27 research outputs found

    Protein MAS NMR methodology and structural analysis of protein assemblies

    Get PDF
    Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Chemistry, 2010.Vita. Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.Includes bibliographical references.Methodological developments and applications of solid-state magic-angle spinning nuclear magnetic resonance (MAS NMR) spectroscopy, with particular emphasis on the analysis of protein structure, are described in this thesis. MAS NMR studies of biomolecules ranging from model peptides and proteins in crystalline form to amyloid fibrils and whole bacterial organelles are reported. The methods presented include novel pulse sequences and optimized pulse sequence elements, experimental approaches designed for multiple-spin systems, a protocol for efficient sequential resonance assignment of proteins in the solid state, and techniques to determine the inter-molecular organization of amyloid fibrils formed by moderately sized proteins. Notably, an efficient dipolar recoupling technique, bandselective radio frequency-driven recoupling (BASE RFDR), is introduced and combined with alternating 13C-12C labeling to yield highly sensitive 13C-13C correlation spectra between distant nuclei in proteins. Various applications of the BASE RFDR scheme are presented, including protein resonance assignment, determination of tertiary structure of amyloid fibrils, and variable-temperature studies of protein dynamics. The main biological systems analyzed are amyloid fibrils formed by the SH3 domain of P13 kinase (P13-SH3) and intact gas vesicles from anabaena flos-aquae, for which atomic-level structural information was previously unavailable. P13-SH3 (86 residues) is a system thoroughly studied as a model of protein misfolding and amyloid formation by a natively globular protein. Gas vesicles are bacterial buoyancy organelles, with walls composed almost entirely by a single protein (GvpA, 70 residues), whose formation and structure constitute a highly intriguing biophysical problem. Nearly complete 13C and 'IN resonance assignments and the molecular conformations of the polypeptide backbones of both P13-SH3 and GvpA have been obtained via MAS NMR spectroscopy, enabling the proposal of models for the structure of these two protein assembly systems. In addition, the tertiary structure of P13-SH3 amyloid fibrils has been elucidated by the application of novel methodology introduced in this thesis. Finally, investigations regarding the effects of temperature and protein dynamics on MAS NMR experiments and biomolecular dynamic nuclear polarization studies are presented.by Marvin J. Bayro.Ph.D

    Dipolar recoupling in solid state NMR by phase alternating pulse sequences

    Get PDF
    We describe some new developments in the methodology of making heteronuclear and homonuclear recoupling experiments in solid state NMR insensitive to rf-inhomogeneity by phase alternating the irradiation on the spin system every rotor period. By incorporating delays of half rotor periods in the pulse sequences, these phase alternating experiments can be made Îł encoded. The proposed methodology is conceptually different from the standard methods of making recoupling experiments robust by the use of ramps and adiabatic pulses in the recoupling periods. We show how the concept of phase alternation can be incorporated in the design of homonuclear recoupling experiments that are both insensitive to chemical shift dispersion and rf-inhomogeneity.United States. Office of Naval Research (38A-1077404)United States. Air Force Office of Scientific Research (FA9550-05-1-0443)National Science Foundation (U.S.) (0724057)National Institute for Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering (U.S.) (Grant EB003151)National Institute for Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering (U.S.) (Grant EB002026

    Dynamic Nuclear Polarization-Enhanced Solid-State NMR Spectroscopy of GNNQQNY Nanocrystals and Amyloid Fibrils

    Get PDF
    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 [superscript 13]C–[superscript 13]C and [superscript 15]N–[superscript 13]C 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.National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grant EB002804)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grant EB003151)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grant EB002026

    Intermolecular Structure Determination of Amyloid Fibrils with 2 Magic-Angle Spinning and Dynamic Nuclear Polarization NMR

    Get PDF
    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 [superscript 13]C–[superscript 13]C correlation spectra and the third based on the identification of intermolecular interactions in [superscript 13]C–[superscript 15]N spectra. We show, in studies of fibrils formed by the 86-residue SH3 domain of PI3 kinase (PI3-SH3 or PI3K-SH3), that efficient [superscript 13]C–[superscript 13]C 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 [superscript 13]C–[superscript 13]C experiments are corroborated by [superscript 15]N–[superscript 13]C correlation spectra obtained from a mixed [[superscript 15]N,[superscript 12]C]/[[superscript 14]N,[superscript 13]C] 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 [superscript 15]N–[superscript 13]C 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 [superscript 13]C–[superscript 13]C and [superscript 15]N–[superscript 13]C constraints that establish that the PI3-SH3 protein strands are aligned in a parallel, in-register arrangement within the amyloid fibril.National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grant EB-003151)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grant EB-002804)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grant EB-002026

    Solid-state NMR evidence for inequivalent GvpA subunits in gas vesicles

    Get PDF
    Gas vesicles are organelles that provide buoyancy to the aquatic microorganisms that harbor them. The gas vesicle shell consists almost exclusively of the hydrophobic 70-residue gas vesicle protein A, arranged in an ordered array. Solid-state NMR spectra of intact collapsed gas vesicles from the cyanobacterium Anabaena flos-aquae show duplication of certain gas vesicle protein A resonances, indicating that specific sites experience at least two different local environments. Interpretation of these results in terms of an asymmetric dimer repeat unit can reconcile otherwise conflicting features of the primary, secondary, tertiary, and quaternary structures of the gas vesicle protein. In particular, the asymmetric dimer can explain how the hydrogen bonds in the β-sheet portion of the molecule can be oriented optimally for strength while promoting stabilizing aromatic and electrostatic side-chain interactions among highly conserved residues and creating a large hydrophobic surface suitable for preventing water condensation inside the vesicle.National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grant EB002175)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grant EB003151)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grant EB002026

