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1.
New base-type-edited transverse-relaxation optimized CT-HCN(C) experiments are presented that yield intra-base and sugar-to-base correlations for 13C−15N labeled RNA. High spectral resolution in the 13C and 15N dimensions is achieved by constant time (CT) frequency editing. A spectral editing filter applied during the CT 15N labeling period separates the correlation peaks arising from G/U and A/C nucleotide bases. This provides the increased spectral resolution required to unambiguously connect the 1H and 13C resonances in sugar and base moieties of RNA nucleotides. In addition, the experiment allows base type identification for each residue, and therefore presents an attractive spectroscopic alternative to nucleotide-specific isotope labeling. Application to a 33-nucleotide RNA aptamer demonstrates the performance of the new pulse scheme. Electronic supplementary material Electronic supplementary material is available for this article at and accessible for authorised users.  相似文献   

2.
Summary A three-dimensional 1H,13C,31P triple resonance experiment, HCP-CCH-TOCSY, is presented which provides unambiguous through-bond correlation of all 1H ribose protons on the 5′ and 3′ sides of the intervening phosphorus along the backbone bonding network in 13C-labeled RNA oligonucleotides. The correlation of the complete ribose spin system to the intervening phosphorus is obtained by adding a C,C-TOCSY coherence transfer step to the triple resonance HCP experiment. The C,C-TOCSY transfer step, which utilizes the large and relatively uniform 1J(C,C) coupling constant (∼40 Hz for ribose carbons), efficiently correlates the phosphorus-coupled carbons observed in the HCP correlation experiment (i.e., C4′ and C5′ in the 5′ direction and C4′ and C3′ in the 3′ direction) to all other carbons in the ribose spin system. Of the additional correlations observed in the HCP-CCH-TOCSY, that to the relatively well-resolved anomeric H1′, C1′ resonance pairs provides the greatest gain in terms of facilitating assignment. The gain in spectral resolution afforded by chemical shift labeling with the anomeric resonances should provide a more robust pathway for sequential assignment over the intervening phosphorus in larger RNA oligonucleotides. The HCP-CCH-TOCSY experiment is demonstrated on a uniformly 13C,15N-labeled 19-nucleotide RNA stem-loop, derived from the antisense RNA I molecule found in the ColE1 plasmid replication control system.  相似文献   

3.
The paper presents a set of two-dimensional experiments that utilize direct 13C detection to provide proton–carbon, carbon–carbon and carbon–nitrogen correlations in the bases of nucleic acids. The set includes a 13C-detected proton–carbon correlation experiment for the measurement of 13C–13C couplings, the CaCb experiment for correlating two quaternary carbons, the HCaCb experiment for the 13C–13C correlations in cases where one of the carbons has a proton attached, the HCC-TOCSY experiment for correlating a proton with a network of coupled carbons, and a 13C-detected 13C–15N correlation experiment for detecting the nitrogen nuclei that cannot be detected via protons. The IPAP procedure is used for extracting the carbon–carbon couplings and/or carbon decoupling in the direct dimension, while the S3E procedure is preferred in the indirect dimension of the carbon–nitrogen experiment to obtain the value of the coupling constant. The experiments supply accurate values of 13C and 15N chemical shifts and carbon–carbon and carbon–nitrogen coupling constants. These values can help to reveal structural features of nucleic acids either directly or via induced changes when the sample is dissolved in oriented media. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi:) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.  相似文献   

4.
A five-dimensional (5D) APSY (automated projection spectroscopy) HCNCH experiment is presented, which allows unambiguous correlation of sugar to base nuclei in nucleic acids. The pulse sequence uses multiple quantum (MQ) evolution which enables long constant-time evolution periods in all dimensions, an improvement that can also benefit non-APSY applications. Applied with an RNA with 23 nucleotides the 5D APSY-HCNCH experiment produced a complete and highly precise 5D chemical shift list within 1.5 h. Alternatively, and for molecules where the out-and-stay 5D experiment sensitivity is not sufficient, a set of out-and-back 3D APSY-HCN experiments is proposed: an intra-base (3D APSY-b-HCN) experiment in an MQ or in a TROSY version, and an MQ sugar-to-base (3D APSY-s-HCN) experiment. The two 3D peak lists require subsequent matching via the N1/9 chemical shift values to one 5D peak list. Optimization of the 3D APSY experiments for maximal precision in the N1/9 dimension allowed matching of all 15N chemical shift values contained in both 3D peak lists. The precise 5D chemical shift correlation lists resulting from the 5D experiment or a pair of 3D experiments also provide a valuable basis for subsequent connection to chemical shifts derived with other experiments.  相似文献   

