首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 750 毫秒
1.
We report here the backbone 1HN, 15N, 13C, 13CO, and 1H NMR assignmentsfor the catalytic domain of human fibroblast collagenase (HFC). Three independentassignment pathways (matching 1H, 13C, and 13CO resonances) were used to establishsequential connections. The connections using 13C resonances were obtained fromHNCOCA and HNCA experiments; 13CO connections were obtained from HNCO andHNCACO experiments. The sequential proton assignment pathway was established from a 3D(1H/15N) NOESY-HSQC experiment. Amino acid typing was accomplished using 13C and15N chemical shifts, specific labeling of 15N-Leu, and spin pattern recognition from DQF-COSY. The secondary structure was determined by analyzing the 3D (1H/15N) NOESY-HSQC. A preliminary NMR structure calculation of HFC was found to be in agreement withrecent X-ray structures of human fibroblast collagenase and human neutrophil collagenase aswell as similar to recent NMR structures of a highly homologous protein, stromelysin. Allthree helices were located; a five-stranded -sheet (four parallel strands, one antiparallelstrand) was also determined. -Sheet regions were identified by cross-stranddN and dNN connections and by strong intraresidue dN correlations, and were corroborated byobserving slow amide proton exchange. Chemical shift changes in a selectively 15N-labeledsample suggest that substantial structural changes occur in the active site cleft on the bindingof an inhibitor.  相似文献   

2.
Summary Two new 3D 1H-15N-13C triple-resonance experiments are presented which provide sequential cross peaks between the amide proton of one residue and the amide nitrogen of the preceding and succeeding residues or the amide proton of one residue and the amide proton of the preceding and succeeding residues, respectively. These experiments, which we term 3D-HN(CA)NNH and 3D-H(NCA)NNH, utilize an optimized magnetization transfer via the 2JNC coupling to establish the sequential assignment of backbone NH and 15N resonances. In contrast to NH-NH connectivities observable in homonuclear NOESY spectra, the assignments from the 3D-H(NCA)NNH experiment are conformation independent to a first-order approximation. Thus the assignments obtained from these experiments can be used as either confirmation of assignments obtained from a conventional homonuclear approach or as an initial step in the analysis of backbone resonances according to Ikura et al. (1990) [Biochemistry, 29, 4659–4667]. Both techniques were applied to uniformly 15N- and 13C-labelled ribonuclease T1.  相似文献   

3.
A suite of experiments are presented for the measurement of H–C, C–C, C–C and HN–N couplings from uniformly 15N, 13C labeled proteins. Couplings are obtained from a series of intensity modulated two-dimensional HN–N spectra equivalent to the common 1H–15N–HSQC spectra, alleviating many overlap and assignment issues associated with other techniques. To illustrate the efficiency of this method, H–C, C–C, and HN–N isotropic scalar couplings were determined for ubiquitin from data collected in less than 4.5 h, C–C data collection required 10 h. The resulting couplings were measured with an average error of ±0.06, ±0.05, ±0.04 and ±0.10 Hz, respectively. This study also shows H–C and C–C couplings, valuable because they provide orientation of bond vectors outside the peptide plane, can be measured in a uniform and precise way. Superior accuracy and precision to existing 3D measurements for C–C couplings and increased precision compared to IPAP measurements for HN–N couplings are demonstrated. Minor modifications allow for acquisition of modulated HN–C 2D spectra, which can yield additional well resolved peaks and significantly increase the number of measured RDCs for proteins with crowded 1H–15N resonances.  相似文献   

4.
Summary It is demonstrated that sequential resonance assignment of the backbone 1H and 15N resonances of proteins can be obtained without recourse to the backbone amide protons, an approach which should be useful for assignment of regions with rapidly exchanging backbone amide protons and for proteins rich in proline residues. The method relies on the combined use of two 2D experiments, HA(CA)N and HA(CACO)N or their 3D analogs, which correlate 1H with the intraresidue 15N and with the 15N resonance of the next residue. The experiments are preferably conducted in D2O, where very high resolution in the 15N dimension can be achieved by using 2H decoupling. The approach is demonstrated for a sample of human ubiquitin, uniformly enriched in 13C and 15N. Complete backbone and 13C/1H resonance assignments are presented.  相似文献   

