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1.
Elucidation of high-resolution protein structures by NMR spectroscopy requires a large number of distance constraints that are derived from nuclear Overhauser effects between protons (NOEs). Due to the high level of spectral overlap encountered in 2D NMR spectra of proteins, the measurement of high quality distance constraints requires higher dimensional NMR experiments. Although four-dimensional Fourier transform (FT) NMR experiments can provide the necessary kind of spectral information, the associated measurement times are often prohibitively long. Covariance NMR spectroscopy yields 2D spectra that exhibit along the indirect frequency dimension the same high resolution as along the direct dimension using minimal measurement time. The generalization of covariance NMR to 4D NMR spectroscopy presented here exploits the inherent symmetry of certain 4D NMR experiments and utilizes the trace metric between donor planes for the construction of a high-resolution spectral covariance matrix. The approach is demonstrated for a 4D (13)C-edited NOESY experiment of ubiquitin. The 4D covariance spectrum narrows the line-widths of peaks strongly broadened in the FT spectrum due to the necessarily short number of increments collected, and it resolves otherwise overlapped cross peaks allowing for an increase in the number of NOE assignments to be made from a given dataset. At the same time there is no significant decrease in the positive predictive value of observing a peak as compared to the corresponding 4D Fourier transform spectrum. These properties make the 4D covariance method a potentially valuable tool for the structure determination of larger proteins and for high-throughput applications in structural biology.  相似文献   

2.
A and FB. The g-tensor orientation of FA and FB is believed to be correlated to the preferential localization of the mixed-valence and equal-valence (ferrous) iron pairs in each [4Fe-4S]+ cluster. The preferential position of the mixed-valence and equal-valence pairs, in turn, can be inferred from the study of the temperature dependence of contact-shifted resonances by 1H NMR spectroscopy. For this, a sequence-specific assignment of these signals is required. The 1H NMR spectrum of reduced, unbound PsaC from Synechococcus sp. PCC 7002 at 280.4 K in 99% D2O solution shows 18 hyperfine-shifted resonances. The non-solvent-exchangeable, hyperfine-shifted resonances of reduced PsaC are clearly identified as belonging to the cysteines coordinating the clusters FA and FB by their downfield chemical shifts, by their temperature dependencies, and by their short T 1 relaxation times. The usual fast method of assigning the 1H NMR spectra of reduced [4Fe-4S] proteins through magnetization transfer from the oxidized to the reduced state was not feasible in the case of reduced PsaC. Therefore, a de novo self-consistent sequence-specific assignment of the hyperfine-shifted resonances was obtained based on dipolar connectivities from 1D NOE difference spectra and on longitudinal relaxation times using the X-ray structure of Clostridium acidi urici 2[4Fe-4S] cluster ferredoxin at 0.94 Å resolution as a model. The results clearly show the same sequence-specific distribution of Curie and anti-Curie cysteines for unbound, reduced PsaC as established for other [4Fe-4S]-containing proteins; therefore, the mixed-valence and equal-valence (ferrous) Fe-Fe pairs in FA and FB have the same preferential positions relative to the protein. The analysis reveals that the magnetic properties of the two [4Fe-4S] clusters are essentially indistinguishable in unbound PsaC, in contrast to the PsaC that is bound as a component of the PS I complex. Received: 1 February 2000 / Accepted: 20 March 2000  相似文献   

3.
The activity profile of the CU2Zn2HSOD Ile-137 mutant has a pKa of 9.6, i. e. one unit lower than the wild type (WT). This property has allowed us to investigate the inactive high pH form of the enzyme before denaturation occurs. The electronic and EPR spectra do not change with the above pKa. The 1H NMR spectrum of the CU2CO2-analog reveals slight decreases in the hyperfine shifts of the protons of His-48 at high pH, which are consistent with a water molecule becoming closer to the copper ion, as detected through water 1H T 1 –1 NMR measurements. The affinity of azide at high pH is lower than at low pH, though still sizeable. The WT follows the same pattern up to pH pKa. It appears that the drop in activity is not related to any major change involving the metal coordination sphere, but is related to changes in the electrostatic potential due to the deprotonation process. Offprint requests to: I. Bertini  相似文献   

