Solid-State NMR of a Protein in a Precipitated Complex with a Full-Length Antibody
Author(s) -
Jonathan M. Lamley,
Dinu Iuga,
Carl Öster,
Hans-Juergen Sass,
Marco Rogowski,
Andres Oss,
Jaan Past,
Andres Reinhold,
Stephan Grzesiek,
Ago Samoson,
Józef R. Lewandowski
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of the american chemical society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 7.115
H-Index - 612
eISSN - 1520-5126
pISSN - 0002-7863
DOI - 10.1021/ja5069992
Subject(s) - chemistry , magic angle spinning , solid state nuclear magnetic resonance , resolution (logic) , spectral line , nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy , chemical shift , nmr spectra database , chemical physics , analytical chemistry (journal) , spinning , crystallography , spectroscopy , precipitation , protein dynamics , biological system , molecular dynamics , computational chemistry , nuclear magnetic resonance , chromatography , stereochemistry , physics , astronomy , artificial intelligence , quantum mechanics , computer science , meteorology , polymer chemistry , biology
NMR spectroscopy is a prime technique for characterizing atomic-resolution structures and dynamics of biomolecular complexes but for such systems faces challenges of sensitivity and spectral resolution. We demonstrate that the application of (1)H-detected experiments at magic-angle spinning frequencies of >50 kHz enables the recording, in a matter of minutes to hours, of solid-state NMR spectra suitable for quantitative analysis of protein complexes present in quantities as small as a few nanomoles (tens of micrograms for the observed component). This approach enables direct structure determination and quantitative dynamics measurements in domains of protein complexes with masses of hundreds of kilodaltons. Protein-protein interaction interfaces can be mapped out by comparison of the chemical shifts of proteins within solid-state complexes with those of the same constituent proteins free in solution. We employed this methodology to characterize a >300 kDa complex of GB1 with full-length human immunoglobulin, where we found that sample preparation by simple precipitation yields spectra of exceptional quality, a feature that is likely to be shared with some other precipitating complexes. Finally, we investigated extensions of our methodology to spinning frequencies of up to 100 kHz.
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