posted on 1996-10-29, 00:00authored byPaolo Baistrocchi, Lucia Banci, Ivano Bertini, Paola Turano, Kara L. Bren, Harry B. Gray
Two-dimensional 1H NMR spectra of
Saccharomyces cerevisiae reduced iso-1-cytochrome
c
have been used to confirm and slightly extend the assignment available
in the literature. 1702 NOESY
cross-peaks have been assigned, and their intensities have been
measured. Through the program DIANA
and related protocols (Güntert, 1992), a solution structure has
been obtained by using 1442 meaningful
NOEs and 13 hydrogen-bond constraints. The RMSD values with
respect to the mean structure for the
backbone and all heavy atoms for a family of 20 structures are 0.61 ±
0.09 and 0.98 ± 0.09 Å, the
average target function value being as small as 0.57 Å2.
The larger number of slowly exchanging amide
NHs observed in this system compared to that observed in the cyanide
derivative of oxidized Ala 80
cytochrome c suggests that the oxidized form is much more
flexible and that the backbone protons are
more solvent accessible. Comparison of the present structure with
the crystal structures of reduced yeast
cytochrome c and of the complex between cytochrome c
peroxidase and oxidized yeast cytochrome c
reveals substantial similarity among the backbone conformations but
differences in the residues located
in the region of protein−protein interaction. Interestingly, in
solution the peripheral residues involved in
the interaction with cytochrome c peroxidase are on average
closer to the position found in the crystal
structure of the complex than to the solid state structure of the
isolated reduced form.