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Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1999 Jan 5;96(1):103-8.Disordered water within a hydrophobic protein cavity visualized by x-ray crystallography.Yu B, Blaber M, Gronenborn AM, Clore GM, Caspar DL.Institute of Molecular Biophysics, Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL 32306-4380, USA. Water in the hydrophobic cavity of human interleukin 1beta, which was detected
by NMR spectroscopy but was invisible by high resolution x-ray crystallography,
has been mapped quantitatively by measurement and phasing of all of the low
resolution x-ray diffraction data from a single crystal. Phases for the low
resolution data were refined by iterative density modification of an initial
flat solvent model outside the envelope of the atomic model. The refinement was
restrained by the condition that the map of the difference between the electron
density distribution in the full unit cell and that of the atomic model be flat
within the envelope of the well ordered protein structure. Care was taken to
avoid overfitting the diffraction data by maintaining phases for the high
resolution data from the atomic model and by a resolution-dependent damping of
the structure factor differences between data and model. The cavity region in
the protein could accommodate up to four water molecules. The refined solvent
difference map indicates that there are about two water molecules in the cavity
region. This map is compatible with an atomic model of the water distribution
refined by using XPLOR. About 70% of the time, there appears to be a water dimer
in the central hydrophobic cavity, which is connected to the outside by two
constricted channels occupied by single water molecules approximately 40% of the
time on one side and approximately 10% on the other.
PMID: 9874779 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE] |
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www.sb.fsu.edu/~xray/Pubs/99yu.html
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