Protein surface accessibility represents a dimension of structural biology which has not been discussed in details so far, in spite of its fundamental role in controlling the molecular recognition process. In the present report the surface accessibility of α-bungarotoxin, a small and well characterized protein, has been investigated by analyzing its interaction with solvent and paramagnetic molecules in an integrated way. The presence of strong hydration sites, identified by a combined analysis of MD simulation and NMR results, seems to prevent the access of Gd(III)DTPA-BMA to the protein surface. On the contrary, the limited hydration of the α-bungarotoxin active site favors frequent encounters between the paramagnetic probe and the protein in the latter region. All the data obtained here for α-bungarotoxin suggest that shape and stability of the solvation shell control its surface accessibility and, hence, intermolecular interactions in a way which could be common to many other proteins. © 2007 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
MD and NMR studies of α-bungarotoxin surface accessibility / Venditti, V.; Bernini, A.; De Simone, A.; Spiga, O.; Prischi, F.; Niccolai, N.. - In: BIOCHEMICAL AND BIOPHYSICAL RESEARCH COMMUNICATIONS. - ISSN 0006-291X. - 356:1(2007), pp. 114-117. [10.1016/j.bbrc.2007.02.094]
MD and NMR studies of α-bungarotoxin surface accessibility
Bernini A.;De Simone A.;Niccolai N.
2007
Abstract
Protein surface accessibility represents a dimension of structural biology which has not been discussed in details so far, in spite of its fundamental role in controlling the molecular recognition process. In the present report the surface accessibility of α-bungarotoxin, a small and well characterized protein, has been investigated by analyzing its interaction with solvent and paramagnetic molecules in an integrated way. The presence of strong hydration sites, identified by a combined analysis of MD simulation and NMR results, seems to prevent the access of Gd(III)DTPA-BMA to the protein surface. On the contrary, the limited hydration of the α-bungarotoxin active site favors frequent encounters between the paramagnetic probe and the protein in the latter region. All the data obtained here for α-bungarotoxin suggest that shape and stability of the solvation shell control its surface accessibility and, hence, intermolecular interactions in a way which could be common to many other proteins. © 2007 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.