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1.
Due to practical limitations in available 15N rf field strength, imperfections in 15N 180° pulses arising from off-resonance effects can result in significant sensitivity loss, even if the chemical shift offset is relatively small. Indeed, in multi-dimensional NMR experiments optimized for protein backbone amide groups, cross-peaks arising from the Arg guanidino 15Nε (~85 ppm) are highly attenuated by the presence of multiple INEPT transfer steps. To improve the sensitivity for correlations involving Arg Nε–Hε groups, we have incorporated 15N broadband 180° pulses into 3D 15N-separated NOE-HSQC and HNCACB experiments. Two 15N-WURST pulses incorporated at the INEPT transfer steps of the 3D 15N-separated NOE-HSQC pulse sequence resulted in a ~1.5-fold increase in sensitivity for the Arg Nε–Hε signals at 800 MHz. For the 3D HNCACB experiment, five 15N Abramovich-Vega pulses were incorporated for broadband inversion and refocusing, and the sensitivity of Arg1Hε-15Nε-13Cγ/13Cδ correlation peaks was enhanced by a factor of ~1.7 at 500 MHz. These experiments eliminate the necessity for additional experiments to assign Arg 1Hε and 15Nε resonances. In addition, the increased sensitivity afforded for the detection of NOE cross-peaks involving correlations with the 15Nε/1Hε of Arg in 3D 15N-separated NOE experiments should prove to be very useful for structural analysis of interactions involving Arg side-chains.  相似文献   

2.
We present a highly sensitive pulse sequence, carbonyl carbon label selective 1H–15N HSQC (CCLS-HSQC) for the detection of signals from 1H–15N units involved in 13C′–15N linkages. The CCLS-HSQC pulse sequence utilizes a modified 15N CT evolution period equal to 1/( ) (∼33 ms) to select for 13C′–15N pairs. By collecting CCLS-HSQC and HNCO data for two proteins (8 kDa ubiquitin and 20 kDa HscB) at various temperatures (5–40°C) in order to vary correlation times, we demonstrate the superiority of the CCLS-HSQC pulse sequence for proteins with long correlation times (i.e. higher molecular weight). We then show that the CCLS-HSQC experiment yields assignments in the case of a 41 kDa protein incorporating pairs of 15N- and 13C′-labeled amino acids, where a TROSY 2D-HN(CO) had failed. Although the approach requires that the 1H–15N HSQC cross peaks be observable, it does not require deuteration of the protein. The method is suitable for larger proteins and is less affected by conformational exchange than HNCO experiments, which require a longer period of transverse 15N magnetization. The method also is tolerant to the partial loss of signal from isotopic dilution (scrambling). This approach will be applicable to families of proteins that have been resistant to NMR structural and dynamic analysis, such as large enzymes, and partially folded or unfolded proteins.  相似文献   

3.
Multidimensional NMR spectroscopy is a well-established technique for the characterization of structure and fast-time-scale dynamics of highly populated ground states of biological macromolecules. The investigation of short-lived excited states that are important for molecular folding, misfolding and function, however, remains a challenge for modern biomolecular NMR techniques. Off-equilibrium real-time kinetic NMR methods allow direct observation of conformational or chemical changes by following peak positions and intensities in a series of spectra recorded during a kinetic event. Because standard multidimensional NMR methods required to yield sufficient atom-resolution are intrinsically time-consuming, many interesting phenomena are excluded from real-time NMR analysis. Recently, spatially encoded ultrafast 2D NMR techniques have been proposed that allow one to acquire a 2D NMR experiment within a single transient. In addition, when combined with the SOFAST technique, such ultrafast experiments can be repeated at high rates. One of the problems detected for such ultrafast protein NMR experiments is related to the heteronuclear decoupling during detection with interferences between the pulses and the oscillatory magnetic field gradients arising in this scheme. Here we present a method for improved ultrafast data acquisition yielding higher signal to noise and sharper lines in single-scan 2D NMR spectra. In combination with a fast-mixing device, the recording of 1H–15N correlation spectra with repetition rates of up to a few Hertz becomes feasible, enabling real-time studies of protein kinetics occurring on time scales down to a few seconds.  相似文献   

