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1.
M Ikura  L E Kay  A Bax 《Biochemistry》1990,29(19):4659-4667
A novel approach is described for obtaining sequential assignment of the backbone 1H, 13C, and 15N resonances of larger proteins. The approach is demonstrated for the protein calmodulin (16.7 kDa), uniformly (approximately 95%) labeled with 15N and 13C. Sequential assignment of the backbone residues by standard methods was not possible because of the very narrow chemical shift distribution range of both NH and C alpha H protons in this largely alpha-helical protein. We demonstrate that the combined use of four new types of heteronuclear 3D NMR spectra together with the previously described HOHAHA-HMQC 3D experiment [Marion, D., et al. (1989) Biochemistry 28, 6150-6156] can provide unambiguous sequential assignment of protein backbone resonances. Sequential connectivity is derived from one-bond J couplings and the procedure is therefore independent of the backbone conformation. All the new 3D NMR experiments use 1H detection and rely on multiple-step magnetization transfers via well-resolved one-bond J couplings, offering high sensitivity and requiring a total of only 9 days for the recording of all five 3D spectra. Because the combination of 3D spectra offers at least two and often three independent pathways for determining sequential connectivity, the new assignment procedure is easily automated. Complete assignments are reported for the proton, carbon, and nitrogen backbone resonances of calmodulin, complexed with calcium.  相似文献   

2.
We recently described a triple resonance experiment, HN(C)N, for sequential correlation of H(N) and 15N atoms in (15N, 13C) labeled proteins [J. Biomol. NMR. 20 (2001) 135]. Here, we describe an approach based on this experiment for estimation of one bond N-C(alpha) J-couplings in medium size labeled proteins, which seem to show good correlations with psi torsion angles along the protein backbone. The approach uses the ratio of the intensities of the sequential and diagonal peaks in the F(2)-F(3) planes of the HN(C)N spectrum. The reliability of the approach has been demonstrated using a short peptide wherein the coupling constants have been measured by the present method and also independently from peak splittings in HSQC spectra. The two results agree within 10%. The applicability of the procedure to proteins has been demonstrated using doubly labeled FK506 binding protein (FKBP, molecular mass approximately 12 kDa). Coupling constant estimates have been obtained for 62 out of 100 non-proline residues and they show a correlation with psi torsion angles, as has been reported before. This semi-quantitative application of HN(C)N extends the significance of the experiment especially, in the context of structural genomics, since the single experiment, not only provides a great enhancement in the speed of resonance assignment, but also provides quantitative structural information.  相似文献   

3.
Summary We recently proposed a novel four-dimensional (4D) NMR strategy for the assignment of backbone nuclei in spectra of 13C/15N-labelled proteins (Boucher et al. (1992) J. Am. Chem. Soc., 114, 2262–2264 and J. Biomol. NMR, 2, 631–637). In this paper we extend this approach with a new constant time 4D HCC(CO)NNH experiment that also correlates the chemical shifts of the aliphatic sidechain (1H and 13C) and backbone (1H, 13C and 15N) nuclei. It separates the sidechain resonances, which may heavily overlap in spectra of proteins with large numbers of similar residues, according to the backbone nitrogen and amide proton chemical shifts. When used in conjunction with a 4D HCANNH or HNCAHA experiment it allows, in principle, complete assignment of aliphatic sidechain and backbone resonances with just two 4D NMR experiments.  相似文献   

