NMR Facility Operations at NYSBC
Transcription
NMR Facility Operations at NYSBC
NMR Facility Operations at NYSBC © NYSBC 7 Sep 2006 1 NYSBC Introduction The New York Structural Biology Center is an independent corporation acting as a resource facility for its ten Member Institutions. Albert Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva University City University of New York Columbia University Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York University Rockefeller University State University of New York Wadsworth Center, NYS Dept. Health/HRI Weill Cornell Medical College of Cornell University © NYSBC 7 Sep 2006 2 NYSBC operates cryo-electron microscopy resources, two beam lines at NSLS/BNL, and a large NMR facility. There are investigatorheaded laboratories, including the protein preparation lab for the New York Consortium for Membrane Protein Structure, funded by NIGMS-PSI. The resources are predominantly available to the Member Institutions, including investigators: Aneel Aggarwal Mark E. Girvin Carlos A. Meriles Ruth Stark David Allis Paul Gottlieb Gaetano Montelione Thomas Szyperski Clay Bracken Steve Greenbaum Tom Muir Maria Luisa Tasayco Esther Breslow Clare Grey Fred Naider Peter Tonge David Cowburn Swapna V. Gurla Arthur G. Palmer Iban Ubarretxena-Belandia Samuel J. Danishefsky Griselda Hernandez Dinshaw Patel Chunyu Wang Seth Darst Barry H. Honig Brian Phillips Milton H. Werner David Eliezer Alexej Jerschow Daniel Raleigh Stanislaus Wong John Spencer Evans Tarun Kapoor Thomas P. Sakmar Lei Zeng Jack H. Freed David LeMaster Nicole Sampson Ming-Ming Zhou Nicholas Geacintov Chin Lin Alexander Shekhtman Martine Ziliox Ranajeet Ghose Min Lu Samuel Singer Lane Gilchrist Ann McDermot Steven Smith Investigators listed are both direct users of the Facility and those collaborating with direct users. Users from outside the NYSBC member institutions are co-PIs or users of the 900 MHz Structural Biology Resource funded by NIH GM-66354 © NYSBC 7 Sep 2006 3 NMR Resources Approximately 35 research groups with about 90 operators use the instruments shown in tables below, plus 700, 600 & 500 systems. Spectrometer Probe 0.1% Ethylbenzene S/N 2mM Sucrose 1 Anomeric H S/N 900 #1 cp TCI 8707:1 1006:1 US2 TCI 2440:1 495:1 800 US2 #1 cp TCI 7450:1 915:1 800 US2 #2 cp TCI 9011:1 851:1 800 conv cp TXI 7050:1 940:1 900 #2 Probes 750 MHz Tuning Range, MHz HXY wide bore X: 150-200 Y:70-130 HFX wide bore X:35-225 HCN standard bore narrowband HRMAS HCND narrowband Fields, kHz. 1 H/13C/15N 90% B1 Homogeneity Volume LowerTemp. Range, oC(3) 10kHz/15kHz 120/50/50 35-40 μl -40/-30 120/50/50 35-40 μl -40/-30 C 180:1 N: 30:1 120/50/50 35-40 μl -15/-5 H : 250:1 90o pulse: 6μs/8μs/15μs 35-40 μl n.a. S/N(1,2) 13 C 160:1 N: 30:1 15 13 C 240:1 N: 30:1 15 13 15 1 (1) CPMAS probes: sensitivity is measured on a fully packed natural abundance glycine sample, 4 scans, 1H-13C cross polarization experiment. (2) HRMAS probes: sensitivity is measured on 60 μ volume sample of 0.1% ethylbenzene solution in CDCl3. (3) These probes have reliably achieved the sample temperatures at the indicated spinning speeds using either an Airjet cooler or Bruker Cooling unit as the source of cold gas. © NYSBC 7 Sep 2006 4 Spectrometer Performance Heteronuclear spin-echo difference test is run on a sample containing 500 mM Sucrose in 100% D2O. In this test the 12C center-band of the sucrose anomeric protons is suppressed in two scans, below the intensity of natural abundance 13C side-bands in a series of 20 consecutive