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. 2000 May;17(1):17-32.
doi: 10.1023/a:1008311703619.

Accuracy of bound peptide structures determined by exchange transferred nuclear Overhauser data: a simulation study

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Accuracy of bound peptide structures determined by exchange transferred nuclear Overhauser data: a simulation study

E Z Eisenmesser et al. J Biomol NMR. 2000 May.

Abstract

The exchange-transferred NOE method to determine the three-dimensional structure of peptides bound to proteins, or other macromolecular systems, is becoming increasingly important in drug design efforts and for large or multicomponent assemblies, such as membrane receptors, where structural analysis of the full system is intractable. The exchange-transferred nuclear Overhauser effect spectroscopy (etNOESY) method allows the determination of the bound-state conformation of the peptide from the intra-molecular NOE interactions between ligand protons. Because only ligand-ligand NOEs are generally observable, the etNOESY method is restricted to fewer NOEs per residue than direct protein structure determination. In addition, the averaging of relaxation rates between free and bound states affects the measured cross-peak intensities, and possibly the accuracy of distance estimates. Accordingly, the study reported here was conducted to examine the conditions required to define a reliable structure. The program CORONA was used to simulate etNOE data using a rate-matrix including magnetic relaxation and exchange rates for two peptide-protein complexes derived from the reference complex of cAMP-dependent protein kinase ligated with a 24-residue inhibitor peptide. The results indicate that reasonably accurate peptide structures can be determined with relatively few NOE interactions when the interactions occur between non-neighboring residues. The reliability of the structural result is suggested from the pattern of NOE interactions. A structure with an accuracy of approximately 1.3 A rms difference for the main-chain atoms can be obtained when etNOE interactions between non-neighboring residues occur over the length of the peptide. The global precision is higher (approximately 0.9 A rms difference) but is not correlated to global accuracy. A local definition of precision along the backbone appears to be a good indicator of the local accuracy.

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