4.
The hnRNP C1 and C2 proteins are abundant nuclear proteins that bind avidly to heterogeneous nuclear RNAs (hnRNAs) and appear to be involved with pre-mRNA processing. The RNA-binding activity of the hnRNP C proteins is contained in the amino-terminal 94 amino acid RNA-binding domain (RBD) that is identical for these two proteins. We have obtained the 1H, 13C, and 15N NMR assignments for the RBD of the human hnRNP C proteins. The assignment process was facilitated by extensive utilization of three- and four-dimensional heteronuclear-edited spectra. Sequential assignments of the backbone resonances were made using a combination of 15N-edited 3D NOESY-HMQC, 3D TOCSY-HMQC, and 3D TOCSY-NOESY-HSQC as well as 3D HNCA, HNCO, and HCACO spectra. Side-chain resonances were assigned using 3D HCCH-COSY and 3D HCH-TOCSY spectra. Four-dimensional 13C/13C-edited NOESY and 13C/15N-edited NOESY experiments were used to unambigously resolve NOEs. The overall global folding pattern was established by calculating a set of preliminary structures using constraints derived from the sequential NOEs and a small number of long-range NOEs. The beta alpha beta-beta alpha beta domain structure exhibits an antiparallel beta-sheet with the conserved RNP 1 and RNP 2 sequences [Dreyfuss et al. (1988) Trends Biochem. Sci. 13, 86-91] located adjacent to one another as the two inner strands of the beta-sheet.  相似文献   

5.
The full assignment of 1H and 13C NMR signals of galactosylceramide 3-sulfate (galactosyl sulfatide) and 1H signals of galactosylceramide 6-sulfate was achieved by using 1H-1H DQF-COSY and 1H-13C heteronuclear COSY. Analyses were performed on a mixture of galactosyl sulfatides with four representative ceramide types consisting of a combination of non-hydroxy or 2-hydroxy fatty acids and sphingenine or 4D-hydroxysphinganine (trihydroxysphinganine) as the long-chain bases. The 1H and 13C NMR parameters of galactosyl sulfatide with 4-hydroxysphinganine as well as 13C signals of complex lipids with 4-hydroxysphinganine were elucidated for the first time. Not only sulfation of the galactosyl residue, but also modification of the aglycon, including hydroxylation of fatty acids and hydration of the double bond in sphingoid bases, altered the chemical shifts substantially. In addition, the unique long-range coupling constants, 4J(H,H) and 5J(H,H), in the galactosyl residue of galactosyl sulfatide could be determined.  相似文献   

6.
A De Marco  M Llinás 《Biochemistry》1979,18(18):3846-3854
Polypeptides and proteins in native conformation exhibit 13C NMR spectra which are highly nondegenerate. Assignment of resonances to carbons in particular residues is hence a prerequisite for a structural analysis of the spectroscopic data. For nonprotonated carbonyl carbons, the assignment can be achieved by selective (1H alpha)13C' 2J decoupling. Using this method, we have assigned the Orn1 and Gly2 carbonyl resonances in alumichrome at 67.9 MHz. We show that a single off-resonance experiment with the decoupling frequency centered in the aliphatic proton spectrum is sufficient to assign unequivocally all the protonated carbon resonances via analysis of the reduced 1J heteronuclear splittings. Alumichrome thus becomes the first complex polypeptide spin system whose 1H, 15N, and now 13C nuclear resonances have been fully identified to date. 13C chemical shifts and 1H--13C spin--spin couplings are discussed in terms of structural strain leading to specific orbital hybridizations and on the basis of polarization effects due to electron density shifts toward hydrogen-bonding and metal-binding sites. A number of 3J(13C--C--C--1H) coupling constants measured on selected multiplets after resolution enhancement were used to derive the x-related Karplus relationship 3J(theta) = (10.2 cos2 theta -- 1.3 cos theta + 0.2) Hz.  相似文献   

7.
Complete assignment of the (1)H and (13)C NMR spectra of all possible d-glucopyranosyl-d-glucopyranosides was performed and the (1)H chemical shifts and proton-proton coupling constants were refined by computational spectral analyses (using PERCH NMR software) until full agreement between the calculated and experimental spectra was achieved. To support the experimental results, the (1)H and (13)C chemical shifts and the spin-spin coupling constants between the non-hydroxyl protons of alpha- and beta-d-glucopyranose (1a and 1b) were calculated with density functional theory (DFT) methods at the B3LYP/pcJ-2//B3LYP/6-31G(d,p) level of theory. The effects of different glycosidic linkage types and positions on the glucose ring conformations and on the alpha/beta-ratio of the reducing end hydroxyl groups were investigated. Conformational analyses were also performed for anomerically pure forms of methyl d-glucopyranosides (13a and 13b) and fully protected derivatives such as 1,2,3,4,6-penta-O-acetyl-d-glucopyranoses (14a and 14b).  相似文献   

