Co-reporter:Qing Zhe Ni, Evgeny Markhasin, Thach V. Can, Björn Corzilius, Kong Ooi Tan, Alexander B. Barnes, Eugenio Daviso, Yongchao Su, Judith Herzfeld, and Robert G. Griffin
The Journal of Physical Chemistry B May 18, 2017 Volume 121(Issue 19) pp:4997-4997
Publication Date(Web):April 24, 2017
DOI:10.1021/acs.jpcb.7b02066
In DNP MAS NMR experiments at ∼80–110 K, the structurally important −13CH3 and −15NH3+ signals in MAS spectra of biological samples disappear due to the interference of the molecular motions with the 1H decoupling. Here we investigate the effect of these dynamic processes on the NMR line shapes and signal intensities in several typical systems: (1) microcrystalline APG, (2) membrane protein bR, (3) amyloid fibrils PI3-SH3, (4) monomeric alanine-CD3, and (5) the protonated and deuterated dipeptide N-Ac-VL over 78–300 K. In APG, the three-site hopping of the Ala-Cβ peak disappears completely at 112 K, concomitant with the attenuation of CP signals from other 13C’s and 15N’s. Similarly, the 15N signal from Ala-NH3+ disappears at ∼173 K, concurrent with the attenuation in CP experiments of other 15N’s as well as 13C’s. In bR and PI3-SH3, the methyl groups are attenuated at ∼95 K, while all other 13C’s remain unaffected. However, both systems exhibit substantial losses of intensity at ∼243 K. Finally, with spectra of Ala and N-Ac-VL, we show that it is possible to extract site specific dynamic data from the temperature dependence of the intensity losses. Furthermore, 2H labeling can assist with recovering the spectral intensity. Thus, our study provides insight into the dynamic behavior of biological systems over a wide range of temperatures, and serves as a guide to optimizing the sensitivity and resolution of structural data in low temperature DNP MAS NMR spectra.
Co-reporter:Kevin J. Donovan, Robert Silvers, Sara Linse, and Robert G. Griffin
Journal of the American Chemical Society May 17, 2017 Volume 139(Issue 19) pp:6518-6518
Publication Date(Web):April 27, 2017
DOI:10.1021/jacs.7b01159
We demonstrate a novel 3D NNC magic angle spinning NMR experiment that generates 15N–15N internuclear contacts in protein systems using an optimized 15N–15N proton assisted recoupling (PAR) mixing period and a 13C dimension for improved resolution. The optimized PAR condition permits the acquisition of high signal-to-noise 3D data that enables backbone chemical shift assignments using a strategy that is complementary to current schemes. The spectra can also provide distance constraints. The utility of the experiment is demonstrated on an M0Aβ1–42 fibril sample that yields high-quality data that is readily assigned and interpreted. The 3D NNC experiment therefore provides a powerful platform for solid-state protein studies and is broadly applicable to a variety of systems and experimental conditions.
Co-reporter:Kevin J. Donovan, Sheetal K. Jain, Robert Silvers, Sara Linse, and Robert G. Griffin
The Journal of Physical Chemistry B December 7, 2017 Volume 121(Issue 48) pp:10804-10804
Publication Date(Web):October 18, 2017
DOI:10.1021/acs.jpcb.7b08934
Proton-assisted recoupling (PAR) is examined by exploring optimal experimental conditions and magnetization transfer rates in a variety of biologically relevant nuclear spin-systems, including simple amino acids, model peptides, and two proteins–nanocrystalline protein G (GB1), and importantly amyloid beta 1–42 (M0Aβ1–42) fibrils. A selective PAR protocol, SUBPAR (setting up better proton assisted recoupling), is described to observe magnetization transfer in one-dimensional spectra, which minimizes experiment time (in comparison to two-dimensional experiments) and thereby enables an efficient assessment of optimal PAR conditions for a desired magnetization transfer. In the case of the peptide spin systems, experimental and simulated PAR data sets are compared on a semiquantitative level, thereby elucidating the interactions influencing PAR magnetization transfer and their manifestations in different spin transfer networks. Using the optimum Rabi frequencies determined by SUBPAR, PAR magnetization transfer trajectories (or buildup curves) were recorded and compared to simulated results for short peptides. PAR buildup curves were also recorded for M0Aβ1–42 and examined conjointly with a recent structural model. The majority of salient cross-peak intensities observed in the M0Aβ1–42 PAR spectra are well-modeled with a simple biexponential equation, although the fitting parameters do not show any strong correlation to internuclear distances. Nevertheless, these parameters provide a wealth of invaluable semiquantitative structural constraints for the M0Aβ1–42. The results presented here offer a complete protocol for recording PAR 13C–13C correlation spectra with high-efficiency and using the resulting information in protein structural studies.
Co-reporter:Qing Zhe Ni, Fengyuan Yang, Thach V. Can, Ivan V. Sergeyev, Suzanne M. D’Addio, Sudheer K. Jawla, Yongjun Li, Maya P. Lipert, Wei Xu, R. Thomas Williamson, Anthony Leone, Robert G. Griffin, and Yongchao Su
The Journal of Physical Chemistry B August 31, 2017 Volume 121(Issue 34) pp:8132-8132
Publication Date(Web):August 1, 2017
DOI:10.1021/acs.jpcb.7b07213
A principal advantage of magic angle spinning (MAS) NMR spectroscopy lies in its ability to determine molecular structure in a noninvasive and quantitative manner. Accordingly, MAS should be widely applicable to studies of the structure of active pharmaceutical ingredients (API) and formulations. However, the low sensitivity encountered in spectroscopy of natural abundance APIs present at low concentration has limited the success of MAS experiments. Dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) enhances NMR sensitivity and can be used to circumvent this problem provided that suitable paramagnetic polarizing agent can be incorporated into the system without altering the integrity of solid dosages. Here, we demonstrate that DNP polarizing agents can be added in situ during the preparation of amorphous solid dispersions (ASDs) via spray drying and hot-melt extrusion so that ASDs can be examined during drug development. Specifically, the dependence of DNP enhancement on sample composition, radical concentration, relaxation properties of the API and excipients, types of polarizing agents and proton density, has been thoroughly investigated. Optimal enhancement values are obtained from ASDs containing 1% w/w radical concentration. Both polarizing agents TOTAPOL and AMUPol provided reasonable enhancements. Partial deuteration of the excipient produced 3× higher enhancement values. With these parameters, an ASD containing posaconazole and vinyl acetate yields a 32-fold enhancement which presumably results in a reduction of NMR measurement time by ∼1000. This boost in signal intensity enables the full assignment of the natural abundance pharmaceutical formulation through multidimensional correlation experiments.
Co-reporter:D. Iuga, P. Rossi, J. Herzfeld, R.G. Griffin
Solid State Nuclear Magnetic Resonance 2017 Volume 84(Volume 84) pp:
Publication Date(Web):1 July 2017
DOI:10.1016/j.ssnmr.2017.07.005
•Methodology to measure 13C-35Cl distances is presented and exemplified.•The effect of quadrupolar interaction on the REDOR measurements is quantified.•Examples of polynomial functions that fit 3D REDOR dephasing charts are given.Chloride ions play important roles in many chemical and biological processes. This paper investigates the possibility of localizing 35Cl nuclei using solid-state NMR. It demonstrates that distances shorter than 3.8 Å, between 13C atoms and 35Cl atoms in 10% uniformly labeled 13C L-tyrosine·HCl and natural abundance Glycine·HCl can be measured using rotational-echo (adiabatic passage) double-resonance (RE(AP)DOR). Furthermore the effect of quadrupolar interaction on the REDOR/REAPDOR experiment is quantified. The dephasing curve is plotted in a three dimensional chart as a function of the dephasing time and of the strength of quadrupolar interaction felt by each orientation. During spinning each orientation feels a quadrupolar interaction that varies in time, and therefore at each moment in time we reorder the crystallite orientations as a function of their contribution to the dephasing curve. In this way the effect of quadrupolar interaction on the dipolar dephasing curve can be fitted with a polynomial function. The numerical investigation performed allows us to generate REDOR/REAPDOR curves which are then used to simulate the experimental data.Download high-res image (117KB)Download full-size image
Co-reporter:Thach V. Can;Ralph T. Weber;Joseph J. Walish;Timothy M. Swager
Angewandte Chemie 2017 Volume 129(Issue 24) pp:6848-6852
Publication Date(Web):2017/06/06
DOI:10.1002/ange.201700032
AbstractThe efficiency of continuous wave dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) experiments decreases at the high magnetic fields used in contemporary high-resolution NMR applications. To recover the expected signal enhancements from DNP, we explored time domain experiments such as NOVEL which matches the electron Rabi frequency to the nuclear Larmor frequency to mediate polarization transfer. However, satisfying this matching condition at high frequencies is technically demanding. As an alternative we report here frequency-swept integrated solid effect (FS-ISE) experiments that allow low power sweeps of the exciting microwave frequencies to constructively integrate the negative and positive polarizations of the solid effect, thereby producing a polarization efficiency comparable to (±10 % difference) NOVEL. Finally, the microwave frequency modulation results in field profiles that exhibit new features that we coin the “stretched” solid effect.
Co-reporter:Thach V. Can;Ralph T. Weber;Joseph J. Walish;Timothy M. Swager
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2017 Volume 56(Issue 24) pp:6744-6748
Publication Date(Web):2017/06/06
DOI:10.1002/anie.201700032
AbstractThe efficiency of continuous wave dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) experiments decreases at the high magnetic fields used in contemporary high-resolution NMR applications. To recover the expected signal enhancements from DNP, we explored time domain experiments such as NOVEL which matches the electron Rabi frequency to the nuclear Larmor frequency to mediate polarization transfer. However, satisfying this matching condition at high frequencies is technically demanding. As an alternative we report here frequency-swept integrated solid effect (FS-ISE) experiments that allow low power sweeps of the exciting microwave frequencies to constructively integrate the negative and positive polarizations of the solid effect, thereby producing a polarization efficiency comparable to (±10 % difference) NOVEL. Finally, the microwave frequency modulation results in field profiles that exhibit new features that we coin the “stretched” solid effect.
