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Showing papers in "Journal of Biomolecular NMR in 1995"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The asynchronous pipeline scheme provides other substantial advantages, including high flexibility, favorable processing speeds, choice of both all-in-memory and disk-bound processing, easy adaptation to different data formats, simpler software development and maintenance, and the ability to distribute processing tasks on multi-CPU computers and computer networks.
Abstract: The NMRPipe system is a UNIX software environment of processing, graphics, and analysis tools designed to meet current routine and research-oriented multidimensional processing requirements, and to anticipate and accommodate future demands and developments. The system is based on UNIX pipes, which allow programs running simultaneously to exchange streams of data under user control. In an NMRPipe processing scheme, a stream of spectral data flows through a pipeline of processing programs, each of which performs one component of the overall scheme, such as Fourier transformation or linear prediction. Complete multidimensional processing schemes are constructed as simple UNIX shell scripts. The processing modules themselves maintain and exploit accurate records of data sizes, detection modes, and calibration information in all dimensions, so that schemes can be constructed without the need to explicitly define or anticipate data sizes or storage details of real and imaginary channels during processing. The asynchronous pipeline scheme provides other substantial advantages, including high flexibility, favorable processing speeds, choice of both all-in-memory and disk-bound processing, easy adaptation to different data formats, simpler software development and maintenance, and the ability to distribute processing tasks on multi-CPU computers and computer networks.

13,804 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a considerable degree of variability exists in the way that 1H, 13C and 15N chemical shifts are reported and referenced for biomolecules and the authors explore some of the reasons for this situation and propose guidelines for future chemical shift referencing and for conversion from many common 1H and 13C chemical shift standards, now used in biomolecular NMR, to those proposed here.
Abstract: A considerable degree of variability exists in the way that 1H, 13C and 15N chemical shifts are reported and referenced for biomolecules. In this article we explore some of the reasons for this situation and propose guidelines for future chemical shift referencing and for conversion from many common 1H, 13C and 15N chemical shift standards, now used in biomolecular NMR, to those proposed here.

2,137 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
Christian Bartels1, Tai-he Xia1, Martin Billeter1, Peter Güntert1, Kurt Wüthrich1 
TL;DR: XEASY was developed for work with 2D, 3D and 4D NMR data sets to provide maximal computer support for the analysis of spectra, while providing the user with complete control over the final resonance assignments.
Abstract: A new program package, XEASY, was written for interactive computer support of the analysis of NMR spectra for three-dimensional structure determination of biological macromolecules. XEASY was developed for work with 2D, 3D and 4D NMR data sets. It includes all the functions performed by the precursor program EASY, which was designed for the analysis of 2D NMR spectra, i.e., peak picking and support of sequence-specific resonance assignments, cross-peak assignments, cross-peak integration and rate constant determination for dynamic processes. Since the program utilizes the X-window system and the Motif widget set, it is portable on a wide range of UNIX workstations. The design objective was to provide maximal computer support for the analysis of spectra, while providing the user with complete control over the final resonance assignments. Technically important features of XEASY are the use and flexible visual display of ‘strips’, i.e., two-dimensional spectral regions that contain the relevant parts of 3D or 4D NMR spectra, automated sorting routines to narrow down the selection of strips that need to be interactively considered in a particular assignment step, a protocol of resonance assignments that can be used for reliable bookkeeping, independent of the assignment strategy used, and capabilities for proper treatment of spectral folding and efficient transfer of resonance assignments between spectra of different types and different dimensionality, including projected, reduced-dimensionality triple-resonance experiments.

1,497 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Comparisons between the chemical shift measurements obtained from Gly-Gly-X-Ala-gly-Glys and Gly- gly- X-Pro-G-Gy reveal significant systematic shift differences arising from the presence of proline in the peptide sequence, lending support to the hypothesis that sequence effects play a significant role in determining peptide and protein chemical shifts.
