J. Am. Chem. Soc., 129 (35), 10823 -10828, 2007. 10.1021/ja072564+ S0002-7863(07)02564-4
Web Release Date: August 11, 2007

Copyright © 2007 American Chemical Society

Sequence-Specific Resonance Assignment of Soluble Nonglobular Proteins by 7D APSY-NMR Spectroscopy

Sebastian Hiller, Christian Wasmer, Gerhard Wider,* and Kurt Wüthrich

Contribution from the Institute of Molecular Biology and Biophysics, ETH Zurich, 8093 Zurich, Switzerland, and Department of Molecular Biology and Skaggs Institute for Chemical Biology, The Scripps Research Institute, La Jolla, California 92037

gsw@mol.biol.ethz.ch

Received April 12, 2007

Abstract:

Based on sequence-specific resonance assignments, NMR is the method of choice for obtaining atomic-resolution experimental data on soluble nonglobular proteins. So far, however, NMR assignment of unfolded polypeptides in solution has been a time-consuming task, mainly due to the small chemical shift dispersion, which has limited practical applications of the NMR approach. This paper presents an efficient, fully automated method for sequence-specific backbone and -carbon NMR assignment of soluble nonglobular proteins with sizes up to at least 150 residues. The procedure is based on new APSY (automated projection spectroscopy) experiments which benefit from the short effective rotational correlation times in soluble nonglobular polypeptides to record five- to seven-dimensional NMR data sets, which reliably resolves chemical shift degeneracies. Fully automated sequence-specific resonance assignments of the backbone nuclei and C are described for the uniformly 13C,15N-labeled urea-denatured 148-residue outer membrane protein X (OmpX) from E. coli. The method is generally applicable to systems with similar spectroscopic properties as unfolded OmpX, and we anticipate that this paper may open the door for extensive atomic-resolution studies of chemical denaturant-unfolded proteins, as well as some classes of functional nonglobular polypeptides in solution.


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