Co-reporter:Eric G. Keeler, Vladimir K. Michaelis, and Robert G. Griffin
The Journal of Physical Chemistry B 2016 Volume 120(Issue 32) pp:7851-7858
Publication Date(Web):July 25, 2016
DOI:10.1021/acs.jpcb.6b05755
The structure and dynamics of the bound water in barium chlorate monohydrate were studied with 17O nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy in samples that are stationary and spinning at the magic-angle in magnetic fields ranging from 14.1 to 21.1 T. 17O NMR parameters of the water were determined, and the effects of torsional oscillations of the water molecule on the 17O quadrupolar coupling constant (CQ) were delineated with variable temperature MAS NMR. With decreasing temperature and reduction of the librational motion, we observe an increase in the experimentally measured CQ explaining the discrepancy between experiments and predictions from density functional theory. In addition, at low temperatures and in the absence of 1H decoupling, we observe a well-resolved 1H–17O dipole splitting in the spectra, which provides information on the structure of the H2O molecule. The splitting arises because of the homogeneous nature of the coupling between the two 1H–17O dipoles and the 1H–1H dipole.
Co-reporter:Guinevere Mathies; Sheetal Jain; Marcel Reese
The Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters 2016 Volume 7(Issue 1) pp:111-116
Publication Date(Web):December 14, 2015
DOI:10.1021/acs.jpclett.5b02720
Continuous-wave (CW) dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) is now established as a method of choice to enhance the sensitivity in a variety of NMR experiments. Nevertheless, there remains a need for the development of more efficient methods to transfer polarization from electrons to nuclei. Of particular interest are pulsed DNP methods because they enable a rapid and efficient polarization transfer that, in contrast with CW DNP methods, is not attenuated at high magnetic fields. Here we report nuclear spin orientation via electron spin-locking (NOVEL) experiments using the polarizing agent trityl OX063 in glycerol/water at a temperature of 80 K and a magnetic field of 0.34 T. 1H NMR signal enhancements up to 430 are observed, and the buildup of the local polarization occurs in a few hundred nanoseconds. Thus, NOVEL can efficiently dynamically polarize 1H atoms in a system that is of general interest to the solid-state DNP NMR community. This is a first, important step toward the general application of pulsed DNP at higher fields.
Co-reporter:Loren B. Andreas; Marcel Reese; Matthew T. Eddy; Vladimir Gelev; Qing Zhe Ni; Eric A. Miller; Lyndon Emsley; Guido Pintacuda; James J. Chou
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2015 Volume 137(Issue 47) pp:14877-14886
Publication Date(Web):July 28, 2015
DOI:10.1021/jacs.5b04802
We report a magic angle spinning (MAS) NMR structure of the drug-resistant S31N mutation of M218–60 from Influenza A. The protein was dispersed in diphytanoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine lipid bilayers, and the spectra and an extensive set of constraints indicate that M218–60 consists of a dimer of dimers. In particular, ∼280 structural constraints were obtained using dipole recoupling experiments that yielded well-resolved 13C–15N, 13C–13C, and 1H–15N 2D, 3D, and 4D MAS spectra, all of which show cross-peak doubling. Interhelical distances were measured using mixed 15N/13C labeling and with deuterated protein, MAS at ωr/2π = 60 kHz, ω0H/2π = 1000 MHz, and 1H detection of methyl–methyl contacts. The experiments reveal a compact structure consisting of a tetramer composed of four transmembrane helices, in which two opposing helices are displaced and rotated in the direction of the membrane normal relative to a four-fold symmetric arrangement, yielding a two-fold symmetric structure. Side chain conformations of the important gating and pH-sensing residues W41 and H37 are found to differ markedly from four-fold symmetry. The rmsd of the structure is 0.7 Å for backbone heavy atoms and 1.1 Å for all heavy atoms. This two-fold symmetric structure is different from all of the previous structures of M2, many of which were determined in detergent and/or with shorter constructs that are not fully active. The structure has implications for the mechanism of H+ transport since the distance between His and Trp residues on different helices is found to be short. The structure also exhibits two-fold symmetry in the vicinity of the binding site of adamantyl inhibitors, and steric constraints may explain the mechanism of the drug-resistant S31N mutation.
Co-reporter:Michael T. Colvin; Robert Silvers; Birgitta Frohm; Yongchao Su; Sara Linse
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2015 Volume 137(Issue 23) pp:7509-7518
Publication Date(Web):May 22, 2015
DOI:10.1021/jacs.5b03997
The presence of amyloid plaques composed of amyloid beta (Aβ) fibrils is a hallmark of Alzheimer’s disease (AD). The Aβ peptide is present as several length variants with two common alloforms consisting of 40 and 42 amino acids, denoted Aβ1–40 and Aβ1–42, respectively. While there have been numerous reports that structurally characterize fibrils of Aβ1–40, very little is known about the structure of amyloid fibrils of Aβ1–42, which are considered the more toxic alloform involved in AD. We have prepared isotopically 13C/15N labeled AβM01–42 fibrils in vitro from recombinant protein and examined their 13C–13C and 13C–15N magic angle spinning (MAS) NMR spectra. In contrast to several other studies of Aβ fibrils, we observe spectra with excellent resolution and a single set of chemical shifts, suggesting the presence of a single fibril morphology. We report the initial structural characterization of AβM01–42 fibrils utilizing 13C and 15N shift assignments of 38 of the 43 residues, including the backbone and side chains, obtained through a series of cross-polarization based 2D and 3D 13C–13C, 13C–15N MAS NMR experiments for rigid residues along with J-based 2D TOBSY experiments for dynamic residues. We find that the first ∼5 residues are dynamic and most efficiently detected in a J-based TOBSY spectrum. In contrast, residues 16–42 are easily observed in cross-polarization experiments and most likely form the amyloid core. Calculation of ψ and φ dihedral angles from the chemical shift assignments indicate that 4 β-strands are present in the fibril’s secondary structure.
Co-reporter:Matthew T. Eddy, Loren Andreas, Oscar Teijido, Yongchao Su, Lindsay Clark, Sergei Y. Noskov, Gerhard Wagner, Tatiana K. Rostovtseva, and Robert G. Griffin
Biochemistry 2015 Volume 54(Issue 4) pp:994-1005
Publication Date(Web):December 29, 2014
DOI:10.1021/bi501260r
The N-terminus of the voltage-dependent anion channel (VDAC) has been proposed to contain the mechanistically important gating helices that modulate channel opening and closing. In this study, we utilize magic angle spinning nuclear magnetic resonance (MAS NMR) to determine the location and structure of the N-terminus for functional channels in lipid bilayers by measuring long-range 13C–13C distances between residues in the N-terminus and other domains of VDAC reconstituted into DMPC lipid bilayers. Our structural studies show that the distance between A14 Cβ in the N-terminal helix and S193 Cβ is ∼4–6 Å. Furthermore, VDAC phosphorylation by a mitochondrial kinase at residue S193 has been claimed to delay mitochondrial cell death by causing a conformational change that closes the channel, and a VDAC-Ser193Glu mutant has been reported to show properties very similar to those of phosphorylated VDAC in a cellular context. We expressed VDAC-S193E and reconstituted it into DMPC lipid bilayers. Two-dimensional 13C–13C correlation experiments showed chemical shift perturbations for residues located in the N-terminus, indicating possible structural perturbations to that region. However, electrophysiological data recorded on VDAC-S193E showed that channel characteristics were identical to those of wild type samples, indicating that phosphorylation of S193 does not directly affect channel gating. The combination of NMR and electrophysiological results allows us to discuss the validity of proposed gating models.
Co-reporter:Dr. Enrico Ravera;Dr. Vladimir K. Michaelis;Dr. Ta-Chung Ong;Eric G. Keeler;Dr. Tommaso Martelli;Dr. Marco Fragai; Robert G. Griffin; Claudio Luchinat
ChemPhysChem 2015 Volume 16( Issue 13) pp:2751-2754
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/cphc.201500549
Abstract
Enzymes are used as environmentally friendly catalysts in many industrial applications, and are frequently immobilized in a matrix to improve their chemical stability for long-term storage and reusability. Recently, it was shown that an atomic-level description of proteins immobilized in a biosilica matrix can be attained by examining their magic-angle spinning (MAS) NMR spectra. However, even though MAS NMR is an excellent tool for determining structure, it is severely hampered by sensitivity. In this work we provide the proof of principle that NMR characterization of biosilica-entrapped enzymes could be assisted by high-field dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP).
Co-reporter:Vladimir K. Michaelis, Eric G. Keeler, Ta-Chung Ong, Kimberley N. Craigen, Susanne Penzel, John E. C. Wren, Scott Kroeker, and Robert G. Griffin
The Journal of Physical Chemistry B 2015 Volume 119(Issue 25) pp:8024-8036
Publication Date(Web):May 21, 2015
DOI:10.1021/acs.jpcb.5b04647
We demonstrate here that the 17O NMR properties of bound water in a series of amino acids and dipeptides can be determined with a combination of nonspinning and magic-angle spinning experiments using a range of magnetic field strengths from 9.4 to 21.1 T. Furthermore, we propose a 17O chemical shift fingerprint region for bound water molecules in biological solids that is well outside the previously determined ranges for carbonyl, carboxylic, and hydroxyl oxygens, thereby offering the ability to resolve multiple 17O environments using rapid one-dimensional NMR techniques. Finally, we compare our experimental data against quantum chemical calculations using GIPAW and hybrid-DFT, finding intriguing discrepancies between the electric field gradients calculated from structures determined by X-ray and neutron diffraction.
Co-reporter:Yongchao Su ; Claire J. Sarell ; Matthew T. Eddy ; Galia T. Debelouchina ; Loren B. Andreas ; Clare L. Pashley ; Sheena E. Radford
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2014 Volume 136(Issue 17) pp:6313-6325
Publication Date(Web):March 28, 2014
DOI:10.1021/ja4126092
Amyloid fibrils formed from initially soluble proteins with diverse sequences are associated with an array of human diseases. In the human disorder, dialysis-related amyloidosis (DRA), fibrils contain two major constituents, full-length human β2-microglobulin (hβ2m) and a truncation variant, ΔN6 which lacks the N-terminal six amino acids. These fibrils are assembled from initially natively folded proteins with an all antiparallel β-stranded structure. Here, backbone conformations of wild-type hβ2m and ΔN6 in their amyloid forms have been determined using a combination of dilute isotopic labeling strategies and multidimensional magic angle spinning (MAS) NMR techniques at high magnetic fields, providing valuable structural information at the atomic-level about the fibril architecture. The secondary structures of both fibril types, determined by the assignment of ∼80% of the backbone resonances of these 100- and 94-residue proteins, respectively, reveal substantial backbone rearrangement compared with the location of β-strands in their native immunoglobulin folds. The identification of seven β-strands in hβ2m fibrils indicates that approximately 70 residues are in a β-strand conformation in the fibril core. By contrast, nine β-strands comprise the fibrils formed from ΔN6, indicating a more extensive core. The precise location and length of β-strands in the two fibril forms also differ. The results indicate fibrils of ΔN6 and hβ2m have an extensive core architecture involving the majority of residues in the polypeptide sequence. The common elements of the backbone structure of the two proteins likely facilitates their ability to copolymerize during amyloid fibril assembly.