4.
A new strategy for the simultaneous NMR assignment of both backbone and side chain amides in large proteins with isotopomer-selective transverse-relaxation-optimized spectroscopy (IS-TROSY) is reported. The method considers aspects of both the NMR sample preparation and the experimental design. First, the protein is dissolved in a buffer with 50%H2O/50%D2O in order to promote the population of semideuterated NHD isotopomers in side chain amides of Asn/Gln residues. Second, a 13C′-coupled 2D 15N–1H IS-TROSY spectrum provides a stereospecific distinction between the geminal protons in the E and Z configurations of the carboxyamide group. Third, a suite of IS-TROSY-based triple-resonance NMR experiments, e.g. 3D IS-TROSY-HNCA and 3D IS-TROSY-HNCACB, are designed to correlate aliphatic carbon atoms with backbone amides and, for Asn/Gln residues, at the same time with side chain amides. The NMR assignment procedure is similar to that for small proteins using conventional 3D HNCA/3D HNCACB spectra, in which, however, signals from NH2 groups are often very weak or even missing due to the use of broad-band proton decoupling schemes and NOE data have to be used as a remedy. For large proteins, the use of conventional TROSY experiments makes resonances of side chain amides not observable at all. The application of IS-TROSY experiments to the 35-kDa yeast cytosine deaminase has established a complete resonance assignment for the backbone and stereospecific assignment for side chain amides, which otherwise could not be achieved with existing NMR experiments. Thus, the development of IS-TROSY-based method provides new opportunities for the NMR study of important structural and biological roles of carboxyamides and side chain moieties of arginine and lysine residues in large proteins as well as amino moieties in nucleic acids.Electronic Supplementary Material Supplementary material is available to authorised users in the online version of this article at .  相似文献   

5.
Three-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance (3D NMR) provides one of the foremost analytical tools available for the elucidation of biomolecular structure, function and dynamics. Executing a 3D NMR experiment generally involves scanning a series of time-domain signals S(t 3), as a function of two time variables (t 1, t 2) which need to undergo parametric incrementations throughout independent experiments. Recent years have witnessed extensive efforts towards the acceleration of this kind of experiments. Among the different approaches that have been proposed counts an “ultrafast” scheme, which distinguishes itself from other propositions by enabling—at least in principle—the acquisition of the complete multidimensional NMR data set within a single transient. 2D protein NMR implementations of this single-scan method have been demonstrated, yet its potential for 3D acquisitions has only been exemplified on model organic compounds. This publication discusses a number of strategies that could make these spatial encoding protocols compatible with 3D biomolecular NMR applications. These include a merging of 2D ultrafast NMR principles with temporal 2D encoding schemes, which can yield 3D HNCO spectra from peptides and proteins within ≈100 s timescales. New processing issues that facilitate the collection of 3D NMR spectra by relying fully on spatial encoding principles are also assessed, and shown capable of delivering HNCO spectra within 1 s timescales. Limitations and prospects of these various schemes are briefly addressed.  相似文献   

6.
Adding the 13C labelled 2-keto-isovalerate and 2-oxobutanoate precursors to a minimal medium composed of 12C labelled glucose instead of the commonly used (2D, 13C) glucose leads not only to the 13C labelling of (I, L, V) methyls but also to the selective 13C labelling of the backbone Cα and CO carbons of the Ile and Val residues. As a result, the backbone (1H, 15N) correlations of the Ile and Val residues and their next neighbours in the (i + 1) position can be selectively identified in HN(CA) and HN(CO) planes. The availability of a selective HSQC spectrum corresponding to the sole amide resonances of the Ile and Val residues allows connecting them to their corresponding methyls by the intra-residue NOE effect, and should therefore be applicable to larger systems.  相似文献   

