4.5 Article

NMR Studies of Aromatic Ring Flips to Probe Conformational Fluctuations in Proteins

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY B
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpcb.2c07258

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Aromatic residues play an important role in the protein core, interacting tightly with surrounding side chains. The rotations, or flips, of phenylalanine and tyrosine residues are mediated by breathing motions, creating void volume around the aromatic ring. Recent advancements in NMR methods have allowed for studying the mechanisms and energetics of aromatic ring flips, which can provide valuable insights into protein dynamics.
Aromatic residues form a significant part of the protein core, where they make tight interactions with multiple surrounding side chains. Despite the dense packing of internal side chains, the aromatic rings of phenylalanine and tyrosine residues undergo 180 degrees rotations, or flips, which are mediated by transient and large-scale breathing motions that generate sufficient void volume around the aromatic ring. Forty years after the seminal work by Wagner and Wu''thrich, NMR studies of aromatic ring flips are now undergoing a renaissance as a powerful means of probing fundamental dynamic properties of proteins. Recent developments of improved NMR methods and isotope labeling schemes have enabled a number of advances in addressing the mechanisms and energetics of aromatic ring flips. The nature of the transition states associated with ring flips can be described by thermodynamic activation parameters, including the activation enthalpy, activation entropy, activation volume, and also the isothermal volume compressibility of activation. Consequently, it is of great interest to study how ring flip rate constants and activation parameters might vary with protein structure and external conditions like temperature and pressure. The field is beginning to gather such data for aromatic residues in a variety of environments, ranging from surface exposed to buried. In the future, the combination of solution and solid-state NMR spectroscopy together with molecular dynamics simulations and other computational approaches is likely to provide detailed information about the coupled dynamics of aromatic rings and neighboring residues. In this Perspective, we highlight recent developments and provide an outlook toward the future.

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