Side-Chain Interactions in the Folding Pathway of a Fyn SH3 Domain Mutant Studied by Relaxation Dispersion NMR Spectroscopy

Anthony Mittermaier, Dmitry M. Korzhnev,§ and Lewis E. Kay*§
Departments of Biochemistry, Chemistry, and Medical Genetics, University of Toronto, 1 King's College Circle, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5S 1A8
Biochemistry, 2005, 44 (47), pp 15430–15436
DOI: 10.1021/bi051771o
Publication Date (Web): November 2, 2005
Copyright © 2005 American Chemical Society

 This work was supported by a grant from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) to L.E.K., D.M.K., and A.M. acknowledge postdoctoral support from the CIHR and the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, respectively. L.E.K. holds a Canada Research Chair in Biochemistry.

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 Department of Biochemistry.

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 Departments of Chemistry and Medical Genetics.

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 To whom correspondence should be addressed in the Department of Medical Genetics. Phone:  (416) 978-0741. Fax:  (416) 978-6885. E-mail:  kay@pound.med.utoronto.ca.

Abstract

Abstract Image

A major challenge to the study of protein folding is the fact that intermediate states along the reaction pathway are generally unstable and thus difficult to observe. Recently developed NMR relaxation dispersion experiments present an avenue to accessing such states, providing kinetic, thermodynamic, and structural information for intermediates with small (greater than or equal to 1%) populations at equilibrium. We have employed these techniques to study the three-state folding reaction of the G48M Fyn SH3 domain. Using 13C-, 1H-, and 15N-based methods, we have characterized backbone and side-chain interactions in the folded, unfolded, intermediate, and transition states, thereby mapping the energy landscape of the protein. We find that the intermediate, populated to approximately 1%, contains nativelike structure in a central β-sheet, and is disordered at the amino and carboxy termini. The intermediate is stabilized by side-chain van der Waals contacts, yet 13C chemical shifts indicate that methyl-containing residues remain disordered. This state has a partially structured backbone and a collapsed yet mobile hydrophobic core and thus closely resembles a molten globule. Nonpolar side-chain contacts are formed in the unfolded-intermediate transition state; these interactions are disrupted in the intermediate-folded transition state, possibly allowing side chains to rearrange as they adopt the native packing configuration. This work illustrates the power of novel relaxation dispersion experiments in characterizing excited states that are “invisible” in even the most sensitive of NMR experiments.

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History

  • Published In Issue November 29, 2005
  • Received September 1, 2005
    Revised Manuscript Received October 14, 2005

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