Publication | Open Access
Quantitative NMR analysis of the protein G B1 domain in <i>Xenopus laevis</i> egg extracts and intact oocytes
232
Citations
18
References
2006
Year
OocyteMolecular BiologyVivo Nmr MeasurementsCytoskeletonReproductive BiologyProtein FoldingXenopus Laevis OocyteBiophysicsQuantitative Nmr AnalysisIntact OocytesQuantitative Nmr ExperimentsProtein FunctionBiomolecular AnalysisSolution Nmr SpectroscopyGene ExpressionCell BiologyStructural BiologyBiophysical AspectBiologyOogenesisNatural SciencesProtein NmrMedicine
We introduce a eukaryotic cellular system, the Xenopus laevis oocyte, for in-cell NMR analyses of biomolecules at high resolution and delineate the experimental reference conditions for successful implementations of in vivo NMR measurements in this cell type. This approach enables quantitative NMR experiments at defined intracellular concentrations of exogenous proteins, which is exemplified by the description of in-cell NMR properties of the protein G B1 domain (GB1). Additional experiments in Xenopus egg extracts and artificially crowded in vitro solutions suggest that for this biologically inert protein domain, intracellular viscosity and macromolecular crowding dictate its in vivo behavior. These contributions appear particularly pronounced for protein regions with high degrees of internal mobility in the pure state. We also evaluate the experimental limitations of this method and discuss potential applications toward the in situ structural characterization of eukaryotic cellular activities.
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