Journal of Magnetic Resonance Open (Dec 2023)
The application of solution NMR spectroscopy to study dynamics of two-domain calcium-binding proteins
Abstract
Protein dynamics due to flexible linkers connecting otherwise rigid domains may be critical for the functioning of a variety of biological systems, ranging from membrane transporters to calcium-signaling and the formation of intercellular junctions. Considering that NMR spectroscopy is extremely powerful to characterize dynamics at various time scales, this manuscript brings an overview of the main strategies that have been employed to characterize inter-domain dynamics in relevant biological systems. Emphasis was given to the calcium binding proteins: calmodulin, cadherin, and the Na+/Ca2+ exchanger calcium-sensor domain. The introduction of paramagnetic centers in diamagnetic proteins is seen as key to obtaining unambiguous information about inter-domain dynamics. This is because the self-alignment of one of the domains in multi-domain proteins avoids the problem of dealing with alignment tensor fluctuations in dynamic systems. The combination of residual dipolar couplings (RDCs) and pseudocontact shifts (PCSs) with computational strategies aiming to provide an ensemble description of protein dynamics is seen as the most powerful strategy to gain detailed atomistic information on inter-domain motions. It is noteworthy that the cadherin ectodomains and the Na+/Ca2+ exchanger calcium sensor respond in the same way upon calcium-binding: in the absence of calcium the two domains are flexibly linked to one another and may preferentially sample kinked inter-domain arrangements, while calcium binding stabilizes a rigid and extended inter-domain arrangement. It is thus remarkable that nature chose the same molecular mechanism to promote two very different biological functions that are triggered by calcium signaling: intercellular adhesion by the formation of cadherin dimers and the allosteric regulation of a membrane transporter in the case of the Na+/Ca2+ exchanger.