7.
Summary The resolution of spectral frequencies in NMR data obtained from discrete Fourier transformation (DFT) along D constant-time dimensions can be improved significantly through extrapolation of the D-dimensional free induction decay (FID) by multidimensional Bayesian analysis. Starting from Bayesian probability theory for parameter estimation and model detection of one-dimensional time-domain data [Bretthorst, (1990) J. Magn. Reson., 88, 533–551; 552–570; 571–595], a theory for the D-dimensional case has been developed and implemented in an algorithm called BAMBAM (BAyesian Model Building Algorithm in Multidimensions). BAMBAM finds the most probable sinusoidal model to account for the systematic portion of any D-dimensional stationary FID. According to the parameters estimated by the algorithm, the FID is extrapolated in D dimensions prior to apodization and Fourier transformation. Multidimensional Bayesian analysis allows for the detection of signals not resolved by the DFT alone or even by sequential one-dimensional extrapolation from mirror-image linear prediction prior to the DFT. The procedure has been tested with a theoretical two-dimensional dataset and with four-dimensional HN(CO)CAHA (Kay et al. (1992) J. Magn. Reson., 98, 443–450) data from a small protein (8 kDa) where BAMBAM was applied to the 13C and H constant-time dimensions.To whom correspondence should be addressed.  相似文献   

8.
S100b is a calcium-binding protein that will bind to many calmodulin target molecules in a Ca2+-dependent manner. In order to study the Ca2+-dependent binding properties of S100b, its interaction with a calmodulin antagonist, trifluoperazine (TFP), was investigated using [19F]- and [1H]-NMR and UV-difference spectroscopy. It was estimated from [19F]-NMR that in the absence of Ca2+, thek 1/2 value of TFP was 130 µM, while itsk 1/2 value decreased to 28 µM in the presence of Ca2+. The addition of KCl was not antagonistic to the Ca2+-dependent interaction of TFP to S100b. The chemical exchange rate of TFP with Ca2+-bound S100b was estimated to be 9×102 sec–1. By comparison with TFP-calmodulin exchange rates, it is suggested that the TFP-binding site on S100b is structurally different from its binding sites on calmodulin. Proton NMR resonance broadening in the range 6.8–7.2 ppm, corresponding to phenylalanine nuclei of S100b, indicates that these residues may be involved in TFP binding. Addition of Ca2+ to a 1:1 mixture of S100b and TFP resulted in a red-shifted UV-difference spectrum, while no significant difference spectrum was detected when Mg2+ was added to a S100b-TFP solution. Thus, we suggest that Ca2+ induces the exposure of a hydrophobic domain on S100b containing one or more phenylalanine residues that will bind TFP but that this domain is different from the hydrophobic domain on calmodulin.  相似文献   

9.
G-matrix FT projection NMR spectroscopy was employed for resonance assignment of the 79-residue subunit c of the Escherichia coli F1F0 ATP synthase embedded in micelles formed by lyso palmitoyl phosphatidyl glycerol (LPPG). Five GFT NMR experiments, that is, (3,2)D HNNCO, L-(4,3)D HNNC αβ C α, L-(4,3)D HNN(CO)C αβ C α, (4,2)D HACA(CO)NHN and (4,3)D HCCH, were acquired along with simultaneous 3D 15N, 13Caliphatic, 13Caromatic-resolved [1H,1H]-NOESY with a total measurement time of ∼43 h. Data analysis resulted in sequence specific assignments for all routinely measured backbone and 13Cβ shifts, and for 97% of the side chain shifts. Moreover, the use of two G2FT NMR experiments, that is, (5,3)D HN{N,CO}{C αβ C α} and (5,3)D {C αβ C α}{CON}HN, was explored to break the very high chemical shift degeneracy typically encountered for membrane proteins. It is shown that the 4D and 5D spectral information obtained rapidly from GFT and G2FT NMR experiments enables one to efficiently obtain (nearly) complete resonance assignments of membrane proteins. Qi Zhang, Hanudatta S. Atreya, Douglas E. Kamen, Mark E. Girvin and Thomas Szyperski—New York Consortium on Membrane Protein Structure.  相似文献   

