Protein Dynamics from Accurate Low-Field Site-Specific Longitudinal and Transverse Nuclear Spin Relaxation
Author(s) -
Pavel Kadeřávek,
Nicolas Bolik-Coulon,
Samuel F. Cousin,
Thorsten Marquardsen,
JeanMax Tyburn,
JeanNicolas Dumez,
Fabien Ferrage
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
the journal of physical chemistry letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.563
H-Index - 203
ISSN - 1948-7185
DOI - 10.1021/acs.jpclett.9b02233
Subject(s) - nanosecond , relaxometry , larmor precession , relaxation (psychology) , protein dynamics , nuclear magnetic resonance , magnetic field , field (mathematics) , superconducting magnet , chemistry , transverse plane , tracking (education) , magnet , physics , computational physics , condensed matter physics , superconductivity , spin echo , optics , protein structure , magnetic resonance imaging , pure mathematics , pedagogy , mathematics , laser , structural engineering , engineering , psychology , social psychology , quantum mechanics , radiology , medicine
Nuclear magnetic relaxation provides invaluable quantitative site-specific information on the dynamics of complex systems. Determining dynamics on nanosecond time scales requires relaxation measurements at low magnetic fields incompatible with high-resolution NMR. Here, we use a two-field NMR spectrometer to measure carbon-13 transverse and longitudinal relaxation rates at a field as low as 0.33 T (proton Larmor frequency 14 MHz) in specifically labeled side chains of the protein ubiquitin. The use of radiofrequency pulses enhances the accuracy of measurements as compared to high-resolution relaxometry approaches, where the sample is moved in the stray field of the superconducting magnet. Importantly, we demonstrate that accurate measurements at a single low magnetic field provide enough information to characterize complex motions on low nanosecond time scales, which opens a new window for the determination of site-specific nanosecond motions in complex systems such as proteins.
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