Co-reporter:Michael T. Colvin, Loren B. Andreas, James J. Chou, and Robert G. Griffin
Biochemistry 2014 Volume 53(Issue 38) pp:
Publication Date(Web):September 3, 2014
DOI:10.1021/bi5005393
The membrane protein M2 from influenza-A forms a single-pass transmembrane helix that assembles in lipid membrane as homotetramers whose primary function is to act as a proton transporter for viral acidification. A single residue, histidine 37 (His 37), is known to be responsible for selectivity and plays an integral role in the protein’s function. We report pH-dependent 15N MAS NMR spectra of His 37 within the influenza-A proton conduction domain of M2, M218–60, which has been previously shown to be a fully functional construct and was recently determined to adopt a dimer-of-dimers structure in lipids. By extracting the ratio of [His]/[HisH+] as a function of pH, we obtained two doubly degenerate proton disassociation constants, 7.63 ± 0.15 and 4.52 ± 0.15, despite a possible maximum of four. We also report the 1HNε chemical shifts at pH 6.5 recorded at 60 kHz MAS in a CP-based 1H–15N spectrum. We were unable to detect resonances indicative of direct proton sharing among His 37 side chains when the tetramer is in the +2 state. In the neutral state, His 37 is exclusively in the τ tautomer, indicating that the δ nitrogen is protonated solely as a function of pH. We also found that the plot of [HisH+]/[His] as a function of pH is qualitatively similar to previously reported proton conduction rates, indicating that proton conduction rate is proportional to the level of histidine protonation within the channel. Two-dimensional 13C–13C and 13C–15N correlations suggest that at low pH multiple conformations are populated as the spectra broaden and eventually disappear as the acidity is increased. A second highly resolved state at low pH was not observed.
Co-reporter:Vladimir K. Michaelis;Ta-Chung Ong;Matthew K. Kiesewetter;Derik K. Frantz;Joseph J. Walish;Enrico Ravera;Claudio Luchinat;Timothy M. Swager
Israel Journal of Chemistry 2014 Volume 54( Issue 1-2) pp:207-221
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/ijch.201300126
Abstract
We report our recent efforts directed at improving high-field dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) experiments. We investigated a series of thiourea nitroxide radicals and the associated DNP enhancements ranging from ε=25 to 82, which demonstrate the impact of molecular structure on performance. We directly polarized low-gamma nuclei, including 13C, 2H, and 17O, by the cross effect mechanism using trityl radicals as a polarization agent. We discuss a variety of sample preparation techniques for DNP with emphasis on the benefits of methods that do not use a glass-forming cryoprotecting matrix. Lastly, we describe a corrugated waveguide for use in a 700 MHz/460 GHz DNP system that improves microwave delivery and increases enhancements up to 50 %.
Co-reporter:Enrico Ravera, Björn Corzilius, Vladimir K. Michaelis, Claudio Luchinat, Robert G. Griffin, and Ivano Bertini
The Journal of Physical Chemistry B 2014 Volume 118(Issue 11) pp:2957-2965
Publication Date(Web):January 24, 2014
DOI:10.1021/jp500016f
Protein sedimentation sans cryoprotection is a new approach to magic angle spinning (MAS) and dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy of proteins. It increases the sensitivity of the experiments by a factor of ∼4.5 in comparison to the conventional DNP sample preparation and circumvents intense background signals from the cryoprotectant. In this paper, we investigate sedimented samples and concentrated frozen solutions of natural abundance bovine serum albumin (BSA) in the absence of a glycerol-based cryoprotectant. We observe DNP signal enhancements of ε ∼ 66 at 140 GHz in a BSA pellet sedimented from an aqueous solution containing the biradical polarizing agent TOTAPOL and compare this with samples prepared using the conventional protocol (i.e., dissolution of BSA in a glycerol/water cryoprotecting mixture). The dependence of DNP parameters on the radical concentration points to the presence of an interaction between TOTAPOL and BSA, so much so that a frozen solution sans cryoprotectant still gives ε ∼ 50. We have studied the interaction of BSA with another biradical, SPIROPOL, that is more rigid than TOTAPOL and has been reported to give higher enhancements. SPIROPOL was also found to interact with BSA, and to give ε ∼ 26 close to its maximum achievable concentration. Under the same conditions, TOTAPOL gives ε ∼ 31, suggesting a lesser affinity of BSA for SPIROPOL with respect to TOTAPOL. Altogether, these results demonstrate that DNP is feasible in self-cryoprotecting samples.
Co-reporter:Björn Corzilius, Loren B. Andreas, Albert A. Smith, Qing Zhe Ni, Robert G. Griffin
Journal of Magnetic Resonance 2014 240() pp: 113-123
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1016/j.jmr.2013.11.013
Co-reporter:Qing Zhe Ni, Eugenio Daviso, Thach V. Can, Evgeny Markhasin, Sudheer K. Jawla, Timothy M. Swager, Richard J. Temkin, Judith Herzfeld, and Robert G. Griffin
Accounts of Chemical Research 2013 Volume 46(Issue 9) pp:1933
Publication Date(Web):April 18, 2013
DOI:10.1021/ar300348n
During the three decades 1980–2010, magic angle spinning (MAS) NMR developed into the method of choice to examine many chemical, physical, and biological problems. In particular, a variety of dipolar recoupling methods to measure distances and torsion angles can now constrain molecular structures to high resolution. However, applications are often limited by the low sensitivity of the experiments, due in large part to the necessity of observing spectra of low-γ nuclei such as the I = 1/2 species 13C or 15N. The difficulty is still greater when quadrupolar nuclei, such as 17O or 27Al, are involved. This problem has stimulated efforts to increase the sensitivity of MAS experiments. A particularly powerful approach is dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) which takes advantage of the higher equilibrium polarization of electrons (which conventionally manifests in the great sensitivity advantage of EPR over NMR). In DNP, the sample is doped with a stable paramagnetic polarizing agent and irradiated with microwaves to transfer the high polarization in the electron spin reservoir to the nuclei of interest. The idea was first explored by Overhauser and Slichter in 1953. However, these experiments were carried out on static samples, at magnetic fields that are low by current standards. To be implemented in contemporary MAS NMR experiments, DNP requires microwave sources operating in the subterahertz regime, roughly 150–660 GHz, and cryogenic MAS probes. In addition, improvements were required in the polarizing agents, because the high concentrations of conventional radicals that are required to produce significant enhancements compromise spectral resolution.In the last two decades, scientific and technical advances have addressed these problems and brought DNP to the point where it is achieving wide applicability. These advances include the development of high frequency gyrotron microwave sources operating in the subterahertz frequency range. In addition, low temperature MAS probes were developed that permit in situ microwave irradiation of the samples. And, finally, biradical polarizing agents were developed that increased the efficiency of DNP experiments by factors of ∼4 at considerably lower paramagnet concentrations. Collectively, these developments have made it possible to apply DNP on a routine basis to a number of different scientific endeavors, most prominently in the biological and material sciences. This Account reviews these developments, including the primary mechanisms used to transfer polarization in high frequency DNP, and the current choice of microwave sources and biradical polarizing agents. In addition, we illustrate the utility of the technique with a description of applications to membrane and amyloid proteins that emphasizes the unique structural information that is available in these two cases.
Co-reporter:Vladimir K. Michaelis ; Albert A. Smith ; Björn Corzilius ; Olesya Haze ; Timothy M. Swager
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2013 Volume 135(Issue 8) pp:2935-2938
Publication Date(Web):February 4, 2013
DOI:10.1021/ja312265x
We report direct 13C dynamic nuclear polarization at 5 T under magic-angle spinning (MAS) at 82 K using a mixture of monoradicals with narrow EPR linewidths. We show the importance of optimizing both EPR linewidth and electron relaxation times by studying direct DNP of 13C using SA-BDPA and trityl radical, and achieve 13C enhancements above 600. This new approach may be best suited for dissolution DNP and for studies of 1H depleted biological and other nonprotonated solids.
Co-reporter:Enrico Ravera ; Björn Corzilius ; Vladimir K. Michaelis ; Camilla Rosa ; Robert G. Griffin ; Claudio Luchinat ;Ivano Bertini
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2013 Volume 135(Issue 5) pp:1641-1644
Publication Date(Web):January 18, 2013
DOI:10.1021/ja312553b
Using the 480 kDa iron-storage protein complex, apoferritin (ApoF), as an example, we demonstrate that sizable dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) enhancements can be obtained on sedimented protein samples. In sedimented solute DNP (SedDNP), the biradical polarizing agent is co-sedimented with the protein, but in the absence of a glass-forming agent. We observe DNP enhancement factors ε > 40 at a magnetic field of 5 T and temperatures below 90 K, indicating that the protein sediment state is “glassy” and suitable to disperse the biradical polarizing agent upon freezing. In contrast, frozen aqueous solutions of ApoF yield ε ≈ 2. Results of SedDNP are compared to those obtained from samples prepared using the traditional glass-forming agent glycerol. Collectively, these and results from previous investigations suggest that the sedimented state can be functionally described as a “microcrystalline glass” and in addition provide a new approach for preparation of samples for DNP experiments.