5.
Summary Extensive 1H and 13C assignments have been obtained for the aliphatic resonances of a uniformly 13C-and 15N-labeled recombinant VL domain from the anti-digoxin antibody 26-10. Four-dimensional triple resonance NMR data acquired with the HNCAHA and HN(CO)CAHA pulse sequences [Kay et al. (1992) J. Magn. Reson., 98, 443–450] afforded assignments for the backbone HN, N, H and C resonances. These data confirm and extend HN, N and H assignments derived previously from three-dimensional 1H-15N NMR studies of uniformly 15N-labeled VL domain [Constantine et al. (1992), Biochemistry, 31, 5033–5043]. The identified H and C resonances provided a starting point for assigning the side-chain aliphatic 1H and 13C resonances using three-dimensional HCCH-COSY and HCCH-TOCSY experiments [Clore et al. (1990), Biochemistry, 29, 8172–8184]. The C and C chemical shifts are correlated with the VL domain secondary structure. The extensive set of side-chain assignments obtained will allow a detailed comparison to be made between the solution structure of the isolated VL domain and the X-ray structure of the VL domain within the 26–10 Fab.  相似文献   

6.
Two new 2D NMR experiments, CT-HMQC-HA and CT-HMQC-HN, are proposed for the rapid measurement of homonuclear 3JHNH coupling constants of uniformly 15N-enriched proteins in solution. The experiments are based on the comparison of the signal intensities in a pair of constant-time [15N,1H]-HMQC spectra recorded with and without decoupling of the amide proton - proton coupling. Experimental data recorded with the 78-residue N-terminal domain of the E. coli arginine repressor (ArgR-N) and with oxidized E. coli flavodoxin (176 residues) showed good agreement with 3JHNH coupling constants obtained by fitting of the multiplet fine structure of the amide proton resonances or from a 3D HNHA-J experiment, respectively. Quantitative estimates for the effects from different relaxation rates of in-phase and antiphase magnetization are given.  相似文献   

7.
Summary A 3D NMR technique is described which correlates the amide proton and nitrogen resonances of an amino acid residue with the C chemical shift of its preceding residue. The technique uses a relay mechanism, transferring magnetization from15N to13C via the intervening carbonyl nucleus. This method for obtaining sequential connectivity is less sensitive to large line widths than the alternative HNCA experiment. The technique is demonstrated for the protein calmodulin, complexed with a 26 amino acid fragment of skeletal muscle myosin light chain kinase.Abbreviations CaM Calmodulin - HCACO -proton to -carbon to carbonyl correlation - H(CA)NHN -proton (via -carbon) to nitrogen to amide proton correlation - HMQC heteronuclear multiple quantum correlation - HNCA amide proton to nitrogen to C -carbon correlation - M13 a 26-residue fragment of the CaM-binding domain of skeletal muscle myosin light chain kinase comprising residues 577–602.  相似文献   

8.
9.
Summary A rapid and sensitive 2D approach is presented for measuring amide proton exchange rates and the NOE interaction between amide protons and water. The approach is applicable to uniformly 13C/15N-enriched proteins and can measure magnetization exchange rates in the 0.02 to >20s–1 range. The experiments rely on selective excitation of the water resonance, coupled with purging of underlying H resonances, followed by NOESY-or ROESY-type transfer to amide protons, which are dispersed by the amide 15N frequencies in an HSQC-type experiment. Two separate but interleaved experiments, with and without selective inversion of the H2O resonance, yield quantitative results. The method is demonstrated for a sample of the calcium-binding protein calcineurin B. Results indicate rapid amide exchange for the five calcineurin B residues that are analogous to the five rapidly exchanging residues in the central helix of the homologous protein calmodulin.  相似文献   

10.
Here we present a novel suite of projected 4D triple-resonance NMR experiments for efficient sequential assignment of polypeptide backbone chemical shifts in 13C/15N doubly labeled proteins. In the 3D HNN[CAHA] and 3D HNN(CO)[CAHA] experiments, the 13C and 1H chemical shifts evolve in a common dimension and are simultaneously detected in quadrature. These experiments are particularly useful for the assignment of glycine-rich polypeptide segments. Appropriate setting of the 1H radiofrequency carrier allows one to place cross peaks correlating either backbone 15N/1HN/13C or 15N/1HN/1H chemical shifts in separate spectral regions. Hence, peak overlap is not increased when compared with the conventional 3D HNNCA and HNN(CA)HA. 3D HNN[CAHA] and 3D HNN(CO)[CAHA] are complemented by 3D reduced-dimensionality (RD) HNN COCA and HNN CACO, where 13C and 13C chemical shifts evolve in a common dimension. The 13C shift is detected in quadrature, which yields peak pairs encoding the 13C chemical shift in an in-phase splitting. This suite of four experiments promises to be of value for automated high-throughput NMR structure determination in structural genomics, where the requirement to independently sample many indirect dimensions in a large number of NMR experiments may prevent one from accurately adjusting NMR measurement times to spectrometer sensitivity.  相似文献   

