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Distinguishing Different Hydrogen-Bonded Helices in Proteins by Efficient 1 H-Detected Three-Dimensional Solid-State NMR.

Joao Medeiros-SilvaAurelio J DregniMei Hong
Published in: Biochemistry (2023)
Helical structures in proteins include not only α-helices but also 3 10 and π helices. These secondary structures differ in the registry of the C═O···H-N hydrogen bonds, which are i to i + 4 for α-helices, i to i + 3 for 3 10 helices, and i to i + 5 for π-helices. The standard NMR observable of protein secondary structures are chemical shifts, which are, however, insensitive to the precise type of helices. Here, we introduce a three-dimensional (3D) 1 H-detected experiment that measures and assigns CO-H N cross-peaks to distinguish the different types of hydrogen-bonded helices. This hCOhNH experiment combines efficient cross-polarization from CO to H N with 13 C, 15 N, and 1 H chemical shift correlation to detect the relative proximities of the CO i -H i +j N spin pairs. We demonstrate this experiment on the membrane-bound transmembrane domain of the SARS-CoV-2 envelope (E) protein (ETM). We show that the C-terminal five residues of ETM form a 3 10 -helix, whereas the rest of the transmembrane domain have CO i -H i +4 N hydrogen bonds that are characteristic of α-helices. This result confirms the recent high-resolution solid-state NMR structure of the open state of ETM, which was solved in the absence of explicit hydrogen-bonding restraints. This C-terminal 3 10 helix may facilitate proton and calcium conduction across the hydrophobic gate of the channel. This hCOhNH experiment is generally applicable and can be used to distinguish not only different types of helices but also different types of β-strands and other hydrogen-bonded conformations in proteins.
Keyphrases
  • solid state
  • high resolution
  • sars cov
  • magnetic resonance
  • binding protein
  • mass spectrometry
  • coronavirus disease
  • ionic liquid