Abstract

A general framework is presented for the interpretation of NMR relaxation data of proteins. The method, termed isotropic reorientational eigenmode dynamics (iRED), relies on a principal component analysis of the isotropically averaged covariance matrix of the lattice functions of the spin interactions responsible for spin relaxation. The covariance matrix, which is evaluated using a molecular dynamics (MD) simulation, is diagonalized yielding reorientational eigenmodes and amplitudes that reveal detailed information about correlated protein dynamics. The eigenvalue distribution allows one to quantitatively assess whether overall and internal motions are statistically separable. To each eigenmode belongs a correlation time that can be adjusted to optimally reproduce experimental relaxation parameters. A key feature of the method is that it does not require separability of overall tumbling and internal motions, which makes it applicable to a wide range of systems, such as folded, partially folded, and unfolded biomolecular systems and other macromolecules in solution. The approach was applied to NMR relaxation data of ubiquitin collected at multiple magnetic fields in the native form and in the partially folded A-state using MD trajectories with lengths of 6 and 70 ns. The relaxation data of native ubiquitin are well reproduced after adjustment of the correlation times of the 10 largest eigenmodes. For this state, a high degree of separability between internal and overall motions is present as is reflected in large amplitude and collectivity gaps between internal and overall reorientational modes. In contrast, no such separability exists for the A-state. Residual overall tumbling motion involving the N-terminal beta-sheet and the central helix is observed for two of the largest modes only. By adjusting the correlation times of the 10 largest modes, a high degree of consistency between the experimental relaxation data and the iRED model is reached for this highly flexible biomolecule.

Keywords

ChemistryRelaxation (psychology)Molecular dynamicsStatistical physicsEigenvalues and eigenvectorsCovarianceNormal modeAmplitudeIsotropyNuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopyComputational chemistryNuclear magnetic resonanceMolecular physicsPhysicsQuantum mechanicsStereochemistry

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Publication Info

Year
2002
Type
article
Volume
124
Issue
16
Pages
4522-4534
Citations
204
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Closed

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Cite This

Jeanine J. Prompers, Rafael Brüschweiler (2002). General Framework for Studying the Dynamics of Folded and Nonfolded Proteins by NMR Relaxation Spectroscopy and MD Simulation. Journal of the American Chemical Society , 124 (16) , 4522-4534. https://doi.org/10.1021/ja012750u

Identifiers

DOI
10.1021/ja012750u