H-1, N-15, AND C-13 BACKBONE CHEMICAL-SHIFT ASSIGNMENTS, SECONDARY STRUCTURE, AND MAGNESIUM-BINDING CHARACTERISTICS OF THE BACILLUS-SUBTILIS RESPONSE REGULATOR, SPOOF, DETERMINED BY HETERONUCLEAR HIGH-RESOLUTION NMR
Va. Feher et al., H-1, N-15, AND C-13 BACKBONE CHEMICAL-SHIFT ASSIGNMENTS, SECONDARY STRUCTURE, AND MAGNESIUM-BINDING CHARACTERISTICS OF THE BACILLUS-SUBTILIS RESPONSE REGULATOR, SPOOF, DETERMINED BY HETERONUCLEAR HIGH-RESOLUTION NMR, Protein science, 4(9), 1995, pp. 1801-1814
Spo0F, sporulation stage 0 F protein, a 124-residue protein responsibl
e, in part, for regulating the transition of Bacillus subtilis from a
vegetative state to a dormant endospore, has been studied by high-reso
lution NMR. The H-1, N-15, and C-13 chemical shift assignments for the
backbone residues have been determined from analyses of 3D spectra, N
-15 TOCSY-HSQC, N-15 NOESY-HSQC, HNCA, and HN(CO)CA. Assignments for m
any side-chain proton resonances are also reported. The secondary stru
cture, inferred from short- and medium-range NOEs, (3)J(HN alpha) coup
ling constants, and hydrogen exchange patterns, define a topology cons
istent with a doubly wound (alpha/beta)(5) fold. Interestingly, compar
ison of the secondary structure of Spo0F to the structure of the Esche
richia coli response regulator, chemotaxis Y protein (CheY) (Volt K, M
atsumura P, 1991, J Biol Chem 266:15511-15519; Bruix M et al., 1993, f
ur J Biochem 215:573-585), show differences in the relative length of
secondary structure elements that map onto a single face of the tertia
ry structure of CheY. This surface may define a region of binding spec
ificity for response regulators. Magnesium titration of Spo0F, followe
d by amide chemical shift changes, gives an equilibrium dissociation c
onstant of 20 +/- 5 mM. Amide resonances most perturbed by magnesium b
inding are near the putative site of phosphorylation, Asp 54.