| High-Resolution Structure of a Na/H Antiporter Dimer Obtained by Pulsed Electron Paramagnetic Resonance Distance Measurements Biophysical Journal, Volume 93, Issue 10, 15 November 2007, Pages 3675-3683 D. Hilger, Y. Polyhach, E. Padan, H. Jung and G. Jeschke Abstract Transient or partial formation of complexes between biomacromolecules is a general mechanism used to control cellular functions. Several of these complexes escape structure determination by crystallographic means. We developed a new approach for determining the structure of protein dimers in the native environment (e.g., in the membrane) with high resolution in cases where the structure of the two monomers is known. The approach is based on measurements of distance distributions between spin labels in the range between 2 and 6 nanometers by a pulsed electron paramagnetic resonance technique and explicit modeling of spin label conformations. By applying this method to the membrane protein homodimer of the Na/H antiporter NhaA of , the structure of the presumably physiological dimer was determined. It reveals two points of contact between the two monomers, with one of them confirming results of earlier cross-linking experiments. Abstract | Full Text | PDF (728 kb) |
| Assessing Oligomerization of Membrane Proteins by Four-Pulse DEER: pH-Dependent Dimerization of NhaA Na/H Antiporter of E. coli Biophysical Journal, Volume 89, Issue 2, 1 August 2005, Pages 1328-1338 Daniel Hilger, Heinrich Jung, Etana Padan, Christoph Wegener, Klaus-Peter Vogel, Heinz-Jürgen Steinhoff and Gunnar Jeschke Abstract The pH dependence of the structure of the main Na/H antiporter NhaA of is studied by continuous-wave (CW) and pulse electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) techniques on singly spin-labeled mutants. Residues 225 and 254 were selected for site-directed spin labeling, as previous work suggested that they are situated in domains undergoing pH-dependent structural changes. A well-defined distance of 4.4nm between residues H225R1 in neighboring molecules is detected by a modulation in double electron-electron resonance data. This indicates that NhaA exists as a dimer, as previously suggested by a low-resolution electron density map and cross-linking experiments. The modulation depth decreases reversibly when pH is decreased from 8 to 5.8. A quantitative analysis suggests a dimerization equilibrium, which depends moderately on pH. Furthermore, the mobility and polarity of the environment of a spin label attached to residue 225 change only slightly with changing pH, while no other changes are detected by CW EPR. As antiporter activity of NhaA changes drastically in the studied pH range, residues 225 and 254 are probably located not in the sensor or ion translocation sites themselves but in domains that convey the signal from the pH sensor to the translocation site. Abstract | Full Text | PDF (168 kb) |
| Backbone Structure of Transmembrane Domain IX of the Na/Proline Transporter PutP of Escherichia coli Biophysical Journal, Volume 96, Issue 1, 7 January 2009, Pages 217-225 Daniel Hilger, Yevhen Polyhach, Heinrich Jung and Gunnar Jeschke Abstract The backbone structure is determined by site-directed spin labeling, double electron electron resonance measurements of distances, and modeling in terms of a helix-loop-helix construct for a transmembrane domain that is supposed to line the translocation pathway in the 54.3 kDa Na/proline symporter PutP of . The conformational distribution of the spin labels is accounted for by a rotamer library. An ensemble of backbone models with a root mean-square deviation of less than 2 Å is obtained. These models exhibit a pronounced kink near residue T341, which is involved in substrate binding. The kink may be associated with a hinge that allows the protein to open and close an inwardly oriented cavity. Abstract | Full Text | PDF (619 kb) |
Copyright © 2007 The Biophysical Society. All rights reserved.
Biophysical Journal, Volume 93, Issue 10, 3339, 15 November 2007
doi:10.1529/biophysj.107.114355
New and Notable
Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, Tennessee
Address reprint requests to A. H. Beth, Tel.: 615-322-4235.X-ray crystallography and nuclear magnetic resonance have been utilized to determine the atomic resolution structures of many proteins and protein domains. It has proven more challenging to apply these same techniques to determine the structures of large protein complexes. This is an important problem since the formation of protein complexes is often critical to regulating protein function. One way to make progress toward determining structural features of an assembly of proteins is to solve the structure of each member and then dock these individual structures together. Toward this goal, computational docking algorithms have been developed and employed with great success to predict important structural features in a wide range of protein-protein interactions. Recent work on the bacterial chemotaxis proteins CheA and CheW (reviewed in 1) has demonstrated how long-range interprobe distance constraints between spin-labeled side chains can be obtained by modern pulsed electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) methods and then utilized to guide the docking process.
The work by Hilger et al. in the article on page 3675 utilizes a similar site-directed spin-labeling approach to determine the structure for the functional Na+/H+ antiporter dimer in a liposome starting from the known atomic resolution structure of the monomer. The authors describe a new scheme to account for the dimensions and flexibility of the spin-labeled side chains in the structure refinement process. As pointed out in several recent publications and as referenced in the article, this is an important step forward in using EPR-derived interprobe distances to build structural models since it is the distance between the unpaired electrons of the two interacting spin labels that is measured and not the distances between Cα carbons of the protein backbone. This work also points out that it is possible to utilize other methods including molecular dynamics to model the conformationally accessible space for the spin labels during the refinement process. Such work is being pursued in many laboratories around the world at this time. It is anticipated that continuing efforts along these lines will lead to the development of even more robust structure refinement tools in the future. However, the current work by Hilger et al., and references cited therein, demonstrate that site-directed spin labeling and modern EPR provides an important new capability for structural studies on large protein assemblies.
1. Borbat, P. P., J. H. Freed, M. Simon, B. R. Crane, and A. B. Crane. 2007. Measuring distances by pulsed dipolar ESR spectroscopy: spin-labeled histidine kinases in two-component signaling systems. Methods Enzymol. In press..