Mapping molecular flexibility of proteins with site-directed spin labeling: a case study of myoglobin.
2012
Site directed spin labeling (SDSL) has potential for mapping protein flexibility under physiological conditions. The purpose of the present study was to explore this potential using 38 singly spin-labeled mutants of myoglobin distributed throughout the sequence. Correlation of the EPR spectra with protein structure provides new evidence that the site dependent variation in lineshape, and hence motion of the spin label, is due largely to differences in mobility of the helical backbone in the ns time range. Fluctuations between conformational substates, typically in the μs-ms time range, are slow on the EPR time scale and the spectra provide a snapshot of conformational equilibria frozen in time as revealed by multiple components in the spectra. A recent study showed that osmolyte perturbation can positively identify conformational exchange as the origin of multicomponent spectra (Lopez et al. (2009), Protein Sci. 18, 1637). In the present study this new strategy is employed in combination with lineshape analysis and pulsed-EPR interspin distance measurements to investigate the conformation and flexibility of myoglobin in three folded and partially folded states. The regions identified to be in conformational exchange in the three forms agree remarkably well with those assigned by NMR, but the faster time scale of EPR allows characterization of localized states not detected in NMR. Collectively, the results suggest that SDSL-EPR and osmolyte perturbation provide a facile means for mapping the amplitude of fast backbone fluctuations and for detecting sequences in slow conformational exchange in folded and partially folded protein sequences.
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