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Principles of circular dichroism (CD) and its applications to proteins José María Delfino [email protected] Departamento de Química Biológica e Instituto de Química y Fisicoquímica Biológicas (IQUIFIB, UBA-CONICET) Facultad de Farmacia y Bioquímica Universidad de Buenos Aires Junín 956, 1113 Buenos Aires, Argentina UNSAM, abril 2012 La reacción de plegamiento NU Importancia del problema: - En general, sólo el estado plegado N está asociado a la función - En general, la cadena polipeptídica en solución adopta espontáneamente el plegamiento característico del estado nativo N (salvo en casos particulares en que son necesarias chaperonas) - Deficiencias en el proceso de plegamiento conducen a enfermedades: - En humanos: amiloidosis: Alzheimer, Creutzfeldt-Jakob, Gerstmann-Straussler-Scheinker (GSS), Kuru, enfisema, fibrosis quística, Parkinson, algunos cánceres, anemia falciforme, cataratas, hipercolesterolemia familiar, etc. - En animales: enfermedades causadas por priones: encefalopatía espongiforme bovina (BSE, vaca loca), scrapie en ovinos, etc. La reacción de plegamiento N U Implicancias prácticas del problema: - Ser capaz de diseñar secuencias de aminoácidos que se plieguen de un modo particular para cumplir funciones determinadas, adviértase aquí que desde hace años existe la tecnología para expresar cualquier proteína (en bacterias o células eucariotas, y aún por síntesis química): - La concreción de este objetivo sería de increible utilidad en medicina y en biotecnología: - P.ej. fabricación de enzimas artificiales: nuevos procesos de fermentación, ingeniería de nuevas vías metabólicas, producción de fármacos y nuevos materiales, corrección de defectos genéticos Según muchos especialistas, quizás éste sea el mayor problema aún no resuelto en bioquímica El problema N 㲗 U directo: ¿Cómo se pliega una dada secuencia de aminoácidos? En general, una secuencia se pliega para dar una única estructura 3D (fold) El problema N 㲗 U inverso: ¿Cuántas secuencias de aminoácidos se pliegan de un modo dado? Muchas secuencias diferentes (aún similares en sólo 5-10%) pueden plegarse de un único modo (o fold): el código de plegamiento está altamente degenerado existen millones de secuencias en la naturaleza, pero quizás sólo ~2000 folds Los grados de libertad de la cadena polipeptídica: La cadena principal (backbone) y los ángulos de torsión phi y psi También existe el ángulo omega (torsión de la propia unión peptídica) que adopta en general valores de 180º y, raramente, de 0o ambos consistentes con la planaridad Ej. el péptido Ala-Ala-Ala La cadena polipeptídica como sucesión de planos conectados por los vértices, relacionados a través de las torsiones phi y psi El diagrama de Ramachandran III Los puntos azules representan pares de ángulos phi/psi medidos en una proteína real extraída del Protein Data Bank (www.rcsb.org) Las cadenas laterales de los aminoácidos también adoptan conformaciones características los ángulos de torsión chi (chi1, chi2, etc.) Los ángulos de torsión chi adoptan valores característicos de acuerdo con el tipo de aminoácido (p.ej. Leu) existen bibliotecas de rotámeros La paradoja de Levinthal En 1969 Cyrus Levinthal demostró teóricamente que si la búsqueda de la conformación plegada fuera al azar, la cadena polipeptídica debería muestrear un número astronómico de conformaciones desde el estado desplegado U hasta alcanzar el estado nativo N. La búsqueda tomaría tanto tiempo (mayor que la edad del universo!), de modo que el proceso sería increíblemente improbable. Esto es: • Suponiendo sólo 2 conformaciones posibles para cada aminoácido • Entonces un polipéptido de 100 residuos poseería 2100 (=1.26. 1030) posibles conformaciones • Si cada conformación se convirtiera en otra en 1 ps (picosegundo 10-12 s) Entonces, el tiempo requerido para el proceso de plegamiento sería de ~1018 segundos o ~1010 años! Sin embargo, las proteínas se pliegan en milisegundos (ms) a minutos No se muestrean todas las conformaciones posibles, sino que existen “caminos” para alcanzar el estado nativo N La superficie de energía no es un campo de golf! Las bases de datos de secuencias: www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov National Center for Biotechnology Information www.expasy.ch SwissProt pir.georgetown.edu Protein Information Resource www.srs.ebi.ac.uk Sequence Retrieval System www.uniprot.org UniProt unifica las bases de datos de secuencias La base de secuencias no redundante (nr) incluye ~17.37 millones de secuencias, que representan ~5.96 mil millones de “letras” (aminoácidos) (28 