NMR Research Today is a free monthly online journal that collates and summarizes the latest research about NMR, including details on nuclear magnetic resonance, structural determination, techniques. | ||||||||
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Dynamics of the S1S2 glutamate binding domain of GluR2 measured using 19F NMR spectroscopy.Ahmed AH, Loh AP, Jane DE, Oswald RE Department of Molecular Medicine, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14853, USA. Ionotropic glutamate receptors mediate the majority of vertebrate excitatory synaptic transmission. Although the structure of the GluR2 binding domain (S1S2) is well known (agonist binding site between two lobes), little is known about the time scales of conformational transitions or the relationship between dynamics and function. (19)F NMR ((19)F-labeled tryptophan) spectroscopy was used to monitor motions in the S1S2 domain bound to ligands with varying efficacy and in the apo state. One tryptophan (Trp-671) undergoes chemical exchange in some but not all agonists, consistent with mus-ms motion. The dynamics can be correlated to ligand affinity, and a likely source of the motion is a peptide bond capable of transiently forming hydrogen bonds across the lobe interface. Another tryptophan (Trp-767) appears to monitor motions of the relative positions of the lobes and suggests that the relative orientation in the apo- and antagonist-bound forms can exchange between at least two conformations on the ms time scale. Published 23 April 2007 in J Biol Chem, 282(17): 12773-84.
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