The structural dynamics of protein ligand binding sites is one factor determining the specificity towards related ligands. In this context, the spectrin PH domain, which binds to a number of phosphatidylinositol lipid head groups, was investigated with respect to the dynamics of the binding loops. The latter were found to be of intermediate flexibility on a picosecond to nanosecond time-scale in the free protein and become more rigid upon ligand binding. Significant N-15 and proton chemical shift changes occur in the binding loops. The internal correlation time, determined from 15N heteronuclear relaxation data using the standard model-free approach, decreases upon ligand binding. For several residues a concomitant rise in the generalized order parameter is observed. This is interpreted as a dampening effect of the ligand on a slow loop motion, while a fast component is not affected. Molecular dynamics simulations were performed to further investigate this situation. In fact, two timescales of loop motions in the free state are observed in a 9 ns molecular dynamics trajectory. Agreement with generalized order parameters obtained from the experiment improves when a subtrajectory is analyzed that excludes rare dihedral transitions. (C) 1998 Academic Press.