10.
Summary A generally applicable method for the automated classification of 2D NMR peaks has been developed, based on a Bayesian approach coupled to a multivariate linear discriminant analysis of the data. The method can separate true NMR signals from noise signals, solvent stripes and artefact signals. The analysis relies on the assumption that the different signal classes have different distributions of specific properties such as line shapes, line widths and intensities. As to be expected, the correlation network of the distributions of the selected properties affects the choice of the discriminant function and the final selection of signal properties. The classification rule for the signal classes was deduced from Bayes's theorem. The method was successfully tested on a NOESY spectrum of HPr protein from Staphylococcus aureus. The calculated probabilities for the different signal class memberships are realistic and reliable, with a high efficiency of discrimination between peaks that are true NOE signals and those that are not.  相似文献   

11.
The new NMR experiments 3D H2BC and clean HMBC are explored for challenging applications to a complex carbohydrate at natural abundance of 13C. The 3D H2BC experiment is crucial for sequential assignment as it yields heteronuclear one- and two-bond together with COSY correlations for the 1H spins, all in a single spectrum with good resolution and non-informative diagonal-type peaks suppressed. Clean HMBC is a remedy for the ubiquitous problem of strong coupling induced one-bond correlation artifacts in HMBC spectra of carbohydrates. Both experiments work well for one of the largest carbohydrates whose structure has been determined by NMR, not least due to the enhanced resolution offered by the third dimension in 3D H2BC and the improved spectral quality due to artifact suppression in clean HMBC. Hence these new experiments set the scene to take advantage of the sensitivity boost achieved by the latest generation of cold probes for NMR structure determination of even larger and more complex carbohydrates in solution.  相似文献   

12.
Recently, a set of selective 1D experiments with spin-state-selective excitation for CH spin systems was introduced by Parella and Belloc (J. Magn. Reson., 148, 78–87 (2001)). We have expanded and generalized this concept further, and demonstrated that a very simple experiment utilizing spin-state-selective filtering can be used for simultaneous measurement of heteronuclear 1 J NH (or 1 J CH) and geminal 2 J HH couplings from two-dimensional 15N-1H (or 13C-1H) correlation spectrum. The experiment has very high sensitivity owing to the preservation of equivalent coherence transfer pathways analogous to the sensitivity and gradient enhanced HSQC experiment. However, overall length of the pulse sequence is 1/(2J) shorter than the gradient selected SE-HSQC experiment. Furthermore, the spin-state-selection can be utilized between NH and NH2 (or CH and CH2) moieties by changing the phase of only one pulse. The pulse scheme will be useful for the measurement of scalar and residual dipolar couplings in wide variety of samples, due to its high sensitivity and artifact suppression efficiency. The method is tested on NH2 and CH2 moieties in 15N- and 15N/13C–labeled ubiquitin samples.  相似文献   

13.
A new NOE strategy is presented that allows the simultaneous observation of intermolecular and intramolecular NOEs between an unlabeled ligand and a 13C,15N-labeled protein. The method uses an adiabatic 13C inversion pulse optimized to an empirically observed relationship between 1 J CH and carbon chemical shift to selectively invert the protein protons (attached to 13C). Two NOESY data sets are recorded where the intermolecular and intramolecular NOESY cross peaks have either equal or opposite signs, respectively. Addition and subtraction yield two NOESY spectra which contain either NOEs within the labeled protein (or unlabeled ligand) or along the binding interface. The method is demonstrated with an application to the B12-binding subunit of Glutamate Mutase from Clostridium tetanomorphum complexed with the B12-nucleotide loop moiety of the natural cofactor adenosylcobalamin (Coenzyme B12).  相似文献   

