Relaxation-compensated difference spin diffusion NMR for detecting 13C-13C long-range correlations in proteins and polysaccharides

被引:33
|
作者
Wang, Tuo [1 ]
Williams, Jonathan K. [1 ]
Schmidt-Rohr, Klaus [2 ]
Hong, Mei [1 ]
机构
[1] MIT, Dept Chem, Cambridge, MA 02139 USA
[2] Brandeis Univ, Dept Chem, Waltham, MA 02453 USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
PDSD; T-1; relaxation; Difference spectroscopy; Long-range distances; SOLID-STATE NMR; M2 PROTON CHANNELS; RESONANCE ASSIGNMENT; MEMBRANE-PROTEINS; SPECTROSCOPY; CELLULOSE; DYNAMICS; SPECTRA; PEPTIDE; VIRUS;
D O I
10.1007/s10858-014-9889-0
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
The measurement of long-range distances remains a challenge in solid-state NMR structure determination of biological macromolecules. In 2D and 3D correlation spectra of uniformly C-13-labeled biomolecules, inter-residue, inter-segmental, and intermolecular C-13-C-13 cross peaks that provide important long-range distance constraints for three-dimensional structures often overlap with short-range cross peaks that only reflect the covalent structure of the molecule. It is therefore desirable to develop new approaches to obtain spectra containing only long-range cross peaks. Here we show that a relaxation-compensated modification of the commonly used 2D H-1-driven spin diffusion (PDSD) experiment allows the clean detection of such long-range cross peaks. By adding a z-filter to keep the total z-period of the experiment constant, we compensate for C-13 T-1 relaxation. As a result, the difference spectrum between a long- and a scaled short-mixing time spectrum show only long-range correlation signals. We show that one- and two-bond cross peaks equalize within a few tens of milliseconds. Within similar to 200 ms, the intensity equilibrates within an amino acid residue and a monosaccharide to a value that reflects the number of spins in the local network. With T-1 relaxation compensation, at longer mixing times, inter-residue and inter-segmental cross peaks increase in intensity whereas intra-segmental cross-peak intensities remain unchanged relative to each other and can all be subtracted out. Without relaxation compensation, the difference 2D spectra exhibit both negative and positive intensities due to heterogeneous T-1 relaxation in most biomolecules, which can cause peak cancellation. We demonstrate this relaxation-compensated difference PDSD approach on amino acids, monosaccharides, a crystalline model peptide, a membrane-bound peptide and a plant cell wall sample. The resulting difference spectra yield clean multi-bond, inter-residue and intermolecular correlation peaks, which are often difficult to resolve in the parent 2D spectra.
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页码:97 / 107
页数:11
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