5.
A new TROSY relayed HCCH-COSY pulse sequence is introduced for correlating adenine H2 and H8 resonances in 13C-labeled RNA molecules. The pulse scheme provides substantial improvements in signal-to-noise compared to previously suggested experiments, and therefore will be suitable for NMR studies of larger RNA molecules. The experiment provides 13C chemical shifts for all carbon nuclei in the adenine base. This is advantageous for resolving spectral overlap in larger RNA molecules and provides a starting point for measuring additional parameters for these carbons in the adenine spin system.  相似文献   

6.
Summary A set of three 3D (1H, 13C, 15N) triple-resonance correlation experiments has been designed to provide H1-H8 intraresidue sugar-to-base correlations in purines in an unambiguous and efficient manner. Together, the HsCsNb, HsCs(N)bCb, and HbNbCb experiments correlate the H1 sugar proton to the H8 proton of the attached base by means of the {H1, C1, N9, C8, H8} heteronuclear scalar coupling network. The assignment strategy presented here allows for unambiguous H1-H8 intraresidue correlations, provided that no two purines have both the same H1 and C1 chemical shifts and the same C8 and N9 chemical shifts. These experiments have yielded H1-H8 intraresidue sugar-to-base correlations for all five guanosines in the [13C, 15N] isotopically labeled RNA duplex r(GGCGCUUGCGUC)2.  相似文献   

7.
A novel three-dimensional (3D) HCCH NMR experiment is introduced. It involves 13C-13C COSY or TOCSY coherence transfer plus two independent editing steps according to the number of protons attached to the individual carbons before and after the 13C-13C homonuclear mixing. This double editing leads to simplification of HCCH protein side chain spectra that otherwise are prone to spectral overlap. Another interesting feature is amino acid selectivity, i.e. that the presence of certain correlations in a doubly edited HCCH subspectrum gives a clue as to assignment to a particular subgroup of amino acids or segments thereof. Finally, the selection of two different multiplicities in the two editing steps leads to diagonal peak suppression in the 1H-1H (3D spectrum recorded with two 1H and one 13C dimension) or the 13C-13C (3D spectrum recorded with one 1H and two 13C dimensions) two-dimensional projection. The new experiment is demonstrated using a 13C,15N-labeled protein sample, chymotrypsin inhibitor 2, at 500 MHz.  相似文献   

8.
Summary Modern multidimensional double- and triple-resonance NMR methods have been applied to assign the backbone and side-chain 13C resonances for both equilibrium conformers of the paramagnetic form of rat liver microsomal cytochrome b 5. The assignment of backbone 13C resonances was used to confirm previous 1H and 15N resonance assignments [Guiles, R.D. et al. (1993) Biochemistry, 32, 8329–8340]. On the basis of short- and medium-range NOEs and backbone 13C chemical shifts, the solution secondary structure of rat cytochrome b 5 has been determined. The striking similarity of backbone 13C resonances for both equilibrium forms strongly suggests that the secondary structures of the two isomers are virtually identical. It has been found that the 13C chemical shifts of both backbone and side-chain atoms are relatively insensitive to paramagnetic effects. The reliability of such methods in anisotropic paramagnetic systems, where large pseudocontact shifts can be observed, is evaluated through calculations of the magnitude of such shifts.Abbreviations DANTE delays alternating with nutation for tailored excitation - DEAE diethylaminoethyl - DQF-COSY 2D double-quantum-filtered correlation spectroscopy - EDTA ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid - HCCH-TOCSY 3D proton-correlated carbon TOCSY experiment - HMQC 2D heteronuclear multiple-quantum correlation spectroscopy - HNCA 3D triple-resonance experiment correlating amide protons, amide nitrogens and alpha carbons - HNCO 3D triple-resonance experiment correlating amide protons, amide nitrogens and carbonyl carbons - HNCOCA 3D triple-resonance experiment correlating amide protons, amide nitrogens and alpha carbons via carbonyl carbons - HOHAHA 2D homonuclear Hartmann-Hahn spectroscopy - HOHAHA-HMQC 3D HOHAHA relayed HMQC - HSQC 2D heteronuclear single-quantum correlation spectroscopy - IPTG isopropyl thiogalactoside - NOESY 2D nuclear Overhauser enhancement spectroscopy - NOESY-HSQC 3D NOESY relayed HSQC - TOCSY 2D total correlation spectroscopy - TPPI time-proportional phase incrementation - TSP trimethyl silyl propionate  相似文献   