experiments. The lineshape stability test is run on a non-spinning sample of 0.3% CHCl3 in Acetone-D6. The lineshape is described by the hump numbers (linewidth at 0.55%/0.11% of the carbon satellite peaks and half height of the main chloroform peak). In this test the hump numbers should not degrade by more than 10% over a period of 12 Hrs. Protein Solid State Performance Characteristic solid state spectra (left) on labeled ubiqutin. left – CP 13C/ 1H; center, double CP 13C/15N/1H; right, 2-D double CP 13C/15N/1H © NYSBC 7 Sep 2006 5 NMR Environment Constructing a Center in Manhattan with minimal interference from the outside environment presents challenges. Red surface are at the 5 G contour © NYSBC 7 Sep 2006 6 To achieve excellent vibration isolation, we choose to take advantage of Manhattan geology, and provide linkage of all critical NMR and CEM sites to the local hard schist bedrock. For the 800’s and 750 on a suspended floor, this involved constructing four c. 3 m diameter columns sunk to bedrock, up to 15 m high (left – picture of one column). © NYSBC 7 Sep 2006 7 © NYSBC 7 Sep 2006 8 NMR Results Publications. (2005-6) see http://www.nysbc.org/papers • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Poget SF, Krueger-Koplin ST, Krueger-Koplin RD, Cahill SM, Chandra Shekar S, Girvin ME 'NMR Assignment of the Dimeric S. aureus Small Multidrug-Resistance Pump in LPPG Micelles.' J Biomol NMR 2006 Feb 2 Shekar, S.C., Wu, H., Fu, Z., Yip, S.C., Cahill, S.M., Girvin, M.E., Backer, J.M. (2005) Mechanism of constitutive PI 3-kinase activation by oncogenic mutants of the p85 regulatory subunit. J Biol Chem 280, 27850-27855 Yu, G. Vengadesan, H., Wang, L., Jashi, T. Yefremov, S. Tian, V. Gaba, I. Shomer and R. E. Stark, “Magic-Angle Spinning NMR Studies of Cell WallBound Aromatic-Aliphatic Biopolyesters Associated with Strengthening of Intercellular Adhesion in Potato ( Solanum Tuberosum L.) Tuber Parenchyma,” Biomacromolecules 7, 937-944. Pujato M, Navarro A, Versace R, Mancusso R, Ghose R, Tasayco ML 'The pH-dependence of amide chemical shift of Asp/Glu reflects its pK(a) in intrinsically disordered proteins with only local interactions.' Biochim Biophys Acta 2006 May 13 Meriles, CA, Dong W. "Indirect detection of nuclear magnetic resonance via geometrically induced long-range dipolar fields" J. Magn. Res. In Press, Corrected Proof Marulanda, D, Tasayco, M.L., Cataldi, M., Arriaran, V., Polenova, P. (2005) Resonance Assignments and Secondary Structure Analysis of E. coli Thioredoxin by Magic Angle Spinning Solid-State NMR Spectroscopy. Journal of Physical Chemistry B. 109, 18135-18145. Pujato, M.; Bracken, C.; Mancusso, R.; Cataldi, M.; Tasayco, M. L. pH-Dependence of Amide Chemical Shifts in Natively Disordered Polypeptides Detects Medium-Range Interactions with Ionizable Residues. Biophysical Journal 89, 3293-3302. Edwards , T.A., Butterwick, J.A., Zeng, L., Gupta, Y.K., Wang, X, Wharton, R.P., Palmer, A.G., Aggarwal, A.K. Solution Structure of the Vts1 SAM Domain in the Presence of RNA J. Mol. Biol. 356, 1065-1072. Tang Y, Grey MJ, McKnight J, Palmer AG, Raleigh DP 'Multistate Folding of the Villin Headpiece Domain.' J Mol Biol 355, 1066-1072. Grey, M.J., Tang, Y, Alexov, E, McKnight, C.J., Raleigh, D.P.,Palmer, A.G. (2006) Characterizing a Partially Folded Intermediate of the Villin Headpiece Domain Under Non-denaturing Conditions: Contribution of His41 to the pH-dependent Stability of the N-terminal Subdomain . Journal of Molecular Biology 355, 1078-1094. Valentine, E. R., and