8.
Methyl groups provide an important source of structural and dynamic information in NMR studies of proteins and their complexes. For this purpose sequence-specific assignments of methyl 1H and 13C resonances are required. In this paper we propose the use of 13C-detected 3D HN(CA)C and HMCMC experiments for assignment of methyl 1H and 13C resonances using a single selectively methyl protonated, perdeuterated and 13C/15N-labeled sample. The high resolution afforded in the 13C directly-detected dimension allows one to rapidly and unambiguously establish correlations between backbone HN strips from the 3D HN(CA)C spectrum and methyl group HmCm strips from the HMCMC spectrum by aligning all possible side-chain carbon chemical shifts and their multiplet splitting patterns. The applicability of these experiments for the assignment of methyl 1H and 13C resonances is demonstrated using the 18.6 kDa B domain of the Escherichia coli mannose transporter (IIBMannose).  相似文献   

9.
Comparative 13C--15N coupling constants are reported for the linear dipeptide tBoc-L-[U-13C]Ala-[15N]GlyOMe and the corresponding cyclic diketopiperazine, both in dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO) and, upon removal of the tBoc group, in water solutions. Spectra were obtained by 13C NMR and by the first application of J cross-polarization (JCP) 15N NMR, which greatly reduces the time required to accumulate 15N NMR spectra. In DMSO there was evidence for the formation of complexed species which were not present in water. The values obtained for the cross-peptide bond coupling constant 2J13C alpha--15N were consistently less (by 2.2 Hz in DMSO, 4.3 Hz in water) for the cyclic than for the linear peptide, which may be related to the cross-peptide bond conformation. The 15N resonance for the cyclic peptide was shifted only 2 ppm downfield from the linear peptide chemical shift value in both solvents.  相似文献   

10.
IIIGlc is an 18.1-kDa signal-transducing phosphocarrier protein of the phosphoenolpyruvate:glycose phosphotransferase system (PTS) of Escherichia coli. Virtually complete (98%) backbone 1H, 15N, and 13C nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) signal assignments were determined by using a battery of triple-resonance three-dimensional (3D) NMR pulse sequences. In addition, nearly complete (1H, 95%; 13C, 85%) side-chain 1H and 13C signal assignments were obtained from an analysis of 3D 13C HCCH-COSY and HCCH-TOCSY spectra. These experiments rely almost exclusively upon one- and two-bond J couplings to transfer magnetization and to correlate proton and heteronuclear NMR signals. Hence, essentially complete signal assignments of this 168-residue protein were made without any assumptions regarding secondary structure and without the aid of a crystal structure, which is not yet available. Moreover, only three samples, one uniformly 15N-enriched, one uniformly 15N/13C-enriched, and one containing a few types of amino acids labeled with 15N and/or 13C, were needed to make the assignments. The backbone assignments together with the 3D 15N NOESY-HMQC and 13C NOESY-HMQC data have provided extensive information about the secondary structure of this protein [Pelton, J.G., Torchia, D.A., Meadow, N.D., Wong, C.-Y., & Roseman, S (1991) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 88, 3479-3488]. The nearly complete set of backbone and side-chain atom assignments reported herein provide a basis for studies of the three-dimensional structure and dynamics of IIIGlc as well as its interactions with a variety of membrane and cytoplasmic proteins.  相似文献   