Abstract: In this study we report on the 1H, 13C and 15N NMR chemical shifts for the random coil state and nearest-neighbor sequence effects measured from the protected linear hexapeptide Gly-Gly-X-Y-Gly-Gly (where X and Y are any of the 20 common amino acids). We present data for a set of 40 peptides (of the possible 400) including Gly-Gly-X-Ala-Gly-Gly and Gly-Gly-X-Pro-Gly-Gly, measured under identical aqueous conditions. Because all spectra were collected under identical experimental conditions, the data from the Gly-Gly-X-Ala-Gly-Gly series provide a complete and internally consistent set of 1H, 13C and 15N random coil chemical shifts for all 20 common amino acids. In addition, studies were also conducted into nearest-neighbor effects on the random coil shift arising from a variety of X and Y positional substitutions. Comparisons between the chemical shift measurements obtained from Gly-Gly-X-Ala-Gly-Gly and Gly-Gly-X-Pro-Gly-Gly reveal significant systematic shift differences arising from the presence of proline in the peptide sequence. Similarly, measurements of the chemical shift changes occurring for both alanine and proline (i.e., the residues in the Y position) are found to depend strougly on the type of amino acid substituted into the X position. These data lend support to the hypothesis that sequence effects play a significant role in determining peptide and protein chemical shifts.

1,007 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Simulations demonstrate that the method is accurate for a wide range of protein motions and correlation times, and experimental data establish the validity of the methodology.
Abstract: A method is presented for the determination of values of the spectral density function, J(ω), describing the dynamics of amide bond vectors from 15N relaxation parameters alone. Assuming that the spectral density is given by the sum of Lorentzian functions, the approach allows values of J(ω) to be obtained at ω=0, ωN and 0.870ωH, where ωN and ωH are Larmor frequencies of nitrogen and proton nuclei, respectively, from measurements of 15N T1, T2 and 1H−15N steady-state NOE values at a single spectrometer frequency. Alternatively, when measurements are performed at two different spectrometer frequencies of i and j MHz, J(ω) can be mapped at ω=0, ωiN, ωjN, 0.870ωiH and 0.870ωjH, where ωiN, for example, is the 15N Larmor frequency for a spectrometer operating at i MHz. Additionally, measurements made at two different spectrometer frequencies enable contributions to trasverse relaxation from motions on millisecond-microsecond time scales to be evaluated and permit assessment of whether a description of the internal dynamics is consistent with a correlation function consisting of a sum of exponentials. No assumptions about the specific form of the spectral density function describing the dynamics of the 15N−NH bond vector are necessary, provided that dJ(ω)/dω is relatively constant between ω=ωH+ωN to ω=ωH−ωN. Simulations demonstrate that the method is accurate for a wide range of protein motions and correlation times, and experimental data establish the validity of the methodology. Results are presented for a folded and an unfolded form of the N-terminal SH3 domain of the protein drk.

476 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Significant changes are found in backbone and side-chain amide proton chemical shifts in these ‘random coil’ peptides with increasing amounts of trifluoroethanol, suggesting that caution is required when interpreting chemical shift changes as a measure of helix formation in peptides in the presence of this solvent.
Abstract: Proton chemical shifts of a series of disordered linear peptides (H-Gly-Gly-X-Gly-Gly-OH, with X being one of the 20 naturally occurring amino acids) have been obtained using 1D and 2D 1H NMR at pH 50 as a function of temperature and solvent composition The use of 2D methods has allowed some ambiguities in side-chain assignments in previous studies to be resolved An additional benefit of the temperature data is that they can be used to obtain ‘random coil’ amide proton chemical shifts at any temperature between 278 and 318 K by interpolation Changes of chemical shift as a function of trifluoroethanol concentration have also been determined at a variety of temperatures for a subset of peptides Significant changes are found in backbone and side-chain amide proton chemical shifts in these ‘random coil’ peptides with increasing amounts of trifluoroethanol, suggesting that caution is required when interpreting chemical shift changes as a measure of helix formation in peptides in the presence of this solvent Comparison of the proton chemical shifts obtained here for H-Gly-Gly-X-Gly-Gly-OH with those for H-Gly-Gly-X-Ala-OH [Bundi, A and Wuthrich, K (1979) Biopolymers, 18, 285–297] and for Ac-Gly-Gly-X-Ala-Gly-Gly-NH2 [Wishart, DS, Bigam, CG, Holm, A, Hodges, RS and Sykes, BD (1995) J Biomol NMR, 5, 67–81] generally shows good agreement for CH protons, but reveals significant variability for NH protons Amide proton chemical shifts appear to be highly sensitive to local sequence variations and probably also to solution conditions Caution must therefore be exercised in any structural interpretation based on amide proton chemical shifts

456 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Two-dimensional 1H NMR techniques were used to determine the spatial structure of ectatomin, a toxin from the venom of the ant Ectatomma tuberculatum, and structures were refined by unrestrained energy minimization using the CHARMm program.