    Structure of the Dimerization Interface in the Mature HIV‑1 Capsid Protein Lattice from Solid State NMR of Tubular Assemblies

    No full text
    The HIV-1 capsid protein (CA) forms the capsid shell that encloses RNA within a mature HIV-1 virion. Previous studies by electron microscopy have shown that the capsid shell is primarily a triangular lattice of CA hexamers, with variable curvature that destroys the ideal symmetry of a planar lattice. The mature CA lattice depends on CA dimerization, which occurs through interactions between helix 9 segments of the C-terminal domain (CTD) of CA. Several high-resolution structures of the CTD-CTD dimerization interface have been reported, based on X-ray crystallography and multidimensional solution nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), with significant differences in amino acid side chain conformations and helix 9-helix 9 orientations. In a structural model for tubular CA assemblies based on cryogenic electron microscopy (cryoEM) [Zhao et al. <i>Nature</i>, <b>2013</b>, <i>497</i>, 643–646], the dimerization interface is substantially disordered. The dimerization interface structure in noncrystalline CA assemblies and the extent to which this interface is structurally ordered within a curved lattice have therefore been unclear. Here we describe solid state NMR measurements on the dimerization interface in tubular CA assemblies, which contain the curved triangular lattice of a mature virion, including quantitative measurements of intermolecular and intramolecular distances using dipolar recoupling techniques, solid state NMR chemical shifts, and long-range side chain-side chain contacts. When combined with restraints on the distance and orientation between helix 9 segments from the cryoEM study, the solid state NMR data lead to a unique high-resolution structure for the dimerization interface in the noncrystalline lattice of CA tubes. These results demonstrate that CA lattice curvature is not dependent on disorder or variability in the dimerization interface. This work also demonstrates the feasibility of local structure determination within large noncrystalline assemblies formed by high-molecular-weight proteins, using modern solid state NMR methods

    Site-Specific Structural Variations Accompanying Tubular Assembly Of The Hiv-1 Capsid Protein

    No full text
    The 231-residue capsid (CA) protein of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) spontaneously self-assembles into tubes with a hexagonal lattice that is believed to mimic the surface lattice of conical capsid cores within intact virions. We report the results of solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) measurements on HIV-1 CA tubes that provide new information regarding changes in molecular structure that accompany CA self-assembly, local dynamics within CA tubes, and possible mechanisms for the generation of lattice curvature. This information is contained in site-specific assignments of signals in two- and three-dimensional solid-state NMR spectra, conformation-dependent 15N and 13C NMR chemical shifts, detection of highly dynamic residues under solution NMR conditions, measurements of local variations in transverse spin relaxation rates of amide 1H nuclei, and quantitative measurements of site-specific 15N-15N dipole-dipole couplings. Our data show that most of the CA sequence is conformationally ordered and relatively rigid in tubular assemblies and that structures of the N-terminal domain (NTD) and the C-terminal domain (CTD) observed in solution are largely retained. However, specific segments, including the N-terminal β-hairpin, the cyclophilin A binding loop, the inter-domain linker, segments involved in intermolecular NTD-CTD interactions, and the C-terminal tail, have substantial static or dynamical disorder in tubular assemblies. Other segments, including the 310-helical segment in CTD, undergo clear conformational changes. Structural variations associated with curvature of the CA lattice appear to be localized in the inter-domain linker and intermolecular NTD-CTD interface, while structural variations within NTD hexamers, around local 3-fold symmetry axes, and in CTD-CTD dimerization interfaces are less significant

    Helical Conformation in the CA-SP1 Junction of the Immature HIV-1 Lattice Determined from Solid-State NMR of Virus-like Particles

    No full text
    Maturation of HIV-1 requires disassembly of the Gag polyprotein lattice, which lines the viral membrane in the immature state, and subsequent assembly of the mature capsid protein lattice, which encloses viral RNA in the mature state. Metastability of the immature lattice has been proposed to depend on the existence of a structurally ordered, α-helical segment spanning the junction between capsid (CA) and spacer peptide 1 (SP1) subunits of Gag, a segment that is dynamically disordered in the mature capsid lattice. We report solid state nuclear magnetic resonance (ssNMR) measurements on the immature lattice in noncrystalline, spherical virus-like particles (VLPs) derived from Gag. The ssNMR data provide definitive evidence for this critical α-helical segment in the VLPs. Differences in ssNMR chemical shifts and signal intensities between immature and mature lattice assemblies also support a major rearrangement of intermolecular interactions in the maturation process, consistent with recent models from electron cryomicroscopy and X-ray crystallography

    Long-Range Correlations between Aliphatic 13C Nuclei in Protein MAS NMR Spectroscopy†

    No full text
    Highly efficient polarization transfer can be achieved in the magic-angle spinning NMR analysis of proteins by the combination of [superscript 13]C labeling at alternating positions and band-selective radio-frequency-driven recoupling (BASE RFDR), a pulse scheme aimed at exploiting the bandwidth selectivity and favorable effects of weak [superscript 13]C radio-frequency irradiation to reintroduce the homonuclear dipolar interactions between distant nuclei.National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grant EB-003151)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grant EB-002026
    corecore