Web Release Date: July 29,
Structural and Dynamic Characteristics of a Partially Folded State of Ubiquitin
Revealed by Hydrogen Exchange Mass Spectrometry
Department of Chemistry, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Massachusetts 01003
Received May 23, 2005
Revised Manuscript Received June 26, 2005

Abstract:
Structural and dynamic properties of a partially folded conformation (A-state) of ubiquitin are
studied using amide hydrogen exchange in solution (HDX) and mass spectrometric detection. A clear
distinction between the native state of the protein and the A-state can be made when HDX is carried out
in a semicorrelated regime. Convoluted exchange patterns are interpreted with the aid of HDX simulations
in a three-state system (highly structured, partially unstructured, and fully unstructured states). The data
clearly indicate a highly dynamic character of the non-native state. Furthermore, combination of HDX
and protein ion fragmentation in the gas phase [by means of collision-induced dissociation (CAD)] is
used to evaluate the conformational stability of various protein segments specifically in the molten globular
state. Chain flexibility appears to be distributed very unevenly in this non-native conformation. The highest
degree of structural disorder is displayed by the C-terminal segment (Gly53-Gly76), which was previously
suggested to form a transient
-helix. The least dynamic segment of ubiquitin in the A-state is Thr9-Glu18 (which was previously suggested to form a stable nativelike
-strand), with the adjacent segments
exhibiting somewhat diminished conformational stability. The study also demonstrates the power of mass
spectrometry as a tool in providing conformer-specific information about the structure and dynamics of
both native and non-native protein states coexisting in solution under equilibrium.
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