Weak alignment offers new NMR opportunities to study protein structure and dynamics
Top Cited Papers
Open Access
- 1 January 2003
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wiley in Protein Science
- Vol. 12 (1) , 1-16
- https://doi.org/10.1110/ps.0233303
Abstract
Protein solution nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) can be conducted in a slightly anisotropic environment, where the orientational distribution of the proteins is no longer random. In such an environment, the large one‐bond internuclear dipolar interactions no longer average to zero and report on the average orientation of the corresponding vectors relative to the magnetic field. The desired very weak ordering, on the order of 10−3, can be induced conveniently by the use of aqueous nematic liquid crystalline suspensions or by anisotropically compressed hydrogels. The resulting residual dipolar interactions are scaled down by three orders of magnitude relative to their static values, but nevertheless can be measured at high accuracy. They are very precise reporters on the average orientation of bonds relative to the molecular alignment frame, and they can be used in a variety of ways to enrich our understanding of protein structure and function. Applications to date have focused primarily on validation of structures, determined by NMR, X‐ray crystallography, or homology modeling, and on refinement of structures determined by conventional NMR approaches. Although de novo structure determination on the basis of dipolar couplings suffers from a severe multiple minimum problem, related to the degeneracy of dipolar coupling relative to inversion of the internuclear vector, a number of approaches can address this problem and potentially can accelerate the NMR structure determination process considerably. In favorable cases, where large numbers of dipolar couplings can be measured, inconsistency between measured values can report on internal motions.Keywords
This publication has 86 references indexed in Scilit:
- Prediction of Sterically Induced Alignment in a Dilute Liquid Crystalline Phase: Aid to Protein Structure Determination by NMRJournal of the American Chemical Society, 2000
- Orienting domains in proteins using dipolar couplings measured by liquid-state NMR: differences in solution and crystal forms of maltodextrin binding protein loaded with β-cyclodextrinJournal of Molecular Biology, 2000
- Tunable alignment of macromolecules by filamentous phage yields dipolar coupling interactionsNature Structural & Molecular Biology, 1998
- Measurement of Residual Dipolar Couplings of Macromolecules Aligned in the Nematic Phase of a Colloidal Suspension of Rod-Shaped VirusesJournal of the American Chemical Society, 1998
- The Third IgG-Binding Domain from Streptococcal Protein GJournal of Molecular Biology, 1994
- Problems with, and alternatives to, the NMR R factorJournal of Magnetic Resonance (1969), 1992
- One thousand families for the molecular biologistNature, 1992
- Relationship between nuclear magnetic resonance chemical shift and protein secondary structureJournal of Molecular Biology, 1991
- Toward an NMR R factorJournal of Magnetic Resonance (1969), 1991
- Structure of ubiquitin refined at 1.8 Å resolutionJournal of Molecular Biology, 1987