TY - JOUR
T1 - Cross-saturation and transferred cross-saturation experiments
AU - Ueda, Takumi
AU - Takeuchi, Koh
AU - Nishida, Noritaka
AU - Stampoulis, Pavlos
AU - Kofuku, Yutaka
AU - Osawa, Masanori
AU - Shimada, Ichio
N1 - Funding Information:
I.S. is grateful to Drs. Hiroaki Terasawa, Tamiji Nakanishi, Mariko Yokogawa, Mitsuhiro Takeda, and Mr. Shinji Ogino and Mr. Osamu Ichikawa for their assistance. This work was supported by a grant from the Japan New Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization (NEDO).
PY - 2014/5
Y1 - 2014/5
N2 - Structural analyses of protein-protein interactions are required to reveal their functional mechanisms, and accurate protein-protein complex models, based on experimental results, are the starting points for drug development. In addition, structural information about proteins under physiologically relevant conditions is crucially important for understanding biological events. However, for proteins such as those embedded in lipid bilayers and transiently complexed with their effectors under physiological conditions, structural analyses by conventional methods are generally difficult, due to their large molecular weights and inhomogeneity. We have developed the cross-saturation (CS) method, which is an nuclear magnetic resonance measurement technique for the precise identification of the interfaces of protein-protein complexes. In addition, we have developed an extended version of the CS method, termed transferred cross-saturation (TCS), which enables the identification of the residues of protein ligands in close proximity to huge (>150 kDa) and heterogeneous complexes under fast exchange conditions (>0.1 s-1). Here, we discuss the outline, basic theory, and practical considerations of the CS and TCS methods. In addition, we will review the recent progress in the construction of models of protein-protein complexes, based on CS and TCS experiments, and applications of TCS to in situ analyses of biologically and medically important proteins in physiologically relevant states.
AB - Structural analyses of protein-protein interactions are required to reveal their functional mechanisms, and accurate protein-protein complex models, based on experimental results, are the starting points for drug development. In addition, structural information about proteins under physiologically relevant conditions is crucially important for understanding biological events. However, for proteins such as those embedded in lipid bilayers and transiently complexed with their effectors under physiological conditions, structural analyses by conventional methods are generally difficult, due to their large molecular weights and inhomogeneity. We have developed the cross-saturation (CS) method, which is an nuclear magnetic resonance measurement technique for the precise identification of the interfaces of protein-protein complexes. In addition, we have developed an extended version of the CS method, termed transferred cross-saturation (TCS), which enables the identification of the residues of protein ligands in close proximity to huge (>150 kDa) and heterogeneous complexes under fast exchange conditions (>0.1 s-1). Here, we discuss the outline, basic theory, and practical considerations of the CS and TCS methods. In addition, we will review the recent progress in the construction of models of protein-protein complexes, based on CS and TCS experiments, and applications of TCS to in situ analyses of biologically and medically important proteins in physiologically relevant states.
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U2 - 10.1017/S0033583514000043
DO - 10.1017/S0033583514000043
M3 - Article
C2 - 24780282
AN - SCOPUS:84907598043
SN - 0033-5835
VL - 47
SP - 143
EP - 187
JO - Quarterly Reviews of Biophysics
JF - Quarterly Reviews of Biophysics
IS - 2
ER -