Palmer, A. G., 3rd (2005). Microsecond-to-Millisecond Conformational Dynamics Demarcate the GluR2 Glutamate Receptor Bound to Agonists Glutamate, Quisqualate, and AMPA. Biochemistry 44, 3410-3417 Zech, S.J., Wand, A.J., McDermott, A.E. Protein Structure Determination by high resolution solid-state NMR spectroscopy: Application to microcrystalline ubiquitin. J Am Chem Soc 127, 8618-8626. Li H, Ilin S, Wang W, Duncan EM, Wysocka J, Allis CD, Patel DJ 'Molecular basis for site-specific read-out of histon H3K4me3 by the BPTF PHD finger of NURF' Nature 442, 31-32 Teplova M, Yuan YR, Phan AT, Malinina L, Teplov A, Patel DJ 'Structural Basis for recognition and sequestration of UUU(OH) 3' termini of nascent RNA polymerase II transcripts by LA, a rheumatic diseaase autoanitgen' Mol. Cell 21 75-85 Phan A.T., Kuryavyi V., Gaw H.Y., Patel D.J. (2005). Small-molecule interaction with a five-guanine-tract G-quadruplex structure from the human MYC promoter. Nature Chemical Biology, 1, 167-173. Zhang N., Phan A.T., Patel D.J. (2005). (3+1) assembly of three human telomeric repeats into an asymmetric dimeric G-quadruplex. J. Am. Chem. Soc., 127, 17277-17285. Zhang, N., Lin, C., Huang, X., Kolbanovskiy, A., Hingerty, B. E., Amin, S., Broyde, S., Geacintov, N. E., and Patel, D. J. (2005). Methylation of Cytosine at C5 in a CpG Sequence Context Causes a Conformational Switch of a Benzo[a]pyrene diol epoxide-N(2)-guanine Adduct in DNA from a Minor Groove Alignment to Intercalation with Base Displacement. J Mol Biol 346, 951-965. Phan A.T., Kuryavyi V., Ma J.B., Faure A., Andréola M.L., Patel D.J. (2005). An interlocked dimeric parallel-stranded DNA quadruplex: A potent inhibitor of HIV-1 integrase. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 102, 634-639. Phan A.T., Modi Y.S., Patel D.J. (2004). Propeller-type parallel-stranded G-quadruplexes in the human c-myc promoter. J. Am. Chem. Soc. , 126, 8710-8716. Serganov A., Yuan Y.R., Pikovskaya O., Polonskaia A., Malinina L., Phan A.T., Hobartner C., Micura R., Breaker R.R., Patel D.J. (2004) Structural basis for discriminative regulation of gene expression by adenine- and guanine-sensing mRNAs. Chem. Biol. , 11, 1729-1741. Qian C, Zhang Q, Li S, Zeng L, Walsh MJ, Zhou MM. (2005)Structure and chromosomal DNA binding of the SWIRM domain. Nat Struct Mol Biol. 2005 12 (12):1078-85. Edwards, TA, Butterwick, JA, Zeng, Z, Gupta, YK, Wang, X, Wharton, RP, Palmer, AG, Aggarwal, AK. Solution Structure of the Vts1 SAM Domain in the Presence of RNA J. Mol. Biol. 365, 1065-1072. Carrington PE, Sandu C, Wei Y, Hill JM, Morisawa G, Huang T, Gavathiotis W, Yu W, Werner MH "The structure of FADD and its mode of interaction with procaspase-8" Mol. Cell 22 599-610 Ji, H., Shekthman, A., McDonnell, J., Ghose, R., Cowburn D. (2006) "NMR determination that an extended BH3 motif of pro-apoptotic BID is specifically bound to BCL-XL " Magnetic Res. Chem. 44 101-6 Muralidharan V., Dutta K., Cho J., Vila-Perello M., Raleigh DP., Cowburn D., Muir TW 'Solution Structure and Folding Characteristics of the C-Terminal SH3 Domain of c-Crk-II' Biochemistry 45, 8874-8884. Burz, D.S., Dutta, K., Cowburn, D., Shekhtman, A. (2006) Mapping structural interactions in proteins using NMR (STINT-NMR). Nature Methods 3, 9395; Nature Protocols, in press. Tang Y, Goger MJ, Raleigh DP 'NMR Characterization of a Peptide Model Provides Evidence for Significant Structure in the Unfolded State of the Villin Headpiece Helical Subdomain.' Biochemistry 2006 Jun 6;45(22):6940-6946 Peng, L., Liu, Y., Kim, N., Readman, J.E., and