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nmrlearner 11-24-2010 09:51 PM

NMR study of nucleotide-induced changes in the nucleotide binding domain of Thermus t
 
NMR study of nucleotide-induced changes in the nucleotide binding domain of Thermus thermophilus Hsp70 chaperone DnaK: implications for the allosteric mechanism.

Related Articles NMR study of nucleotide-induced changes in the nucleotide binding domain of Thermus thermophilus Hsp70 chaperone DnaK: implications for the allosteric mechanism.

J Biol Chem. 2004 Aug 6;279(32):33958-67

Authors: Revington M, Holder TM, Zuiderweg ER

We present an NMR investigation of the nucleotide-dependent conformational properties of a 44-kDa nucleotide binding domain (NBD) of an Hsp70 protein. Conformational changes driven by ATP binding and hydrolysis in the N-terminal NBD are believed to allosterically regulate substrate affinity in the C-terminal substrate binding domain. Several crystal structures of Hsc70 NBDs in different nucleotide states have, however, not shown significant structural differences. We have previously reported the NMR assignments of the backbone resonances of the NBD of the bacterial Hsp70 homologue Thermus thermophilus DnaK in the ADP-bound state. In this study we show, by assigning the NBD with the ATP/transition state analogue, ADP.AlFx, bound, that it closely mimics the ATP-bound state. Chemical shift difference mapping of the two nucleotide states identified differences in a cluster of residues at the interface between subdomains 1A and 1B. Further analysis of the spectra revealed that the ATP state exhibited a single conformation, whereas the ADP state was in slow conformational exchange between a form similar to the ATP state and another state unique to the ADP-bound form. A model is proposed of the allosteric mechanism based on the nucleotide state altering the balance of a dynamic equilibrium between the open and closed states. The observed chemical shift perturbations were concentrated in an area close to a previously described J-domain binding channel, confirming the importance of that region in the allosteric mechanism.

PMID: 15175340 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]



Source: PubMed


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