| Literature DB >> 23657844 |
Jan Stanek1, Michał Nowakowski, Saurabh Saxena, Katarzyna Ruszczyńska-Bartnik, Andrzej Ejchart, Wiktor Koźmiński.
Abstract
A band-selective aromatic-aliphatic C,C-edited four-dimensional NOESY experiment is proposed here. Its key advantage is the absence of auto-correlation signals which makes it very attractive for joint use with non-uniform sampling. It is demonstrated here that the sensitivity of the experiment is not significantly affected by utilization of selective pulses (for either aromatic-13C or aliphatic-13C spins). The method was applied to the sample of E32Q mutant of human S100A1 protein, a homodimer of total molecular mass ~20 kDa. High-resolution 4D spectra were obtained from ~1.5 % of sampling points required conventionally. It is shown that superior resolution facilitates unambiguous assignment of observed aliphatic-aromatic cross-peaks. Additionally, the addition of aliphatic-13C dimension enables to resolve peaks with degenerated aliphatic (1)H chemical shifts. All observed cross-peaks were validated against previously determined 3D structure of E32Q mutant of S100A1 protein (PDB 2LHL). The increased reliability of structural constraints obtained from the proposed high-resolution 4D 13C(ali),13C(aro)-edited NOESY can be exploited in the automated protocols of structure determination of proteins.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23657844 PMCID: PMC3699708 DOI: 10.1007/s10858-013-9739-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomol NMR ISSN: 0925-2738 Impact factor: 2.835
Fig. 1Pulse sequence scheme for (a) C(aliph)HMQC-NOESY-C(aro)HSQC and (b) C(aro)HMQC-NOESY-C(aliph)HSQC. 90° and 180° ‘hard’ pulses are represented by filled and open bars, respectively. Shaped pulses are represented as follows: (a) 40 ppm selective pulse of the iburp-2 profile (Geen and Freeman 1991) (659 μs duration, 7.6 kHz peak r.f. field) is shown as wide open bell-shaped pulse (denoted ‘E’). Wide grey rectangular pulses (‘A’ and ‘C’) are of duration of 61 μs and peak r.f. 4.1 kHz (calibrated to give null excitation 90 ppm off -resonance). (b) Wide grey bell-shaped pulse denotes 80 ppm-selective hyperbolic secant adiabatic pulse (Silver et al. 1984) of duration of 1 ms (r.f. peak 6.9 kHz). Narrow grey bell-shaped pulses (‘F’ and ‘H’) utilize Gaussian profile (Bauer et al. 1984) (truncated at 1 %, duration of 178 μs, peak r.f. 3.4 kHz, ca. 60 ppm bandwidth). Note that for some hardware the shaped 90° pulses (‘A’, ‘C’, ‘F’ and ‘H’) may require small angle phase adjustment to compensate 0th order phase shift with respect to refocusing pulses (‘B’ and ‘G’) which are applied at full power. 15N refocusing pulse enclosed in dashed-line box (sequence b) is optional and may be used if delay complementing to half-dwell time, ξ = [(sw3)-1 − pw180(N)]/2, is positive. Otherwise ξ = [(sw3)-1 − pw180(H)]/2. Similar rules apply to the delay ζ for sequence (a). Refocusing of Caliph-C’ couplings in t 2 (a) or t 3 (b) may be considered if max. evolution time of aliphatic 13C spins exceeds 9 ms. The composite 34.2°−x123°x197.6°−x288.8°x pulse (‘D’ and ‘I’) was used in HMQC for broadband inversion of 13C spins (Shaka 1985). WATERGATE (Piotto et al. 1992) with 3-9-19 pulses separated by (3.2 kHz)−1 was employed for experiment (a). 