Co-reporter:Galia T. Debelouchina ; Marvin J. Bayro ; Anthony W. Fitzpatrick ; Vladimir Ladizhansky ; Michael T. Colvin ; Marc A. Caporini ; Christopher P. Jaroniec ; Vikram S. Bajaj ; Melanie Rosay ; Cait E. MacPhee ; Michele Vendruscolo ; Werner E. Maas ; Christopher M. Dobson
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2013 Volume 135(Issue 51) pp:19237-19247
Publication Date(Web):December 4, 2013
DOI:10.1021/ja409050a
Protein magic angle spinning (MAS) NMR spectroscopy has generated structural models of several amyloid fibril systems, thus providing valuable information regarding the forces and interactions that confer the extraordinary stability of the amyloid architecture. Despite these advances, however, obtaining atomic resolution information describing the higher levels of structural organization within the fibrils remains a significant challenge. Here, we detail MAS NMR experiments and sample labeling schemes designed specifically to probe such higher order amyloid structure, and we have applied them to the fibrils formed by an eleven-residue segment of the amyloidogenic protein transthyretin (TTR(105–115)). These experiments have allowed us to define unambiguously not only the arrangement of the peptide β-strands into β-sheets but also the β-sheet interfaces within each protofilament, and in addition to identify the nature of the protofilament-to-protofilament contacts that lead to the formation of the complete fibril. Our efforts have resulted in 111 quantitative distance and torsion angle restraints (10 per residue) that describe the various levels of structure organization. The experiments benefited extensively from the use of dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP), which in some cases allowed us to shorten the data acquisition time from days to hours and to improve significantly the signal-to-noise ratios of the spectra. The β-sheet interface and protofilament interactions identified here revealed local variations in the structure that result in multiple peaks for the exposed N- and C-termini of the peptide and in inhomogeneous line-broadening for the residues buried within the interior of the fibrils.
Co-reporter:Loren B. Andreas, Alexander B. Barnes, Björn Corzilius, James J. Chou, Eric A. Miller, Marc Caporini, Melanie Rosay, and Robert G. Griffin
Biochemistry 2013 Volume 52(Issue 16) pp:
Publication Date(Web):March 12, 2013
DOI:10.1021/bi400150x
We demonstrate the use of dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) to elucidate ligand binding to a membrane protein using dipolar recoupling magic angle spinning (MAS) NMR. In particular, we detect drug binding in the proton transporter M218–60 from influenza A using recoupling experiments at room temperature and with cryogenic DNP. The results indicate that the pore binding site of rimantadine is correlated with previously reported widespread chemical shift changes, suggesting functional binding in the pore. Futhermore, the 15N-labeled ammonium of rimantadine was observed near A30 13Cβ and G34 13Cα, suggesting a possible hydrogen bond to A30 carbonyl. Cryogenic DNP was required to observe the weaker external binding site(s) in a ZF-TEDOR spectrum. This approach is generally applicable, particularly for weakly bound ligands, in which case the application of MAS NMR dipolar recoupling requires the low temperatures to quench dynamic exchange processes. For the fully protonated samples investigated, we observed DNP signal enhancements of ∼10 at 400 MHz using only 4–6 mM of the polarizing agent TOTAPOL. At 600 MHz and with DNP, we measured a distance between the drug and the protein to a precision of 0.2 Å.
Co-reporter:Evgeny Markhasin, Jianping Hu, Yongchao Su, Judith Herzfeld, Robert G. Griffin
Journal of Magnetic Resonance 2013 231() pp: 32-38
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1016/j.jmr.2013.02.017
Co-reporter:Vladimir K. Michaelis, Björn Corzilius, Albert A. Smith, and Robert G. Griffin
The Journal of Physical Chemistry B 2013 Volume 117(Issue 48) pp:14894-14906
Publication Date(Web):November 6, 2013
DOI:10.1021/jp408440z
Dynamic nuclear polarization of 17O was studied using four different polarizing agents: the biradical TOTAPOL and the monoradicals trityl and SA-BDPA, as well as a mixture of the latter two. Field profiles, DNP mechanisms, and enhancements were measured to better understand and optimize directly polarizing this low-gamma quadrupolar nucleus using both mono- and biradical polarizing agents. Enhancements were recorded at <88 K and were >100 using the trityl (OX063) radical and <10 with the other polarizing agents. The >10 000-fold savings in acquisition time enabled a series of biologically relevant small molecules to be studied with small sample sizes and the measurement of various quadrupolar parameters. The results are discussed with comparison to room temperature studies and GIPAW quantum chemical calculations. These experimental results illustrate the strength of high field DNP and the importance of radical selection for studying low-gamma nuclei.
Co-reporter:Ta-Chung Ong, Melody L. Mak-Jurkauskas, Joseph J. Walish, Vladimir K. Michaelis, Björn Corzilius, Albert A. Smith, Andrew M. Clausen, Janet C. Cheetham, Timothy M. Swager, and Robert G. Griffin
The Journal of Physical Chemistry B 2013 Volume 117(Issue 10) pp:3040-3046
Publication Date(Web):February 19, 2013
DOI:10.1021/jp311237d
Dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) of amorphous and crystalline ortho-terphenyl (OTP) in the absence of glass forming agents is presented in order to gauge the feasibility of applying DNP to pharmaceutical solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance experiments and to study the effect of intermolecular structure, or lack thereof, on the DNP enhancement. By way of 1H–13C cross-polarization, we obtained a DNP enhancement (ε) of 58 for 95% deuterated OTP in the amorphous state using the biradical bis-TEMPO terephthalate (bTtereph) and ε of 36 in the crystalline state. Measurements of the 1H T1 and electron paramagnetic resonance experiments showed the crystallization process led to phase separation of the polarization agent, creating an inhomogeneous distribution of radicals within the sample. Consequently, the effective radical concentration was decreased in the bulk OTP phase, and long-range 1H–1H spin diffusion was the main polarization propagation mechanism. Preliminary DNP experiments with the glass-forming anti-inflammation drug, indomethacin, showed promising results, and further studies are underway to prepare DNP samples using pharmaceutical techniques.
Co-reporter:Loren B. Andreas ; Matthew T. Eddy ; James J. Chou
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2012 Volume 134(Issue 17) pp:7215-7218
Publication Date(Web):April 5, 2012
DOI:10.1021/ja3003606
We report chemical shift assignments of the drug-resistant S31N mutant of M218–60 determined using 3D magic-angle-spinning (MAS) NMR spectra acquired with a 15N–13C ZF-TEDOR transfer followed by 13C–13C mixing by RFDR. The MAS spectra reveal two sets of resonances, indicating that the tetramer assembles as a dimer of dimers, similar to the wild-type channel. Helicies from the two sets of chemical shifts are shown to be in close proximity at residue H37, and the assignments reveal a difference in the helix torsion angles, as predicted by TALOS+, for the key resistance residue N31. In contrast to wild-type M218–60, chemical shift changes are minimal upon addition of the inhibitor rimantadine, suggesting that the drug does not bind to S31N M2.
Co-reporter:Matthew T. Eddy ; Ta-Chung Ong ; Lindsay Clark ; Oscar Teijido ; Patrick C. A. van der Wel ; Robert Garces ; Gerhard Wagner ; Tatiana K. Rostovtseva
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2012 Volume 134(Issue 14) pp:6375-6387
Publication Date(Web):March 21, 2012
DOI:10.1021/ja300347v
We employ a combination of 13C/15N magic angle spinning (MAS) NMR and 2H NMR to study the structural and functional consequences of different membrane environments on VDAC1 and, conversely, the effect of VDAC1 on the structure of the lipid bilayer. MAS spectra reveal a well-structured VDAC1 in 2D crystals of dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) and diphytanoylphosphatidylcholine (DPhPC), and their temperature dependence suggests that the VDAC structure does not change conformation above and below the lipid phase transition temperature. The same data show that the N-terminus remains structured at both low and high temperatures. Importantly, functional studies based on electrophysiological measurements on these same samples show fully functional channels, even without the presence of Triton X-100 that has been found necessary for in vitro-refolded channels. 2H solid-state NMR and differential scanning calorimetry were used to investigate the dynamics and phase behavior of the lipids within the VDAC1 2D crystals. 2H NMR spectra indicate that the presence of protein in DMPC results in a broad lipid phase transition that is shifted from 19 to ∼27 °C and show the existence of different lipid populations, consistent with the presence of both annular and bulk lipids in the functionally and structurally homogeneous samples.
Co-reporter:Matthew K. Kiesewetter ; Björn Corzilius ; Albert A. Smith ; Robert G. Griffin ;Timothy M. Swager
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2012 Volume 134(Issue 10) pp:4537-4540
Publication Date(Web):February 28, 2012
DOI:10.1021/ja212054e
A new biradical polarizing agent, bTbtk-py, for dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) experiments in aqueous media is reported. The synthesis is discussed in light of the requirements of the optimum, theoretical, biradical system. To date, the DNP NMR signal enhancement resulting from bTbtk-py is the largest of any biradical in the ideal glycerol/water solvent matrix, ε = 230. EPR and X-ray crystallography are used to characterize the molecule and suggest approaches for further optimizing the biradical distance and relative orientation.
Co-reporter:Natalia B. Shustova ; Ta-Chung Ong ; Anthony F. Cozzolino ; Vladimir K. Michaelis ; Robert G. Griffin ;Mircea Dincă
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2012 Volume 134(Issue 36) pp:15061-15070
Publication Date(Web):August 13, 2012
DOI:10.1021/ja306042w
Molecules that exhibit emission in the solid state, especially those known as aggregation-induced emission (AIE) chromophores, have found applications in areas as varied as light-emitting diodes and biological sensors. Despite numerous studies, the mechanism of fluorescence quenching in AIE chromophores is still not completely understood. To this end, much interest has focused on understanding the low-frequency vibrational dynamics of prototypical systems, such as tetraphenylethylene (TPE), in the hope that such studies would provide more general principles toward the design of new sensors and electronic materials. We hereby show that a perdeuterated TPE-based metal–organic framework (MOF) serves as an excellent platform for studying the low-energy vibrational modes of AIE-type chromophores. In particular, we use solid-state 2H and 13C NMR experiments to investigate the phenyl ring dynamics of TPE cores that are coordinatively trapped inside a MOF and find a phenyl ring flipping energy barrier of 43(6) kJ/mol. DFT calculations are then used to deconvolute the electronic and steric contributions to this flipping barrier. Finally, we couple the NMR and DFT studies with variable-temperature X-ray diffraction experiments to propose that both the ethylenic C═C bond twist and the torsion of the phenyl rings are important for quenching emission in TPE, but that the former may gate the latter. To conclude, we use these findings to propose a set of design criteria for the development of tunable turn-on porous sensors constructed from AIE-type molecules, particularly as applied to the design of new multifunctional MOFs.
