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Small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) is a relatively simple experimental technique that provides information on the global conformation of macromolecules in solution, be they fully structured, partially, or extensively unfolded. Size exclusion chromatography in line with a SAXS measuring cell considerably improves the monodispersity and ideality of solutions, the two main requirements of a "good" SAXS sample. Hydrogen/deuterium exchange monitored by mass spectrometry (HDX-MS) offers a wealth of information regarding the solvent accessibility at the local (peptide) level. It constitutes a sensitive probe of local flexibility and, more generally, of structural dynamics. The combination of both approaches presented here is very powerful, as illustrated by the case of RD, a calcium-binding protein that is part of a bacterial virulence factor.

Original publication

DOI

10.1002/bab.1577

Type

Journal article

Journal

Biotechnology and applied biochemistry

Publication Date

01/2018

Volume

65

Pages

62 - 68

Addresses

Institut Pasteur, UMR CNRS 3528, Chemistry and Structural Biology Department, Paris, France.

Keywords

Bordetella pertussis, Calcium, Adenylate Cyclase Toxin, X-Ray Diffraction, Deuterium Exchange Measurement, Binding Sites, Quantum Theory, Models, Molecular, Mass Spectrometry, Scattering, Small Angle