-dependenceBiochemistryCatalysisArticleCatalysisEnzyme catalysisColloid and Surface ChemistryReaction rate constantDihydrofolate reductasemedicineEscherichia coliQDEscherichia colichemistry.chemical_classificationbiologyChemistryProtein dynamicsActive siteEnzyme catalysisGeneral ChemistryTetrahydrofolate DehydrogenaseEnzymeDehydrogenasebiology.proteinBiocatalysisConformational motions
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THz spectroscopy studies on proteins: exploring collective modes of amyloid fibrils

2013

THz Spectroscopy collective modes amyloid Fibrils protein dynamics
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Protein dynamics: conformational disorder, vibrational coupling and anharmonicity in deoxy-hemoglobin and myoglobin.

1993

In this work we study the temperature dependence of the Soret band lineshape of deoxymyoglobin and deoxyhemoglobin, in the range 300-20 K. To fit the measured spectra we use an approach originally proposed by Champion and coworkers (Srajer et al. 1986; Srajer and Champion 1991). The band profile is modelled as a Voigt function that accounts for the coupling with low frequency vibrational modes, whereas the coupling with high frequency modes is responsible for the vibronic structure of the spectra. Moreover, owing to the position of the iron atom out of the mean heme plane, inhomogeneous broadening brings about a non-Gaussian distribution of 0-0 electronic transition frequencies. The reporte…

Voigt profileChemical PhenomenaChemistry PhysicalMyoglobinProtein ConformationProtein dynamicsAnharmonicityBiophysicsTemperatureDynamic properties Heme proteins Optical spectroscopyGeneral MedicineMolecular physicsMolecular electronic transitionSpectral linechemistry.chemical_compoundHemoglobinsNuclear magnetic resonanceMyoglobinchemistrySpectrophotometryMolecular vibrationAnimalsThermodynamicsRotational–vibrational couplingEuropean biophysics journal : EBJ
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