Co-reporter:Olesya Haze ; Björn Corzilius ; Albert A. Smith ; Robert G. Griffin ;Timothy M. Swager
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2012 Volume 134(Issue 35) pp:14287-14290
Publication Date(Web):August 23, 2012
DOI:10.1021/ja304918g
The synthesis of air-stable, highly water-soluble organic radicals containing a 1,3-bis(diphenylene)-2-phenylallyl (BDPA) core is reported. A sulfonated derivative, SA-BDPA, retains the narrow electron paramagnetic resonance linewidth (<30 MHz at 5 T) of the parent BDPA in highly concentrated glycerol/water solutions (40 mM), which enables its use as polarizing agent for solid effect dynamic nuclear polarization (SE DNP). A sensitivity enhancement of 110 was obtained in high-field magic-angle-spinning (MAS) NMR experiments. The ease of synthesis and high maximum enhancements obtained with the BDPA-based radicals constitute a major advance over the trityl-type narrow-line polarization agents.
Co-reporter:Vladimir K. Michaelis, Evgeny Markhasin, Eugenio Daviso, Judith Herzfeld, and Robert G. Griffin
The Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters 2012 Volume 3(Issue 15) pp:2030-2034
Publication Date(Web):July 16, 2012
DOI:10.1021/jz300742w
Oxygen-17-detected DNP NMR of a water/glycerol glass enabled an 80-fold enhancement of signal intensity at 82 K, using the biradical TOTAPOL. The >6000-fold savings in acquisition time enable 17O–1H distance measurements and heteronuclear correlation experiments. These experiments are the initial demonstration of the feasibility of DNP NMR on quadrupolar 17O.Keywords: 17O; CPMG; cross effect; DNP; HETCOR; NMR; water;
Co-reporter:Alexander B. Barnes, Evgeny Markhasin, Eugenio Daviso, Vladimir K. Michaelis, Emilio A. Nanni, Sudheer K. Jawla, Elijah L. Mena, Ronald DeRocher, Ajay Thakkar, Paul P. Woskov, Judith Herzfeld, Richard J. Temkin, Robert G. Griffin
Journal of Magnetic Resonance 2012 224() pp: 1-7
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1016/j.jmr.2012.08.002
Co-reporter:Albert A. Smith, Björn Corzilius, Jeffrey A. Bryant, Ronald DeRocher, Paul P. Woskov, Richard J. Temkin, Robert G. Griffin
Journal of Magnetic Resonance 2012 223() pp: 170-179
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1016/j.jmr.2012.07.008
Co-reporter:Alexander B. Barnes, Emilio A. Nanni, Judith Herzfeld, Robert G. Griffin, Richard J. Temkin
Journal of Magnetic Resonance 2012 221() pp: 147-153
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1016/j.jmr.2012.03.014
Co-reporter:Matthew T. Eddy, David Ruben, Robert G. Griffin, Judith Herzfeld
Journal of Magnetic Resonance 2012 214() pp: 296-301
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1016/j.jmr.2011.12.002
Co-reporter:Eric L. Dane, Björn Corzilius, Egon Rizzato, Pierre Stocker, Thorsten Maly, Albert A. Smith, Robert G. Griffin, Olivier Ouari, Paul Tordo, and Timothy M. Swager
The Journal of Organic Chemistry 2012 Volume 77(Issue 4) pp:1789-1797
Publication Date(Web):February 6, 2012
DOI:10.1021/jo202349j
The synthesis and characterization of oxidized bis-thioketal-trispiro dinitroxide biradicals that orient the nitroxides in a rigid, approximately orthogonal geometry are reported. The biradicals show better performance as polarizing agents in dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) NMR experiments as compared to biradicals lacking the constrained geometry. In addition, the biradicals display improved solubility in aqueous media due to the presence of polar sulfoxides. The results suggest that the orientation of the radicals is not dramatically affected by the oxidation state of the sulfur atoms in the biradical, and we conclude that a biradical polarizing agent containing a mixture of oxidation states can be used for improved solubility without a loss in performance.
Co-reporter:Józef R. Lewandowski ; Patrick C. A. van der Wel ; Mike Rigney ; Nikolaus Grigorieff
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2011 Volume 133(Issue 37) pp:14686-14698
Publication Date(Web):July 18, 2011
DOI:10.1021/ja203736z
The molecular structure of amyloid fibrils and the mechanism of their formation are of substantial medical and biological importance, but present an ongoing experimental and computational challenge. An early high-resolution view of amyloid-like structure was obtained on amyloid-like crystals of a small fragment of the yeast prion protein Sup35p: the peptide GNNQQNY. As GNNQQNY also forms amyloid-like fibrils under similar conditions, it has been theorized that the crystal’s structural features are shared by the fibrils. Here we apply magic-angle-spinning (MAS) NMR to examine the structure and dynamics of these fibrils. Previously multiple NMR signals were observed for such samples, seemingly consistent with the presence of polymorphic fibrils. Here we demonstrate that peptides with these three distinct conformations instead assemble together into composite protofilaments. Electron microscopy (EM) of the ribbon-like fibrils indicates that these protofilaments combine in differing ways to form striations of variable widths, presenting another level of structural complexity. Structural and dynamic NMR data reveal the presence of highly restricted side-chain conformations involved in interfaces between differently structured peptides, likely comprising interdigitated steric zippers. We outline molecular interfaces that are consistent with the observed EM and NMR data. The rigid and uniform structure of the GNNQQNY crystals is found to contrast distinctly with the more complex structural and dynamic nature of these “composite” amyloid fibrils. These results provide insight into the fibril–crystal distinction and also indicate a necessary caution with respect to the extrapolation of crystal structures to the study of fibril structure and formation.
Co-reporter:Marvin J. Bayro ; Galia T. Debelouchina ; Matthew T. Eddy ; Neil R. Birkett ; Catherine E. MacPhee ; Melanie Rosay ; Werner E. Maas ; Christopher M. Dobson
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2011 Volume 133(Issue 35) pp:13967-13974
Publication Date(Web):July 21, 2011
DOI:10.1021/ja203756x
We describe magic-angle spinning NMR experiments designed to elucidate the interstrand architecture of amyloid fibrils. Three methods are introduced for this purpose, two being based on the analysis of long-range 13C–13C correlation spectra and the third based on the identification of intermolecular interactions in 13C–15N spectra. We show, in studies of fibrils formed by the 86-residue SH3 domain of PI3 kinase (PI3-SH3 or PI3K-SH3), that efficient 13C–13C correlation spectra display a resonance degeneracy that establishes a parallel, in-register alignment of the proteins in the amyloid fibrils. In addition, this degeneracy can be circumvented to yield direct intermolecular constraints. The 13C–13C experiments are corroborated by 15N–13C correlation spectra obtained from a mixed [15N,12C]/[14N,13C] sample which directly quantify interstrand distances. Furthermore, when the spectra are recorded with signal enhancement provided by dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) at 100 K, we demonstrate a dramatic increase (from 23 to 52) in the number of intermolecular 15N–13C constraints detectable in the spectra. The increase in the information content is due to the enhanced signal intensities and to the fact that dynamic processes, leading to spectral intensity losses, are quenched at low temperatures. Thus, acquisition of low temperature spectra addresses a problem that is frequently encountered in MAS spectra of proteins. In total, the experiments provide 111 intermolecular 13C–13C and 15N–13C constraints that establish that the PI3-SH3 protein strands are aligned in a parallel, in-register arrangement within the amyloid fibril.
Co-reporter:Björn Corzilius ; Albert A. Smith ; Alexander B. Barnes ; Claudio Luchinat ; Ivano Bertini
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2011 Volume 133(Issue 15) pp:5648-5651
Publication Date(Web):March 29, 2011
DOI:10.1021/ja1109002
We report the dynamic nuclear polarization of 1H spins in magic-angle-spinning spectra recorded at 5 T and 84 K via the solid effect using Mn2+ and Gd3+ complexes as polarizing agents. We show that the magnitude of the enhancements can be directly related to the effective line width of the central (mS = −1/2 → +1/2) EPR transition. Using a Gd3+ complex with a narrow central transition EPR line width of 29 MHz, we observed a maximum enhancement of ∼13, which is comparable to previous results on the narrow-line-width trityl radical.
Co-reporter:V.S. Bajaj, C.T. Farrar, M.K. Hornstein, I. Mastovsky, J. Vieregg, J. Bryant, B. Eléna, K.E. Kreischer, R.J. Temkin, R.G. Griffin
Journal of Magnetic Resonance 2011 213(2) pp: 404-409
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1016/j.jmr.2011.09.010
Co-reporter:Robert G. Griffin
Journal of Magnetic Resonance 2011 213(2) pp: 410-412
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1016/j.jmr.2011.08.015
Co-reporter:Galia T. Debelouchina ; Geoffrey W. Platt ; Marvin J. Bayro ; Sheena E. Radford
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2010 Volume 132(Issue 48) pp:17077-17079
Publication Date(Web):November 15, 2010
DOI:10.1021/ja107987f
The deposition of amyloid-like fibrils, composed primarily of the 99-residue protein β2-microglobulin (β2m), is one of the characteristic symptoms of dialysis-related amyloidosis. Fibrils formed in vitro at low pH and low salt concentration share many properties with the disease related fibrils and have been extensively studied by a number of biochemical and biophysical methods. These fibrils contain a significant β-sheet core and have a complex cryoEM electron density profile. Here, we investigate the intrasheet arrangement of the fibrils by means of 15N−13C MAS NMR correlation spectroscopy. We utilize a fibril sample grown from a 50:50 mixture of 15N,12C- and 14N,13C-labeled β2m monomers, the latter prepared using 2-13C glycerol as the carbon source. Together with the use of ZF-TEDOR mixing, this sample allowed us to observe intermolecular 15N−13C backbone-to-backbone contacts with excellent resolution and good sensitivity. The results are consistent with a parallel, in-register arrangement of the protein subunits in the fibrils and suggest that a significant structural reorganization occurs from the native to the fibril state.
