4.3 Article

Nitrogen detected TROSY at high field yields high resolution and sensitivity for protein NMR

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOMOLECULAR NMR
Volume 63, Issue 4, Pages 323-331

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10858-015-9991-y

Keywords

Nitrogen detection; TROSY; High field magnet; Protein NMR; Amide back exchange; Deuteration

Funding

  1. NIH [GM047467, AI37581, EB002026]
  2. METI
  3. JST, PRESTO

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Detection of N-15 in multidimensional NMR experiments of proteins has sparsely been utilized because of the low gyromagnetic ratio (gamma) of nitrogen and the presumed low sensitivity of such experiments. Here we show that selecting the TROSY components of proton-attached N-15 nuclei (TROSY N-15(H)) yields high quality spectra in high field magnets (> 600 MHz) by taking advantage of the slow N-15 transverse relaxation and compensating for the inherently low N-15 sensitivity. The N-15 TROSY transverse relaxation rates increase modestly with molecular weight but the TROSY gain in peak heights depends strongly on the magnetic field strength. Theoretical simulations predict that the narrowest line width for the TROSY N-15(H) component can be obtained at 900 MHz, but sensitivity reaches its maximum around 1.2 GHz. Based on these considerations, a N-15-detected 2D H-1-N-15 TROSY-HSQC (N-15-detected TROSY-HSQC) experiment was developed and high-quality 2D spectra were recorded at 800 MHz in 2 h for 1 mM maltose-binding protein at 278 K (tau(c) similar to 40 ns). Unlike for H-1 detected TROSY, deuteration is not mandatory to benefit N-15 detected TROSY due to reduced dipolar broadening, which facilitates studies of proteins that cannot be deuterated, especially in cases where production requires eukaryotic expression systems. The option of recording N-15 TROSY of proteins expressed in H2O media also alleviates the problem of incomplete amide proton back exchange, which often hampers the detection of amide groups in the core of large molecular weight proteins that are expressed in D2O culture media and cannot be refolded for amide back exchange. These results illustrate the potential of N-15(H)-detected TROSY experiments as a means to exploit the high resolution offered by high field magnets near and above 1 GHz.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.3
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available