14.
400 MHz1H-NMR and 100 MHz13C-NMR spectra of a neutral octasaccharide and of a disialyldecasaccharide of theN-acetyllactosamine type were studied. The resonance assignments were made by combining multiple-relayed coherence-transfer chemical-shift-correlated spectroscopy (multiple-RELAY-COSY) and1H/13C-shift correlated 2D experiments. The complete analysis of the1H and13C spectra was performed.  相似文献   

15.
The interaction of the diastereomeric complexes Λ-[Ru(bpy)2(m-GHK)]Cl2 and Δ-[Ru(bpy)2(m-GHK)]Cl2 (bpy is 2,2′-bipyridine, GHK is glycine–l-histidine–l-lysine) with the deoxynucleotide duplex d(5′-CGCGATCGCG)2 was studied by means of 1H NMR spectroscopy. At a Δ-isomer to DNA ratio of 1:1, significant shifts for the metal complex are observed, whereas there is negligible effect on the oligonucleotide protons and only one intermolecular nuclear Overhauser effect (NOE) is present at the 2D nuclear Overhauser enhancement spectroscopy spectrum. The 1Η NMR spectrum at ratio 2:1 is characterized by a slight shift for the Δ-isomer’s bpy aromatic protons as well as significant shifts for the decanucleotide G4 H1′ and Η2″, A5 H2, G10 H1′, T6 NH and G2 NH protons. Furthermore, at ratio 2:1, 11 intermolecular NOEs are observed. The majority of the NOEs involve the sugar Η2′ and Η2″ protons sited in the major groove of the decanucleotide. Increasing the Δ-isomer to d(CGCGATCGCG)2 ratio to 5:1 results in noteworthy spectral changes. The Δ-isomer’s proton shifts are reduced, whereas significant shifts are observed for the decanucleotide protons, especially the sugar protons, as well as for the exchangeable protons. Interaction is characterized by the presence of only one intermolecular NOE. Furthermore, there is significant broadening of the imino proton signals as the ratio of the Δ-isomer to DΝΑ increases, which is attributed to the opening of the two strands of the duplex. The Λ-isomer, on the other hand, approaches the minor groove of the oligonucleotide and interacts only weakly, possibly by electrostatic interactions. Photocleavage studies were also conducted with the plasmid pUC19 and a 158-bp restriction fragment, showing that both diastereomers cleave DNA with similar efficiency, attacking mainly the guanines of the sequence probably by generating active oxygen species. Electronic supplementary material Supplementary material is available in the online version of this article at and is accessible for authorized users. An erratum to this article can be found at  相似文献   

16.
In this paper we consider maximum likelihood analysis of generalized growth curve model with the Box‐Cox transformation when the covariance matrix has AR(q) dependence structure with grouping variances. The covariance matrix under consideration is Σ = D σ CD σ where C is the correlation matrix with stationary autoregression process of order q, q < p and D σ is a diagonal matrix with p elements divided into g(≤ p) groups, i.e., D σ is a function of {σ1, …, σg} and – 1 < ρ < 1 and σl, l = 1, …, g, are unknown. We consider both parameter estimation and prediction of future values. Results are illustrated with real and simulated data.  相似文献   

17.
2D [13C,1H] COSY NMR is used by the metabolic engineering community for determining 13C–13C connectivities in intracellular compounds that contain information regarding the steady-state fluxes in cellular metabolism. This paper proposes innovations in the generation and analysis of these specific NMR spectra. These include a computer tool that allows accurate determination of the relative peak areas and their complete covariance matrices even in very complex spectra. Additionally, a method is introduced for correcting the results for isotopic non-steady-state conditions. The proposed methods were applied to measured 2D [13C,1H] COSY NMR spectra. Peak intensities in a one-dimensional section of the spectrum are frequently not representative for relative peak volumes in the two-dimensional spectrum. It is shown that for some spectra a significant amount of additional information can be gained from long-range 13C–13C scalar couplings in 2D [13C,1H] COSY NMR spectra. Finally, the NMR resolution enhancement by dissolving amino acid derivatives in a nonpolar solvent is demonstrated.  相似文献   