Abstract: Two-dimensional 1H NMR techniques were used to determine the spatial structure of ectatomin, a toxin from the venom of the ant Ectatomma tuberculatum. Nearly complete proton resonance assignments for two chains of ectatomin (37 and 34 amino acid residues, respectively) were obtained using 2D TOCSY, DQF-COSY and NOESY experiments. The cross-peak volumes in NOESY spectra were used to define the local structure of the protein and generate accurate proton-proton distance constraints employing the MARDIGRAS program. Disulfide bonds were located by analyzing the global fold of ectatomin, calculated with the distance geometry program DIANA. These data, combined with data on the rate of exchange of amide protons with deuterium, were used to obtain a final set of 20 structures by DIANA. These structures were refined by unrestrained energy minimization using the CHARMm program. The resulting rms deviations over 20 structures (excluding the mobile N- and c-termini of each chain) are 0.75 A for backbone heavy atoms, and 1.25 A for all heavy atoms. The conformations of the two chains are similar. Each chain consists of two alpha-helices and a hinge region of four residues; this forms a hairpin structure which is stabilized by disulfide bridges. The hinge regions of the two chains are connected together by a third disulfide bridge. Thus, ectatomin forms a four-alpha-helical bundle structure.

360 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The occurrence of equilibrium intermediates on the kinetic folding pathways of some proteins, such as α-lactalbumin and apomyoglobin, argues that these intermediates are not caused by kinetic traps but rather are stable intermediates under certain conditions, and this conclusion is consistent with a sequential model of folding.
Abstract: Summary Pulsed hydrogen exchange and other studies of the kinetic refolding pathways of several small proteins have established that folding intermediates with native-like secondary structures are well populated, but these studies have also shown that the folding kinetics are not well synchronized Older studies of the kinetics of formation of the native protein, monitored by optical probes, indicate that the folding kinetics should be synchronized The model commonly used in these studies is the simple sequential model, which postulates a unique folding pathway with defined and sequential intermediates Theories of the folding process and Monte Carlo simulations of folding suggest that neither the folding pathway nor the set of folding intermediates is unique, and that folding intermediates accumulate because of kinetic traps caused by partial misfolding Recent experiments with cytochrome c lend support to this 'new view' of folding pathways These different views of the folding process are discussed Misfolding and consequent slowing down of the folding process as a result of cis-trans isomerization about prolyl peptide bonds in the unfolded protein are well known; isomerization occurs before refolding is initiated The occurrence of equilibrium intermediates on the kinetic folding pathways of some proteins, such as c~-lactalbumin and apomyoglobin, argues that these intermediates are not caused by kinetic traps but rather are stable intermediates under certain conditions, and this conclusion is consistent with a sequential model of folding Folding reactions with successive kinetic intermediates, in which late intermediates are more highly folded than early intermediates, indicate that folding is hierarchical New experiments that test the predictions of the classical and the new views are needed

316 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Results indicate that this cell-free protein synthesis system was optimized, so that highly efficient and selective stable isotope labeling of proteins can be achieved in the absence of amino acid metabolism, is useful for NMR studies.
Abstract: For the application of multidimensional NMR spectroscopy to larger proteins, it would be useful to perform selective labeling of one of the 20 amino acids. For some amino acids, however, amino acid metabolism drastically reduces the efficiency and selectivity of labeling in in vivo expression systems. In the present study, a cell-free protein synthesis system was optimized, so that highly efficient and selective stable isotope labeling of proteins can be achieved in the absence of amino acid metabolism. The productivity of the E. coli cell-free coupled transcription-translation system was first improved, by about fivefold, by using the T7 RNA polymerase for transcription and also by improving the translation conditions. Thus, about 0.1 mg protein per 1 ml reaction mixture was synthesized. Then, this improved cell-free system was used for Asp- or Ser-selective 15N-labeling of the human c-Ha-Ras protein. With a 15 ml cell-free reaction, using less than 1 mg of 15N-labeled amino acid, 1 mg of the Ras protein was obtained. 1H-15N HSQC experiments confirmed that the Ras protein was efficiently labeled with high selectivity. These results indicate that this cell-free protein synthesis system is useful for NMR studies.

174 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is shown experimentally that a simple modification to the WATERGATE water suppression scheme results in a 20% gain in intensity for all signals when using a relaxation delay of 1.5 s, and that avoiding a semisaturated state for the water magnetization allows the amide protons as well as other proton resonances to relax to equilibrium with their proper relaxation time.
