Publication Details
ID: 57A simple method to predict protein flexibility using secondary chemical shifts.
Authors
Berjanskii MV; Wishart DS
Journal/Conference
Journal of the American Chemical Society Vol. 127 (43) , pp. 14970-1
Abstract
Protein motions play a critical role in many biological processes, such as enzyme catalysis, allosteric regulation, antigen-antibody interactions, and protein-DNA binding. NMR spectroscopy occupies a unique place among methods for investigating protein dynamics due to its ability to provide site-specific information about protein motions over a large range of time scales. However, most NMR methods require a detailed knowledge of the 3D structure and/or the collection of additional experimental data (NOEs, T1, T2, etc.) to accurately measure protein dynamics. Here we present a simple method based on chemical shift data that allows accurate, quantitative, site-specific mapping of protein backbone mobility without the need of a three-dimensional structure or the collection and analysis of NMR relaxation data. Further, we show that this chemical shift method is able to quantitatively predict per-residue RMSD values (from both MD simulations and NMR structural ensembles) as well as model-free backbone order parameters.
Publication Info
- Year: 2005
- Publication Date: Oct. 27, 2005
- Citations: 497
- Source: Google Scholar
Identifiers
- DOI: 10.1021/ja054842f
- PubMed ID: 16248604
- ISSN: 0002-7863 (Print) 0002-7863 (Linking)
- Google Scholar ID: u5HHmVD_uO8C
PubMed Data
Additional Information
- Publication Type: Journal Article; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
- Language: eng
- Last PubMed Update: April 22, 2025