febrero 2012) La base de datos de estructuras 3D: Protein Data Bank: www.rcsb.org Esta base de coordenadas atómicas de estructuras 3D de proteínas, ácidos nucleicos, complejos y otras macromoléculas incluye ~79700 estructuras, determinadas por cristalografía de rayos X, NMR y microscopía electrónica (28 febrero 2012) Algunas herramientas en Expasy (I): http://expasy.org/tools/ http://www.isb-sib.ch/ Primary structure analysis ProtParam - Physico-chemical parameters of a protein sequence (amino-acid and atomic compositions, isoelectric point, extinction coefficient, etc.) Compute pI/Mw - Compute the theoretical isoelectric point (pI) and molecular weight (Mw) from a UniProt Knowledgebase entry or for a user sequence ScanSite pI/Mw - Compute the theoretical pI and Mw, and multiple phosphorylation states MW, pI, Titration curve - Computes pI, composition and allows to see a titration curve Scratch Protein Predictor HeliQuest - A web server to screen sequences with specific alpha-helical properties Radar - De novo repeat detection in protein sequences REP - Searches a protein sequence for repeats REPRO - De novo repeat detection in protein sequences TRUST - De novo repeat detection in protein sequences XSTREAM - De novo tandem repeat detection and architecture modeling in protein sequences SAPS - Statistical analysis of protein sequences at EMBnet-CH [Also available at EBI] Coils - Prediction of coiled coil regions in proteins (Lupas's method) at EMBnet-CH [Also available at PBIL] Paircoil - Prediction of coiled coil regions in proteins (Berger's method) Paircoil2 - Prediction of the parallel coiled coil fold from sequence using pairwise residue probabilitis with the Paircoil algorithm. Multicoil - Prediction of two- and three-stranded coiled coils 2ZIP - Prediction of Leucine Zippers ePESTfind - Identification of PEST regions HLA_Bind - Prediction of MHC type I (HLA) peptide binding PEPVAC - Prediction of supertypic MHC binders RANKPEP - Prediction of peptide MHC binding SYFPEITHI - Prediction of MHC type I and II peptide binding ProtScale - Amino acid scale representation (Hydrophobicity, other conformational parameters, etc.) Drawhca - Draw an HCA (Hydrophobic Cluster Analysis) plot of a protein sequence Más herramientas en Expasy (II): http://expasy.org/tools/ http://www.isb-sib.ch/ Secondary structure prediction AGADIR - An algorithm to predict the helical content of peptides APSSP - Advanced Protein Secondary Structure Prediction Server CFSSP - Chou & Fasman Secondary Structure Prediction Server GOR - Garnier et al, 1996 HNN - Hierarchical Neural Network method (Guermeur, 1997) HTMSRAP - Helical TransMembrane Segment Rotational Angle Prediction Jpred - A consensus method for protein secondary structure prediction at University of Dundee JUFO - Protein secondary structure prediction from sequence (neural network) NetSurfP - Protein Surface Accessibility and Secondary Structure Predictions NetTurnP - Prediction of Beta-turn regions in protein sequences nnPredict - University of California at San Francisco (UCSF) Porter - University College Dublin PredictProtein - PHDsec, PHDacc, PHDhtm, PHDtopology, PHDthreader, MaxHom, EvalSec from Columbia University Prof - Cascaded Multiple Classifiers for Secondary Structure Prediction PSA - BioMolecular Engineering Research Center (BMERC) / Boston PSIpred - Various protein structure prediction methods at Bloomsbury Centre for Bioinformatics SOPMA - Geourjon and Deléage, 1995 Scratch Protein Predictor DLP-SVM - Domain linker prediction using SVM at Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology Tertiary structure Tertiary structure analysis iMolTalk - An Interactive Protein Structure Analysis Server (currently down) MolTalk - A computational environment for structural bioinformatics COPS - Navigation through fold space and the instantaneous visualization of pairwise structure similarities PoPMuSiC - Prediction of thermodynamic stability changes upon point mutations; design of modified proteins Seq2Struct - A web resource for the identification of sequence-structure links STRAP - A structural alignment program for proteins TLSMD - TLS (Translation/Libration/Screw) Motion Determination TopMatch-web - Protein structure comparison Aún más herramientas en Expasy (III): http://expasy.org/tools/ Tertiary structure prediction Homology modeling SWISS-MODEL - An automated knowledge-based protein modelling server CPHmodels - Automated neural-network based protein modelling server ESyPred3D - Automated homology modeling program using neural networks Geno3d - Automatic modelling