9.
A through bond, C4′/H4′ selective, “out and stay” type 4D HC(P)CH experiment is introduced which provides sequential connectivity via H4′(i)–C4′(i)–C4′(i?1)–H4′(i?1) correlations. The 31P dimension (used in the conventional 3D HCP experiment) is replaced with evolution of better dispersed C4′ dimension. The experiment fully utilizes 13C-labeling of RNA by inclusion of two C4′ evolution periods. An additional evolution of H4′ is included to further enhance peak resolution. Band selective 13C inversion pulses are used to achieve selectivity and prevent signal dephasing due to the of C4′–C3′ and C4′–C5′ homonuclear couplings. For reasonable resolution, non-uniform sampling is employed in all indirect dimensions. To reduce sensitivity losses, multiple quantum coherences are preserved during shared-time evolution and coherence transfer delays. In the experiment the intra-nucleotide peaks are suppressed whereas inter-nucleotide peaks are enhanced to reduce the ambiguities. The performance of the experiment is verified on a fully 13C, 15N-labeled 34-nt hairpin RNA comprising typical structure elements.  相似文献   

10.
Three improved 13C-spinlock experiments for side chain assignments of isotope labelled proteins in liquid state are presented. These are based on wide bandwidth spinlock techniques that have become possible with contemporary cryogenic probes. The first application, the H(CaliCaro)H-TOCSY, is an HCCH-TOCSY in which all CHn moieties of a protein are detected in a single experiment, including the aromatic ones. This enables unambiguous assignment of aromatic and aliphatic amino acids in a single, highly sensitive experiment. In the second application, the 13C-detected Call-TOCSY, magnetization transfer comprises all carbons—aliphatic, aromatic as well as the carbonyl carbons—making the complete carbon assignment possible using one spectrum only. Thirdly, the frequently used HC(CCO)NH experiment was redesigned by replacing the long C-carbonyl refocused INEPT transfer step by direct 13C–13C-TOCSY magnetization transfer from side chain carbons to the backbone carbonyls. The resulting HC(CCO)NH experiment minimizes relaxation losses because it is shorter and represents a more sensitive alternative particularly for larger proteins. The performance of the experiments is demonstrated on isotope labeled proteins up to the size of 43 kDa.  相似文献   

11.
Extensive spectral overlap presents a major problem for the NMR study of large RNAs. Here we present NMR techniques for resolution enhancement and spectral simplification of fully 13C labelled RNA. High-resolution 1H-13C correlation spectra are obtained by combining TROSY-type experiments with multiple-band-selective homonuclear 13C decoupling. An additional C-C filter sequence performs base-type-selective spectral editing. Signal loss during the filter is significantly reduced because of TROSY-type spin evolution. These tools can be inserted in any 13C-edited multidimensional NMR experiment. As an example we have chosen the 13C-edited NOESY which is a crucial experiment for sequential resonance assignment of RNA. Application to a 33-nucleotide RNA aptamer and a 76-nucleotide tRNA illustrates the potential of this new methodology.  相似文献   

12.
We present a 13C direct detection CACA-TOCSY experiment for samples with alternate 13C–12C labeling. It provides inter-residue correlations between 13Cα resonances of residue i and adjacent Cαs at positions i − 1 and i + 1. Furthermore, longer mixing times yield correlations to Cα nuclei separated by more than one residue. The experiment also provides Cα-to-sidechain correlations, some amino acid type identifications and estimates for ψ dihedral angles. The power of the experiment derives from the alternate 13C–12C labeling with [1,3-13C] glycerol or [2-13C] glycerol, which allows utilizing the small scalar 3JCC couplings that are masked by strong 1JCC couplings in uniformly 13C labeled samples.  相似文献   

