Suzanna Bennett
Ph.D. Student in Molecular and Cellular Physiology, admitted Autumn 2018
All Publications
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Non-Additive Effects of Binding Site Mutations in Calmodulin
BIOCHEMISTRY
2019; 58 (24): 2730–39
Abstract
Despite decades of research on ion-sensing proteins, gaps persist in the understanding of ion binding affinity and selectivity even in well-studied proteins such as calmodulin. Site-directed mutagenesis is a powerful and popular tool for addressing outstanding questions about biological ion binding and is employed to selectively deactivate binding sites and insert chromophores at advantageous positions within ion binding structures. However, even apparently nonperturbative mutations can distort the binding dynamics they are employed to measure. We use Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) and ultrafast two-dimensional infrared (2D IR) spectroscopy of the carboxylate asymmetric stretching mode in calmodulin as a mutation- and label-independent probe of the conformational perturbations induced in calmodulin's binding sites by two classes of mutation, tryptophan insertion and carboxylate side-chain deletion, commonly used to study ion binding in proteins. Our results show that these mutations not only affect ion binding but also induce changes in calmodulin's conformational landscape along coordinates not probed by vibrational spectroscopy, remaining invisible without additional perturbation of binding site structure. Comparison of FTIR line shapes with 2D IR diagonal slices provides a clear example of how nonlinear spectroscopy produces well-resolved line shapes, refining otherwise featureless spectral envelopes into more informative vibrational spectra of proteins.
View details for DOI 10.1021/acs.biochem.9b00096
View details for Web of Science ID 000472682700006
View details for PubMedID 31124357
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Ultrafast vibrational spectroscopy reveals non-additive effects of mutation on binding site structure
AMER CHEMICAL SOC. 2019
View details for Web of Science ID 000478861202459