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Published December 4, 2001 | public
Journal Article

Dynamic Structure of a Protein Hydrogel: A Solid-State NMR Study

Abstract

^(13)C and ^(15)N solid-state NMR spectroscopy has been used to study the dynamic structure of a genetically engineered multidomain protein hydrogel that contains two leucine-zipper domains and a central polyelectrolyte domain. ^(13)C NMR spectra show that on the microsecond time scale the central domain is isotropically mobile while the leucine-zipper domains are rigid. This supports the hypothesis that the central domain acts as the flexible swelling agent of the gel network while the terminal domains form intermolecular aggregates. ^(13)C isotropic chemical shifts indicate that the terminal domains are helical, while the central domain has a random coil conformation. On the millisecond time scale, the leucine-zipper domains are highly dynamic, as determined from the ^(13)C-detected ^(15)N CODEX experiment. The motion is rigid-body in nature with a correlation time of about 80 ms at room temperature and has an average amplitude of about 50°. Several specific motional models are considered by comparing simulated and experimental exchange intensities as a function of the recoupling time for ^(15)N chemical shift anisotropy. The experimental data are consistent with two of the models considered:  a random jump model and a uniaxial rotation model. The implications of this motion to strand exchange between helical bundles are discussed.

Additional Information

Copyright © 2001 American Chemical Society. Received May 4, 2001. Publication Date (Web): November 7, 2001. This work was partially supported by the NSF Materials Science and Engineering Center at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. M. Hong acknowledges NSF for a POWRE award and the Beckman Foundation for a Young Investigator Award. E. R. deAzevedo thanks the FAPESP-Brazil program for a graduate fellowship.

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 19, 2023