Skip to Content
Merck
CN
  • Hydrogen exchange differences between chemoreceptor signaling complexes localize to functionally important subdomains.

Hydrogen exchange differences between chemoreceptor signaling complexes localize to functionally important subdomains.

Biochemistry (2014-11-25)
Seena S Koshy, Xuni Li, Stephen J Eyles, Robert M Weis, Lynmarie K Thompson
ABSTRACT

The goal of understanding mechanisms of transmembrane signaling, one of many key life processes mediated by membrane proteins, has motivated numerous studies of bacterial chemotaxis receptors. Ligand binding to the receptor causes a piston motion of an α helix in the periplasmic and transmembrane domains, but it is unclear how the signal is then propagated through the cytoplasmic domain to control the activity of the associated kinase CheA. Recent proposals suggest that signaling in the cytoplasmic domain involves opposing changes in dynamics in different subdomains. However, it has been difficult to measure dynamics within the functional system, consisting of extended arrays of receptor complexes with two other proteins, CheA and CheW. We have combined hydrogen exchange mass spectrometry with vesicle template assembly of functional complexes of the receptor cytoplasmic domain to reveal that there are significant signaling-associated changes in exchange, and these changes localize to key regions of the receptor involved in the excitation and adaptation responses. The methylation subdomain exhibits complex changes that include slower hydrogen exchange in complexes in a kinase-activating state, which may be partially consistent with proposals that this subdomain is stabilized in this state. The signaling subdomain exhibits significant protection from hydrogen exchange in complexes in a kinase-activating state, suggesting a tighter and/or larger interaction interface with CheA and CheW in this state. These first measurements of the stability of protein subdomains within functional signaling complexes demonstrate the promise of this approach for measuring functionally important protein dynamics within the various physiologically relevant states of multiprotein complexes.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Sigma-Aldrich
Nickel, foil, thickness 0.1 mm, 99.98% trace metals basis
Sigma-Aldrich
Nickel, foil, thickness 0.5 mm, 99.98% trace metals basis
Sigma-Aldrich
Nickel, rod, diam. 6.35 mm, ≥99.99% trace metals basis
Nickel, pellets, 50g, max. size 10mm, 99.999%
Supelco
L-Lysine, analytical standard
Sigma-Aldrich
L-Lysine, ≥98% (TLC)
Sigma-Aldrich
L-Lysine acetate salt, ≥98% (HPLC)
Sigma-Aldrich
L-Lysine, crystallized, ≥98.0% (NT)
Nickel, foil, 100x100mm, thickness 1.0mm, as rolled, 99.99+%
Sigma-Aldrich
Nickel, nanopowder, <100 nm avg. part. size, ≥99% trace metals basis
Nickel, foil, light tested, 100x100mm, thickness 0.025mm, 99.9%
Nickel, wire reel, 5m, diameter 0.025mm, as drawn, 99.98%
Nickel, foil, 5m coil, thickness 0.05mm, annealed, 99%
Nickel, wire reel, 0.1m, diameter 0.75mm, as drawn, 99.99+%
Nickel, foil, 0.5m coil, thickness 0.025mm, 99.9%
Sigma-Aldrich
Nickel, wire, diam. 0.5 mm, ≥99.9% trace metals basis
Nickel, foil, 0.5m coil, thickness 0.0075mm, 99.95%
Nickel, foil, 0.2m coil, thickness 0.005mm, as rolled, 99.9%
Nickel, rod, 200mm, diameter 10.0mm, 99.99+%
Nickel, foil, light tested, 100x100mm, thickness 0.05mm, 99.9%
Nickel, foil, 0.5m coil, thickness 0.0125mm, 99.9%
Nickel, foil, not light tested, 300x300mm, thickness 0.0125mm, 99.9%
Nickel, foil, not light tested, 25x25mm, thickness 0.001mm, 99.95%
Nickel, foil, 1m coil, thickness 0.075mm, annealed, 99%
Nickel, foil, 25x25mm, thickness 0.3mm, annealed, 99%
Nickel, foil, light tested, 25x25mm, thickness 0.025mm, annealed, 99%
Nickel, foil, 100x100mm, thickness 0.25mm, as rolled, 99.99+%
Nickel, mesh, 30x30mm, nominal aperture 0.34mm, thickness 0.025mm, wire diameter 0.041mm, 70 wires/inch, open area 80%, electro-formed mesh, 99.9%
Nickel, rod, 1000mm, diameter 3.0mm, 99%
Nickel, foil, 10mm disks, thickness 0.05mm, 99.9%