4.
Imino 1H–15N residual dipolar couplings (RDCs) provide additional structural information that complements standard 1H–1H NOEs leading to improvements in both the local and global structure of RNAs. Here, we report measurement of imino 1H–1H RDCs for the Iron Responsive Element (IRE) RNA and native E. coli tRNAVal using a BEST-Jcomp-HMQC2 experiment. 1H–1H RDCs are observed between the imino protons in G–U wobble base pairs and between imino protons on neighboring base pairs in both RNAs. These imino 1H–1H RDCs complement standard 1H–15N RDCs because the 1H–1H vectors generally point along the helical axis, roughly perpendicular to 1H–15N RDCs. The use of longitudinal relaxation enhancement increased the signal-to-noise of the spectra by ~3.5-fold over the standard experiment. The ability to measure imino 1H–1H RDCs offers a new restraint, which can be used in NMR domain orientation and structural studies of RNAs. Electronic supplementary material  The online version of this article (doi:) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.  相似文献   

5.
We present two time-shared experiments that enable the characterization of all nOes in 1H–13C-ILV methyl-labelled proteins that are otherwise uniformly deuterated and 15N enriched and possibly selectively protonated for distinct residue types. A 3D experiment simultaneously provides the spectra of a 3D NOESY-HN-TROSY and of a 3D NOESY-HC-PEP-HSQC. Thus, nOes from any protons to methyl or amide protons are dispersed with respect to 15N and 13C chemical shifts, respectively. The single 4D experiment presented here yields simultaneously the four 4D experiments HC-HSQC-NOESY-HC-PEP-HSQC, HC-HSQC-NOESY-HN-TROSY, HN-HSQC-NOESY-HN-TROSY and HN-HSQC-NOESY-HC-PEP-HSQC. This allows for the unambiguous determination of all nOes involving amide and methyl protons. The method was applied to a (1H,13C)-ILV−(1H)-FY-(U−2H,15N) sample of a 37 kDa di-domain of the E. coli enterobactin synthetase module EntF.  相似文献   

6.
A modified Lorentzian distribution function is used to model peaks in two-dimensional (2D) 1H–13C heteronuclear single quantum coherence (HSQC) nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectra. The model fit is used to determine accurate chemical shifts from genuine signals in complex metabolite mixtures such as blood. The algorithm can be used to extract features from a set of spectra from different samples for exploratory metabolomics. First a reference spectrum is created in which the peak intensities are given by the median value over all samples at each point in the 2D spectra so that 1H–13C correlations in any spectra are accounted for. The mathematical model provides a footprint for each peak in the reference spectrum, which can be used to bin the 1H–13C correlations in each HSQC spectrum. The binned intensities are then used as variables in multivariate analyses and those found to be discriminatory are rapidly identified by cross referencing the chemical shifts of the bins with a database of 13C and 1H chemical shift correlations from known metabolites.  相似文献   

7.
A simple spectroscopic filtering technique is presented that may aid the assignment of 13C and 15N resonances of methyl-containing amino-acids in solid-state magic-angle spinning (MAS) NMR. A filtering block that selects methyl resonances is introduced in two-dimensional (2D) 13C-homonuclear and 15N–13C heteronuclear correlation experiments. The 2D 13C–13C correlation spectra are recorded with the methyl filter implemented prior to a 13C–13C mixing step. It is shown that these methyl-filtered 13C-homonuclear correlation spectra are instrumental in the assignment of Cδ resonances of leucines by suppression of Cγ–Cδ cross peaks. Further, a methyl filter is implemented prior to a 15N–13C transferred-echo double resonance (TEDOR) exchange scheme to obtain 2D 15N–13C heteronuclear correlation spectra. These experiments provide correlations between methyl groups and backbone amides. Some of the observed sequential 15N–13C correlations form the basis for initial sequence-specific assignments of backbone signals of the outer-membrane protein G.  相似文献   

8.
Aromatic proton resonances of proteins are notoriously difficult to assign. Through-bond correlation experiments are preferable over experiments that rely on through-space interactions because they permit aromatic chemical shift assignments to be established independently of the structure determination process. Known experimental schemes involving a magnetization transfer across the Cβ–Cγ bond in aromatic side chains either suffer from low efficiency for the relay beyond the Cδ position, use sophisticated 13C mixing schemes, require probe heads suitable for application of high 13C radio-frequency fields or rely on specialized isotopic labelling patterns. Novel methods are proposed that result in sequential assignment of all aromatic protons in uniformly 13C/15N labelled proteins using standard spectrometer hardware. Pulse sequences consist of routinely used building blocks and are therefore reasonably simple to implement. Ring protons may be correlated with β-carbons and, alternatively, with amide protons (and nitrogens) or carbonyls in order to take advantage of the superior dispersion of backbone resonances. It is possible to record spectra in a non-selective manner, yielding signals of all aromatic residues, or as amino-acid type selective versions to further reduce ambiguities. The new experiments are demonstrated with four different proteins with molecular weights ranging from 11 kDa to 23 kDa. Their performance is compared with that of (Hβ)Cβ(CγCδ)Hδ and (Hβ)Cβ(CγCδCɛ)Hɛ pulse sequences [Yamazaki et al. (1993) J Am Chem Soc 115:11054–11055]. Electronic Supplementary Material The online version of this article (doi: ) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.  相似文献   

