Robust heteronuclear correlations for proteins in ultrafast magic-angle spinning solid-state NMR

02 January 2025, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Under ultrafast magic-angle spinning (MAS), proton-detected solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (ssNMR) has emerged as a powerful technique for elucidating structures from sub-milligram protein, where establishing 13C-15N correlations is essential. However, traditional 13C-15N cross-polarization (CP), which performs well at lower MAS frequencies, suffers diminished efficiency under ultrafast MAS conditions. To address this challenge, we have developed a robust method for selective polarization between insensitive nuclei (SPINE). This approach significantly enhances the efficiency of heteronuclear 13C-15N correlation compared to CP, achieving gain factors of 1.75 for 13CA-15N and 1.9 and 13CO-15N transfers. These enhancements can reduce the duration of current multi-dimensional experiments to approximately one-third of that required by 13C-15N CP and to approximately one-tenth when involving two 13C-15N transfers. The effectiveness of SPINE has been validated through experiments on four distinct proteins: the microcrystalline β1 immunoglobulin binding domain of protein G (GB1), the large-conductance mechanosensitive ion channel from Methanosarcina acetivorans (MaMscL), fibrillar septum-forming protein (SepF), and the vertex protein of the β-carboxysome shell (CcmL). These findings highlight the practical utility and versatility of SPINE in ssNMR spectroscopy, making it a valuable approach for structural biology applications.

Keywords

protein
solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR)
heteronuclear correlation
ultrafast magic-angle spinning
selective polarization transfer
dipolar recoupling

Supplementary materials

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Description
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SPINE_Supporting Information
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Supporting Information
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