Co-reporter:Loren B. Andreas ; Matthew T. Eddy ; Rafal M. Pielak ; James Chou
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2010 Volume 132(Issue 32) pp:10958-10960
Publication Date(Web):July 27, 2010
DOI:10.1021/ja101537p
The tetrameric M2 proton channel from influenza A virus conducts protons at low pH and is inhibited by aminoadamantyl drugs such as amantadine and rimantadine (Rmt). We report magic angle spinning NMR spectra of POPC and DPhPC membrane-embedded M218−60, both apo and in the presence of Rmt. Similar line widths in the spectra of apo and bound M2 indicate that Rmt does not have a significant impact on the dynamics or conformational heterogeneity of this construct. Substantial chemical shift changes for many residues in the transmembrane region support an allosteric mechanism of inhibition. An Rmt titration supports a binding stoichiometry of >1 Rmt molecule per channel and shows that nonspecific binding or changes in membrane composition are unlikely sources of the chemical shift changes. In addition, doubling of spectral lines in all of the observed samples provides evidence that the channel assembles with twofold symmetry.
Co-reporter:Galia T. Debelouchina ; Geoffrey W. Platt ; Marvin J. Bayro ; Sheena E. Radford
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2010 Volume 132(Issue 30) pp:10414-10423
Publication Date(Web):July 13, 2010
DOI:10.1021/ja102775u
β2-Microglobulin (β2m) is the major structural component of amyloid fibrils deposited in a condition known as dialysis-related amyloidosis. Despite numerous studies that have elucidated important aspects of the fibril formation process in vitro, and a magic angle spinning (MAS) NMR study of the fibrils formed by a small peptide fragment, structural details of β2m fibrils formed by the full-length 99-residue protein are largely unknown. Here, we present a site-specific MAS NMR analysis of fibrils formed by the full-length β2m protein and compare spectra of fibrils prepared under two different conditions. Specifically, long straight (LS) fibrils are formed at pH 2.5, while a very different morphology denoted as worm-like (WL) fibrils is observed in preparations at pH 3.6. High-resolution MAS NMR spectra have allowed us to obtain 13C and 15N resonance assignments for 64 residues of β2m in LS fibrils, including part of the highly mobile N-terminus. Approximately 25 residues did not yield observable signals. Chemical shift analysis of the sequentially assigned residues indicates that these fibrils contain an extensive β-sheet core organized in a non-native manner, with a trans-P32 conformation. In contrast, WL fibrils exhibit more extensive dynamics and appear to have a smaller β-sheet core than LS fibrils, although both cores seem to share some common elements. Our results suggest that the distinct macroscopic morphological features observed for the two types of fibrils result from variations in structure and dynamics at the molecular level.
Co-reporter:Alexander B. Barnes, Björn Corzilius, Melody L. Mak-Jurkauskas, Loren B. Andreas, Vikram S. Bajaj, Yoh Matsuki, Marina L. Belenky, Johan Lugtenburg, Jagadishwar R. Sirigiri, Richard J. Temkin, Judith Herzfeld and Robert G. Griffin
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics 2010 vol. 12(Issue 22) pp:5861-5867
Publication Date(Web):08 May 2010
DOI:10.1039/C003763J
This contribution addresses four potential misconceptions associated with high-resolution dynamic nuclear polarization/magic angle spinning (DNP/MAS) experiments. First, spectral resolution is not generally compromised at the cryogenic temperatures at which DNP experiments are performed. As we demonstrate at a modest field of 9 T (380 MHz 1H), 1 ppm linewidths are observed in DNP/MAS spectra of a membrane protein in its native lipid bilayer, and <0.4 ppm linewidths are reported in a crystalline peptide at 85 K. Second, we address the concerns about paramagnetic broadening in DNP/MAS spectra of proteins by demonstrating that the exogenous radical polarizing agents utilized for DNP are distributed in the sample in such a manner as to avoid paramagnetic broadening and thus maintain full spectral resolution. Third, the enhanced polarization is not localized around the polarizing agent, but rather is effectively and uniformly dispersed throughout the sample, even in the case of membrane proteins. Fourth, the distribution of polarization from the electron spins mediated via spin diffusion between 1H–1H strongly dipolar coupled spins is so rapid that shorter magnetization recovery periods between signal averaging transients can be utilized in DNP/MAS experiments than in typical experiments performed at ambient temperature.
Co-reporter:Thorsten Maly, Loren B. Andreas, Albert A. Smith and Robert G. Griffin
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics 2010 vol. 12(Issue 22) pp:5872-5878
Publication Date(Web):11 May 2010
DOI:10.1039/C003705B
Perdeuteration of biological macromolecules for magic angle spinning solid-state NMR spectroscopy can yield high-resolution 2H–13C correlation spectra and the method is therefore of great interest for the structural biology community. Here we demonstrate that the combination of sample deuteration and dynamic nuclear polarization yields resolved 2H–13C correlation spectra with a signal enhancement of ε ≥ 700 compared to a spectrum recorded with microwaves off and otherwise identical conditions. To our knowledge, this is the first time that 2H-DNP has been employed to enhance MAS-NMR spectra of a biologically relevant system. The DNP process is studied using several polarizing agents and the technique is applied to obtain 2H–13C correlation spectra of U-[2H, 13C] proline.
Co-reporter:Galia T. Debelouchina, Marvin J. Bayro, Patrick C. A. van der Wel, Marc A. Caporini, Alexander B. Barnes, Melanie Rosay, Werner E. Maas and Robert G. Griffin
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics 2010 vol. 12(Issue 22) pp:5911-5919
Publication Date(Web):08 May 2010
DOI:10.1039/C003661G
Dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) utilizes the inherently larger polarization of electrons to enhance the sensitivity of conventional solid-state NMR experiments at low temperature. Recent advances in instrumentation development and sample preparation have transformed this field and have opened up new opportunities for its application to biological systems. Here, we present DNP-enhanced 13C–13C and 15N–13C correlation experiments on GNNQQNY nanocrystals and amyloid fibrils acquired at 9.4 T and 100 K and demonstrate that DNP can be used to obtain assignments and site-specific structural information very efficiently. We investigate the influence of temperature on the resolution, molecular conformation, structural integrity and dynamics in these two systems. In addition, we assess the low-temperature performance of two commonly used solid-state NMR experiments, proton-driven spin diffusion (PDSD) and transferred echo double resonance (TEDOR), and discuss their potential as tools for measurement of structurally relevant distances at low temperature in combination with DNP.
Co-reporter:Patrick C. A. van der Wel, Józef R. Lewandowski, and Robert G. Griffin
Biochemistry 2010 Volume 49(Issue 44) pp:
Publication Date(Web):August 9, 2010
DOI:10.1021/bi100077x
Several human diseases are associated with the formation of amyloid aggregates, but experimental characterization of these amyloid fibrils and their oligomeric precursors has remained challenging. Experimental and computational analysis of simpler model systems has therefore been necessary, for instance, on the peptide fragment GNNQQNY7−13 of yeast prion protein Sup35p. Expanding on a previous publication, we report here a detailed structural characterization of GNNQQNY fibrils using magic angle spinning (MAS) NMR. On the basis of additional chemical shift assignments we confirm the coexistence of three distinct peptide conformations within the fibrillar samples, as reflected in substantial chemical shift differences. Backbone torsion angle measurements indicate that the basic structure of these coexisting conformers is an extended β-sheet. We structurally characterize a previously identified localized distortion of the β-strand backbone specific to one of the conformers. Intermolecular contacts are consistent with each of the conformers being present in its own parallel and in-register sheet. Overall the MAS NMR data indicate a substantial difference between the structure of the fibrillar and crystalline forms of these peptides, with a clearly increased complexity in the GNNQQNY fibril structure. These experimental data can provide guidance for future work, both experimental and theoretical, and provide insights into the distinction between fibril growth and crystal formation.
Co-reporter:Marvin J. Bayro, Thorsten Maly, Neil R. Birkett, Cait E. MacPhee, Christopher M. Dobson and Robert G. Griffin
Biochemistry 2010 Volume 49(Issue 35) pp:
Publication Date(Web):July 27, 2010
DOI:10.1021/bi100864t
The SH3 domain of the PI3 kinase (PI3-SH3 or PI3K-SH3) readily aggregates into fibrils in vitro and has served as an important model system in the investigation of the molecular properties and mechanism of formation of amyloid fibrils. We describe the molecular conformation of PI3-SH3 in amyloid fibril form as revealed by magic-angle spinning (MAS) solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. The MAS NMR spectra of these fibrils display excellent resolution, with narrow 13C and 15N line widths, representing a high degree of structural order and the absence of extensive molecular motion for the majority of the polypeptide chain. We have identified the spin systems of 82 of the 86 residues in the protein and obtained sequential resonance assignments for 75 of them. Chemical shift analysis indicates that the protein subunits making up the fibril adopt a compact conformation consisting of four well-defined β-sheet regions and four random-coil elements with varying degrees of local dynamics or disorder. The backbone conformation of PI3-SH3 in fibril form differs significantly from that of the native state of the protein, both in secondary structure and in the location of dynamic or disordered segments. The site-specific MAS NMR analysis of PI3-SH3 fibrils we report here is compared with previously published mechanistic and structural data, resulting in a detailed interpretation of the factors that mediate fibril formation by PI3-SH3 and allowing us to propose a possible model of the core structure of the fibrils. Our results confirm the structural similarities between PI3-SH3 fibrils and amyloid assemblies directly related to degenerative and infectious diseases.
Co-reporter:Vikram S. Bajaj, Melody L. Mak-Jurkauskas, Marina Belenky, Judith Herzfeld, Robert G. Griffin
Journal of Magnetic Resonance 2010 Volume 202(Issue 1) pp:9-13
Publication Date(Web):January 2010
DOI:10.1016/j.jmr.2009.09.005
We describe a new approach to multiple 13C–15N distance measurements in uniformly labeled solids, frequency-selective (FS) TEDOR. The method shares features with FS-REDOR and ZF- and BASE-TEDOR, which also provide quantitative 15N–13C spectral assignments and distance measurements in U-[13C,15N] samples. To demonstrate the validity of the FS-TEDOR sequence, we measured distances in [U-13C,15N]-asparagine which are in good agreement with other methods. In addition, we integrate high frequency dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) into the experimental protocol and use FS-TEDOR to record a resolved correlation spectrum of the Arg-13Cγ–15Nε region in [U-13C,15N]-bacteriorhodopsin. We resolve six of the seven cross-peaks expected based on the primary sequence of this membrane protein.