11.
The assignment of the 1H, 15N, 13CO, and 13C resonances of recombinant human interleukin-4 (IL-4), a protein of 133 residues and molecular mass of 15.4 kDa, is presented based on a series of 11 three-dimensional (3D) double- and triple-resonance heteronuclear NMR experiments. These studies employ uniformly labeled 15N- and 15N/13C-labeled IL-4 with an isotope incorporation of greater than 95% for the protein expressed in yeast. Five independent sequential connectivity pathways via one-, two-, and three-bond heteronuclear J couplings are exploited to obtain unambiguous sequential assignments. Specifically, CO(i)-N(i + 1),NH(i + 1) correlations are observed in the HNCO experiment, the C alpha H(i), C alpha (i)-N(i + 1) correlations in the HCA(CO)N experiment, the C alpha(i)-N(i + 1),NH(i + 1) correlations in the HNCA and HN(CO)CA experiments, the C alpha H(i)-N(i + 1),NH(i + 1) correlations in the H(CA)NH and HN(CO)HB experiments, and the C beta H(i)-N(i + 1),NH(i + 1) correlations in the HN(CO)HB experiments. The backbone intraresidue C alpha H(i)-15N(i)-NH(i) correlations are provided by the 15N-edited Hartmann-Hahn (HOHAHA) and H(CA)NH experiments, the C beta H(i)-15N(i)-NH(i) correlations by the 15N-edited HOHAHA and HNHB experiments, the 13C alpha(i)-15N(i)-NH(i) correlations by the HNCA experiment, and the C alpha H(i)-13C alpha(i)-13CO(i) correlations by the HCACO experiment. Aliphatic side-chain spin systems are assigned by 3D 1H-13C-13C-1H correlated (HCCH-COSY) and total correlated (HCCH-TOCSY) spectroscopy. Because of the high resolution afforded by these experiments, as well as the availability of multiple sequential connectivity pathways, ambiguities associated with the limited chemical shift dispersion associated with helical proteins are readily resolved. Further, in the majority of cases (88%), four or more sequential correlations are observed between successive residues. Consequently, the interpretation of these experiments readily lends itself to semiautomated analysis which significantly simplifies and speeds up the assignment process. The assignments presented in this paper provide the essential basis for studies aimed at determining the high-resolution three-dimensional structure of IL-4 in solution.  相似文献   

12.
The pH-dependence of selected 13C chemical shifts reflects the state of ionization of the imidazole ring in both imidazole and L-histidine. Titration of the amino and carboxyl groups of histidine also perturbs the shifts. The coupling constants 1J (13C(2),H) and 1J (13C(5),H) for both compounds also vary with pH, but in L-histidine these constants are relatively insensitive to the titration of groups outside the imidazole ring.  相似文献   

13.
Uniform double labeling of proteins for NMR studies can be prohibitively expensive, even with an efficient expression and purification scheme, due largely to the high cost of [13C6, 99%]glucose. We demonstrate here that uniformly (greater than 95%) 13C and 15N double-labeled proteins can be prepared for NMR structure/function studies by growing cells in defined media containing sodium [1,2-13C2, 99%]acetate as the sole carbon source and [15N, 99%]ammonium chloride as the sole nitrogen source. In addition, we demonstrate that this labeling scheme can be extended to include uniform carbon isotope labeling to any desired level (below 50%) by utilizing media containing equal amounts of sodium [1-13C, 99%]acetate and sodium [2-13C, 99%]acetate in conjunction with unlabeled sodium acetate. This technique is less labor intensive and more straightforward than labeling using isotope-enriched algal hydrolysates. These labeling schemes have been used to successfully prepare NMR quantities of isotopically enriched human carbonic anhydrase II. The activity and the 1H NMR spectra of the protein labeled by this technique are the same as those obtained from the protein produced from media containing labeled glucose; however, the cost of the sodium [1,2-13C2, 99%]acetate growth media is considerably less than the cost of the [13C6, 99%]glucose growth media. We report here the first published 13C and 15N NMR spectra of human carbonic anhydrase II as an important step leading to the assignment of this 29-kDa zinc metalloenzyme.  相似文献   

