I. Barsukov et al., H-1,N-15 AND C-13 NMR RESONANCE ASSIGNMENT, SECONDARY STRUCTURE AND GLOBAL FOLD OF THE FMN-BINDING DOMAIN OF HUMAN CYTOCHROME-P450 REDUCTASE, Journal of biomolecular NMR, 10(1), 1997, pp. 63-75
The FMN-binding domain of human NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase, corre
sponding to exons 3-7, has been expressed at high level in an active f
orm and labelled with C-13 and N-15. Most of the backbone and aliphati
c side-chain H-1, N-15 and C-13 resonances have been assigned using he
teronuclear double-and triple-resonance methods, together with a semia
utomatic assignment strategy. The secondary structure as estimated fro
m the chemical shift index and NOE connectivities consists of six alph
a-helices and five beta-strands. The global fold was deduced from the
long-range NOEs unambiguously assigned in a 4D C-13-resolved HMQC-NOES
Y-HMQC spectrum. The fold is of the alternating alpha/beta type, with
the five beta-strands arranged into a parallel beta-sheet. The seconda
ry structure and global fold are very similar to those of the bacteria
l flavodoxins, but the FMN-binding domain has an extra short helix in
place of a loop, and an extra helix at the N-terminus (leading to the
membrane anchor domain in the intact P450 reductase). The experimental
constraints were combined with homology modelling to obtain a structu
re of the FMN-binding domain satisfying the observed NOE constraints.
Chemical shift comparisons showed that the effects of FMN binding and
of FMN reduction are largely localised at the binding site.