Site-specific investigation of the steady-state kinetics and dynamics of the multistep binding of bile Acid molecules to a lipid carrier protein
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2010
abstract:
The investigation of multisite
ligand-protein binding and multistep
mechanisms is highly demanding.
In this work, advanced NMR methodologies
such as 2D 1H-15N line-shape
analysis, which allows a reliable investigation
of ligand binding occurring on
micro- to millisecond timescales, have
been extended to model a two-step
binding mechanism. The molecular recognition
and complex uptake mechanism
of two bile salt molecules by lipid
carriers is an interesting example that
shows that protein dynamics has the
potential to modulate the macromolecule-
ligand encounter. Kinetic analysis
supports a conformational selection
model as the initial recognition process
in which the dynamics observed in the
apo form is essential for ligand uptake,
leading to conformations with improved
access to the binding cavity.
Subsequent multi-step events could be
modelled, for several residues, with a
two-step binding mechanism. The protein
in the ligand-bound state still exhibits
a conformational rearrangement
that occurs on a very slow timescale, as
observed for other proteins of the
family. A global mechanism suggesting
how bile acids access the macromolecular
cavity is thus proposed.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
binding mechanisms; line-shape analysis; lipids; molecular recognition; NMR spectroscopy
List of contributors:
Cogliati, Clelia; Molinari, Henriette; Ragona, LAURA GIUDITTA; Tomaselli, Simona
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