Abstract: A simple modification to the WATERGATE water suppression scheme [Piotto, M., Saudek, V. and Sklenař, V. (1992) J. Biomol. NMR, 2, 661–665] is proposed. Radiation damping is used as an active element during the mixing time of a NOESY experiment, in order to obtain a reproducable state of the water magnetization at the end of the mixing time. Through the use of a water flip-back pulse and a gradient-tailored excitation scheme, we obtain both an excellent water suppression and a water magnetization close to equilibrium at the beginning of the acquisition time. We show experimentally that this modification results in a 20% gain in intensity for all signals when using a relaxation delay of 1.5 s, and also that avoiding a semisaturated state for the water magnetization allows the amide protons as well as other proton resonances to relax to equilibrium with their proper relaxation time.

159 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Rather than simply being a necessary prerequisite for multidimensional NMR, chemical shifts and chemical shift non-equivalence due to folding are now beginning to be useful for structural characterization.
Abstract: During the past three years it has become possible to compute ab initio the 13C, 15N and 19F NMR chemical shifts of many sites in native proteins. Chemical shifts are beginning to become a useful supplement to more established methods of solution structure determination, and may find utility in solid-state analysis as well. From 13C NMR, information on ϕ, Ψ and χ torsions can be obtained, permitting both assignment verification, and structure refinement and prediction. For 15N, both torsional and hydrogen-bonding effects are important, while for 19F, chemical shifts are primarily indicators of the local charge field. Chemical shift calculations are still slow, but shielding hypersurfaces — the shift as a function of the dihedral angles that define the molecular conformation — are becoming accessible. Over the next few years, theoretical and computer hardware improvements will enable more routine use of chemical shifts in structural studies, including the study of metal-ligand interactions, the analysis of drug and substrate binding and catalysis, the study of folding/unfolding pathways, as well as the characterization of conformational substates. Rather than simply being a necessary prerequisite for multidimensional NMR, chemical shifts and chemical shift non-equivalence due to folding are now beginning to be useful for structural characterization.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Using data from high-resolution crystal structures of 15 proteins, the parameters for HN chemical shift calculations of proteins have been determined and it is suggested that the main reason for the difference in NH chemical shifts in helices and sheets is not an effect from the directly hydrogen-bonded carbonyl, which gives rise to downfield shifts in both cases.
Abstract: The parameters for HN chemical shift calculations of proteins have been determined using data from high-resolution crystal structures of 15 proteins. Employing these chemical shift calculations for HN protons, the observed secondary structure chemical shift trends of HN protons, i.e., upfield shifts on helix formation and downfield shifts on β-sheet formation, are discussed. Our calculations suggest that the main reason for the difference in NH chemical shifts in helices and sheets is not an effect from the directly hydrogen-bonded carbonyl, which gives rise to downfield shifts in both cases, but arises from an additional upfield shift predicted in helices and originating in residues i-2 and i-3. The calculations also explain the well-known relationship between amide proton shifts and hydrogen-bond lengths. In addition, the HN chemical shifts of the distorted amphipathic helices of the GCN4 leucine zipper are calculated and used to characterise the solution structure of the helices. By comparing the calculated and experimental shifts, it is shown that in general the agreement is good between residues 15 and 28. The most interesting observation is that in the N-terminal half of the zipper, although both calculated and experimental shifts show clear periodicity, they are no longer in phase. This suggests that for the N-terminal half, in the true average solution structure the period of the helix coil is longer by roughly one residue compared to the NMR structures.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is proposed that PFG NMR spectroscopy can be used as a facile alternative to conventional techniques such as analytical ultracentrifugation for examining the self-association of biological macromolecules.
Abstract: At the millimolar concentrations required for structural studies, NMR spectra of the calcium-binding protein myosin light chain 2 (MLC2) showed resonance line widths indicative of extensive self-association. Pulsed-field-gradient (PFG) NMR spectroscopy was used to examine whether MLC2 aggregation could be prevented by the zwitterionic bile salt derivative 3-[(3-cholamidopropyl)dimethylammonio]-1-propanesulfonate (CHAPS). PFG NMR measurements indicated that CHAPS was capable of preventing MLC2 self-association, but only at concentrations well above the critical micelle concentration of ∼7.5 mM. CHAPS was most effective at a concentration of 22.5 mM, where the apparent molecular mass of MLC2 correponded to a protein monomer plus seven molecules of bound detergent. The resolution and sensitivity of 2D 15N-1H HSQC spectra of MLC2 were markedly improved by the addition of 25 mM CHAPS, consistent with a reduction in aggregation following addition of the detergent. The average amide nitrogen T2 value for MLC2 increased from ∼30 ms in the absence of CHAPS to ∼56 ms in the presence of 25 mM CHAPS. The results of this study lead us to propose that PFG NMR spectroscopy can be used as a facile alternative to conventional techniques such as analytical ultracentrifugation for examining the self-association of biological macromolecules.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The protein human carbonic anhydrase II has been isotopically labeled with 2H, 13C and 15N for high-resolution NMR assignment studies and pulse sequence development to increase the sensitivity of several key 1H/13C/15N triple-resonance correlation experiments.
