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How NMR is Used for the Study of Biomacromolecules

01/30/08. How NMR is Used for the Study of Biomacromolecules. Analytical biochemistry Comparative analysis Interactions between biomolecules Structure determination Biomolecular dynamics from NMR. Arunkumar et al., JBC 278 , 41077-41082 (2003) Mer et al. Cell 103 , 449-456 (2000)

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How NMR is Used for the Study of Biomacromolecules

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  1. 01/30/08 How NMR is Used forthe Study of Biomacromolecules • Analytical biochemistry • Comparative analysis • Interactions between biomolecules • Structure determination • Biomolecular dynamics from NMR Arunkumar et al., JBC 278, 41077-41082 (2003) Mer et al. Cell 103, 449-456 (2000) Ohi et al. NSB 11, 250-255 (2003)

  2. Analytical Protein Biochemistry • Purity (can detect >99%)- heterogeneity, degradation, contamination • Is a protein structured?- fast and easy assay, detects aggregation and folding • Check on sequence (fingerprint regions) • Don’t need the sequence-specific assignments! Start with 1D NMR (50 mM)

  3. NMR Assay of Structural Integrity 1H COSY 15N-1H HSQC 13C HSQC also! Tertiary structure, check on sequence

  4. Comparative Analysis • Different preparations, changes in conditions • Binding of ligands • Chemical/conformational heterogeneity • Assaying structural/functional independence of domains • Homologous proteins, mutants, engineered proteins

  5. B A B A RPA70 15N 15N 15N 2 2 3 1H 3 1 1 1H 1H Arunkumar et al., JBC (2003) Folding and Domain StructureAre domains packed together or independent? • Chemical shift is extremely sensitive • If peaks are the same, structure is the same • If peaks are different, the structure is different but we don’t know how much

  6. Biochemical Effect of MutationsAssay for proper folding/stability Wild-type Partially destabilized Structural heterogeneity Unfolded Ohi et al., NSB (2003)

  7. Structural Basis for TS PhenotypeWhat is the cause of defective RNA splicing by Prp19-1? Initial interpretation was defect in some binding interface  NMR showed U-box folding defect Ohi et al., NSB (2003)

  8. NMR to Study Interactions • Detect the binding of molecules • Determine binding constants (discrete off rates, on rates) • Sequence and 3D structural mapping of binding interfaces

  9. The Thousand Dollar Pull-down! After adding binding partner Before Yes, binding did occur!

  10. NMR- The Master Spectroscopy Titration monitored by 15N-1H HSQC NMR Provides • Site-specific • Multiple probes • In-depth information • Perturbations can be mapped on structure

  11. Binding Constants FromChemical Shift Changes Stronger Weaker Molar ratio of d-CTTCA • Fit change in chemical shift to binding equation Arunkumar et al., JBC (2003)

  12. Characterize Binding Events15N-RPA32C + Unlabeled XPA1-98 15N-1H HSQC • Only 19 residues affected • Discrete binding site • Signal broadening  exchange between the bound and un-bound state • Kd ~ 1 mM RPA32C RPA32C + XPA 1-98 Mer et al., Cell (2000)

  13. C N Map XPA Binding Site on RPA32C Using NMR • Map chemical shift perturbations on the structure of RPA32C • Can even map directly on to sequence with no structure Mer et al., Cell (2000)

  14. Determine 3D Structure of Complexes by NMR

  15. NMR Structure Determination

  16. NMR Experimental Observables Providing Structural Information • Distances from dipolar couplings (NOEs) • Backbone and side chain dihedral angles from scalar couplings • Backbone conformation from chemical shifts (Chemical Shift Index- CSI): , • Hydrogen bonds- NH exchange or J • Relative inter-nuclear orientations from residual dipolar couplings (RDCs)

  17. NMR Structure Calculations • Programs initially search with restraints disregarding chemistry (bond lengths, etc.) • Molecular force fields are then used to improve molecular properties and refine • Data are not perfect (noise, incomplete)  multiple solutions (conformational ensemble) • Final output is all conformations consistent with the experimental data

  18. Characteristics of Structures Determined in Solution by NMR • Secondary structures well defined, loops variable • Interiors well defined, surfaces more variable • RMSD provides measure of variability/precision (but not accuracy!)

  19. Restraints and Uncertainty • Large # of restraints = low values of RMSD • The most important restraints are long-range

  20. Assessing the Accuracy and Precisionof NMR Structures • Number of experimental restraints (A/P) • Violation of constraints- number, magnitude (A) • Comparison of model and exptl. parameters (A) • Comparison to known structures: PROCHECK (A) • Molecular energies (?A?, subjective) • RMSD of structural ensemble (P, biased)

  21. Biomolecular Dynamics from NMR Why? Function requires motion/kinetic energy • Entropic contributions to binding events • Differences in folded vs. unfolded states • Basis for uncertainty in NMR/crystal structures • Effect on NMR experiments dynamics to predict outcomes and design new experiments • Calibration of computational methods that predict protein properties (predict motions)

  22. Biomolecular Dynamics from NMR “Dynamic Personalities of Proteins” K. Henzler-Wildman & D. Kern Nature 450 (Dec. 13), 964-972 (2007) Lecture by Dorothee Kern: April 7, 2008

  23. Characterizing Protein Dynamics: Parameters/Timescales Residual Dipolar Couplings

  24. B A B A 15N 15N 15N 1H 1H 1H Linewidth is Dependent on MW • Linewidth determined by size of particle • Fragments have narrower linewidths Arunkumar et al., JBC (2003)

  25. 40 173 P Independent Domains in Large Proteins RPA32 RPA14 > 400 residues / ~80 signals Why? A structurally-independent functional domain Mer et al., Cell (2000)

  26. Correlating Structure and Dynamics      Weak correlation • Measurements show if high RMSD is due to high flexibility (low S2)   Strong correlation  

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