Isolation, purification and 13C‐and 1H‐n.m.r. assignments of peptide [1–24] of human serum albumin

Abstract
Isolation, purification and 360 MHz 1H- and 13C-n.m.r. spectra of the residue corresponding to the NH2-terminal peptide fragment [1-24] of human serum albumin are reported. The various resonances have been assigned to individual amino acid residues and their spatial microenvironment has been determined in a straightforward manner on the basis of (i) pH dependent chemical shifts; (ii) conbined use of multiple and selective proton-decoupled 1H- and 13c-n.m.r. spectra; (iii) the characteristic pK values exhibited by protons adjacent to sites of ionization in the molecule; and (iv) comparison of the spectra with the NH2-terminal tripeptide segment of human albumin. The pK values of different ionizable groups all fall in the normal range expected for each titrating sites and support a model of peptide fragment [1-24] in which there is no special structure-forming strong associations. These results are in agreement with those obtained by CD spectroscopy.

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