Abstract: The protein human carbonic anhydrase II (HCA II) has been isotopically labeled with 2H, 13C and 15N for high-resolution NMR assignment studies and pulse sequence development. To increase the sensitivity of several key 1H/13C/15N triple-resonance correlation experiments, 2H has been incorporated into HCA II in order to decrease the rates of 13C and 1HN T2 relaxation. NMR quantities of protein with essentially complete aliphatic 2H incorporation have been obtained by growth of E. coli in defined media containing D2O, [1,2-13C2, 99%] sodium acetate, and [15N, 99%] ammonium chloride. Complete aliphatic deuterium enrichment is optimal for 13C and 15N backbone NMR assignment studies, since the 13C and 1HN T2 relaxation times and, therefore, sensitivity are maximized. In addition, complete aliphatic deuteration increases both resolution and sensitivity by eliminating the differential 2H isotopic shift observed for partially deuterated CHnDm moieties.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Good agreement is found between the empirical formulas and the quantum chemistry results, allowing a reassessment of the ring-current intensity factors for aromatic amino acids and nucleic acid bases.
Abstract: Density functional chemical shielding calculations are reported for methane molecules placed in a variety of positions near aromatic rings of the type found in proteins and nucleic acids. The results are compared to empirical formulas that relate these intermolecular shielding effects to magnetic anisotropy (‘ring-current’) effects and to electrostatic polarization of the C−H bonds. Good agreement is found between the empirical formulas and the quantum chemistry results, allowing a reassessment of the ring-current intensity factors for aromatic amino acids and nucleic acid bases. Electrostatic interactions contribute significantly to the computed chemical shift dispersion. Prospects for using this information in the analysis of chemical shifts in proteins and nucleic acids are discussed.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: AURELIA is an advanced program for the computer-aided evaluation of two-, three- and four-dimensional NMR spectra of any type of molecule and offers a large number of tools, such as artefact reduction, cluster and multiplet analysis, spin system searches, resonance assignments, automated calculation of volumes in multidimensional spectra.
Abstract: AURELIA is an advanced program for the computer-aided evaluation of two-, three- and four-dimensional NMR spectra of any type of molecule. It can be used for the analysis of spectra of small molecules as well as for evaluation of complicated spectra of biological macromolecules such as proteins. AURELIA is highly interactive and offers a large number of tools, such as artefact reduction, cluster and multiplet analysis, spin system searches, resonance assignments, automated calculation of volumes in multidimensional spectra, calculation of distances with different approaches, including the full relaxation matrix approach, Bayesian analysis of peak features, correlation of molecular structures with NMR data, comparison of spectra via spectral algebra and pattern match techniques, automated sequential assignments on the basis of triple resonance spectra, and automatic strip calculation. In contrast to most other programs, many tasks are performed automatically.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: New pulse sequences are introduced and discussed that allow for simultaneous acquisition of 15N, 1H-and 13C,1H-HSQC correlations for fully13C,15N-labeled biomacromolecules in combination with hetero-nuclear gradient echoes and sensitivity enhancement.
Abstract: New pulse sequences are introduced and discussed that allow for simultaneous acquisition of 15N,1H-and 13C,1H-HSQC correlations for fully 13C,15N-labeled biomacromolecules in combination with hetero-nuclear gradient echoes and sensitivity enhancement. The pulse sequence experimentally found to be optimal can be used as a building block, especially in time-consuming multidimensional NMR experiments. Due to the excellent solvent suppression obtained by employing heteronuclear gradient echoes, which allows detection of resonances under the water resonance, it would be possible to record two sensitivity-enhanced 4D experiments simultaneously on one sample dissolved in H2O, e.g. a 4D 13C,1H-HSQC-NOESY-15N, 1H/13C,1H-HSQC.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The algorithm is shown to remove the baseline artifacts present in a particularly distorted NOESY spectrum and to reveal peaks which had been obscured by the artifacts.
