## Abstract The substrate‐like inhibition of serine proteinases by avian ovomucoid domains has provided an excellent model for protein inhibitor‐proteinase interactions of the standard type. ^1^H,^15^N and ^13^C NMR studies have been undertaken on complexes formed between turkey ovomucoid third dom
The Effects of Dissolved Oxygen upon Amide Proton Relaxation and Chemical Shift in a Perdeuterated Protein
✍ Scribed by Tobias S. Ulmer; Iain D. Campbell; Jonathan Boyd
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2002
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 294 KB
- Volume
- 157
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1090-7807
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✦ Synopsis
The effects of dissolved molecular oxygen upon amide proton ((1)H(N)) longitudinal and transverse relaxation rates and chemical shifts were studied for a small protein domain, the second type 2 module of fibronectin ((2)F2)-isotopically enriched to 99% (2)H, 98% (15)N. Longitudinal relaxation rate enhancements, R(O(2))((1)H(N)), of individual backbone (1)H(N) nuclei varied up to 14 fold between a degassed and oxygenated (1 bar) solution, indicating that the oxygen distribution within the protein is inhomogeneous. On average, smaller relaxation rate enhancements were observed for (1)H(N) nuclei associated with the core of the protein compared to (1)H(N) nuclei closer to the surface, suggesting restricted oxygen accessibility to some regions. In agreement with an O(2)-(1)H(N) hyperfine interaction in the extreme narrowing limit, the (1)H(N) transverse relaxation rates showed no significant change, up to an oxygen pressure of 9.5 bar (the maximum pressure used in this study). For most (1)H(N) resonances, small deltadelta(O(2))((1)H(N)) hyperfine chemical shifts could be detected between oxygen pressures of 1 bar and 9.5 bar.
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