Infrared spectroscopy is a powerful tool in protein science due to its sensitivity to changes in secondary structure or conformation. In order to take advantage of the full power of infrared spectroscopy in structural studies of proteins, complex band contours, such as the amide I band, have to be decomposed into their main component bands, a process referred to as curve fitting. In this paper, we report on an improved curve fitting approach in which absorption spectra and second derivative spectra are fitted simultaneously. Our approach, which we name co-fitting, leads to a more reliable modelling of the experimental data because it uses more spectral information than the standard approach of fitting only the absorption spectrum. It also avoids that the fitting routine becomes trapped in local minima. We have tested the proposed approach using infrared absorption spectra of three mixed α/β proteins with different degrees of spectral overlap in the amide I region: ribonuclease A, pyruvate kinase, and aconitase.
Dehydrins are disordered proteins that are expressed in plants as a response to embryogenesis and water-related stress. The molecular function and structural action of the dehydrins are yet elusive, but increasing evidence points to a role in protecting the structure and functional dynamics of cell membranes. An intriguing example is the cold-induced dehydrin Lti30 that binds to membranes by its conserved K segments. Moreover, this binding can be regulated by pH and phosphorylation and shifts the membrane phase transition to lower temperatures, consistent with the protein's postulated function in cold stress. In this study, we reveal how the Lti30-membrane interplay works structurally at atomic level resolution in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana). Nuclear magnetic resonance analysis suggests that negatively charged lipid head groups electrostatically capture the protein's disordered K segments, which locally fold up into a-helical segments on the membrane surface. Thus, Lti30 conforms to the general theme of structure-function relationships by folding upon binding, in spite of its disordered, atypically hydrophilic and repetitive sequence signatures. Moreover, the fixed and well-defined structure of the membrane-bound K segments suggests that dehydrins have the molecular prerequisites for higher level binding specificity and regulation, raising new questions about the complexity of their biological function.
The mammalian cell cycle is controlled by the E2F family of transcription factors. Typical E2Fs bind to DNA as heterodimers with the related dimerization partner (DP) proteins, whereas the atypical E2Fs, E2F7 and E2F8 contain two DNA-binding domains (DBDs) and act as repressors. To understand the mechanism of repression, we have resolved the structure of E2F8 in complex with DNA at atomic resolution. We find that the first and second DBDs of E2F8 resemble the DBDs of typical E2F and DP proteins, respectively. Using molecular dynamics simulations, biochemical affinity measurements and chromatin immunoprecipitation, we further show that both atypical and typical E2Fs bind to similar DNA sequences in vitro and in vivo. Our results represent the first crystal structure of an E2F protein with two DBDs, and reveal the mechanism by which atypical E2Fs can repress canonical E2F target genes and exert their negative influence on cell cycle progression.
We have developed and characterized efficient caged compounds of the neurotransmitter octopamine. For derivatization, we introduced [6-bromo-8-(diethylaminomethyl)-7-hydroxycoumarin-4-yl]methoxycarbonyl (DBHCMOC) and {6-bromo-7-hydroxy-8-[(piperazin-1-yl)methyl]coumarin-4-yl}methoxycarbonyl (PBHCMOC) moieties as novel photo-removable protecting groups. The caged compounds were functionally inactive when applied to heterologously expressed octopamine receptors (AmOctα1R). Upon irradiation with UV-visible or IR light, bioactive octopamine was released and evoked Ca2+ signals in AmOctα1R-expressing cells. The pronounced water solubility of compounds 2-4 in particular holds great promise for these substances as excellent phototriggers of this important neurotransmitter.
The early phase in the aggregation process of the Alzheimer's peptide Aβ(12-28) with both protected and unprotected ends was studied by time-resolved infrared spectroscopy and circular dichroism spectroscopy. Aggregation in the time-resolved experiments was initiated by a rapid pH drop caused by the photolysis of 1-(2-nitrophenyl)ethyl sulfate (caged sulfate). The infrared spectra indicate aggregates from both versions of the Aβ(12-28) peptide. [corrected] They form fast (within 60 ms), presumably from initial aggregates, and their spectral signature is consistent with a β-barrel structure. The other type arises relatively slowly from unstructured monomers on the seconds-to-minutes time scale and forms at lower pH than the first type. These β sheets are antiparallel, planar, and large and show an absorption band at 1622 cm(-1) that shifts to 1617 cm(-1) in 12 min with most of the shift occurring in 10 s.
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