Cholesterol promotes the structural integrity of the fluid cell membrane and interacts dynamically with many membrane proteins to regulate function. Understanding site-resolved cholesterol structural dynamics is thus important. This long-standing challenge has thus far been addressed, in part, by selective isotopic labeling approaches. Here we present a new 3D solid-state NMR (SSNMR) experiment utilizing scalar C-C polarization transfer and recoupling of the H-C interactions in order to determine average dipolar couplings for all H-C vectors in uniformly C-enriched cholesterol. The experimentally determined order parameters (OP) agree exceptionally well with molecular dynamics (MD) trajectories and reveal coupling among several conformational degrees of freedom in cholesterol molecules. Quantum chemistry shielding calculations further support this conclusion and specifically demonstrate that ring tilt and rotation are coupled to changes in tail conformation and that these coupled segmental dynamics dictate the orientation of cholesterol. These findings advance our understanding of physiologically relevant dynamics of cholesterol, and the methods that revealed them have broader potential to characterize how structural dynamics of other small molecules impact their biological functions.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10638920 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jacs.3c01775 | DOI Listing |
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