of protein three-dimensional structure http://www.isb-sib.ch/ Threading Phyre (Successor of 3D-PSSM) - Automated 3D model building using profile-profile matching and secondary structure Fugue - Sequence-structure homology recognition HHpred - Protein homology detection and structure prediction by HMM-HMM comparison LOOPP - Sequence to sequence, sequence to structure, and structure to structure alignment SAM-T08 - HMM-based Protein Structure Prediction PSIpred - Various protein structure prediction methods (including threading) at Bloomsbury Centre for Bioinformatics Ab initio HMMSTR/Rosetta - Prediction of protein structure from sequence Assessing tertiary structure prediction Anolea - Atomic Non-Local Environment Assessment LiveBench - Continuous Benchmarking of Structure Prediction Servers NQ-Flipper - Validation and correction of asparagine and glutamine side-chain amide rotamers in protein structures solved by X-ray crystallography PROCHECK - Verification of the stereochemical quality of a protein structure ProSA-web - Recognition of errors in 3D structures of proteins QMEAN - Server for Model Quality Estimation What If - Protein structure analysis program for mutant prediction, structure verification, molecular graphics Quaternary structure MakeMultimer - Reconstruction of multimeric molecules present in crystals EBI PISA - Protein Interfaces, Surfaces and Assemblies PQS - Protein Quaternary Structure Query form at the EBI ProtBud - Comparison of asymmetric units and biological units from PDB and PQS Molecular modeling and visualization tools Swiss-PdbViewer - A program to display, analyse and superimpose protein 3D structures SwissDock - Docking of small ligands into protein active sites with EADock DSS …y la lista sigue … Las predicciones a partir de la secuencia de aminoácidos P. ej. Las predicciones a partir de la secuencia de aminoácidos P. ej. ¿Qué significa conocer la conformación de una proteina? Definir el conjunto de los ángulos de torsión para cada aminoácido de una proteína, esto es, phi/psi/omega y todos los chi (chi1, chi2, etc.) resulta equivalente a conocer las coordenadas atómicas (x,y,z) de cada uno de los átomos, esto es, la información depositada en el banco pdb (www.rcsb.org) Ejercicio: extraer una estructura del banco pdb y representarla mediante algún programa de visualización (Pymol, VMD, RasMol o SwissPDBViewer), medir algunos ángulos de torsión característicos Secuencia de IFABP (en formato FASTA): >2IFB:_|PDBID|CHAIN|SEQUENCE AFDGTWKVDRNENYEKFMEKMGINVVKRKLGAHDNLKLTITQEGNKFTVKESSNFRNI DVVFELGVDFAYSLADGTELTGTWTMEGNKLVGKFKRVDNGKELIAVREISGNELIQT YTYEGVEAKRIFKKE Coordenadas atómicas de IFABP (en formato PDB): HEADER COMPND COMPND SOURCE AUTHOR REVDAT REVDAT JRNL JRNL JRNL JRNL JRNL JRNL JRNL REMARK REMARK ... REMARK REMARK SEQRES SEQRES ... FORMUL FORMUL HELIX HELIX SHEET SHEET ... FATTY ACID - BINDING PROTEIN 05 -DEC -90 2IFB INTESTINAL FATTY ACID BINDING PROTEIN (HOLO FORM) 2 (/I -FABP$) RAT (RATTUS $RATTUS) EXPRESSED IN (ESCHERICHIA $COLI) J.C.SACCHETTINI,J.I.GORDON,L.J.BANASZAK 2 30 -APR-94 2IFBA 3 HETATM CONECT 1 15 -JAN-92 2IF B 0 AUTH J.C.SACCHETTINI,J.I.GORDON,L.J.BANASZAK TITL CRYSTAL STRUCTURE OF RAT INTESTINAL TITL 2 FATTY -ACID -BINDING P ROTEIN. REFINEMENT AND ANALYSIS TITL 3 OF THE ESCHERICHIA $COLI -DRIVED PROTEIN WITH BOUND TITL 4 PALMITATE REF J.MOL.BIOL. V. 208 327 1989 REFN ASTM JMOBAK UK ISSN 0022 -2836 070 1 2 2IFB 2 2IFB 3 2IFB 4 2IFB 5 2IFB 6 2IFBA 1 2IFB 7 2IFB 8 2IFB 9 2IFB 10 2IFB 11 2IFB 12 2IFB 13 2IFB 14 2IFB 15 2IFB 16 4 CORRECTION. REVISE ATOM NAMING AND ORDERING FOR HET GROUP 2IFBA 3 4 PLM TO FOLLOW PDB SPECIFICATIONS. 30 -APR-94. 2IFBA 4 1 131 ALA PHE ASP GLY T HR TRP LYS VAL ASP ARG ASN GLU ASN 2IFB 26 2 131 TYR GLU LYS PHE MET GLU LYS MET GLY ILE ASN VAL VAL 2IFB 27 2 3 1 2 1 2 PLM C16 H32 O2 HOH *61(H2 O1) A1 ASN 13 MET A2 ASN 24 HIS B1 6 ASP 3 GLU B1 6 ASP 34 GLU 21 1 33 1 12 0 43 -1 N ILE continua… 40 O GLY 4 2IFB 2IFB 2IFB 2IFB 2IFB 2IFB 38 39 40 41 42 43 IFABP (intestinal fatty acid binding protein) (continuación del archivo PDB) CRYST1 ORIGX1 ORIGX2 ORIGX3 SCALE1 SCALE2 SCALE3 ATOM ATOM ATOM ATOM ATOM ATOM ATOM ATOM ATOM ... MASTER END 36.800 56.900 31.900 90.00 0.027174 0.000000 0.012099 0.000000 0.017575 0.000000 0.000000 0.000000 0.034315 0.027174 0.000000 0.012099 0.000000 0.017575 0.000000 0.000000 0.000000 0.034315 1 N ALA 1 5.210 2 CA ALA 1 4.880 3 C ALA 1 6.063 4 O ALA 1 5.895 5 CB ALA 1 4.579 6 N PHE 2 7.269 7 CA PHE 2 8.399 8 C PHE 2 9.117 9 O PHE 2 10.100 14 0 1 2 11 0 114.00 90.00 P 21 0.00000 0.00000 0.00000 0.00000 0.00000 0.00000 6.162 2.340 1.00 63.97 7.329 3.147 1.00 54.91 8.279 3.211 1.00 45.04 9.480 3.380 1.00 44.89 6.942 4.593 1.00 52.86 7.755 3.072 1.00 30.47 8.620 3.319 1.00 22.66 9. 