11.
The simultaneous interpretation of a suite of dipole-dipole and dipole-CSA cross-correlation rates involving the backbone nuclei 13C, 1H,13CO, 15N and 1HN can be used to resolve the ambiguities associated with each individual cross-correlation rate. The method is based on the transformation of experimental cross-correlation rates via calculated values based on standard peptide plane geometry and solid-state 13CO CSA parameters into a dihedral angle probability surface. Triple resonance NMR experiments with improved sensitivity have been devised for the quantification of relaxation interference between 1H(i)-13C(i)/15N(i)-1HN(i) and 1H(i–1)-13C(i–1)/15N(i)-1HN(i) dipole-dipole mechanisms in 15N,13C-labeled proteins. The approach is illustrated with an application to 13C,15N-labeled ubiquitin.  相似文献   

12.
Summary Two new methods are described for the measurement of three-bond JH NHcouplings in proteins isotopically enriched with 15N. Both methods leave the water magnetization in an unsaturated state, parallel to the z-axis, and therefore offer significant enhancements in sensitivity for rapidly exchanging backbone amide protons. The J couplings can be measured either from a set of constant-time 2D 1H-15N HMQC spectra, which are modulated in intensity by JH NH, or from a water-flip-back version of the 3D HNHA experiment. The method is demonstrated for a sample of calcium-free calmodulin. Residues Lys75-Asp80 have JH NHvalues in the 6–7 Hz range, suggesting that a break in the central helix occurs at the same position as previously observed in solution NMR studies of Ca2+-ligated calmodulin.  相似文献   

13.
Summary A new 3D1H–15N–13C triple resonance experiment is presented that provides in-phase absorptive cross peaks between amide protons and -protons of the same and the sequentially preceding residue. The experiment yields similar connectivities as those described previously by Montelione and Wagner (1990a) [J. Magn. Reson.,87, 183–188] and Kay et al. (1991) [J. Magn. Reson.,91, 84–92]. However, the pulse sequence was designed to minimize the time that transverse coherence of the13C nucleus is present, since this nucleus has the shortest transverse relaxation time of all the nuclei involved in these experiments. This is achieved by using a coherence transfer pathway from1HN to15N,13C,1H and back to the1HN. In the sequence described, transverse13C coherence is present only for a length of ca. I1J(C-H). This reduces loss of signal due to transverse relaxation. We tested the technique on uniformly15N- and13C-enriched T4 lysozyme.  相似文献   

14.
A new strategy of backbone resonance assignment is proposed based on a combination of the most sensitive TROSY-type triple resonance experiments such as TROSY-HNCA and TROSY-HNCO with a new 3D multiple-quantum HACACO experiment. The favourable relaxation properties of the multiple-quantum coherences and signal detection using the 13C antiphase coherences optimize the performance of the proposed experiment for application to larger proteins. In addition to the 1HN, 15N,13C and 13C chemical shifts the 3D multiple-quantum HACACO experiment provides assignment for the 1H resonances in constrast to previously proposed experiments for large proteins. The strategy is demonstrated with the 44 kDa uniformly 15N,13C-labeled and fractionally 35% deuterated trimeric B. subtilis Chorismate Mutase measured at 20°C and 9°C. Measurements at the lower temperature indicate that the new strategy can be applied to even larger proteins with molecular weights up to 80 kDa.  相似文献   

15.
NMR experiments are presented which allow backbone resonance assignment, secondary structure identification, and in favorable cases also molecular fold topology determination from a series of two-dimensional 1H-15N HSQC-like spectra. The 1H-15N correlation peaks are frequency shifted by an amount ± X along the 15N dimension, where X is the C, C, or H frequency of the same or the preceding residue. Because of the low dimensionality (2D) of the experiments, high-resolution spectra are obtained in a short overall experimental time. The whole series of seven experiments can be performed in typically less than one day. This approach significantly reduces experimental time when compared to the standard 3D-based methods. The here presented methodology is thus especially appealing in the context of high-throughput NMR studies of protein structure, dynamics or molecular interfaces.  相似文献   

16.
Summary Sequence-specific 1H, 13C and 15N resonance assignments have been established for rat intestinal fatty acid-binding protein complexed with palmitate (15.4 kDa) at pH 7.2 and 37°C. The resonance assignment strategy involved the concerted use of seven 3D triple-resonance expriments (CC-TOCSY, HCCH-TOCSY, HNCO, HNCA, 15N-TOCSY-HMQC, HCACO and HCA(CO)N). A central feature of this strategy was the concurrent assignment of both backbone and side-chain aliphatic atoms, which was critical for overcoming ambiguities in the assignment process. The CC-TOCSY experiment provided the unambiguous links between the side-chain spin systems observed in HCCH-TOCSY and the backbone correlations observed in the other experiments. Assignments were established for 124 of the 131 residues, although 6 of the 124 had missing amide 1H resonances, presumably due to rapid exchange with solvent under these experimental conditions. The assignment database was used to determine the solution secondary structure of the complex, based on chemical shift indices for the 1H, 13C, 13C and 13CO atoms. Overall, the secondary structure agreed well with that determined by X-ray crystallography [Sacchettini et al. (1989) J. Mol. Biol., 208, 327–339], although minor differences were observed at the edges of secondary structure elements.  相似文献   

