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Sensitivity-Enhanced Four-Dimensional Amide-Amide Correlation NMR Experiments for Sequential Assignment of Proline-Rich Disordered Proteins.

Leo E WongJoachim MaierJürgen WienandsStefan BeckerChristian Griesinger
Published in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2018)
Proline is prevalent in intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs). NMR assignment of proline-rich IDPs is a challenge due to low dispersion of chemical shifts. We propose here new sensitivity-enhanced 4D NMR experiments that correlate two pairs of amide resonances that are either consecutive (NH i-1, NH i) or flanking a proline at position i-1 (NH i-2, NH i). The maximum 2-fold enhancement of sensitivity is achieved by employing two coherence order-selective (COS) transfers incorporated unconventionally into the pulse sequence. Each COS transfer confers an enhancement over amplitude-modulated transfer by a factor of √2 specifically when transverse relaxation is slow. The experiments connect amide resonances over a long fragment of sequence interspersed with proline. When this method was applied to the proline-rich region of B cell adaptor protein SLP-65 (pH 6.0) and α-synuclein (pH 7.4), which contain a total of 52 and 5 prolines, respectively, 99% and 92% of their nonprolyl amide resonances have been successfully assigned, demonstrating its robustness to address the assignment problem in large proline-rich IDPs.
Keyphrases
  • magnetic resonance
  • room temperature
  • high resolution
  • amino acid
  • binding protein