13.
Simulation and experiment have been used to establish that significant artifacts can be generated in X-pulse CPMG relaxation dispersion experiments recorded on heteronuclear ABX spin-systems, such as 13C i 13C j 1H, where 13C i and 13C j are strongly coupled. A qualitative explanation of the origin of these artifacts is presented along with a simple method to significantly reduce them. An application to the measurement of 1H CPMG relaxation dispersion profiles in an HIV-2 TAR RNA molecule where all ribose sugars are protonated at the 2′ position, deuterated at all other sugar positions and 13C labeled at all sugar carbons is presented to illustrate the problems that strong 13C–13C coupling introduces and a simple solution is proposed.  相似文献   

14.
The conformations of the major coat protein of a filamentous bacteriophage can be described by nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy of the protein and the virus. The NMR experiments involve detection of the 13C and 1H nuclei of the coat protein. Both the 13C and 1H nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectra show that regions of the polypeptide chain have substantially more motion than a typical globular protein. The fd coat protein was purified by gel chromatography of the SDS solubilized virus. Natural abundance 13C NMR spectra at 38 MHz resolve all of the nonprotonated aromatic carbons from the three phenylalanines, two tyrosines, and one tryptophan of the coat protein. The α carbons of the coat protein show at least two different classes of relaxation behavior, indicative of substantial variation in the motion of the backbone carbons in contrast to the rigidity of the α carbons of globular proteins. The 1H spectrum at 360 MHz shows all of the aromatic carbons and many of the amide protons. Titration of a 1H spectra gives the pKas for the tyrosines.  相似文献   

15.
A newly implemented G-matrix Fourier transform (GFT) (4,3)D HC(C)CH experiment is presented in conjunction with (4,3)D HCCH to efficiently identify 1H/13C sugar spin systems in 13C labeled nucleic acids. This experiment enables rapid collection of highly resolved relay 4D HC(C)CH spectral information, that is, shift correlations of 13C?C1H groups separated by two carbon bonds. For RNA, (4,3)D HC(C)CH takes advantage of the comparably favorable 1??- and 3??-CH signal dispersion for complete spin system identification including 5??-CH. The (4,3)D HC(C)CH/HCCH based strategy is exemplified for the 30-nucleotide 3??-untranslated region of the pre-mRNA of human U1A protein.  相似文献   

16.
Several techniques for spectral editing of 2D 13C?C13C correlation NMR of proteins are introduced. They greatly reduce the spectral overlap for five common amino acid types, thus simplifying spectral assignment and conformational analysis. The carboxyl (COO) signals of glutamate and aspartate are selected by suppressing the overlapping amide N?CCO peaks through 13C?C15N dipolar dephasing. The sidechain methine (CH) signals of valine, lecuine, and isoleucine are separated from the overlapping methylene (CH2) signals of long-chain amino acids using a multiple-quantum dipolar transfer technique. Both the COO and CH selection methods take advantage of improved dipolar dephasing by asymmetric rotational-echo double resonance (REDOR), where every other ??-pulse is shifted from the center of a rotor period tr by about 0.15 tr. This asymmetry produces a deeper minimum in the REDOR dephasing curve and enables complete suppression of the undesired signals of immobile segments. Residual signals of mobile sidechains are positively identified by dynamics editing using recoupled 13C?C1H dipolar dephasing. In all three experiments, the signals of carbons within a three-bond distance from the selected carbons are detected in the second spectral dimension via 13C spin exchange. The efficiencies of these spectral editing techniques range from 60?% for the COO and dynamic selection experiments to 25?% for the CH selection experiment, and are demonstrated on well-characterized model proteins GB1 and ubiquitin.  相似文献   

