| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5138642 | Journal of Proteomics | 2016 | 8 Pages | 
Abstract
												The isotopically labeled short-range non-specific crosslinker TATA-12C3/13C3 was characterized for use in crosslinking-based protein structural studies. The crosslinking products of TATA can provide a distance constraint of merely 5Ǻ between crosslinked residues. TATA-12C3/13C3 had broad reactivity, crosslinking a wide variety of amino acids, including lysine, glutamic and aspartic acid, asparagine, glutamine, glycine, alanine, valine, proline, methionine, serine, cysteine, tyrosine, and the N-terminus. The short-distance crosslinking constraints provided by TATA allowed us to predict the fold of myoglobin using a combination of these distance constraints with a prediction of myoglobin's secondary structure motifs. TATA was also used to crosslink α-synuclein in its native, molten globule form, which has not been characterized using other structural biology techniques. The distance constraints provided by the crosslinks allowed for the manual modeling of a rudimentary structure for the α-synuclein monomer.
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											Authors
												Nicholas I. Brodie, Evgeniy V. Petrotchenko, Christoph H. Borchers, 
											