Co-reporter:Marc A. Caporini, Vikram S. Bajaj, Mikhail Veshtort, Anthony Fitzpatrick, Cait E. MacPhee, Michele Vendruscolo, Christopher M. Dobson, and Robert G. Griffin
The Journal of Physical Chemistry B 2010 Volume 114(Issue 42) pp:13555-13561
Publication Date(Web):October 6, 2010
DOI:10.1021/jp106675h
Amyloid fibrils are structurally ordered aggregates of proteins whose formation is associated with many neurodegenerative and other diseases. For that reason, their high-resolution structures are of considerable interest and have been studied using a wide range of techniques, notably electron microscopy, X-ray diffraction, and magic angle spinning (MAS) NMR. Because of the excellent resolution in the spectra, MAS NMR is uniquely capable of delivering site-specific, atomic resolution information about all levels of amyloid structure: (1) the monomer, which packs into several (2) protofilaments that in turn associate to form a (3) fibril. Building upon our high-resolution structure of the monomer of an amyloid-forming peptide from transthyretin (TTR105−115), we introduce single 1-13C labeled amino acids at seven different sites in the peptide and measure intermolecular carbonyl−carbonyl distances with an accuracy of ∼0.11 A. Our results conclusively establish a parallel, in register, topology for the packing of this peptide into a β-sheet and provide constraints essential for the determination of an atomic resolution structure of the fibril. Furthermore, the approach we employ, based on a combination of a double-quantum filtered variant of the DRAWS recoupling sequence and multispin numerical simulations in SPINEVOLUTION, is general and should be applicable to a wide range of systems.
Co-reporter:Thorsten Maly Dr.;Anne-Frances Miller
ChemPhysChem 2010 Volume 11( Issue 5) pp:999-1001
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/cphc.200900908
Co-reporter:Alexander B. Barnes, Melody L. Mak-Jurkauskas, Yoh Matsuki, Vikram S. Bajaj, Patrick C.A. van der Wel, Ronald DeRocher, Jeffrey Bryant, Jagadishwar R. Sirigiri, Richard J. Temkin, Johan Lugtenburg, Judith Herzfeld, Robert G. Griffin
Journal of Magnetic Resonance 2009 Volume 198(Issue 2) pp:261-270
Publication Date(Web):June 2009
DOI:10.1016/j.jmr.2009.03.003
We describe a cryogenic sample exchange system that dramatically improves the efficiency of magic angle spinning (MAS) dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) experiments by reducing the time required to change samples and by improving long-term instrument stability. Changing samples in conventional cryogenic MAS DNP/NMR experiments involves warming the probe to room temperature, detaching all cryogenic, RF, and microwave connections, removing the probe from the magnet, replacing the sample, and reversing all the previous steps, with the entire cycle requiring a few hours. The sample exchange system described here—which relies on an eject pipe attached to the front of the MAS stator and a vacuum jacketed dewar with a bellowed hole—circumvents these procedures. To demonstrate the excellent sensitivity, resolution, and stability achieved with this quadruple resonance sample exchange probe, we have performed high precision distance measurements on the active site of the membrane protein bacteriorhodopsin. We also include a spectrum of the tripeptide N-f-MLF-OH at 100 K which shows 30 Hz linewidths.
Co-reporter:Judith Herzfeld;Melody L. Mak-Jurkauskas;Vikram S. Bajaj;Marina Belenky
PNAS 2009 Volume 106 (Issue 23 ) pp:9244-9249
Publication Date(Web):2009-06-09
DOI:10.1073/pnas.0900908106
Observation and structural studies of reaction intermediates of proteins are challenging because of the mixtures of states
usually present at low concentrations. Here, we use a 250 GHz gyrotron (cyclotron resonance maser) and cryogenic temperatures
to perform high-frequency dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) NMR experiments that enhance sensitivity in magic-angle spinning
NMR spectra of cryo-trapped photocycle intermediates of bacteriorhodopsin (bR) by a factor of ≈90. Multidimensional spectroscopy
of U-13C,15N-labeled samples resolved coexisting states and allowed chemical shift assignments in the retinylidene chromophore for several
intermediates not observed previously. The correlation spectra reveal unexpected heterogeneity in dark-adapted bR, distortion
in the K state, and, most importantly, 4 discrete L substates. Thermal relaxation of the mixture of L's showed that 3 of these
substates revert to bR568 and that only the 1 substate with both the strongest counterion and a fully relaxed 13-cis bond is functional. These definitive observations of functional and shunt states in the bR photocycle provide a preview of
the mechanistic insights that will be accessible in membrane proteins via sensitivity-enhanced DNP NMR. These observations
would have not been possible absent the signal enhancement available from DNP.
Co-reporter:Józef R. Lewandowski, Gaël De Paëpe, Matthew T. Eddy, Jochem Struppe, Werner Maas and Robert G. Griffin
The Journal of Physical Chemistry B 2009 Volume 113(Issue 27) pp:9062-9069
Publication Date(Web):June 2, 2009
DOI:10.1021/jp810280t
We demonstrate the successful application of 13C−13C proton assisted recoupling (PAR) on [U−13C,15N] N-f-MLF-OH and [U−13C,15N] protein GB1 at high magic angle spinning (MAS) frequencies (ωr/2π = 65 kHz). Specifically, by combining PAR mixing with low power heteronuclear decoupling (ω1H/2π ∼ 16 kHz) and high spinning frequencies, we obtain high resolution 2D spectra displaying long-range 13C−13C contacts from which distance estimates can be extracted. These experiments therefore demonstrate the possibility of performing high resolution structural studies in the limit of high spinning frequency and low power 1H decoupling, a regime which optimizes the resolution of protein samples and preserves their integrity.
Co-reporter:MarvinJ. Bayro;Thorsten Maly Dr.;NeilR. Birkett Dr.;ChristopherM. Dobson ;RobertG. Griffin
Angewandte Chemie 2009 Volume 121( Issue 31) pp:5818-5820
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/ange.200901520
Co-reporter:Patrick C. A. van der Wel Dr.;Matthew T. Eddy;Ramesh Ramachran Dr. Dr.
ChemPhysChem 2009 Volume 10( Issue 9-10) pp:1656-1663
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/cphc.200900102
Co-reporter:Marc A. Caporini, Christopher J. Turner, Anthony Bielecki, Robert G. Griffin
Journal of Magnetic Resonance 2009 200(2) pp: 233-238
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1016/j.jmr.2009.07.003
Co-reporter:Yoh Matsuki Dr.;Thorsten Maly Dr.;Olivier Ouari Dr.;Hakim Karoui Dr.;François LeMoigne Dr.;Egon Rizzato Dr.;Sevdalina Lyubenova Dr.;Judith Herzfeld ;Thomas Prisner ;Paul Tordo ;RobertG. Griffin
Angewandte Chemie 2009 Volume 121( Issue 27) pp:5096-5100
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/ange.200805940
Co-reporter:MarvinJ. Bayro;Thorsten Maly Dr.;NeilR. Birkett Dr.;ChristopherM. Dobson ;RobertG. Griffin
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2009 Volume 48( Issue 31) pp:5708-5710
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/anie.200901520
Co-reporter:Yoh Matsuki Dr.;Thorsten Maly Dr.;Olivier Ouari Dr.;Hakim Karoui Dr.;François LeMoigne Dr.;Egon Rizzato Dr.;Sevdalina Lyubenova Dr.;Judith Herzfeld ;Thomas Prisner ;Paul Tordo ;RobertG. Griffin
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2009 Volume 48( Issue 27) pp:4996-5000
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/anie.200805940
Co-reporter:Vikram S. Bajaj, Melissa K. Hornstein, Kenneth E. Kreischer, Jagadishwar R. Sirigiri, Paul P. Woskov, Melody L. Mak-Jurkauskas, Judith Herzfeld, Richard J. Temkin, Robert G. Griffin
Journal of Magnetic Resonance 2007 Volume 189(Issue 2) pp:251-279
Publication Date(Web):December 2007
DOI:10.1016/j.jmr.2007.09.013
In this paper, we describe a 250 GHz gyrotron oscillator, a critical component of an integrated system for magic angle spinning (MAS) dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) experiments at 9 T, corresponding to 380 MHz 1H frequency. The 250 GHz gyrotron is the first gyro-device designed with the goal of seamless integration with an NMR spectrometer for routine DNP enhanced NMR spectroscopy and has operated under computer control for periods of up to 21 days with a 100% duty cycle. Following a brief historical review of the field, we present studies of the membrane protein bacteriorhodopsin (bR) using DNP enhanced multidimensional NMR. These results include assignment of active site resonances in [U-13C, 15N]-bR and demonstrate the utility of DNP for studies of membrane proteins. Next, we review the theory of gyro-devices from quantum mechanical and classical viewpoints and discuss the unique considerations that apply to gyrotron oscillators designed for DNP experiments. We then characterize the operation of the 250 GHz gyrotron in detail, including its long-term stability and controllability. We have measured the spectral purity of the gyrotron emission using both homodyne and heterodyne techniques. Radiation intensity patterns from the corrugated waveguide that delivers power to the NMR probe were measured using two new techniques to confirm pure mode content: a thermometric approach based on the temperature-dependent color of liquid crystalline media applied to a substrate and imaging with a pyroelectric camera. We next present a detailed study of the mode excitation characteristics of the gyrotron. Exploration of the operating characteristics of several fundamental modes reveals broadband continuous frequency tuning of up to 1.8 GHz as a function of the magnetic field alone, a feature that may be exploited in future tunable gyrotron designs. Oscillation of the 250 GHz gyrotron at the second harmonic of cyclotron resonance begins at extremely low beam currents (as low 12 mA) at frequencies between 320 and 365 GHz, suggesting an efficient route for the generation of even higher frequency radiation. The low starting currents were attributed to an elevated cavity Q, which is confirmed by cavity thermal load measurements. We conclude with an appendix containing a detailed description of the control system that safely automates all aspects of the gyrotron operation.
