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A Study of Phenylalanine Side-Chain Dynamics in Surface-Adsorbed Peptides Using Solid-State Deuterium NMR and Rotamer Library Statistics
Extracellular matrix
proteins adsorbed onto mineral surfaces exist
in a unique environment where the structure and dynamics of the protein
can be altered profoundly. To further elucidate how the mineral surface
impacts molecular properties, we perform a comparative study of the
dynamics of nonpolar side chains within the mineral-recognition domain
of the biomineralization protein salivary statherin adsorbed onto
its native hydroxyapatite (HAP) mineral surface versus the dynamics
displayed by the native protein in the hydrated solid state. Specifically,
the dynamics of phenylalanine side chains (viz., F7 and F14) located
in the surface-adsorbed 15-amino acid HAP-recognition fragment (SN15:
DpSpSEEKFLRRIGRFG) are studied using deuterium magic angle spinning
(<sup>2</sup>H MAS) line shape and spin–lattice relaxation
measurements. <sup>2</sup>H NMR MAS spectra and <i>T</i><sub>1</sub> relaxation times obtained from the deuterated phenylalanine
side chains in free and HAP-adsorbed SN15 are fitted to models where
the side chains are assumed to exchange between rotameric states and
where the exchange rates and a priori rotameric state populations
are varied iteratively. In condensed proteins, phenylalanine side-chain
dynamics are dominated by 180° flips of the phenyl ring, i.e.,
the “π flip”. However, for both F7 and F14, the
number of exchanging side-chain rotameric states increases in the
HAP-bound complex relative to the unbound solid sample, indicating
that increased dynamic freedom accompanies introduction of the protein
into the biofilm state. The observed rotameric exchange dynamics in
the HAP-bound complex are on the order of 5–6 × 10<sup>6</sup> s<sup>–1</sup>, as determined from the deuterium MAS
line shapes. The dynamics in the HAP-bound complex are also shown
to have some solution-like behavioral characteristics, with some interesting
deviations from rotameric library statistics