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Nature Research, Nature Chemistry, 9(4), p. 711-717, 2012

DOI: 10.1038/nchem.1396

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Key stabilizing elements of protein structure identified through pressure and temperature perturbation of its hydrogen bond network

Journal article published in 2012 by Lydia Nisius, Stephan Grzesiek ORCID
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

Hydrogen bonds are key constituents of biomolecular structures, and their response to external perturbations may reveal important insights about the most stable components of a structure. NMR spectroscopy can probe hydrogen bond deformations at very high resolution through hydrogen bond scalar couplings (HBCs). However, the small size of HBCs has so far prevented a comprehensive quantitative characterization of protein hydrogen bonds as a function of the basic thermodynamic parameters of pressure and temperature. Using a newly developed pressure cell, we have now mapped pressure- and temperature-dependent changes of 31 hydrogen bonds in ubiquitin by measuring HBCs with very high precision. Short-range hydrogen bonds are only moderately perturbed, but many hydrogen bonds with large sequence separations (high contact order) show greater changes. In contrast, other high-contact-order hydrogen bonds remain virtually unaffected. The specific stabilization of such topologically important connections may present a general principle with which to achieve protein stability and to preserve structural integrity during protein function.