info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Use of 13Ca chemical-shifts in protein structure determination
Fecha
2007-05Registro en:
Vila, Jorge Alberto; Ripoll, Daniel R.; Scheraga, Harold A.; Use of 13Ca chemical-shifts in protein structure determination; American Chemical Society; Journal of Physical Chemistry B; 111; 23; 5-2007; 6577-6585
1520-6106
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Vila, Jorge Alberto
Ripoll, Daniel R.
Scheraga, Harold A.
Resumen
A physics-based method aimed at determining protein structures by using NOE-derived distances together with observed and computed 13C chemical shifts is proposed. The approach makes use of 13Cα chemical shifts, computed at the density functional level of theory, to obtain torsional constraints for all backbone and side-chain torsional angles without making a priori use of the occupancy of any region of the Ramachandran map by the amino acid residues. The torsional constraints are not fixed but are changed dynamically in each step of the procedure, following an iterative self-consistent approach intended to identify a set of conformations for which the computed 13Cα chemical shifts match the experimental ones. A test is carried out on a 76-amino acid, all-α-helical protein; namely, the Bacillus subtilis acyl carrier protein. It is shown that, starting from randomly generated conformations, the final protein models are more accurate than an existing NMR-derived structure model of this protein, in terms of both the agreement between predicted and observed 13Cα chemical shifts and some stereochemical quality indicators, and of similar accuracy as one of the protein models solved at a high level of resolution. The results provide evidence that this methodology can be used not only for structure determination but also for additional protein structure refinement of NMR-derived models deposited in the Protein Data Bank.