| Literature DB >> 28864905 |
Maxim Mayzel1, Alexandra Ahlner2, Patrik Lundström2, Vladislav Y Orekhov3,4.
Abstract
Peak overlap in crowded regions of two-dimensional spectra prevents characterization of dynamics for many sites of interest in globular and intrinsically disordered proteins. We present new three-dimensional pulse sequences for measurement of Carr-Purcell-Meiboom-Gill relaxation dispersions at backbone nitrogen and carbonyl positions. To alleviate increase in the measurement time associated with the additional spectral dimension, we use non-uniform sampling in combination with two distinct methods of spectrum reconstruction: compressed sensing and co-processing with multi-dimensional decomposition. The new methodology was validated using disordered protein CD79A from B-cell receptor and an SH3 domain from Abp1p in exchange between its free form and bound to a peptide from the protein Ark1p. We show that, while providing much better resolution, the 3D NUS experiments give the similar accuracy and precision of the dynamic parameters to ones obtained using traditional 2D experiments. Furthermore, we show that jackknife resampling of the spectra yields robust estimates of peak intensities errors, eliminating the need for recording duplicate data points.Entities:
Keywords: Conformational exchange; Dynamics; IDP; NMR; NUS; Target acquisition
Mesh:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28864905 PMCID: PMC5626786 DOI: 10.1007/s10858-017-0127-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomol NMR ISSN: 0925-2738 Impact factor: 2.835
Fig. 1Schematic presentation of the TA procedure for the real-time estimate of the peak intensity precision. The spectra are processed in steps as more and more NUS points are acquired. The precision of individual peak intensities is estimated as the difference between the intensities obtained at two successive steps
Experimental details
| SH3 | 2D-15N-US | 2D-13CO-US | 3D-15N-NUS | 3D-13CO-NUS |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Spectral width (Hz) | 15N 2500 | 15N 2250 | 15N 2250; 13C 1400 | 15N 2250; 13C 1400 |
| Evolution time (ms) | 25.6 | 28.6 | 15N 13.3; 13C 28.6 | 15N 22.2; 13C 28.6 |
| N different efficient fields (repetitions) | 16 (4) | 17 (4) | 11 (3) | 13 (1) |
| Interscan delay (s) | 3 | 2.5 | 3 | 3 |
| NUS (%) | 100 | 100 | 8.3 | 5 |
| Acquisition time (h) | 18 | 16 | 43 | 43 |
Fig. 2Pulse sequences for measurement of a 13CO and b 15N CPMG relaxation dispersions. Narrow and wide rectangles represent rectangular 90° and 180° pulses, respectively. All pulses are centered at 4.77, 176 and 119 ppm for 1H, 13C and 15N, respectively. The phase of all pulses is x if not specified. The shaped pulse on proton is used to selectively excite the water resonance. A 1.5 ms rectangular pulse was used here. All rectangular 90° pulses on 13C are applied at a field strength that yields null at 58 ppm. The 180° pulse represented by an open rectangle is shifted 118 ppm upfield and applied with a field strength that gives a null at 176 ppm. Shaped pulses of duration 450 μs on 13C are used to selectively invert or refocus 13CO. These are similar to the RE-BURP variety of selective pulses (Geen and Freeman 1991) but have improved inversion profiles (Lundstrom et al. 2008). The simultaneous pulses (applied as a complete train in each scan) during 15N→13CO transfer have phases ϕ2(i) = 2(x,y,x,y,y,x,y,x,−x,−y,−x,−y,−y,−x,−y,−x) so that both the x and the y components of transverse magnetization are refocused properly in the presence of off-resonance effects and pulse imperfections (Gulltan et al. 