A comprehensive assessment of selective amino acid 15 N-labeling in human embryonic kidney 293 cells for NMR spectroscopy.
Ganesh P SubediElijah T RobertsAlexander R DavisPaul G KremerI Jonathan AmsterAdam W BarbPublished in: Journal of biomolecular NMR (2024)
A large proportion of human proteins contain post-translational modifications that cannot be synthesized by prokaryotes. Thus, mammalian expression systems are often employed to characterize structure/function relationships using NMR spectroscopy. Here we define the selective isotope labeling of secreted, post-translationally modified proteins using human embryonic kidney (HEK)293 cells. We determined that alpha-[ 15 N]- atoms from 10 amino acids experience minimal metabolic scrambling (C, F, H, K, M, N, R, T, W, Y). Two more interconvert to each other (G, S). Six others experience significant scrambling (A, D, E, I, L, V). We also demonstrate that tuning culture conditions suppressed V and I scrambling. These results define expectations for 15 N-labeling in HEK293 cells.