Abstract: A novel algorithm for removing baseline distortions in NMR spectra is presented. The algorithm approximates the baseline as the median of the noise extrema. Consequently, the method does not require that NMR peaks be discriminated from noise peaks. In addition, no assumptions regarding the source or functional form of the distortion are made. The algorithm is shown to remove the baseline artifacts present in a particularly distorted NOESY spectrum and to reveal peaks which had been obscured by the artifacts. The parameters and spectral characteristics (signal-to-noise ratio, NMR peak density, peak linewidths) governing the resolution of the calculated baselines are also explored.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A new protocol is described for obtaining intraresidual and sequential correlations between carbonyl carbons and amide 1H and 15N resonances of amino acids and novel pulse sequences are applied to flavodoxin from Desulfovibrio vulgaris.
Abstract: A new protocol is described for obtaining intraresidual and sequential correlations between carbonyl carbons and amide 1H and 15N resonances of amino acids. Frequency labeling of 13CO spins occurs during a period required for the 13Cα-15N polarization transfer, leading to an optimized transfer efficiency. In a four-dimensional version of the experiment, 13Cα chemical shifts are used to improve the dispersion of signals. The resonance frequencies of all backbone nuclei can be detected in a 3D variant in which cross peaks are split along two frequency axes. This pulse scheme is the equivalent of a five-dimensional experiment. The novel pulse sequences are applied to flavodoxin from Desulfovibrio vulgaris.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results demonstrate the feasibility of multiple-pulse spectroscopy in a flat-coil probe, the ability to measure three spectral parameters from each site in a single experiment, and the potential for resolving among many labeled sites in oriented membrane proteins.
Abstract: A three-dimensional 1H chemical shift/1H-15N dipolar coupling/15N chemical shift correlation spectrum was obtained on a sample of specifically 15N-labeled magainin peptides oriented in lipid bilayers between glass plates in a flat-coil probe. The spectrum showed complete resolution of the resonances from two labeled amide sites in all three dimensions. The three orientationally dependent frequencies associated with each resonance enabled the orientation of the peptide planes to be determined relative to the direction of the applied magnetic field. These results demonstrate the feasibility of multiple-pulse spectroscopy in a flat-coil probe, the ability to measure three spectral parameters from each site in a single experiment, and the potential for resolving among many labeled sites in oriented membrane proteins.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that sequential resonance assignment of the backbone 1Hα and 15N resonances of proteins can be obtained without recourse to the backbone amid protons, an approach which should be useful for assignment of regions with rapidly exchanging backbone amide protons and for proteins rich in proline residues.
Abstract: It is demonstrated that sequential resonance assignment of the backbone 1Hα and 15N resonances of proteins can be obtained without recourse to the backbone amide protons, an approach which should be useful for assignment of regions with rapidly exchanging backbone amide protons and for proteins rich in proline residues. The method relies on the combined use of two 2D experiments, HA(CA)N and HA(CACO)N or their 3D analogs, which correlate 1Hα with the intraresidue 15N and with the 15N resonance of the next residue. The experiments are preferably conducted in D2O, where very high resolution in the 15N dimension can be achieved by using 2H decoupling. The approach is demonstrated for a sample of human ubiquitin, uniformly enriched in 13C and 15N. Complete backbone and 13Cβ/1Hβ resonance assignments are presented.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is shown here that accurate upper and lower bounds of the distances can be obtained if the intensity errors are properly accounted for in the complete relaxation matrix calculations, specifically the MARDIGRAS algorithm.
