* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Center for Structural Biology
Magnesium transporter wikipedia , lookup
G protein–coupled receptor wikipedia , lookup
Ancestral sequence reconstruction wikipedia , lookup
Protein (nutrient) wikipedia , lookup
Protein moonlighting wikipedia , lookup
Bottromycin wikipedia , lookup
Interactome wikipedia , lookup
Homology modeling wikipedia , lookup
Protein structure prediction wikipedia , lookup
Western blot wikipedia , lookup
Isotopic labeling wikipedia , lookup
Circular dichroism wikipedia , lookup
Protein adsorption wikipedia , lookup
Two-hybrid screening wikipedia , lookup
Protein–protein interaction wikipedia , lookup
Intrinsically disordered proteins wikipedia , lookup
Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy of proteins wikipedia , lookup
01/23/04 Biomolecular Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy RESONANCE ASSIGNMENT IN PROTEINS • Multi-dimensional NMR experiments • NMR analysis of proteins Proteins Have Too Many Signals! 1H NMR Spectrum of Ubiquitin ~500 resonances Resolve resonances by multi-dimensional experiments The Pulse FT NMR Experiment 90º pulse Experiment (t) equilibration detection of signals Fourier Transform Data Analysis Time domain (t) The 2D NMR Pulse Sequence + 1D + 1D = 2D [2nd preparation] 2D NMR: Coupling is the Key 2D detect signals twice (before/after coupling) 90º pulse t1 Same as 1D experiment Transfers between coupled spins t2 t1 t2 The 2D NMR Spectrum Pulse Sequence t1 Spectrum Before mixing After mixing Coupled spins t2 The Power of 2D NMR: Resolving Overlapping Signals 1D 2 signals overlapped 2D 2 cross peaks resolved Acronyms For Basic Experiments Differ Only By The Nature Of Mixing Scalar Coupling Dipolar Coupling Homonuclear Heteronuclear COSY HSQC TOCSY Hetero-TOCSY Multiple Quantum HMQC NOESY NOESY-HSQC NOESY-HMQC Higher Dimensional NMR: Built on the 2D Principle 3D- detect signals 3 times 90º pulse (t3) t1 Same as 1D experiment t2 t3 3D NMR Pulse Sequence Experiments are composites acronyms are composites Proteins Have Too Many Signals! 1H NMR Spectrum of Ubiquitin ~500 resonances Challenges For Determining Protein Structures Using NMR • Proteins have thousands of signals • Assign the specific signal for each atom • Thousands of interactions between atoms- also need to be assigned • Need to transform representation from spectrum through interactions between atoms to spatial coordinates NMR Spectrum to 3D Structure H H H H H H H H H H H Critical Features of Protein NMR Spectra •The nuclei are not all mutually coupled Each amino acid gives rise to an independent NMR sub-spectrum, which is much simpler than the complete protein spectrum Critical Features of Protein NMR Spectra • The nuclei are not all mutually coupled • Regions of the spectrum correspond to different parts of the amino acid • Tertiary structure leads to increased dispersion of resonances Regions of the 1H NMR Spectrum What would the unfolded protein look like? Solutions to the Challenges 1. Increase dimensionality of spectra to better resolve signals: 123 4 t2 t1 t3 Resolve Peaks By Multi-D NMR A BONUSregions in 2D spectra provide protein fingerprints If 2D cross peaks overlap go to 3D Solutions to the Challenges 1. Increase dimensionality of spectra to better resolve signals: 123 4 2. Detect signals from heteronuclei (13C,15N) Better resolution of signals/chemical shifts not correlated between nuclei More information to identify signals Lower sensitivity to MW of protein Double-Resonance Experiments Increases Resolution/Information Content 15N-1H R R -15N - Ca- CO -15N - Ca H H HSQC Large Scalar Couplings Less Sensitive to MW of the Protein Superior to 1H homonuclear NMR: all JH-H < 20 Hz Mixing is faster so less time for signal to relax