9.
The copper-mediated protein–protein interaction between yeast Atx1 and Ccc2 has been examined by protonless heteronuclear NMR and compared with the already available 1H–15N HSQC information. The observed chemical shift variations are analyzed with respect to the actual solution structure, available through intermolecular NOEs. The advantage of using the CON-IPAP spectrum with respect to the 1H–15N HSQC resides in the increased number of signals observed, including those of prolines. CBCACO-IPAP experiments allow us to focus on the interaction region and on side-chain carbonyls, while a newly designed CEN-IPAP experiment on side-chains of lysines. An attempt is made to rationalize the chemical shift variations on the basis of the structural data involving the interface between the proteins and the nearby regions. It is here proposed that protonless 13C direct-detection NMR is a useful complement to 1H based NMR spectroscopy for monitoring protein–protein and protein–ligand interactions. Electronic Supplementary Material Supplementary material is available to authorised users in the online version of this article at  相似文献   

10.
We present a simple method, ARTSY, for extracting 1JNH couplings and 1H–15N RDCs from an interleaved set of two-dimensional 1H–15N TROSY-HSQC spectra, based on the principle of quantitative J correlation. The primary advantage of the ARTSY method over other methods is the ability to measure couplings without scaling peak positions or altering the narrow line widths characteristic of TROSY spectra. Accuracy of the method is demonstrated for the model system GB3. Application to the catalytic core domain of HIV integrase, a 36 kDa homodimer with unfavorable spectral characteristics, demonstrates its practical utility. Precision of the RDC measurement is limited by the signal-to-noise ratio, S/N, achievable in the 2D TROSY-HSQC spectrum, and is approximately given by 30/(S/N) Hz.  相似文献   

11.
With the advent of high-yield cell-free expressions systems, many researchers are exploiting selective isotope labelling of amino acids to increase the efficiency and accuracy of the NMR assignment process. We developed recently a combinatorial selective labelling (CSL) method capable of yielding large numbers of residue-type and sequence-specific backbone amide assignments, which involves comparing cross-peak intensities in 1H–15N HSQC and 2D 1H–15N HNCO spectra collected for five samples containing different combinations of 13C- and 15N-labelled amino acids [Parker MJ, Aulton-Jones M, Hounslow A, Craven C J (2004) J Am Chem Soc 126:5020–5021]. In this paper we develop a robust method for establishing the reliability of these assignments. We have performed a detailed statistical analysis of the CSL data collected for a model system (the B1 domain of protein G from Streptococcus), developing a scoring method which allows the confidence in assignments to be assessed, and which enables the effects of overlap on assignment fidelity to be predicted. To further test the scoring method and also to assess the performance of CSL in relation to sample quality, we have applied the method to the CSL data collected for GFP in our previous study.  相似文献   

12.
In-cell NMR is an application of solution NMR that enables the investigation of protein conformations inside living cells. We have measured in-cell NMR spectra in oocytes from the African clawed frog Xenopus laevis. 15N-labeled ubiquitin, its derivatives and calmodulin were injected into Xenopus oocytes and two-dimensional 1H–15N correlation spectra of the proteins were obtained. While the spectrum of wild-type ubiquitin in oocytes had rather fewer cross-peaks compared to its in vitro spectrum, ubiquitin derivatives that are presumably unable to bind to ubiquitin-interacting proteins gave a markedly larger number of cross-peaks. This observation suggests that protein–protein interactions between ubiquitin and ubiquitin-interacting proteins may cause NMR signal broadening, and hence spoil the quality of the in-cell HSQC spectra. In addition, we observed the maturation of ubiquitin precursor derivative in living oocytes using the in-cell NMR technique. This process was partly inhibited by pre-addition of ubiquitin aldehyde, a specific inhibitor for ubiquitin C-terminal hydrolase (UCH). Our work demonstrates the potential usefulness of in-cell NMR with Xenopus oocytes for the investigation of protein conformations and functions under intracellular environmental conditions.Electronic Supplementary Material Supplementary material is available to authorized users in the online version of this article at .  相似文献   