093 2.072 1.00 24.99 9.827 2.119 1.00 26.08 0 6 1136 1 28 2 11 2IFB 2IFB 2IFB 2IFB 2IFB 2IFB 2IFB 2IFB 2IFB 2IFB 2IFB 2IFB 2IFB 2IFB 2IFB 2IFB 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 IFABP 2IFBA 43 2IFB1226 En el recuadro se muestran los valores de coordenadas atómicas (en Å) La situación actual: un poco de estadística … http://www.rcsb.org/pdb/statistics 28 febrero 2012 Yearly Growth of Total Structures in the PDB El número total de estructuras sigue creciendo a ritmo (casi) exponencial, pero … http://www.rcsb.org/pdb/statistics 28 febrero 2012 el número de ‘folds’(modos de plegado) habría alcanzado un límite? (el panorama según SCOP) http://www.rcsb.org/pdb/statistics 28 febrero 2012 el número de ‘folds’ (modos de plegado) habría alcanzado un límite? (el panorama según CATH) http://www.rcsb.org/pdb/statistics 28 febrero 2012 Rayos X: no hay límite de MW: piensen que se han cristalizado virus enteros o el ribosoma! NMR: limitado por el MW? las nuevas tendencias apuntan más a definir la dinámica que la propia estructura Estructuras por rayos X o por NMR? http://www.rcsb.org/pdb/statistics 28 febrero 2012 Cristalografía de rayos X Los pioneros: la cristalografía de rayos X En 2009 se cumplieron 50 años de la primera estructura de una proteína: la mioglobina insulina http://nobelprize.org/ Cristalografía de rayos X Cristalografía de rayos X: una estación de trabajo Cristalografía de rayos X: la radiación sincrotrón http://nobelprize.org/ http://nobelprize.org/ Resonancia magnética nuclear (NMR) Los pioneros: la resonancia magnética nuclear (NMR) http://nobelprize.org/ Resonancia magnética nuclear (NMR): la estructura y la dinámica de las proteínas Resonancia magnética nuclear (NMR): la estructura y la dinámica de las proteínas Resonancia magnética nuclear (NMR): la estructura y la dinámica de las proteínas … o cómo construir un modelo estructural a partir de: - distancias entre átomos (NOEs), -la orientación relativa de vectores (las uniones químicas, RDCs) y - datos de desplazamiento químico (CSs) La relajación de spins (ps-ns); los acoples dipolares y escalares, los desplazamientos químicos (ps-ms); la dispersión de la relajación (s-ms); la forma de las líneas, el intercambio químico (ms-s); y la técnica de “real time” NMR (s) dan información sobre la dinámica de las proteínas en escalas de tiempo muy diversas Movilidad relativa del esqueleto: un núcleo ordenado y extremos desordenados Kurt Wüthrich La proteína del prión: coexistencia de un dominio ordenado y otro ‘nativamente’ desordenado Kurt Wüthrich El movimiento relativo del esqueleto y de las cadenas laterales Una visión del agua sobre la superficie proteica Kurt Wüthrich Difracción de electrones, microscopía electrónica Los pioneros: la microscopía electrónica como herramienta estructural y los complejos proteína-ácidos nucleicos el nucleosoma el método el virus del mosaico del tabaco http://nobelprize.org/ ¿Cómo estudiar la reacción NU? 1.- Estudios en equilibrio 2.- Estudios cinéticos (cinética rápida: típicamente en la escala de miliseg) Uso de agentes (físicos y químicos) como perturbadores de la conformación: Temperatura, presión hidrostática Urea, cloruro/tiocianato de guanidinio pH, fuerza iónica Aditivos (p.ej. trifluoroetanol: TFE) Técnicas experimentales para estudiar la reacción NU Espectroscopías - Dicroismo circular - Fluorescencia (intrínseca o sondas: p.ej. ANS) - Absorción UV - Resonancia magnética nuclear (NMR) Determinación de forma y tamaño - Dispersión luminosa (scattering) - Dispersión de rayos X (p.ej. SAXS) - Exclusión molecular (p.ej. SEC-FPLC) Alteración química - Proteólisis limitada + SDS-PAGE, HPLC, - Reactividad frente a agentes modificadores ESI/MALDI-MS, NMR - Intercambio H/D en uniones amida Construcción de variantes - Mutagénesis dirigida a sitios - Síntesis de péptidos - Expresión de variantes truncadas, permutadas circularmente - Complementación de fragmentos Termodinámica Estudios funcionales - Microcalorimetría de titulación (ITC) y de barrido (DSC) - Catálisis enzimática - Unión de ligandos ¿Cómo estudiar la reacción NU? 1.- Estudios en equilibrio 2.