17.
Two triple resonance experiments, HNN and HN(C)N, are presented which correlate HN and 15N resonances sequentially along the polypeptide chain of a doubly (13C, 15N) labeled protein. These incorporate several improvements over the previously published sequences for a similar purpose and have several novel features. The spectral characteristics enable direct identification of certain triplets of residues, which provide many starting points for the sequential assignment procedure. The experiments are sensitive and their utility has been demonstrated with a 22 kDa protein under unfolding conditions where most of the standard triple resonance experiments such as HNCA, CBCANH etc. have limited success because of poor amide, C and C chemical shift dispersions.  相似文献   

18.
Summary 1H, 13C and 15N NMR assignments of the backbone atoms of subtilisin 309, secreted by Bacillus lentus, have been made using heteronuclear 3D NMR techniques. With 269 amino acids, this protein is one of the largest proteins to be sequentially assigned by NMR methods to date. Because of the size of the protein, some useful 3D correlation experiments were too insensitive to be used in the procedure. The HNCO, HN(CO)CA, HNCA and HCACO experiments are robust enough to provide most of the expected correlations for a protein of this size. It was necessary to use several experiments to unambiguously determine a majority of the -protons. Combined use of HCACO, HN(COCA)HA, HN(CA)HA, 15N TOCSY-HMQC and 15N NOESY-HMQC experiments provided the H chemical shifts. Correlations for glycine protons were absent from most of the spectra. A combination of automated and interactive steps was used in the process, similar to that outlined by Ikura et al. [(1990) J. Am. Chem. Soc., 112, 9020–9022] in the seminal paper on heteronuclear backbone assignment. A major impediment to the linking process was the amount of overlap in the C and H frequencies. Ambiguities resulting from this redundancy were solved primarily by assignment of amino acid type, using C chemical shifts and TOCSY ladders. Ninety-four percent of the backbone resonances are reported for this subtilisin. The secondary structure was analyzed using 3D 15N NOESY-HMQC data and C secondary chemical shifts. Comparison with the X-ray structure [Betzel et al. (1992) J. Mol. Biol., 223, 427–445] shows no major differences.Supplementary material available from F.J.M. van de Ven: the source code (PASCAL) for the computer program described in this paper.  相似文献   

19.
The effect of time and spatial averaging on 15N chemical shift/1H-15N dipolar correlation spectra, i.e., PISEMA spectra, of -helical membrane peptides and proteins is investigated. Three types of motion are considered: (a) Librational motion of the peptide planes in the -helix; (b) rotation of the helix about its long axis; and (c) wobble of the helix about a nominal tilt angle. A 2ns molecular dynamics simulation of helix D of bacteriorhodopsin is used to determine the effect of librational motion on the spectral parameters. For the time averaging, the rotation and wobble of this same helix are modelled by assuming either Gaussian motion about the respective angles or a uniform distribution of a given width. For the spatial averaging, regions of possible 15N chemical shift/1H-15N dipolar splittings are computed for a distribution of rotations and/or tilt angles of the helix. The computed spectra show that under certain motional modes the 15N chemical shift/1H-15N dipolar pairs for each of the residues do not form patterns which mimic helical wheel patterns. As a result, the unambiguous identification of helix tilt and helix rotation without any resonance assignments or on the basis of a single assignment may be difficult.  相似文献   

20.
Summary A new four-dimensional pulse scheme is described for the main-chain assignment of proteins by means of the J connectivity of the amide proton and nitrogen resonances of adjacent residues. Since the new experiment, 4D CP-HN(COCA)NH, involves heteronuclear cross-polarization for magnetization transfer from 13C=O to 15N via 13C, a relatively strong WALTZ-16 decoupling rf field is applied to 13C during magnetization transfer. Consequently, 13C is effectively decoupled from its attached 2H in the case of deuterated proteins, in the absence of a decoupling rf field for 2H. This efficiently improves the sensitivity of the experiment through 13C line narrowing. The experiment was performed on a randomly 60% deuterated protein, and the sensitivity of the final 4D spectrum was found to be excellent.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号