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S and monitoring of the folding process, thus providing a better understanding of protein structure-function relationships [2,6,7]. Proteins such as the Human Carbonic Anhydrase (HCAII) are characterized by remarkably complex contributions of the aromatic chromophores (mainly from the seven tryptophans and eight tyrosines) to the CD spectra. A comprehensive experimental investigation of the wild-type enzyme and seven tryptophan mutant forms of the enzyme 374913-63-0 revealed that the tryptophan chromophores not only determine the near-UV CD spectral features of the protein but also contribute sensitively to the far-UV region [8]. In addition the CD spectrum of the wild type enzyme was calculated using the matrix method [9], with ab initio monopoles. Calculations of the CD spectra of the tryptophan mutants were done by the matrix method using semi-empirical monopoles [10] and in the case for 23727046 W192F ab initio monopoles were used [9]. All calculations are based on single crystalConformational Effects on the Circular Dichroismstructures. The experimental CD spectrum of HCAII in the nearUV region is considered as complex, and indicative of complicated aromatic chromophore 58-49-1 manufacturer interactions [8]. The recent development of computational chemistry methods and high performance computing provides advanced opportunities for analyzing such complex protein spectral properties which are potentially insightful for better understanding of protein structure-function relationships. Carbonic anhydrase (EC 4.2.1.1) is a zinc-containing metalloenzyme that catalyzes the reversible conversion of carbon dioxide to a bicarbonate anion and a proton [11]. The enzyme form studied here, the Human Carbonic Anhydrase II (HCAII), is located in erythrocytes and is one of the most active enzymes known to date. It consists of one polypeptide chain organized in a single domain protein without any disulfide bonds. The structure is primarily dominated by a b-sheet which spans along the entire molecule and has a small a-helical content (Figure 1). Relative to the average protein in humans, Trp is about twice as abundant in HCAII (2.7 vs 1.4 ), whereas the abundance of the Tyr in HCAII is comparable to that in the average protein (3.1 vs 3.2 ). [12]. It has also been shown experimentally that these chromophores and their interactions have a strong impact on the near-UV and far-UV CD [8]. Tryptophans W97, W123, W192, W209 and W245 are positioned in a b-sheet with tryptophan; W97 being deeply buried. In addition tryptophans W5, W16 and W97 are located in aromatic clusters, which might influence the coupling interactions between them that would reflect in the resulting CD spectrum. Nevertheless, recent studies do not facilitate a better understanding of the underlying mechanisms of interaction between the aromatic chromophores which generate the CD spectra. In addition, due to the protein conformational flexibility these aromatic interactions would potentially have some dynamic nature which is important to explore. Providing such insight could be an excellent opportunity to demonstrate the synergy effect from integrated application of multilevel computational methods in correlation with the available structural and spectroscopic data. This paper presents a comprehensive multilevel computational study of the CD properties of HCAII in correlation with theexperimental CD spectra, which is performed with the following objectives: i) understanding the mechanisms of generation of the nearUV CD spectru.S and monitoring of the folding process, thus providing a better understanding of protein structure-function relationships [2,6,7]. Proteins such as the Human Carbonic Anhydrase (HCAII) are characterized by remarkably complex contributions of the aromatic chromophores (mainly from the seven tryptophans and eight tyrosines) to the CD spectra. A comprehensive experimental investigation of the wild-type enzyme and seven tryptophan mutant forms of the enzyme revealed that the tryptophan chromophores not only determine the near-UV CD spectral features of the protein but also contribute sensitively to the far-UV region [8]. In addition the CD spectrum of the wild type enzyme was calculated using the matrix method [9], with ab initio monopoles. Calculations of the CD spectra of the tryptophan mutants were done by the matrix method using semi-empirical monopoles [10] and in the case for 23727046 W192F ab initio monopoles were used [9]. All calculations are based on single crystalConformational Effects on the Circular Dichroismstructures. The experimental CD spectrum of HCAII in the nearUV region is considered as complex, and indicative of complicated aromatic chromophore interactions [8]. The recent development of computational chemistry methods and high performance computing provides advanced opportunities for analyzing such complex protein spectral properties which are potentially insightful for better understanding of protein structure-function relationships. Carbonic anhydrase (EC 4.2.1.1) is a zinc-containing metalloenzyme that catalyzes the reversible conversion of carbon dioxide to a bicarbonate anion and a proton [11]. The enzyme form studied here, the Human Carbonic Anhydrase II (HCAII), is located in erythrocytes and is one of the most active enzymes known to date. It consists of one polypeptide chain organized in a single domain protein without any disulfide bonds. The structure is primarily dominated by a b-sheet which spans along the entire molecule and has a small a-helical content (Figure 1). Relative to the average protein in humans, Trp is about twice as abundant in HCAII (2.7 vs 1.4 ), whereas the abundance of the Tyr in HCAII is comparable to that in the average protein (3.1 vs 3.2 ). [12]. It has also been shown experimentally that these chromophores and their interactions have a strong impact on the near-UV and far-UV CD [8]. Tryptophans W97, W123, W192, W209 and W245 are positioned in a b-sheet with tryptophan; W97 being deeply buried. In addition tryptophans W5, W16 and W97 are located in aromatic clusters, which might influence the coupling interactions between them that would reflect in the resulting CD spectrum. Nevertheless, recent studies do not facilitate a better understanding of the underlying mechanisms of interaction between the aromatic chromophores which generate the CD spectra. In addition, due to the protein conformational flexibility these aromatic interactions would potentially have some dynamic nature which is important to explore. Providing such insight could be an excellent opportunity to demonstrate the synergy effect from integrated application of multilevel computational methods in correlation with the available structural and spectroscopic data. This paper presents a comprehensive multilevel computational study of the CD properties of HCAII in correlation with theexperimental CD spectra, which is performed with the following objectives: i) understanding the mechanisms of generation of the nearUV CD spectru.

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Author: bet-bromodomain.