13.
We report enhanced sensitivity NMR measurements of intrinsically disordered proteins in the presence of paramagnetic relaxation enhancement (PRE) agents such as Ni2+-chelated DO2A. In proton-detected 1H-15N SOFAST-HMQC and carbon-detected (H-flip)13CO-15N experiments, faster longitudinal relaxation enables the usage of even shorter interscan delays. This results in higher NMR signal intensities per units of experimental time, without adverse line broadening effects. At 40 mmol·L−1 of the PRE agent, we obtain a 1.7- to 1.9-fold larger signal to noise (S/N) for the respective 2D NMR experiments. High solvent accessibility of intrinsically disordered protein (IDP) residues renders this class of proteins particularly amenable to the outlined approach.  相似文献   

14.
The partial 15N and 13C solid-state NMR resonance assignment of the HET-s prion protein fragment 218–289 in its amyloid form is presented. It is based on experiments measured at MAS frequencies in the range of 20–40 kHz using exclusively adiabatic polarization-transfer schemes. The resonance assignment within each residue is based on two-dimensional 13C––13C correlation spectra utilizing the DREAM mixing scheme. The sequential linking of the assigned residues used a set of two- and three-dimensional 15N––13C correlation experiments. Almost all cross peaks visible in the spectra are assigned, but only resonances from 43 of the 78 amino-acid residues could be detected. The missing residues are thought to be highly disordered and/or highly dynamic giving rise to broad resonance lines that escaped detection in the experiments applied. The line widths of the observed resonances are narrow and comparable to line widths observed in micro-crystalline samples. The 43 assigned residues are located in two fragments of about 20 residues. Electronic Supplementary Material Supplementary material is available for this article at and is accessible for authorized users.  相似文献   

15.
High resolution 13C-detected solid-state NMR spectra of the deuterated beta-1 immunoglobulin binding domain of the protein G (GB1) have been collected to show that all 15N, 13C′, 13Cα and 13Cβ sites are resolved in 13C–13C and 15N–13C spectra, with significant improvement in T 2 relaxation times and resolution at high magnetic field (750 MHz). The comparison of echo T 2 values between deuterated and protonated GB1 at various spinning rates and under different decoupling schemes indicates that 13T 2′ times increase by almost a factor of two upon deuteration at all spinning rates and under moderate decoupling strength, and thus the deuteration enables application of scalar-based correlation experiments that are challenging from the standpoint of transverse relaxation, with moderate proton decoupling. Additionally, deuteration in large proteins is a useful strategy to selectively detect polar residues that are often important for protein function and protein–protein interactions.  相似文献   

16.
Rapid acquisition of high-resolution 2D and 3D NMR spectra is essential for studying biological macromolecules. In order to minimize the experimental time, a non-linear sampling scheme is proposed for the indirect dimensions of multidimensional experiments. These data can be processed using the algorithm proposed by Dutt and Rokhlin (Appl. Comp. Harm. Anal. 1995, 2, 85–100) for fast Fourier transforms of non equispaced data. Examples of 1H−15N HSQC spectra are shown, where crowded correlation peaks can be resolved using non-linear acquisition. Simulated data have been used to analyze the artefacts produced by the Lagrange interpolation. As compared to non-linear processing methods, this algorithm is simple and highly robust since no parameters need to be adjusted by the user.  相似文献   

17.
Structure and membrane interaction of a 31 amino acid residue fragment of the membrane bound FKBP-like protein twisted dwarf 1 (TWD1) from Arabidopsis thaliana was investigated by solid-state NMR spectroscopy. The studied peptide TWD1(335–365) contained the putative membrane anchor of the protein (residues 339–357) that was previously predicted by sequence hydrophobicity analysis. The TWD1 peptide was synthesized by standard solid phase peptide synthesis and contained three uniformly 13C- and 15N-labelled residues (Phe 340, Val 350, Ala 364). The peptide was incorporated into either multilamellar vesicles or oriented planar membranes composed of an equimolar ternary phospholipid mixture (POPC, POPE, POPG), where the POPC was sn-1 chain-deuterated. 31P NMR spectra of the membrane in the absence and in the presence of the peptide showed axially symmetric powder patterns indicative of a lamellar bilayer phase. Further, the addition of peptide caused a decrease in the lipid hydrocarbon chain order as indicated by reduced quadrupolar splittings in the 2H NMR spectra of the POPC in the membrane. The conformation of TWD1(335–365) was investigated by 13C cross-polarization magic-angle spinning NMR spectroscopy. At a temperature of −30°C all peptide signals were resolved and could be fully assigned in two-dimensional proton-driven 13C spin diffusion and 13C single quantum/double quantum correlation experiments. The isotropic chemical shift values for Phe 340 and Val 350 exhibited the signature of a regular α-helix. Chemical shifts typical for a random coil conformation were observed for Ala 364 located close to the C-terminus of the peptide. Static 15N NMR spectra of TWD1(335–365) in mechanically aligned lipid bilayers demonstrated that the helical segment of TWD1(335–365) adopts an orientation perpendicular to the membrane normal. At 30°C, the peptide undergoes intermediate time scale motions. Dedicated to Prof. K. Arnold on the occasion of his 65th birthday.  相似文献   