13C composite pulse decoupling was performed employing WURST scheme (Kupče and Freeman 1995). The durations of ‘hard’ π/2 pulses were 7.1, 14.3 and 31 μs for 1H, 13C and 15N, respectively. ϕ1, ϕ2 and ϕ3 are incremented for quadrature detection in t 1, t 2 and t 3 using States (ω1) or States-TPPI (ω2, ω3) method. Four-step phase cycle is as follows: ϕ1 = 45°; ϕ2 = x, −x; ϕ3 = 2(x), 2(−x); ϕ4 = 2(x), 2(−x); ϕ5 = 135°; ϕrec = x, −x, x, −x. Delays are set as follows: τa = 1.79 ms ≈ (4 JCHaliph)−1, τb = 1.56 ms ≈ (4 JCHarom)−1. NOESY mixing time τm = 150 ms was used. For the semi-constant time evolution in t 1 (1H) the delays τ1, τ2 and τ3 are t 1/2, t 1(1 − 2Δ/t 1,max)/2 and Δ(1 − t 1/t 1,max), where Δ = 2τa, or Δ = 2τb for sequences (a) and (b), respectively (Stanek et al. 2012). Gradient levels and durations are: G1 (2 ms, 6.5 Gs/cm), G2 (2 ms, 14.2 Gs/cm), G3 (0.5 ms, 1.77 Gs/cm), G4 (2 ms, 11.3 Gs/cm), G5 (2 ms, −12.9 Gs/cm), G6 (0.5 ms, 5.4 Gs/cm). Proton carrier frequency was set on resonance with water (4.68 ppm), carbon carrier was set to 35 ppm and switched to 125 ppm as indicated by the vertical arrow; 15N carrier was set to 117 ppm and shifted to 162 ppm at the beginning of NOESY mixing period. For the aliphatic-to-aromatic NOESY (a) 4,400 sampling points (t1,t2,t3) were randomly chosen from 120 × 84 × 30 Cartesian grid according to Gaussian probability distribution, p(t) = exp[−(t/t max)2/2σ2], σ = 0.5, with Poisson disk restrictions (Kazimierczuk et al. 2008). Maximum evolution times of 15 (t 1), 6 (t 2) and 5 ms (t 3) were achieved in the indirectly detected dimensions. Spectral widths of 8, 14, 6 and 12 kHz were set in ω1, ω2, ω3 and ω4 dimensions, respectively. In the full 4D spectrum any residual diagonal peaks can be folded in 13C (ω2 and ω3) dimensions without the risk of overlap and misinterpretation with genuine peaks. The only requirement is to ensure proper 1H (ω1) spectral width to avoid aliasing in this indirect dimension. The restriction of 13C spectral widths is very practical as it saves vast amounts of disk space. Inter-scan delay of 1.2 ms was used. The total experimental time was 57 h
Fig. 2The comparison of homonuclear (ω1 (1H)–ω2 (1H)) versions of (a) selective aliphatic-to-aromatic, (b) non-selective aliphatic-to-aromatic (see Fig. 1b), (d) selective aromatic-to-aliphatic and (e) non-selective aromatic-to-aliphatic NOESY experiments. Spectra (a) and (d) were acquired using pulse sequences shown in Fig. 1a, b, respectively. Non-selective versions (b) and (e) utilize the same pulse sequences as (a) and (d), respectively, with all the shaped pulses replaced by ‘hard’ ones. 13C spins were not evolved. Spectra (b) and (e) show that non-selective experiments suffer from many spectral artefacts due to poor broadband performance of ‘hard’ pulses and decoupling schemes at high fields. Apart from sign inversions across the spectrum, intense axial peaks as well as phase-distorted pseudo-diagonals are present (e). Selective experiments (a, d) achieve to filter-out virtually all diagonal signals with only slight decrease of intensity of cross-peaks. (c) Superimposed 1D cross-sections across ω1 (1H) from spectra (a, blue curves) and (b, green curves) for ω2 coordinates indicated by the vertical arrows (1–3). (f) ω2 (1H, direct dimension) cross-sections of spectra (d, blue) and (e, green curves) at ω1 coordinates indicated by the horizontal arrows (1–3). The cross-sections are plotted using the same intensity scale, thus they enable direct comparison of experimental sensitivity between selective and non-selective versions of experiments (a vs. b, and d vs. e). For each experiment 120 increments with 40 scans were collected (duration of 3 h). Spectral width of 8 kHz in the indirect ω1 (1H) dimension was set