- Estudios cinéticos (cinética rápida: típicamente en la escala de miliseg) Uso de agentes (físicos y químicos) como perturbadores de la conformación: Temperatura, presión hidrostática Urea, cloruro/tiocianato de guanidinio pH, fuerza iónica Aditivos (p.ej. trifluoroetanol: TFE) Highlights on key conformational techniques: Size Exclusion Chromatography (SEC) combined with Light Scattering (LS) & Chemical Cross-linking (e.g. with a bifunctional reagents such as DSS): - aggregation state of the protein, overall shape and volume Circular Dichroism: - far UV region: secondary (and tertiary) structure - near UV region: tertiary structure - ligand-induced bands: features of the binding site Fluorescence Emission: - Trp environment - Quenching effects: map accessibility of the core region - Interaction between a ligand and a fluorophore: Measurement of the affinity for ligands Highlights on key conformational techniques: Size Exclusion Chromatography (SEC) combined with Light Scattering (LS) & Chemical Cross-linking (e.g. with a bifunctional reagents such as DSS): - aggregation state of the protein, overall shape and volume Circular Dichroism: - far UV region: secondary (and tertiary) structure - near UV region: tertiary structure - ligand-induced bands: features of the binding site Fluorescence Emission: - Trp environment - Quenching effects: map accessibility of the core region - Interaction between a ligand and a fluorophore: Measurement of the affinity for ligands The context where CD becomes a useful tool in biochemistry The folding reaction NU In general, N = function, U = loss of function The binding reaction N + L NL Substrate binding to enzymes Ligand binding to receptors, channels, pumps Drug binding to target proteins An intuitive approach to understand the nature of polarized light and its interaction with matter Unpolarized, linearly (or plane) polarized, and circularly polarized light What is optical rotatory dispersion (ORD)? =[]cl nLnR (Ó ) Two systems to represent a light beam y y z x x Three simple exercises to intuitively understand the (general) nature of polarized light and the CD phenomenon 1. A plane polarized light beam results from the sum of two in phase circularly polarized light beams of opposite sign (R and L) What would happen if the constituent beams were out of phase? 2. A circularly polarized light beam results from the sum of two perpendicular plane polarized light beams dephased + wavelength (= +/2) What would happen if the dephasing were instead - wavelength (= -/2)? What would be the outcome if they were in phase (= 0)? Remember this point to understand the function of the Pockels cell (see block diagram of the apparatus)! 3. A plane polarized light beam -of which one of the circular components (R or L) were differentially absorbed (by a dichroic sample)- would result in an elliptically polarized light beam What would be the orientation of the major axis of the ellipse? What would the result be if -in addition to the differential absorption- dephasing would also occur? Three simple exercises to intuitively understand the (general) nature of polarized light and the CD phenomenon 1. A plane polarized light beam results from the sum of two in phase circularly polarized light beams of opposite sign (R and L) What would happen if the constituent beams were out of phase? 2. A circularly polarized light beam results from the sum of two perpendicular plane polarized light beams dephased + wavelength (= +/2) What would happen if the dephasing were instead - wavelength (= -/2)? What would be the outcome if they were in phase (= 0)? Remember this point to understand the function of the Pockels cell (see block diagram of the apparatus)! 3. A plane polarized light beam -of which one of the circular components (R or L) were differentially absorbed (by a dichroic sample)- would result in an elliptically polarized light beam What would be the orientation of the major axis of the ellipse? What would the result be if -in addition to the differential absorption- dephasing would also occur? Three simple exercises to intuitively understand the (general) nature of polarized light and the CD phenomenon 1. A plane polarized light beam results from the sum of two in phase circularly polarized light beams of opposite sign (R and L) What would happen if the constituent beams were out of phase? 2. A circularly polarized light beam results from the sum of two perpendicular plane polarized light beams dephased + wavelength (= +/2) What would happen if the dephasing were instead - wavelength (= -/2)? What would be the outcome if they were in phase (= 0)? Remember this point to understand the function of the Pockels cell (see block diagram of the apparatus)! 