Grey, C.P. Detection of Brønsted acid sites in zeolite HY with high-field 17O-MAS-NMR techniques. Nature Materials 4 216-219 Deng, Y, Liu, J, Zheng, Q, Eliezer, D, Kallenbach, N, Lu, M. Antiparallel Four-Stranded Coiled Coil Specified by a 3-3-1 Hyrdrophobic Heptad Repeat. Structure 14 (2006), 247-255. Deng, Y, Liu, J, Zheng, Q, Yong, W, Lu, M. Structures and Polymorphic Interactions of Two Heptad-Repeat Regions of the SARS Virus S2 Protein. Structure 14, 889-899. Bussell, R Jr, Ramlall, T F, Eliezer, D. Helix Periodicity, Topology and Dynamics of Membrane-Associated alpha-Synuclein. Prot Sci (2005) 14, 862872. Eliezer, D, Barré, P, Kobaslija, M, Chan, D, Li, X, Heend, L. Residual structure in the repeat domain of tau: Echoes of microtubule binding and paired helical filament formation. Biochemistry (2005) 44, 1026-1036. Naik, M.T., Lee, H., Bracken, C. and Breslow, E., (2005) NMR Investigation of Main-Chain Dynamics of the H80E Mutant of Bovine Neurophysin-I: Demonstration of Dimerization-Induced Changes at the Hormone-Binding Site, Biochemistry 44, 11766-11776 Mukherjee, M., Dutta, K., White, M.A., Cowburn, D., Fox, R.O. (2006) "NMR solution structure and backbone dynamics of domain III of the E protein of tick-borne Langat flavivirus, suggests a potential site for molecular recognition" Protein Science 15 1342-1355. Ferrage, F., Pelepussey P., Cowburn D., Bodenhausen G. "Intra-residue dipolar cross-relaxation rates between 13Ca and 13C' as a measure of internal dynamics in proteins by NMR Spectroscopy" J. Am. Chem. Soc. 128, 11072-11078. Salmon, J.B., Dubrocq, C., Tabeling, P., Charier, S., Alcor, D., Jullien, L., Ferrage, F. (2005) An Approach To Extract Rate Constants from ReactionDiffusion Dynamics in a Microchannel Anal. Chem. 77, 3417-3424 © NYSBC 7 Sep 2006 9 Scientific Focus Areas, NYSBC NMR affiliates and staff Chemical Physics Methodology Isotope Labeling Structures * * Dynamics * * Membrane Proteins * * * * Complexes * * * * © NYSBC 7 Sep 2006 In cell Protein Expression * 10 Structures free Langat d3 CrkII-cSH3 N-terminal Rhomboid Protein Science, 15, 1342, 2006 Biochemistry, 45, 8874, 2006 J. Mol. Bio., 2006 bound BPTF PHD 3+1 Human telomeric repeat Nature, 442, 91, 2006 J. Am. Chem. Soc., 127, 17277, 2005 FADD SWIRM Vts1 SAM DNA quadruplex Mol. Cell 22, 599, 2006 Nat. Str. Mol. Bio., 12, 1078, 2005 J. Mol. Bio., 356, 1065, 2006 PNAS, 102, 634, 2005 © NYSBC 7 Sep 2006 11 Dipolar Cross-relaxation rates between Cα and C’ Figure 5 Three typical buildup curves of the symmetrical reconversion ratio of eq 1, with their best-fit curves and the structure of ubiquitin. Filled red circles and the solid red line correspond to the C'C pair of glutamine Q31 observed through the NHN pair of aspartate D32 ( CR = (10.9 ± 0.12) × 10-2 s-1). Blue crosses and the dashed blue line correspond to the C'C pair of leucine L8 observed through the signal of threonine T9 ( CR = (9.07 ± 0.09) × 10-2 s-1). Filled green squares and the dotted green line correspond to the C C' pair of arginine R74 observed through the signal of glycine G75 ( CR = (2.33 ± 0.02) × 10-2 s-1). The structure of ubiquitin39 was generated with MOLMOL. Figure 7 Orange dots: correlation of experimental order parameters S2(C'Cα) = (C'Cα)exp/g(C'Cα)rigid with experimental order parameters S2(NHN) derived from 15N relaxation rates. The four points circled in red represent residues for which the extended model-free approach41 was used to fit 15N relaxation data. The curves show the theoretical correlation for