1990). The phase cycling is ϕ1 = y,−y; ϕ3 = y,y,−y,−y; ϕ4 = y,−y; ϕ5 = x; ϕ6 = x; ϕ7 = 4(x),4(−x); ϕ8 = x, ϕ9 = x,x,−x,−x, receiver = x,−x,−x,x. Quadrature detection in t1 is achieved by incrementing the phase ϕ5 (or ϕ9) by π/2 and in t2 by incrementing the phase ϕ6 by π and inverting the gradient g6. For every increment in t1 and t2 the phases of ϕ5 (or ϕ9) and ϕ8 are incremented by π, respectively. Proton decoupling is achieved by WALTZ-16 at a field of 6 kHz and 13Cα decoupling is achieved by SEDUCE-1 that is cosine modulated at 118 ppm (McCoy and Mueller 1992). Decoupling during acquisition employs WALTZ-16 at a field-strength of 1.2 kHz for 15N (Shaka et al. 1983) and WURST-2 (bandwidth of 12 ppm, centered at 176 ppm, maximum (rms) B1 field of 0.6 (0.4) kHz) for 13CO (Kupce and Freeman 1995). The delays are τa = 2.3 ms, τb = 1.36 ms, τeq = 3 ms, T = 10 ms, TN = 14 ms, Δ = 0.5 ms ξ1 = max (0, TN - t1/2), ξ2 = max (0, t1/2 - TN). In this scheme, data is recorded in constant-time mode for t1 < 2TN, whereas magnetization decays for t1 > 2TN. The gradient-strengths in G/cm (durations in ms) are g1 = 4.0(0.5), g2 = 10.0(1.0), g3 = 7.0(1.0), g4 = −6.0(0.6), g5 = 3.3(0.6), g6 = −30.0(1.25), g7 = 4.0(0.3), g8 = 2.0(0.4), g9 = 29.6(0.125)
Number of overlapped peaksa for the proteins CD79A and Abp1p SH3 domain in HSQC and HNCO type experiments
| Protein | Number of residues | Number of unresolved peaks | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2D HSQC | 3D HNCO | ||
| CD79A | 63 | 33 | 4b |
| Abp1p SH3 | 59 | 6 | 2c |
aAs gauged by visual inspection of the spectra drawn at the noise level
bPeaks corresponding to the amide groups of residues L13, D17, D32 and L43
cPeaks corresponding to the amide groups of residues Y08 and L18
Fig. 3Analysis of the 2D 15N and 13CO RD experiments on Abp1p SH3 domain partially bound to the Ark1p peptide. Global parameters kex (a, b) and pB (c, d) obtained from the RD as well as RMSD (e, f) between the Δϖ measured directly and derived from RD are shown versus the spectrum sparse level. Shown is a typical result obtained for a NUS scheme (random seed, flat random distribution) using different estimates of errors for the R values: (black) from the duplicate measurement and (red) from 20 jackknife resampling trials, respectively. Circles and error bars give fitted values and uncertainties of kex and pB of the parameters. The areas indicated by gray color and restricted by the red lines show an anticipated error obtained as an extrapolation of the uncertainty in the reference spectrum to shorter measurement times as ~1⁄√t
Summary of relaxation dispersion experiments performed for Abp1p SH3 domain partially bound to Ark1p peptide
| Parameter | 15N CPMG | 13CO CPMG | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2D | NUS 2D | NUS 3D | 2D | NUS 2D | NUS 3D | |
| Sparseness (%) | 100 | 50 | 8.3 | 100 | 50 | 5 |
| Acquisition time (h) | 18 | 9 | 43 | 16 | 8 | 43 |
| Number of residues with significant chemical exchange | 14 | 17 | ||||
| Exchange rate (s−1) | 182 ± 8 | 200 ± 15 | 211 ± 30 | 173 ± 9 | 171 ± 12 | 170 ± 23 |
| Population of the excited state (%) | 2.9 ± 0.1 | 2.7 ± 0.2 | 2.8 ± 0.3 | 3.6 ± 0.2 | 3.6 ± 0.2 | 3.5 ± 0.4 |
| RMSD between |Δ | 0.12 | 0.15 | 0.22 | 0.07 | 0.07 | 0.06 |
For 50% NUS 2D reported values correspond to mean values/errors over 20 resampling trials. For NUS 2D and 3D datasets errors were estimated via jackknife resampling while for the reference, fully sampled 2D experiments errors were estimated traditionally as a global error from duplicate measurements. NUS 2D spectra were processed with co-RMDD, 3D spectra were processed with co-MDD