3. A plane polarized light beam -of which one of the circular components (R or L) were differentially absorbed (by a dichroic sample)- would result in an elliptically polarized light beam What would be the orientation of the major axis of the ellipse? What would the result be if -in addition to the differential absorption- dephasing would also occur? Three simple exercises to intuitively understand the (general) nature of polarized light and the CD phenomenon 1. A plane polarized light beam results from the sum of two in phase circularly polarized light beams of opposite sign (R and L) What would happen if the constituent beams were out of phase? 2. A circularly polarized light beam results from the sum of two perpendicular plane polarized light beams dephased + wavelength (= +/2) What would happen if the dephasing were instead - wavelength (= -/2)? What would be the outcome if they were in phase (= 0)? Remember this point to understand the function of the Pockels cell (see block diagram of the apparatus)! 3. A plane polarized light beam -of which one of the circular components (R or L) were differentially absorbed (by a dichroic sample)- would result in an elliptically polarized light beam What would be the orientation of the major axis of the ellipse? What would the result be if -in addition to the differential absorption- dephasing would also occur? Electromagnetic waves and circular dichroism: an animated tutorial By András Szilágyi ([email protected]) www.enzim.hu/~szia/cddemo/edemo0.htm Circular Dichroism (CD), a pictorial view What is Circular Dichroism (CD)? CD is the differential absorption -by an asymmetric chromophoric molecule (the polypeptide chain in our case)- of right and left circularly polarized light beams. The magnitude of CD is measured by the ellipticity (, theta), an angle parameter expressed in (mili)degree units. What is Circular Dichroism (CD)? Two equivalent expressions: ALAR =[]cl A=cl Plane polarized light turns into elliptically polarized light by the differential absorption of an optically active chromophore However, both ORD and CD are different outcomes of the same physical phenomenon, i.e. the interaction of polarized light (ER and EL) with chiral molecules In ORD, the detection consists in evaluating the change in the velocity of the beams (by measuring the change in the index of refraction nR nL) In CD, the detection consists in evaluating the change in the amplitudes: |ER| and |EL| of the beams (through the change in absorption: R L) If CD and ORD are indeed so intimately related, the information derived from each technique is redundant In fact, each spectrum can be converted to the other via the Kronig-Kramers transforms: Nowadays CD is used more often than ORD Superior CD instrumentation (alternate nature of the detection by CD) Band shapes in CD are more narrow and of a single sign, leading to less spread, thus achieving better spectral resolution and facilitating the assignment The asymmetry of chromophores in proteins (amides, aromatic groups and disulfide bridges) is induced by their interaction with neighboring groups (the chemical environment) Estimate secondary structure content Uses of CD Detect conformational changes Measure ligand binding The ORD spectrum looks like the derivative (but it is not) of the CD spectrum, however, the dependence with is different For this reason, it is possible to measure optical activity in regions far from the absorption maximum (e.g. in sugars) By contrast, the high UV absorption of proteins allows the measurement of CD, the concentration is expressed in terms of the mean amino acid residue weight (MRW): MRW = MW / #res Physical conditions allowing the existence of optical activity Optically active transition The Cotton effect is the outcome of the phenomenon of interaction of polarized light with chiral matter Transitions as seen by ORD (dispersive, dashed lines) or CD (absorptive, solid lines): The (quasi)linear relationship existing between molar ellipticity ([]) and the difference in the molar extinction coefficients () Differential LambertBeer’s law Definition of absorbance A Molar ellipticity ([ ]) and the difference in the molar extinction coefficients () are equivalent measurements (convertible by a constant factor) How come [ ] = 3300 ? The basic equations of ORD and CD ORD CD The units: ORD O cm2 dmol-1 CD O cm2 dmol-1 The CD instrument: the spectropolarimeter •Compact benchtop design •Air cooled 150W Xenon lamp or Water cooled 450W Xenon lamp •Highest Signal-to-Noise ratio. Range of precise temperature control accessories Automated titration and stopped-flow accessories •Spectra Manager™ II software for control and data analysis •Spectra Manager™ CFR option for 21 CFR 11 compliance •Flexible design allows field upgrades for different