Abstract: The effect of experimental and integration errors on the calculations in interproton distances from NOE intensities is examined. It is shown that NOE intensity errors can have a large impact on the distances determined. When multiple spin (‘spin diffusion’) effects are significant, the calculated distances are often underestimated, even when using a complete relaxation matrix analysis. In this case, the bias of distances to smaller values is due to the random errors in the NOE intensities. We show here that accurate upper and lower bounds of the distances can be obtained if the intensity errors are properly accounted for in the complete relaxation matrix calculations, specifically the MARDIGRAS algorithm. The basic MARDIGRAS algorithm has been previously described [Borgias, B.A. and James, T.L. (1990) J. Magn. Reson., 87, 475–487]. It has been shown to provide reasonably good interproton distance bounds, but experimental errors can compromise the quality of the resulting restraints, especially for weak cross peaks. In a new approach introduced here, termed RANDMARDI (random error MARDIGRAS), errors due to random noise and integration errors are mimicked by the addition of random numbers from within a specified range to each input intensity. Interproton distances are then calculated for the modified intensity set using MARDIGRAS. The distribution of distances that define the upper and lower distance bounds is obtained by using N randomly modified intensity sets. RANDMARDI has been used in the solution structure determination of the interstrand cross-link (XL) formed between 4′-hydroxymethyl-4,5′,8-trimethylpsoralen (HMT) and the DNA oligomer d(5′-GCGTACGC-3′)2 [Spielmann, H.P. et al. (1995) Biochemistry, 34, 12937–12953]. RANDMARDI generates accurate distance bounds from the experimental NOESY cross-peak intensities for the fixed (known) interproton distances in XL. This provides an independent internal check for the ability of RANDMARDI to accurately fit the experimental data. The XL structure determined using RANDMARDI-generated restrains is in good agreement with other biophysical data that indicate that there is no bend introduced into the DNA by the cross-link. In contrast, isolated spin-pair approximation calculations give distance restraints that, when applied in a restrained molecular dynamics protocol, produce a bent structure.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Comparison of the results indicates that the ML approach provides superior frequency resolution compared to conventional methods, particularly under conditions of limited digital resolution in the time-domain input data, as is characteristic of D-dimensional NMR data of biomolecules.
Abstract: A general theory has been developed for the application of the maximum likelihood (ML) principle to the estimation of NMR parameters (frequency and amplitudes) from multidimensional time-domain NMR data. A computer program (ChiFit) has been written that carries out ML parameter estimation in the D-1 indirectly detected dimensions of a D-dimensional NMR data set. The performance of this algorithm has been tested with experimental three-dimensional (HNCO) and four-dimensional (HN(CO)-CAHA) data from a small protein labeled with 13C and 15N. These data sets, with different levels of digital resolution, were processed using ChiFit for ML analysis and employing conventional Fourier transform methods with prior extrapolation of the time-domain dimensions by linear prediction. Comparison of the results indicates that the ML approach provides superior frequency resolution compared to conventional methods, particularly under conditions of limited digital resolution in the time-domain input data, as is characteristic of D-dimensional NMR data of biomolecules. Close correspondence is demonstrated between the results of analyzing multidimensional time-domain NMR data by Fourier transformation, Bayesian probability theory [Chylla, R.A. and Markley, J.L. (1993) J. Biomol. NMR, 3, 515–533], and the ML principle.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Comparisons of N−H and Cα−H order parameters provide a useful approach for identifying crank-shaft librational motions in proteins and are demonstrated to be correlated with systematically smaller values of motional order parameters.
Abstract: Order parameters for the backbone N−H and Cα−H bond vectors have been calculated from a 150 ps molecular dynamics (MD) simulation of human type-α transforming growth factor in H2O solvent Two kinds of ‘crankshaft motions’ of the polypeptide backbone are observed in this MD trajectory The first involves small-amplitude rocking of the rigid peptide bond due to correlated changes in the backbone dihedral angles ψi−1 and φi These high-frequency ‘librational crankshaft’ motions are correlated with systematically smaller values of motional order parameters for backbone N−H bond vectors compared to Cα−H bond vectors In addition, infrequent ‘crankshaft flips’ of the peptide bond from one local minimum to another are observed for several amino acid residues These MD simulations demonstrate that comparisons of N−H and Cα−H order parameters provide a useful approach for identifying crank-shaft librational motions in proteins

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is shown that in 3D sequences employing several Coherence Order Selective Coherence Transfer (COS-CT) steps, enhancement factors of up to 2 can be achieved, compatible with the use of heteronuclear gradient echoes, yielding spectra with excellent water suppression.
Abstract: Novel strategies for sensitivity enhancement in heteronuclear multidimensional spectra are introduced and evaluated theoretically and experimentally. It is shown that in 3D sequences employing several Coherence Order Selective Coherence Transfer (COS-CT) steps, enhancement factors of up to 2 can be achieved. This sensitivity enhancement is compatible with the use of heteronuclear gradient echoes, yielding spectra with excellent water suppression. HNCO and HCCH-TOCSY pulse sequences are proposed and experimentally tested. These experiments employ recently developed coherence order selective pulse sequence elements, e.g., COS-INEPT and planar TOCSY for antiphase to in-phase transfers 2F-S2↔S- or in-phaseaCOS-CT for in-phase transfer F-↔S-, and the well-known isotropic TOCSY mixing sequences for homo- and heteronuclear in-phase transfer.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Investigation of the effect of the glycosidic torsion angle on 13C and 15N shifts of the sugar and base moieties of guanosine nucleotides found that they showed shifts that may be distinguished from those normally found in B-DNA-like structures.
