Title of article :
Solution structure and dynamics of the single-chain hepatitis C virus NS3 protease NS4A cofactor complex
Author/Authors :
Mark D. McCoy، نويسنده , , Mary M Senior، نويسنده , , Jennifer J Gesell، نويسنده , , Lata Ramanathan، نويسنده , , Daniel F Wyss، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
Pages :
12
From page :
1099
To page :
1110
Abstract :
The backbone assignments, secondary structure, topology, and dynamics of the single-chain hepatitis C virus NS3 protease NS4A cofactor complex have been determined by NMR spectroscopy. Residues I34 to S181 of NS3 and the central three residues of the NS4A cofactor were assigned and the secondary structure was verified for these residues. In several X-ray structures of NS4A-bound NS3 protease, residues 1 to 28 are stabilized by crystal packing, which allows for the formation of the A0 strand and α0 helix. In solution, these N-terminal residues are largely unassigned and no evidence of a well-structured A0 strand or α0 helix was detected. NOEs between residues in the E1-F1 loop (containing D81) and the α1 helix (containing H57) together with the detection of a D81-H57 hydrogen bond indicate that in solution the catalytic triad (D81, H57, S139) of the protease is better ordered in the presence of the NS4A cofactor. This is consistent with the earlier crystallographic results and may explain the observed increase in catalytic activity of the enzyme due to NS4A binding. A model-free analysis of our relaxation data indicates substantial exchange rates for residues V51-D81, which comprise the upper part of the N-terminal β-barrel. A comparison of chemical-shift differences between NS3 protease and the NS3 protease-NS4A complex shows extensive chemical-shift changes for residues V51-D81 indicating that non-local structural changes occur upon NS4A binding to the NS3 protease that are propagated well beyond the protease-cofactor interaction site. This is consistent with crystallographic data that reveal large structural rearrangements of the strand and loop regions formed by residues V51-D81 as a result of NS4A binding. The coincidence of large exchange rates for the NS3 protease-NS4A complex with chemical-shift differences due to NS4A binding suggests that residues V51-D81 of the NS3 protease NS4A complex are in slow exchange with a NS4A-free conformation of NS3 protease.
Keywords :
NS3 , HCV , protease , NMR , Dynamics
Journal title :
Journal of Molecular Biology
Serial Year :
2001
Journal title :
Journal of Molecular Biology
Record number :
1240498
Link To Document :
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