18.
The metal–thiolate connectivity of recombinant Cd7-MT10 metallothionein from the sea mussel Mytilus galloprovincialis has been investigated for the first time by means of multinuclear, multidimensional NMR spectroscopy. The internal backbone dynamics of the protein have been assessed by the analysis of 15N T 1 and T 2 relaxation times and steady state {1H}–15N heteronuclear NOEs. The 113Cd NMR spectrum of mussel MT10 shows unique features, with a remarkably wide dispersion (210 ppm) of 113Cd NMR signals. The complete assignment of cysteine Hα and Hβ proton resonances and the analysis of 2D 113Cd–113Cd COSY and 1H–113Cd HMQC type spectra allowed us to identify a four metal–thiolate cluster (α-domain) and a three metal–thiolate cluster (β-domain), located at the N-terminal and the C-terminal, respectively. With respect to vertebrate MTs, the mussel MT10 displays an inversion of the α and β domains inside the chain, similar to what observed in the echinoderm MT-A. Moreover, unlike the MTs characterized so far, the α-domain of mussel Cd7-MT10 is of the form M4S12 instead of M4S11, and has a novel topology. The β-domain has a metal–thiolate binding pattern similar to other vertebrate MTs, but it is conformationally more rigid. This feature is quite unusual for MTs, in which the β-domain displays a more disordered conformation than the α-domain. It is concluded that in mussel Cd7-MT10, the spacing of cysteine residues and the plasticity of the protein backbone (due to the high number of glycine residues) increase the adaptability of the protein backbone towards enfolding around the metal–thiolate clusters, resulting in minimal alterations of the ideal tetrahedral geometry around the metal centres.  相似文献   

19.
Stereo-array isotope labeling (SAIL) has been combined with the fully automated NMR structure determination algorithm FLYA to determine the three-dimensional structure of the protein ubiquitin from different sets of input NMR spectra. SAIL provides a complete stereo- and regio-specific pattern of stable isotopes that results in sharper resonance lines and reduced signal overlap, without information loss. Here we show that as a result of the superior quality of the SAIL NMR spectra, reliable, fully automated analyses of the NMR spectra and structure calculations are possible using fewer input spectra than with conventional uniformly 13C/15N-labeled proteins. FLYA calculations with SAIL ubiquitin, using a single three-dimensional “through-bond” spectrum (and 2D HSQC spectra) in addition to the 13C-edited and 15N-edited NOESY spectra for conformational restraints, yielded structures with an accuracy of 0.83–1.15 Å for the backbone RMSD to the conventionally determined solution structure of SAIL ubiquitin. NMR structures can thus be determined almost exclusively from the NOESY spectra that yield the conformational restraints, without the need to record many spectra only for determining intermediate, auxiliary data of the chemical shift assignments. The FLYA calculations for this report resulted in 252 ubiquitin structure bundles, obtained with different input data but identical structure calculation and refinement methods. These structures cover the entire range from highly accurate structures to seriously, but not trivially, wrong structures, and thus constitute a valuable database for the substantiation of structure validation methods.  相似文献   

20.
A pair of HN-methyl NOESY experiments that are based on simultaneous TROSY-type detection of amide and methyl groups is described. The preservation of cross-peak symmetry in the simultaneous 1H–15N/13CH3 NOE spectra enables straightforward assignments of HN-methyl NOE cross-peaks in large and complex protein structures. The pulse schemes are designed to preserve the slowly decaying components of both 1H–15N and methyl 13CH3 spin-systems in the course of indirect evolution (t 2) and acquisition period (t 3) of 3D NOESY experiments. The methodology has been tested on {U-[15N,2H]; Ileδ1-[13CH3]; Leu,Val-[13CH3,12CD3]}-labeled 82-kDa enzyme Malate Synthase G (MSG). A straightforward procedure that utilizes the symmetry of NOE cross-peaks in the time-shared 3D NOE data sets allows unambiguous assignments of more than 300 HN-methyl interactions in MSG from a single 3D data set providing important structural restraints for derivation of the backbone global fold.  相似文献   

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