We report the first IR characterization of a single C-D bond within a protein, methyl-d1 Met80 of horse heart cytochrome c. A comparison was made to methyl-d1/d3 methionine as well as methyl-d3 Met80. We found that for methyl-d1 and the asymmetric stretches of methyl-d3, line widths/line shapes are dominated by inhomogeneous broadening, whereas the symmetric stretch of methyl-d3 has a significant homogeneous component. Vibrational energy relaxation calculations found that a significantly stronger Fermi resonance exists for the symmetric stretch than for the asymmetric stretches, thereby suggesting that a difference in intramolecular vibrational relaxation (IVR) causes the observed line width/line shape difference between the symmetric and asymmetric stretches.
The viability of alpha-carbon deuterated bonds (Calpha-D) as infrared (IR) probes of protein backbone dynamics was explored through a combination of experiment and theory. alpha-Carbon deuterated alanine (Ala-d1) served as a convenient model system for a comparison of experiment, density functional theory (DFT), and combined quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical (QM/MM) simulations of the Calpha-D IR line shape. In addition to the primary Calpha-D absorption, the experimental spectrum contains three features that likely result from Fermi resonances. DFT calculations supported the assignments and identified the lower frequency modes participating in the Fermi resonances. A QM/MM simulation of the Ala-d1 line shape was in qualitative agreement with the experiment, including the presence of classical analogues of Fermi resonances. These studies demonstrated that the Calpha-D line shape is sensitive, via Fermi resonances, to lower frequency collective vibrations that are expected to play a role in protein dynamics and function, and that the QM/MM approach, which is applicable to proteins, is capable of aiding in their interpretation.
Structural heterogeneity is thought to be inherent in many proteins and may be important for their folding and/or function. However, it is difficult to detect by conventional methods. Carbon-deuterium bonds are environmentally sensitive, nonperturbative probes of protein environments whose observation and characterization are facilitated by their unique stretching absorption frequency in an otherwise unobscured region of the IR spectrum. We demonstrate that deuterium atoms incorporated at C(alpha) backbone positions (C(alpha)-D bonds) are sensitive to the local backbone structure and thus may be used not only to detect structural heterogeneity but also to help characterize it structurally. Density functional theory calculations are used to predict that C(alpha)-D bonds of glycine are sensitive to their local structure, with the absorptions red-shifted for an extended beta-sheet relative to gamma- and alpha-helix-like turns. These predictions are confirmed using the N-terminal Src homology 3 (nSH3) domain from the human CrkII adaptor protein, whose function as a signaling domain may require structural heterogeneity. Four nSH3 variants were synthesized in which individual glycine residues were site-specifically modified with C(alpha)D(2) glycine residues. Not only were the C(alpha)-D bonds incorporated within the beta-sheet of nSH3 more red-shifted than those incorporated within loops, but the data also reveal that nSH3 populates at least two discrete beta-sheet core structures. Moreover, the data suggest that the folded core of nSH3 may be less ordered than previously believed and also that the unfolded state may be more ordered than previously thought, and both of these factors may influence the folding and function of these important signaling domains. The C-D-based IR technique should be generally useful in the characterization of structure and heterogeneity of both folded and unfolded states.
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