Co-reporter:Christopher P. Jaroniec;Cait E. MacPhee;Vikram S. Bajaj;Michael T. McMahon;Christopher M. Dobson
PNAS 2004 101 (3 ) pp:711-716
Publication Date(Web):2004-01-20
DOI:10.1073/pnas.0304849101
Amyloid fibrils are self-assembled filamentous structures associated with protein deposition conditions including Alzheimer's
disease and the transmissible spongiform encephalopathies. Despite the immense medical importance of amyloid fibrils, no atomic-resolution
structures are available for these materials, because the intact fibrils are insoluble and do not form diffraction-quality
3D crystals. Here we report the high-resolution structure of a peptide fragment of the amyloidogenic protein transthyretin,
TTR(105–115), in its fibrillar form, determined by magic angle spinning NMR spectroscopy. The structure resolves not only
the backbone fold but also the precise conformation of the side chains. Nearly complete 13C and 15N resonance assignments for TTR(105–115) formed the basis for the extraction of a set of distance and dihedral angle restraints.
A total of 76 self-consistent experimental measurements, including 41 restraints on 19 backbone dihedral angles and 35 13C–15N distances between 3 and 6 Å were obtained from 2D and 3D NMR spectra recorded on three fibril samples uniformly 13C, 15N-labeled in consecutive stretches of four amino acids and used to calculate an ensemble of peptide structures. Our results
indicate that TTR(105–115) adopts an extended β-strand conformation in the amyloid fibrils such that both the main- and side-chain
torsion angles are close to their optimal values. Moreover, the structure of this peptide in the fibrillar form has a degree
of long-range order that is generally associated only with crystalline materials. These findings provide an explanation of
the unusual stability and characteristic properties of this form of polypeptide assembly.
Co-reporter:Cait E. MacPhee;Nathan S. Astrof;Christopher P. Jaroniec;Christopher M. Dobson
PNAS 2002 Volume 99 (Issue 26 ) pp:16748-16753
Publication Date(Web):2002-12-24
DOI:10.1073/pnas.252625999
The molecular conformation of peptide fragment 105–115 of transthyretin, TTR(105–115), previously shown to form amyloid fibrils
in vitro, has been determined by magic-angle spinning solid-state NMR spectroscopy. 13C and 15N linewidth measurements indicate that TTR(105–115) forms a highly ordered structure with each amino acid in a unique environment.
2D 13C-13C and 15N-13C-13C chemical shift correlation experiments, performed on three fibril samples uniformly 13C,15N-labeled in consecutive stretches of 4 aa, allowed the complete sequence-specific backbone and side-chain 13C and 15N resonance assignments to be obtained for residues 105–114. Analysis of the 15N, 13CO, 13Cα, and 13Cβ chemical shifts allowed quantitative predictions to be made for the backbone torsion angles φ and ψ. Furthermore, four backbone
13C–15N distances were determined in two selectively 13C,15N-labeled fibril samples by using rotational-echo double-resonance NMR. The results show that TTR(105–115) adopts an extended
β-strand conformation that is similar to that found in the native protein except for substantial differences in the vicinity
of the proline residue.
Co-reporter:D. Iuga, P. Rossi, J. Herzfeld, R.G. Griffin
Solid State Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (April–May 2017) Volumes 82–83() pp:35-41
Publication Date(Web):April–May 2017
DOI:10.1016/j.ssnmr.2017.01.003
Co-reporter:Björn Corzilius ; Vladimir K. Michaelis ; Susanne A. Penzel ; Enrico Ravera ; Albert A. Smith ; Claudio Luchinat
Journal of the American Chemical Society () pp:
Publication Date(Web):July 29, 2014
DOI:10.1021/ja5044374
The study of inorganic crystalline materials by solid-state NMR spectroscopy is often complicated by the low sensitivity of heavy nuclei. However, these materials often contain or can be prepared with paramagnetic dopants without significantly affecting the structure of the crystalline host. Dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) is generally capable of enhancing NMR signals by transferring the magnetization of unpaired electrons to the nuclei. Therefore, the NMR sensitivity in these paramagnetically doped crystals might be increased by DNP. In this paper we demonstrate the possibility of efficient DNP transfer in polycrystalline samples of [Co(en)3Cl3]2·NaCl·6H2O (en = ethylenediamine, C2H8N2) doped with Cr(III) in varying concentrations between 0.1 and 3 mol %. We demonstrate that 1H, 13C, and 59Co can be polarized by irradiation of Cr(III) with 140 GHz microwaves at a magnetic field of 5 T. We further explain our findings on the basis of electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy of the Cr(III) site and analysis of its temperature-dependent zero-field splitting, as well as the dependence of the DNP enhancement factor on the external magnetic field and microwave power. This first demonstration of DNP transfer from one paramagnetic metal ion to its diamagnetic host metal ion will pave the way for future applications of DNP in paramagnetically doped materials or metalloproteins.
Co-reporter:Michael T. Colvin; Robert Silvers; Qing Zhe Ni; Thach V. Can; Ivan Sergeyev; Melanie Rosay; Kevin J. Donovan; Brian Michael; Joseph Wall; Sara Linse
Journal of the American Chemical Society () pp:
Publication Date(Web):June 29, 2016
DOI:10.1021/jacs.6b05129
Amyloid-β (Aβ) is a 39–42 residue protein produced by the cleavage of the amyloid precursor protein (APP), which subsequently aggregates to form cross-β amyloid fibrils that are a hallmark of Alzheimer’s disease (AD). The most prominent forms of Aβ are Aβ1–40 and Aβ1–42, which differ by two amino acids (I and A) at the C-terminus. However, Aβ42 is more neurotoxic and essential to the etiology of AD. Here, we present an atomic resolution structure of a monomorphic form of AβM01–42 amyloid fibrils derived from over 500 13C–13C, 13C–15N distance and backbone angle structural constraints obtained from high field magic angle spinning NMR spectra. The structure (PDB ID: 5KK3) shows that the fibril core consists of a dimer of Aβ42 molecules, each containing four β-strands in a S-shaped amyloid fold, and arranged in a manner that generates two hydrophobic cores that are capped at the end of the chain by a salt bridge. The outer surface of the monomers presents hydrophilic side chains to the solvent. The interface between the monomers of the dimer shows clear contacts between M35 of one molecule and L17 and Q15 of the second. Intermolecular 13C–15N constraints demonstrate that the amyloid fibrils are parallel in register. The RMSD of the backbone structure (Q15–A42) is 0.71 ± 0.12 Å and of all heavy atoms is 1.07 ± 0.08 Å. The structure provides a point of departure for the design of drugs that bind to the fibril surface and therefore interfere with secondary nucleation and for other therapeutic approaches to mitigate Aβ42 aggregation.
Co-reporter:Alexander B. Barnes, Björn Corzilius, Melody L. Mak-Jurkauskas, Loren B. Andreas, Vikram S. Bajaj, Yoh Matsuki, Marina L. Belenky, Johan Lugtenburg, Jagadishwar R. Sirigiri, Richard J. Temkin, Judith Herzfeld and Robert G. Griffin
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics 2010 - vol. 12(Issue 22) pp:NaN5867-5867
Publication Date(Web):2010/05/08
DOI:10.1039/C003763J
This contribution addresses four potential misconceptions associated with high-resolution dynamic nuclear polarization/magic angle spinning (DNP/MAS) experiments. First, spectral resolution is not generally compromised at the cryogenic temperatures at which DNP experiments are performed. As we demonstrate at a modest field of 9 T (380 MHz 1H), 1 ppm linewidths are observed in DNP/MAS spectra of a membrane protein in its native lipid bilayer, and <0.4 ppm linewidths are reported in a crystalline peptide at 85 K. Second, we address the concerns about paramagnetic broadening in DNP/MAS spectra of proteins by demonstrating that the exogenous radical polarizing agents utilized for DNP are distributed in the sample in such a manner as to avoid paramagnetic broadening and thus maintain full spectral resolution. Third, the enhanced polarization is not localized around the polarizing agent, but rather is effectively and uniformly dispersed throughout the sample, even in the case of membrane proteins. Fourth, the distribution of polarization from the electron spins mediated via spin diffusion between 1H–1H strongly dipolar coupled spins is so rapid that shorter magnetization recovery periods between signal averaging transients can be utilized in DNP/MAS experiments than in typical experiments performed at ambient temperature.
Co-reporter:Thorsten Maly, Loren B. Andreas, Albert A. Smith and Robert G. Griffin
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics 2010 - vol. 12(Issue 22) pp:NaN5878-5878
Publication Date(Web):2010/05/11
DOI:10.1039/C003705B
Perdeuteration of biological macromolecules for magic angle spinning solid-state NMR spectroscopy can yield high-resolution 2H–13C correlation spectra and the method is therefore of great interest for the structural biology community. Here we demonstrate that the combination of sample deuteration and dynamic nuclear polarization yields resolved 2H–13C correlation spectra with a signal enhancement of ε ≥ 700 compared to a spectrum recorded with microwaves off and otherwise identical conditions. To our knowledge, this is the first time that 2H-DNP has been employed to enhance MAS-NMR spectra of a biologically relevant system. The DNP process is studied using several polarizing agents and the technique is applied to obtain 2H–13C correlation spectra of U-[2H, 13C] proline.
Co-reporter:Galia T. Debelouchina, Marvin J. Bayro, Patrick C. A. van der Wel, Marc A. Caporini, Alexander B. Barnes, Melanie Rosay, Werner E. Maas and Robert G. Griffin
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics 2010 - vol. 12(Issue 22) pp:NaN5919-5919
Publication Date(Web):2010/05/08
DOI:10.1039/C003661G
Dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) utilizes the inherently larger polarization of electrons to enhance the sensitivity of conventional solid-state NMR experiments at low temperature. Recent advances in instrumentation development and sample preparation have transformed this field and have opened up new opportunities for its application to biological systems. Here, we present DNP-enhanced 13C–13C and 15N–13C correlation experiments on GNNQQNY nanocrystals and amyloid fibrils acquired at 9.4 T and 100 K and demonstrate that DNP can be used to obtain assignments and site-specific structural information very efficiently. We investigate the influence of temperature on the resolution, molecular conformation, structural integrity and dynamics in these two systems. In addition, we assess the low-temperature performance of two commonly used solid-state NMR experiments, proton-driven spin diffusion (PDSD) and transferred echo double resonance (TEDOR), and discuss their potential as tools for measurement of structurally relevant distances at low temperature in combination with DNP.