protein footprinting
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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Niloofar Abolhasani Khaje ◽  
Alexander Eletsky ◽  
Sarah E. Biehn ◽  
Charles K. Mobley ◽  
Monique J. Rogals ◽  
...  

High resolution hydroxyl radical protein footprinting (HR-HRPF) is a mass spectrometry-based method that measures the solvent exposure of multiple amino acids in a single experiment, offering constraints for experimentally-informed computational modeling. HR-HRPF-based modeling has previously been used to accurately model the structure of proteins of known structure, but the technique has never been used to determine the structure of a protein of unknown structure leaving questions of unintentional bias and applicability to unknown structures unresolved. Here, we present the use of HR-HRPF-based modeling to determine the structure of the Ig-like domain of NRG1, a protein with no close homolog of known structure. Independent determination of the protein structure by both HR-HRPF-based modeling and heteronuclear NMR was carried out, with results compared only after both processes were complete. The HR-HRPF-based model was highly similar to the lowest energy NMR model, with a backbone RMSD of 1.6 Å. To our knowledge, this is the first use of HR-HRPF-based modeling to determine a previously uncharacterized protein structure.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jie Sun ◽  
Xiaoran Roger Liu ◽  
Shuang Li ◽  
Peng He ◽  
Weikai Li ◽  
...  

AbstractMass spectrometry-based footprinting can probe higher order structure of soluble proteins in their native states and serve as a complement to high-resolution approaches. Traditional footprinting approaches, however, are hampered for integral membrane proteins because their transmembrane regions are not accessible to solvent, and they contain hydrophobic residues that are generally unreactive with most chemical reagents. To address this limitation, we bond photocatalytic titanium dioxide (TiO2) nanoparticles to a lipid bilayer. Upon laser irradiation, the nanoparticles produce local concentrations of radicals that penetrate the lipid layer, which is made permeable by a simultaneous laser-initiated Paternò–Büchi reaction. This approach achieves footprinting for integral membrane proteins in liposomes, helps locate both ligand-binding residues in a transporter and ligand-induced conformational changes, and reveals structural aspects of proteins at the flexible unbound state. Overall, this approach proves effective in intramembrane footprinting and forges a connection between material science and biology.


Author(s):  
Joshua S. Sharp ◽  
Emily E. Chea ◽  
Sandeep K. Misra ◽  
Ron Orlando ◽  
Marla Popov ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Casimir Bamberger ◽  
Sandra Pankow ◽  
Salvador Martínez-Bartolomé ◽  
Michelle Ma ◽  
Jolene Diedrich ◽  
...  

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