UNUSUAL HELIX-CONTAINING GREEK KEYS IN DEVELOPMENT-SPECIFIC CA2-BINDING PROTEIN-S - H-1, N-15, AND C-13 ASSIGNMENTS AND SECONDARY STRUCTUREDETERMINED WITH THE USE OF MULTIDIMENSIONAL DOUBLE AND TRIPLE-RESONANCE HETERONUCLEAR NMR-SPECTROSCOPY()
S. Bagby et al., UNUSUAL HELIX-CONTAINING GREEK KEYS IN DEVELOPMENT-SPECIFIC CA2-BINDING PROTEIN-S - H-1, N-15, AND C-13 ASSIGNMENTS AND SECONDARY STRUCTUREDETERMINED WITH THE USE OF MULTIDIMENSIONAL DOUBLE AND TRIPLE-RESONANCE HETERONUCLEAR NMR-SPECTROSCOPY(), Biochemistry, 33(9), 1994, pp. 2409-2421
Multidimensional heteronuclear NMR spectroscopy has been used to deter
mine almost complete backbone and side-chain H-1, N-15, and C-13 reson
ance assignments of calcium loaded Myxococcus xanthus protein S (173 r
esidues). Of the range of constant-time triple resonance experiments r
ecorded, HNCACB and CBCA(CO)NH, which correlate C alpha and C beta wit
h backbone amide resonances of the same and the succeeding residue res
pectively, proved particularly useful in resolving assignment ambiguit
ies created by the 4-fold internal homology of the protein S amino aci
d sequence. Extensive side-chain H-1 and C-13 assignments have been ob
tained by analysis of HCCH-TOCSY and N-15-edited TOCSY-HMQC spectra. A
combination of NOE, backbone amide proton exchange, (3)J(NH alpha), c
oupling constant, and chemical shift data has been used to show that e
ach of the protein S repeat units consists of four beta-strands in a c
reek key arrangement. Two of the Greek keys contain a regular alpha-he
lix between the third and fourth strands, resulting in an unusual and
possibly unique variation on this common folding motif. Despite simila
rity between two nine-residue stretches in the first and third domains
of protein S and one of the Ca2+-binding sequences in bovine brain ca
lmodulin [Inouye, S., Franceschini, T., and Inouye, M. (1983) Proc. Na
tl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 80, 6829-6833], the protein S topology in these
regions is incompatible with an EF-hand calmodulin-type Ca2+-binding s
ite.