Proton positions in the Mn2+ binding site of concanavalin A as determined by single-crystal high-field ENDOR spectroscopy

Citation
R. Carmieli et al., Proton positions in the Mn2+ binding site of concanavalin A as determined by single-crystal high-field ENDOR spectroscopy, J AM CHEM S, 123(34), 2001, pp. 8378-8386
Citations number
27
Categorie Soggetti
Chemistry & Analysis",Chemistry
Journal title
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
ISSN journal
00027863 → ACNP
Volume
123
Issue
34
Year of publication
2001
Pages
8378 - 8386
Database
ISI
SICI code
0002-7863(20010829)123:34<8378:PPITMB>2.0.ZU;2-G
Abstract
High-field (95 GHz) pulsed EPR and electron-nuclear double resonance (ENDOR ) techniques have been used for the first time to determine coordinates of ligand protons of a high-spin metal center in a protein single crystal. The protein concanavalin A contains a Mn2+ ion which is coordinated to two wat er molecules, a histidine residue, and three carboxylates. Single crystals of concanavalin A were grown in H2O and in D2O to distinguish the exchangea ble water protons from the nonexchangeable protons of the imidazole group. Distinct EPR transitions were selected by performing the ENDOR measurements at different magnetic fields within the EPR spectrum. This selection, comb ined with the large thermal polarization achieved at 4.5 K and a magnetic f ield of similar to3.4 T allowed us to assign the ENDOR signals to their res pective Ms manifolds, thus providing the signs of the hyperfine couplings. Rotation patterns were acquired in the ac and ab crystallographic planes. T wo distinct crystallographic sites were identified in each plane, and the h yperfine tensors of two of the imidazole protons and the four water protons were determined by simulations of the rotation patterns. All protons have axially symmetric hyperfine tensors and, by applying the point-dipole appro ximation, the positions of the various protons relative to the Mn2+ ion wer e determined. Likewise, the water protons involved in H-bonding to neighbor ing residues were identified using the published, ultrahigh-resolution X-ra y crystallographic coordinates of the protein.