measurement modes and accessories as applications evolve. Measurement modes and Hyphenated techniques Standard •Circular Dichroism/UV/VIS absorbance Optional •Linear Dichroism (LD) •Optical Rotatory Dispersion (ORD) •Total Fluorescence (TF) •Scanning EM Fluorescence •Fluorescence Detected CD (FDCD) •Stopped-Flow CD •Stopped-Flow Absorbance •Stopped-Flow Fluorescence •Chiral HPLC Detection •Magnetic CD (MCD) •Near Infrared CD (NIRCD) Optional Accessories •Peltier cell holders, single and six position •Scanning emission monochomator •Automatic titration system •2, 3, and 4 syringe stopped-flow systems •LD, ORD attachments •Permanent, electro and super-conducting magnets •Near IR extended detection •And many more! J-815 Circular Dichroism Spectrometer Optional Program •Protein secondary structure estimation program •Detatured protein analysis program •Multi-WL variable temperature measurement program •Macro command program •And many more! The CD instrument: the spectropolarimeter Pockels cell Calibration: CSA -4.9 @ 192.5 nm +2.36 @ 290.5 nm The innards of the CD instrument: A block diagram Pockels cell Radiation is split into the two circularly polarized components by passage through a modulator (usually a piezoelectric crystal such as quartz) subjected to an alternating (50 kHz) electric field. The modulator will transmit each of the two components in turn. If, after passage through the sample, the components are not absorbed (or are absorbed to the same extent), combination of the components would regenerate radiation polarized in the original plane. However, if one of the components is absorbed by the sample to a greater extent than the other, the resultant (combined component) radiation would now be elliptically polarized, i.e., the resultant would trace out an ellipse. Practical aspects I: Manufacturers: Horiba-Jobin Yvon, Jasco, AVIV A ~ 10-4 A More potent light sources vs. efficient photodetectors (PMT), enhanced electronics to suppress noise 1 to 10 cm cells in the near UV region: to detect weak signals, and 1, 0.5, 0.1 mm (and even 0.05 and 0.01 mm!) cells in the far UV region, to minimize solvent absorption Continuous N2 flow: to avoid ozone damage to the optics (mirrors) It is essential to accurately know the protein concentration in the sample: by spectrophotometry (using a reliable value), or by quantitative amino acid analysis Practical aspects II: Reduce spectral noise via: - sum of several scans/digital smoothing (Savitzky-Golay, FT) - increase data collection time (especially so in the very far UV region, where the absorption is high, e.g. 1 nm/min and 4 sec time constant). In general, follow the rule of thumb: Scan speed (nm/sec) times Time constant (sec) < 0.33 - alternate spectrum collection of the sample with blanks (buffer) and standards (known protein samples, etc.) Keep transparency of buffers (choice of phosphates, perchlorate, borates,Tris, in this order) and additives (DTT or ME < 1 mM, EDTA < 0.1 mM) CD measurements can be carried out on samples that disperse light significantly (e.g. membrane proteins in micelles or liposomes). MOPS, lubrol and SDS are acceptable The information content of the spectrum increases a lot at low wavelengths (if possible, scan up to < 190 nm) How CD becomes useful to understand protein structure Nowadays, CD is used more often than ORD Availability of superior instrumentation (alternate nature of detection in CD) Less ‘spread’ of bands in CD -of only one-sign and more narrow- allows better spectral resolution and easier assignment Chromophore asymmetry in proteins (amide groups, aromatic groups and disulfide bridges) is induced by the chirality of the chemical environment Estimate the secondary structure content of a protein Main uses Detect conformational changes Measure ligand binding Common applications of circular dichroism (CD) in proteins and peptides: - Estimate secondary structure content - Evaluate conformational changes - Measure ligand binding phenomena The possibility exists to carry out both equilibrium and kinetic experiments The electronic transitions in proteins: The peptide bond: n * (br, w) ~ 210 nm * (sh, s) ~ 190 nm Cystine: S 3 S Far UV region (180-250 nm) …and the aromatic residues (see below) Aromatic residues (optically inactive per se, but placed in asymmetric environments): W, Y, F, H, Cystine (w, ~ 280 nm) … also prosthetic groups (e.g. heme) and metalloproteins Near UV region (250-340 nm) Circular Dichroism (CD) (CD) CD in the far UV region (180-240 nm) -where the peptide bond absorbs light- reports on the overall content of secondary structure Circular Dichroism (CD) 50 ES-L S126C S265C ES-L S126C ES-L S265C ES-L 0 0 M, WT 42 0.0 M, trunc. 