Abstract: The effect of the glycosidic torsion angle on 13C and 15N shifts of the sugar and base moieties of guanosine nucleotides was investigated by comparing the sites in two model G-tetrad oligodeoxynucleotides that contain guanosine residues alternately with syn and anti bases. The sugar puckering has been shown to be C2'-endo for both cases. It was observed that, for the instances with syn bases, the C1' through C4' carbons showed shifts that may be distinguished from those normally found in B-DNA-like structures. C1', C3' and C4' moved to lower field, while C2' moved to higher field. Effects of the change in glycosidic torsion angle were also seen in the shifts of base carbons and nitrogens in the five-membered ring portion of the base. Characterization of the shift variation associated with this conformational change may be useful in developing the use of 13C shifts as a tool in conformational analysis of oligonucleotides.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An electronic neutralization network which dramatically reduces radiation damping is presented, which detects the radiation field profile and feeds back into the probe an rf field with identical amplitude and opposite phase.
Abstract: Radiation damping is a phenomenon well known among NMR spectroscopists of proteins as a source of undesirable features, especially in high-field and high-Q probe NMR. In this paper, we present an electronic neutralization network which dramatically reduces radiation damping. It detects the radiation field profile and feeds back into the probe an rf field with identical amplitude and opposite phase. Experimental results of a practical implementation carried out on a 400 MHz Bruker spectrometer are shown.

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TL;DR: This work addresses the issue of using the correct Boltzmann weighting for each member of an ensemble, both in time and in space, and shows that the molecular- or space-averaging method is simple in theory, but requires a priori knowledge of the behaviour of a system.
Abstract: Time-averaging restraints in molecular dynamics simulations were introduced to account for the averaging implicit in spectroscopic data. Space- or molecule-averaging restraints have been used to overcome the fact that not all molecular conformations can be visited during the finite time of a simulation of a single molecule. In this work we address the issue of using the correct Boltzmann weighting for each member of an ensemble, both in time and in space. It is shown that the molecular- or space-averaging method is simple in theory, but requires a priori knowledge of the behaviour of a system. This is illustrated using a five-atom model system and the small cyclic peptide analogue somatostatin. When different molecular conformers that are separated by energy barriers insurmountable on the time scale of a simulation contribute significantly to a measured NOE intensity, the use of space- or molecule-averaged distance restraints yields a more appropriate description of the measured data than conventional single-molecule refinement with or without application of time averaging.

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TL;DR: A set of triple resonance experiments is presented, providing through-bond H2N/HN to H6 connectivities in uridines and cytidines in 13C-/15N-labeled RNAs, providing an important link between the sequential assignment pathways for the exchangeable and nonexchangeable proton resonances in nucleic acids.
Abstract: A set of triple resonance experiments is presented, providing through-bond H2N/HN to H6 connectivities in uridines and cytidines in 13C-/15N-labeled RNAs. These connectivities provide an important link between the sequential assignment pathways for the exchangeable and nonexchangeable proton resonances in nucleic acids. Both 2D and pseudo-3D HNCCCH experiments were applied to a 30-nucleotide lead-dependent ribozyme, known as the leadzyme. The HN to H6 connectivities for three uridines in the leadzyme were identified from one 2D H(NCCC)H experiment, and the H2N to H6 connectivities were identified for seven of the eight cytidines from the combination of a 2D H(NCCC)H and a pseudo-3D H(NCC)CH experiment.

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TL;DR: Sequence-specific backbone 1HN, 15N and 13Cα as well as side-chain 13Cβ resonance assignments have been made for over 90% of the amino acids in the carbon monoxide complex of the protein.
Abstract: Sperm whale apomyoglobin was expressed to high levels on minimal media and isotopically labeled with 13C and 15N nuclei. The isotopically labeled apoprotein was purified to homogeneity in a single step by reversed-phase chromatography and reconstituted with hemin and carbon monoxide gas for NMR analysis. Sequence-specific backbone 1HN, 15N and 13Cα as well as side-chain 13Cβ resonance assignments have been made for over 90% of the amino acids in the carbon monoxide complex of the protein. Resonance assignments were made by analysis of a series of 3D triple resonance spectra measured on the uniformly labeled sample. These assignments will provide the basis for analyzing the effects of point site mutations on the structure, stability and dynamics of the protein in solution.