18.
A goose-type lysozyme from ostrich egg white (OEL) was produced by Escherichia coli expression system, and the role of His101 of OEL in the enzymatic reaction was investigated by NMR spectroscopy, thermal unfolding, and theoretical modeling of the enzymatic hydrolysis of hexa-N-acetylchitohexaose, (GlcNAc)6. Although the binding of tri-N-acetylchitotriose, (GlcNAc)3, to OEL perturbed several backbone resonances in the 1H–15N HSQC spectrum, the chemical shift of the backbone resonance of His101 was not significantly affected. However, apparent pKa values of His101 and Lys102 determined from the pH titration curves of the backbone chemical shifts were markedly shifted by (GlcNAc)3 binding. Thermal unfolding experiments and modeling study of (GlcNAc)6 hydrolysis using a His101-mutated OEL (H101A-OEL) revealed that the His101 mutation affected not only sugar residue affinities at subsites ?3 and ?2 but also the rate constant for bond cleavage. His101 appears to play multiple roles in the substrate binding and the catalytic reaction.  相似文献   

19.
Combined multidimensional nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and electrospray mass spectrometry was used to analyze the platinated DNA adduct of the phase II anticancer drug [{trans-PtCl(NH3)2}2-μ-{trans-Pt(NH3)2(NH2(CH2)6NH2)2}](NO3)4 (BBR3464) with [5′-d(ACG*TATACG*T)-3′]2. Two 1,2-interstrand cross-links were formed by concomitant binding of two trinuclear moieties to the oligonucleotide. The four DNA-bound platinum atoms coordinated in the major groove at N7 positions of guanines in the 3′ → 3′ direction and the central platinum unit is expected to lie in the DNA minor groove. This is the first report of such a DNA lesion. The melting temperature of the adduct is 76 °C and is 42 °C higher than that of the unplatinated DNA. The sugar residues of the platinated bases are in the N-type conformation and the G9 nucleoside is in the syn orientation, while the G3 nucleoside appears to retain the anti configuration. The secondary structure of DNA was significantly changed upon cross-linking of the two BBR3464 molecules. Base destacking occurs between A1/C2 and C2/G3 and weakened stacking is seen for the C8/G9 and G9/T10 bases. The lack of Watson–Crick base pairing is also seen for A1–T10 and C2–G9 base pairs, whereas Watson–Crick base pairs in the central sequence of the DNA (T4 → A7) are well maintained. While DNA repair proteins may “see” different platinated adducts as bulky “lesions”, the subtle differences involved in base pairing and stacking, as summarized here, may extend to their role as a substrate for repair enzymes. Thus, differences in protein recognition and repair efficiency among the various interstrand cross-links are likely and a subject worthy of detailed exploration. Electronic supplementary material  The online version of this article (doi:) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.  相似文献   

20.
The interaction between cyproheptadine hydrochloride (CYP) and human serum albumin (HSA) was investigated by fluorescence spectroscopy, UV–vis absorption spectroscopy, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FT‐IR) and molecular modeling at a physiological pH (7.40). Fluorescence of HSA was quenched remarkably by CYP and the quenching mechanism was considered as static quenching since it formed a complex. The association constants Ka and number of binding sites n were calculated at different temperatures. According to Förster's theory of non‐radiation energy transfer, the distance r between donor (human serum albumin) and acceptor (cyproheptadine hydrochloride) was obtained. The effect of common ions on the binding constant was also investigated. The effect of CYP on the conformation of HSA was analyzed using FT‐IR, synchronous fluorescence spectroscopy and 3D fluorescence spectra. The thermodynamic parameters ΔH and ΔS were calculated to be ?14.37 kJ mol?1 and 38.03 J mol?1 K?1, respectively, which suggested that hydrophobic forces played a major role in stabilizing the HSA‐CYP complex. In addition, examination of molecular modeling indicated that CYP could bind to site I of HSA and that hydrophobic interaction was the major acting force, which was in agreement with binding mode studies. Copyright © 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

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