2.0 M, trunc. 5.0 M, trunc. 28 6.6 M, trunc. 6.6 M, WT -50 14 -100 0 -150 -14 250 260 270 280 290 300 310 Wavelength (nm) 320 330 250 260 270 280 290 300 310 320 Wavelength (nm) Javier Santos The CD in the near UV region (240-340 nm) -where the side-chain chromophores of W,Y,F,H and the disulfide bonds absorb light- reveal features of the tertiary structure (asymmetric environments): a ‘fingerprint’ of the protein Estimate secondary structure content The reference spectra (basis set) for the different types of secondary structure: helix, sheet, and random coil A critical point is the wise choice of standards Based on amino acid polymers: poly-K, poly-E (Fasman) Problem: dependency on the length of helices, sheets or coils, uncertain contribution of turns Based on known 3D structures taken from the PDB: helix, parallel and antiparallel sheet, type I, II and III turns (Wetlaufer) Spectral deconvolution into standard components There are several methods to deconvolute (decompose) spectra, so that secondary structure content can be extracted: SSE CONTIN BELOK VARSLC 1 Self-consistent LINCOMB/CCA (convex constraint analysis) BPNN (use of neural networks) SOM-BPN PROT CD Check the DICHROWEB site: www.cryst.bbk.ac.uk/cdweb/html Nevertheless, problems persist in regard to the reliability of the basis sets (e.g. there is less information on structure than on structure), and the variable contribution of aromatic residues in this spectral region (see below) All proteins All proteins + proteins / proteins Disordered proteins The contribution of aromatic residues A cautionary note whenever interpreting the contributions to []222! Ligand binding: calcium binding to calmodulin The binding of an intercalator molecule to dsDNA Two coupled equilibria: the folding of protein P and the binding of anionic ligands Two structurally related proteins exhibiting very different folding mechanisms: bovine alpha-lactalbumin ( -LA) and lysozyme (HEWL) HEWL apo -LA HEWL apo -LA CD reveals the presence of folding intermediates: -LA vs. HEWL U U N N HEWL MG -LA (Kuwajima) The ‘molten globule’ (MG) state of -LA conserves the dichroic signal in the far UV zone, but loses the signal in the near UV region U/MG U N N HEWL -LA Another example of a molten globule (MG): Conservation of secondary structure with loss of tertiary interactions, a critical step for the insertion of colicin A in membranes pH 2 pH 2 pH 7 pH 7 The channel polypeptide P190 changes its conformation as a function of pH Folding kinetics detected by CD (time resolved CD) The case of cytochrome c (Elöve, Englander, Roder) Folding kinetics of HEWL and -LA (Kuwajima) Some sites of interest on circular dichroism (CD): Brief introduction, tutorial with examples and programs: www.imbjena.de/ImgLibDoc/cd/index.htm Brief critical analysis of the technique: www.cryst.bbk.ac.uk/PPS2/course/section8/ss_960531_21.html CD class with applications to proteins and nucleic acids: www.newark.rutgers.edu/chemistry/grad/chem585/lecture1.html Practical aspects of conformational transitions: www.ap-lab.com/circular_dichroism.htm Basic concepts and instrumentation: www.ruppweb.org/cd/cdtutorial.htm Animations on polarized light: www.enzim.hu/~szia/cddemo/edemo0.htm A database on CD spectra (under construction): pcddb.cryst.bbk.ac.uk On the deconvolution of CD spectra with DICHROWEB: www.cryst.bbk.ac.uk/cdweb/html Simple tutorial with a focus on applications: wwwstructure.llnl.gov/cd/cdtutorial.htm Reference books 1979 2005 1997 1996 2009 1984 1998 1980 The Greenfield papers: Norma J Greenfield ‘Determination of the folding of proteins as a function of denaturants, osmolytes or ligands using circular dichroism’ Nat Protoc. 2006 ; 1(6): 2733-2741 Norma J Greenfield 'Using circular dichroism collected as a function of temperature to determine the thermodynamics of protein unfolding and binding interactions Nat Protoc. 2006 ; 1(6): 2527-2535 Norma J Greenfield ‘Using circular dichroism spectra to estimate protein secondary structure’ Nat Protoc. 2006 ; 1(6): 2876-2890 Norma J Greenfield ‘Analysis of the kinetics of folding of proteins and peptides using circular dichroism’ Nat Protoc. 2006 ; 1(6): 2891-2899 The Cotton effect is the manifestation of the interaction phenomenon of polarized light with the chiral matter Here it is how it looks like by ORD and CD: El instrumento de medida: el espectropolarímetro Celda de Pockels La calibración del espectropolarímetro CSA Rango A280 ~ 0.4-1.0 en proteína -4.9 @ 192.5 nm +2.36 @ 290.5 nm