Fig. 3a, b Maximum signal-to-noise ratio measured for peaks in the individual 3D cubes (indirect domains ω1 × ω2 × ω3) in each point of directly detected dimension (ω4). The plots show the ratio of the most intense spectral point (absolute value) to the noise level in the corresponding 3D cube (c, d). Assuming that cross-peaks do not overlap in the 4D spectrum these plots reflect the overall sensitivity of experiment. Considerable sensitivity advantage of the aliphatic-to-aromatic (a, c) over aromatic-to-aliphatic (b, d) NOESY is apparent. Noise levels (c, d) in the 3D cubes for each point of directly detected dimension were measured as the median of absolute values of all spectral intensities. From the uniformity of noise level across directly detected dimension one can conclude that advanced procedures for NUS artifact suppression are not beneficial in this case, and that the both experiments are sensitivity-limited. The scale was cut for intense water resonance (at 4.68 ppm)
Fig. 4Schematic illustration of reliable cross-peak assignment strategy using 4D C(ali),C(aro)-edited NOESY spectrum. In the top left panel a plane of 4D 13C(ali),13C(aro)-edited NOESY at Tyr 74 Hε/Cε chemical shifts is presented with expanded methyl region of the spectrum on the right side. In the bottom left panel 2D 1H–13C HSQC spectrum is shown with expanded methyl region on the right side. Corresponding cross peaks in the cross-section of 4D spectrum and the methyl region of HSQC are connected by arrows. Relevant methyl-aromatic cross-peaks can be readily assigned (even manually) as the ambiguity is removed by additional aliphatic-13C chemical shift (ω2)
Fig. 5An example showing removal of proton chemical shift degeneracy by addition of aliphatic carbon-13 dimension. In the standard 3D 13Caro-edited NOESY-HSQC spectrum (top left panel) only two cross peaks are observed for Hζ proton of Phe 15. In the bottom left panel a cross section from 4D aliphatic–aromatic NOESY is presented, and one of the cross peaks splits into two. On the right panel the corresponding fragment of previously determined 3D structure of S100A1 E32Q (PDB code 2LHL) is shown. All three atoms giving rise to NOE contacts are close in space. For clarity only the E70 Hα–F15 Hζ and K27 Hα–F15 Hζ interactions were marked
Fig. 6In the top left panel the slice of 3D 13C-edited NOESY-HSQC for Hε/Cε of Phe 15 is presented. In the bottom left panel corresponding plane of 4D 13C(ali),13C(aro)-edited NOESY is presented. In the right panel a fragment of 3D structure derived previously is presented. All atoms giving rise to NOEs are in proximity. Residues are color-coded as are the lines connecting corresponding peaks in the spectra, while Phe 15 is presented in black
The summary of NOE constraints derived from standard 3D 13C-edited NOESY HSQC (tuned to aromatic carbons) and 4D 13C(ali),13C(aro)-edited NOESY
| 3D 13C(aro)-edited NOESY HSQC | 4D 13C(ali),13C(aro)-edited NOESY | Number of common constraints from 3D and 4D spectra | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Constraints between aromatic and aliphatic protons | 156 | 131 | 111 |
| Intraresidual (i − j ≤ 1) | 63 | 50 | 44 |
| Medium range (1 < i − j < 5) | 22 | 14 | 10 |
| Long range (i − j ≥ 5) | 45 | 44 | 37 |
| Intersubunit | 26 | 23 | 20 |
4D spectrum provided 20 additional constraints that could not be assigned in the 3D spectrum. A number of weak NOE contacts present in 3D spectrum were not detected in 4D NOESY, including mostly intraresidual Hα–Hδ, Hα–Hε and Hβ–Hε NOE contacts. Nevertheless, the number of most relevant long range and intersubunit constraints remained virtually equal