Isomerization Kinetics of AT Hook Decapeptide Solution
Structures
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Abstract
The
mammalian high mobility group protein HMGA2 contains three
DNA binding motifs associated with many physiological functions including
oncogenesis, obesity, stem cell youth, human height, and human intelligence.
In the present paper, trapped ion mobility spectrometry-mass spectrometry
(TIMS-MS) has been utilized to study the conformational dynamics of
the third DNA binding motif using the “AT hook” decapeptide
unit (Lys<sup>1</sup>-Arg<sup>2</sup>-Prol<sup>3</sup>-Arg<sup>4</sup>-Gly<sup>5</sup>-Arg<sup>6</sup>-Prol<sup>7</sup>-Arg<sup>8</sup>-Lys<sup>9</sup>-Trp<sup>10</sup>, ATHP) as a function of the solvent
state. Solvent state distributions were preserved during electrospray
ion formation, and multiple IMS bands were identified for the [M +
2H]<sup>2+</sup> and for the [M + 3H]<sup>3+</sup> charge states.
Conformational isomer interconversion rates were measured as a function
of the trapping time for the [M + 2H]<sup>2+</sup> and [M + 3H]<sup>3+</sup> charge states. Candidate structures were proposed for all
IMS bands observed. Protonation site, proline residue conformation,
and side chain orientations were identified as the main motifs governing
the conformational interconversion processes. Conformational dynamics
from the solvent state distribution to the gas-phase “de-solvated”
state distribution demonstrated that ATHP is “structured”,
and relative abundances are associated with the relative stability
between the proposed conformers. The most stable ATHP [M + 2H]<sup>2+</sup> conformation at the “de-solvated” state corresponds
to the AT hook motif observed in AT-rich DNA regions