17.
We have used 13C-labeled sugars and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectrometry to study the metabolic pathway of starch biosynthesis in developing wheat grain (Triticum aestivum cv Mardler). Our aim was to examine the extent of redistribution of 13C between carbons atoms 1 and 6 of [1-13C] or [6-13C]glucose (or fructose) incorporated into starch, and hence provide evidence for or against the involvement of triose phosphates in the metabolic pathway. Starch synthesis in the endosperm tissue was studied in two experimental systems. First, the 13C sugars were supplied to isolated endosperm tissue incubated in vitro, and second the 13C sugars were supplied in vivo to the intact plant. The 13C starch produced by the endosperm tissue of the grain was isolated and enzymically degraded to glucose using amyloglucosidase, and the distribution of 13C in all glucosyl carbons was quantified by 13C-NMR spectrometry. In all of the experiments, irrespective of the incubation time or incubation conditions, there was a similar pattern of partial (between 15 and 20%) redistribution of label between carbons 1 and 6 of glucose recovered from starch. There was no detectable increase over background 13C incidence in carbons 2 to 5. Within each experiment, the same pattern of partial redistribution of label was found in the glucosyl and fructosyl moieties of sucrose extracted from the tissue. Since it is unlikely that sucrose is present in the amyloplast, we suggest that the observed redistribution of label occurred in the cytosolic compartment of the endosperm cells and that both sucrose and starch are synthesized from a common pool of intermediates, such as hexose phosphate. We suggest that redistribution of label occurs via a cytosolic pathway cycle involving conversion of hexose phosphate to triose phosphate, interconversion of triose phosphate by triose phosphate isomerase, and resynthesis of hexose phosphate in the cytosol. A further round of triose phosphate interconversion in the amyloplast could not be detected. These data seriously weaken the argument for the selective uptake of triose phosphates by the amyloplast as part of the pathway of starch biosynthesis from sucrose in plant storage tissues. Instead, we suggest that a hexose phosphate such as glucose 1-phosphate, glucose 6-phosphate, or fructose 6-phosphate is the most likely candidate for entry into the amyloplast. A pathway of starch biosynthesis is presented, which is consistent with our data and with the current information on the intracellular distribution of enzymes in plant storage tissues.  相似文献   

18.
Large RNAs (>30 nucleotides) suffer from extensive resonance overlap that can seriously hamper unambiguous structural characterization. Here we present a set of 3D multinuclear NMR experiments with improved and optimized resolution and sensitivity for aiding with the assignment of RNA molecules. In all these experiments strong base and ribose carbon–carbon couplings are eliminated by homonuclear band-selective decoupling, leading to improved signal to noise and resolution of the C5, C6, and C1′ carbon resonances. This decoupling scheme is applied to base-type selective 13C-edited NOESY, 13C-edited TOCSY (HCCH, CCH), HCCNH, and ribose H1C1C2 experiments. The 3D implementation of the HCCNH experiment with both carbon and nitrogen evolution enables direct correlation of 13C and 15N resonances at different proton resonant frequencies. The advantages of the new experiments are demonstrated on a 36 nucleotides hairpin RNA from domain 5 (D5) of the group II intron Pylaiella littoralis using an abbreviated assignment strategy. These four experiments provided additional separation for regions of the RNA that have overlapped chemical shift resonances, and enabled the assignment of critical D5 bulge nucleotides that could not be assigned using current experimental schemes.Supplementary material to this paper is available in electronic form at http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10858-005-5093-6  相似文献   

19.
Summary A new protocol is described for obtaining intraresidual and sequential correlations between carbonyl carbons and amide 1H and 15N resonances of amino acids. Frequency labeling of 13CO spins occurs during a period required for the 13C-15N polarization transfer, leading to an optimized transfer efficiency. In a four-dimensional version of the experiment, 13C chemical shifts are used to improve the dispersion of signals. The resonance frequencies of all backbone nuclei can be detected in a 3D variant in which cross peaks are split along two frequency axes. This pulse scheme is the equivalent of a five-dimensional experiment. The novel pulse sequences are applied to flavodoxin from Desulfovibrio vulgaris.  相似文献   

20.
We have developed a simple NMR-based method to determine the turnover of nucleotides and incorporation into RNA by stable isotope resolved metabolomics (SIRM) in A549 lung cancer cells. This method requires no chemical degradation of the nucleotides or chromatography. During cell growth, the free ribonucleotide pool is rapidly replaced by de novo synthesized nucleotides. Using [U-13C]-glucose and [U-13C,15N]-glutamine as tracers, we showed that virtually all of the carbons in the nucleotide riboses were derived from glucose, whereas glutamine was preferentially utilized over glucose for pyrimidine ring biosynthesis, via the synthesis of Asp through the Krebs cycle. Incorporation of the glutamine amido nitrogen into the N3 and N9 positions of the purine rings was also demonstrated by proton-detected 15N NMR. The incorporation of 13C from glucose into total RNA was measured and shown to be a major sink for the nucleotides during cell proliferation. This method was applied to determine the metabolic action of an anti-cancer selenium agent (methylseleninic acid or MSA) on A549 cells. We found that MSA inhibited nucleotide turnover and incorporation into RNA, implicating an important role of nucleotide metabolism in the toxic action of MSA on cancer cells.  相似文献   

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