14.
When used in concert, one-bond carbon-carbon correlations, one-bond and multiple-bond proton-carbon correlations, and multiple-bond proton-nitrogen correlations, derived from two-dimensional (2D) NMR spectra of isotopically enriched proteins, provide a reliable method of assigning proton, carbon, and nitrogen resonances. In contrast to procedures that simply extend proton assignments to carbon or nitrogen resonances, this technique assigns proton, carbon, and nitrogen resonances coordinately on the basis of their integrated coupling networks. Redundant spin coupling pathways provide ways of resolving overlaps frequently encountered in homonuclear 1H 2D NMR spectra and facilitate the elucidation of complex proton spin systems. Carbon-carbon and proton-carbon couplings can be used to bridge the aromatic and aliphatic parts of proton spin systems; this avoids possible ambiguities that may result from the use of nuclear Overhauser effects to assign aromatic amino acid signals. The technique is illustrated for Anabaena 7120 flavodoxin and cytochrome c-553, both uniformly enriched with carbon-13 (26%) or nitrogen-15 (98%).  相似文献   

15.
A pair of 4D NMR experiments for the backbone assignment of disordered proteins is presented. The experiments exploit (13)C direct detection and non-uniform sampling of the indirectly detected dimensions, and provide correlations of the aliphatic proton (H(α), and H(β)) and carbon (C(α), C(β)) resonance frequencies to the protein backbone. Thus, all the chemical shifts regularly used to map the transient secondary structure motifs in the intrinsically disordered proteins (H(α), C(α), C(β), C', and N) can be extracted from each spectrum. Compared to the commonly used assignment strategy based on matching the C(α) and C(β) chemical shifts, inclusion of the H(α) and H(β) provides up to three extra resonance frequencies that decrease the chance of ambiguous assignment. The experiments were successfully applied to the original assignment of a 12.8 kDa intrinsically disordered protein having a high content of proline residues (26 %) in the sequence.  相似文献   

16.
Summary A method for measuring J(C,P) and J(H,P) coupling constants is presented, based on fitting a target multiplet containing the heteronuclear coupling to a reference multiplet that lacks the heteronuclear coupling. In DNA and RNA oligonucleotides, information on backbone torsion angles can be obtained from these couplings. Experimental multiplets are obtained from 31P-coupled and 31P-decoupled 1H, 13C HSQC spectra of Rp-cyclic methylphosphonate. The accuracy to which the heteronuclear coupling constants can be determined depends on the signal-to-noise ratio of the experimental data and is analyzed in detail.Dedicated to Prof. R.R. Ernst on the occasion of his 60th birthday.  相似文献   

17.
The assignment of the aliphatic 1H and 13C resonances of IL-1 beta, a protein of 153 residues and molecular mass 17.4 kDa, is presented by use of a number of novel three-dimensional (3D) heteronuclear NMR experiments which rely on large heteronuclear one-bond J couplings to transfer magnetization and establish through-bond connectivities. These 3D NMR experiments circumvent problems traditionally associated with the application of conventional 2D 1H-1H correlation experiments to proteins of this size, in particular the extensive chemical shift overlap which precludes the interpretation of the spectra and the reduced sensitivity arising from 1H line widths that are often significantly larger than the 1H-1H J couplings. The assignment proceeds in two stages. In the first step the 13C alpha chemical shifts are correlated with the NH and 15N chemical shifts by a 3D triple-resonance NH-15N-13C alpha (HNCA) correlation experiment which reveals both intraresidue NH(i)-15N(i)-13C alpha (i) and some weaker interresidue NH(i)-15N(i)-C alpha (i-1) correlations, the former via intraresidue one-bond 1JNC alpha and the latter via interresidue two-bond 2JNC alpha couplings. As the NH, 15N, and C alpha H chemical shifts had previously been sequentially assigned by 3D 1H Hartmann-Hahn 15N-1H multiple quantum coherence (3D HOHAHA-HMQC) and 3D heteronuclear 1H nuclear Overhauser 15N-1H multiple quantum coherence (3D NOESY-HMQC) spectroscopy [Driscoll, P.C., Clore, G.M., Marion, D., Wingfield, P.T., & Gronenborn, A.M. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 3542-3556], the 3D triple-resonance HNCA correlation experiment permits the sequence-specific assignments of 13C alpha chemical shifts in a straightforward manner. The second step involves the identification of side-chain spin systems by 3D 1H-13C-13C-1H correlated (HCCH-COSY) and 3D 1H-13C-13C-1H total correlated (HCCH-TOCSY) spectroscopy, the latter making use of isotropic mixing of 13C magnetization to obtain relayed connectivities along the side chains. Extensive cross-checks are provided in the assignment procedure by examination of the connectivities between 1H resonances at all the corresponding 13C shifts of the directly bonded 13C nuclei. In this manner, we were able to obtain complete 1H and 13C side-chain assignments for all residues, with the exception of 4 (out of a total of 15) lysine residues for which partial assignments were obtained. The 3D heteronuclear correlation experiments described are highly sensitive, and the required set of three 3D spectra was recorded in only 1 week of measurement time on a single uniformly 15N/13C-labeled 1.7 mM sample of interleukin-1 beta.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
The assignment of protein backbone and side-chain NMR chemical shifts is the first step towards the characterization of protein structure. The recent introduction of proton detection in combination with fast MAS has opened up novel opportunities for assignment experiments. However, typical 3D sequential-assignment experiments using proton detection under fast MAS lead to signal intensities much smaller than the theoretically expected ones due to the low transfer efficiency of some of the steps. Here, we present a selective 3D experiment for deuterated and (amide) proton back-exchanged proteins where polarization is directly transferred from backbone nitrogen to selected backbone or sidechain carbons. The proposed pulse sequence uses only 1H–15N cross-polarization (CP) transfers, which are, for deuterated proteins, about 30% more efficient than 1H–13C CP transfers, and employs a dipolar version of the INEPT experiment for N–C transfer. By avoiding HN–C (HN stands for amide protons) and C–C CP transfers, we could achieve higher selectivity and increased signal intensities compared to other pulse sequences containing long-range CP transfers. The REDOR transfer is designed with an additional selective π pulse, which enables the selective transfer of the polarization to the desired 13C spins.  相似文献   