Comparison of relaxation dispersion parameters derived for Abp1p SH3 domain partially bound to Ark1p peptide using co-processing with MDD, IRLS-VE methods of NUS spectra reconstruction
| Parameter | 15N CPMG | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2Da | 3D co-MDD | 3D IRLS-VE | |||
| Dupa | JKb | Dup | JK | ||
| Exchange rate (s−1) | 182 ± 8 | 206 ± 20 | 211 ± 30 | 238 ± 28 | 246 ± 27 |
| Population of the excited state (%) | 2.9 ± 0.1 | 2.9 ± 0.2 | 2.8 ± 0.3 | 2.6 ± 0.2 | 2.6 ± 0.2 |
| RMSD between |Δϖcpmg| and |Δϖdirect| (ppm) | 0.12 | 0.19 | 0.22 | 0.24 | 0.26 |
a R 2, errors are estimated as per residue errors derived from duplicate measurements
b R 2, errors are estimated via jackknife resampling
Fig. 415N (top row) and 13CO (bottom row) relaxation dispersion profiles from the 3D NUS experiments for serval residues of Abp1p SH3 domain partially bound to a peptide from Ark1p. The residues with the smallest (N16/E7), median (S52/W37) and largest (V32) |Δϖ| are shown. Filled circles represent experimental data collected using the three-dimensional pulse sequence with sparse sampling at 18.8 T. The line represents the best fit to a global two-state model
Fig. 5Correlation between the magnitude of difference in chemical shift obtained from the 3D RD experiments (a 3D 15N-NUS-CPMG and b 13CO-NUS-CPMG) and calculated from free Abp1p SH3 domain and SH3 domain saturated with Ark1p peptide. All residues with significant chemical exchange are shown. Pairwise RMSD between |ΔωCPMG| and |ΔωDirect| are shown in the bottom-right corners of the panels. The straight line represents |ΔωCPMG|=|ΔωDirect| to guide the eye
Comparison of relaxation dispersion parameters derived from 3D 15N relaxation dispersion experiment on Abp1p SH3 domain partially bound to Ark1p peptide using co-MDD and CS-VE methods at 8.3, 7.0, 5.8 and 4.2% NUS levels
| Parameter | 15N CPMG | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| co-MDD | IRLS-VE | |||||||
| 8.3% | 7.0% | 5.8% | 4.1% | 8.3% | 7.0% | 5.8% | 4.1% | |
| Exchange rate (s−1) | 211 ± 30 | 206 ± 20 | 206 ± 23 | 209 ± 28 | 246 ± 27 | 235 ± 30 | 243 ± 35 | 274 ± 54 |
| Population of the excited state (%) | 2.8 ± 0.3 | 2.9 ± 0.2 | 2.9 ± 0.3 | 2.8 ± 0.3 | 2.5 ± 0.2 | 2.6 ± 0.3 | 2.6 ± 0.3 | 2.5 ± 0.4 |
| RMSD between |Δϖcpmg| and |Δϖdirect|(ppm) | 0.22 | 0.22 | 0.24 | 0.24 | 0.26 | 0.25 | 0.26 | 0.3 |
Except for 8.3% NUS, reported values and errors correspond to mean and standard deviation of the related parameters respectively over 20 resampling trials. R2 errors at all NUS levels were estimated via jackknife resampling
Fig. 6R2 error estimation with Targeted Acquisition. TA calculations were performed post hoc by subsampling the 8.3% NUS three-dimensional 15N relaxation dispersion experiment on Abp1p SH3 domain partially bound to a peptide from Ark1p. Spectra were processed and analyzed in steps starting from 3.3% NUS, at each step 1% NUS points was added to the final 8.3% NUS. 15 random TA realizations were made to average the effect of various random seeds. Black dotted lines and black dot at 8.3% NUS correspond to R2 error estimated as a global error from duplicate measurements, black dashed line corresponds to global error from duplicate measurements at 8.3% NUS scaled according to the measurement time. The red dot at 8.3% NUS correspond to R2 error estimated from jackknife resampling. Red dotted lines correspond to R2 error calculated as a variation of R2 values on consecutive TA steps. Red solid line corresponds to R2 error calculated via jackknife resampling on every TA step