19.
We describe an approach for the signal assignment and structural analysis with a suite of two-dimensional (13)C-(13)C magic-angle-spinning solid-state NMR spectra of uniformly (13)C-labeled peptides and proteins. We directly fit the calculated spectra to experimental ones by simulated annealing in restrained molecular dynamics program CNS as a function of atomic coordinates. The spectra are calculated from the conformation dependent chemical shift obtained with SHIFTX and the cross-peak intensities computed for recoupled dipolar interactions. This method was applied to a membrane-bound 14-residue peptide, mastoparan-X. The obtained C', C(alpha) and C(beta) chemical shifts agreed with those reported previously at the precisions of 0.2, 0.7 and 0.4 ppm, respectively. This spectral fitting program also provides backbone dihedral angles with a precision of about 50 degrees from the spectra even with resonance overlaps. The restraints on the angles were improved by applying protein database program TALOS to the obtained chemical shifts. The peptide structure provided by these restraints was consistent with the reported structure at the backbone RMSD of about 1 A.  相似文献   

20.
The combined application of one- and two-dimensional high-field NMR techniques has led to the first assignment of the 1H, 13C, and 15N spectra of the pentadecapeptide gramicidin A in dimethylsulphoxide solution. The 62.9-MHz and 100.6-MHz 13C spin-lattice relaxation times and 13C-[1H] NOE factors for the backbone alpha carbons have been analysed in the 'model-free' approach to give a single correlation time (tau m) for isotropic overall molecular motion and an order parameter and internal correlation time for each C alpha H group in the backbone. The relatively high and constant values for the order parameter along the backbone indicate a degree of ordering of the structure, while the internal correlation times show that internal motions are progressively more rapid towards the N terminus. The average values of the vicinal HNC alpha H couplings are 7.4 Hz and 8.4 Hz respectively for the alternate L- and D-amino acid residues. The values are not consistent with either a ribbon conformation for the backbone or a right-handed beta 6.3 helix; they are consistent with the model proposed by Glickson et al. [Glickson, J. D., Mayers, D. F., Settine, J. M. & Urry, D. W. (1972) Biochemistry 11, 477-486] in which there is a rapid conformational order in equilibrium disorder equilibrium, the ordered structure being the left-handed beta 6.3 helix and the disordered state having local random-coil character.  相似文献   

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