the three-dimensional Gaussian amplitude fluctuation (3D GAF) model with amplitudes σα =σβ=κσγ (where σγ corresponds to fluctuations about the Cαi-1Cαi vectors) for = 0, 0.5, 1, and 2 (red, light blue, dark blue, and purple curves). The green diamonds (which are almost exactly on the red curve) represents S2{ CR} = aS2{ (C'Cα)} + bS2{ (NC'NCα)}/(a + b) for very anisotropic local motions (κ= 0, i.e., σα = σβ = 0) for weights a = 1 and b = 0.12. JACS, 128, 11072, 2006 Dynamics Studies of FlaviVirus LANGAT domain III Figure 5. Plot showing slow motion. (A) Residues showing Rex value (> 1.5 s-1) obtained from and R’ex analysis are painted (as green) on the ribbon plot of the lowest-energy LGT-E-D3 NMR structure. Residues showing Rex value (B) which do not make any contact with E-D1 and E-D2 in TBE are shown in green and those in contact with E-D1 (magenta) and E-D2 (blue) domains in TBE are shown in yellow on the surface plot of the lowest-energy structure of LGT-E-D3 (SWISS-PROT). Contact regions were determined from the crystal structure of TBE which bears 90% similarity to LGT, (C) which are in contact with two adjacent monomer unit (shown in magenta and blue) of LGTE-D3 pentamer crystal structure are shown in yellow and which do not show any contact are shown in green. (D) Surface plot of LGT-E-D3 showing residues that show Rex in LGT-E-D3 NMR analysis (green) and residues for which mutation studies have been done (red) in TBE, LI, JE, WN and DEN-2 and residues for which mutational studies have been done and also happen to show slow dynamics (yellow). © NYSBC 7 Sep 2006 12 Dynamics Studies of Glutamate receptor Bound to Glutamate and AMPA Figure 5 Chemical shift perturbations. (a) A 1H 15N TROSY correlation spectrum is shown for glutamate-bound GluR2 S1S2. (b) Chemical shift perturbations, , are shown for AMPA- (red) and quisqualate-bound (black) GluR2 S1S2, compared to the glutamate-bound complex, as a function of the linear sequence of GluR2 S1S2. GT indicates the linker region between S1 and S2. (c) Chemical shift perturbations of AMPAbound, compared to glutamate-bound, GluR2 S1S2 mapped onto a ribbon diagram of glutamate-bound GluR2 S1S2 (pdb 1ftj, protomer a). The peptide flip of GluR2 S1S2 is shown in the unflipped conformation. Figure 9 Difference in Rex between glutamate- and AMPA-bound GluR2 S1S2 mapped onto the glutamate-bound GluR2 S1S2 structure (pdb 1ftj). Gray indicates amino acids that were not analyzed. Differences are color-coded from white, 0 s-1, to red, ~10 s-1. The potential subdomain between the loop containing Val683 and the peptide flip is circled. Biochemistry, 44, 3410, 2005 Structure and Dynamics of N-terminal domain of Rhomboid Figure 8. NRho shows extensive conformational flexibility for both the backbone and the sidechains on the μs-ms timescale. (a) Rex values at 600 MHz for NRho obtained from an analysis of backbone R1, R2 and 1HN{15N} NOE data at 600 and 800 MHz using the Lipari-Szabo model-free formalism. Errors in the Rex values are indicated by red risers. Rex values scale as the square of the static magnetic field. (b) Fits of the Ala3 (black) and Leu7 (red) Cmethyl-Cnext zero-quantum coherences (ZQ, experimental points: open circles; theoretical curve: dotted line) and double-quantum coherences (DQ, experimental points: filled circles; theoretical curve: solid line) to Equation 1. Errors in the experimental data points (Ala3: black, Leu7: red) are indicated by the error bars at the top right hand corner of the figure. Ghose et al, in press Figure 9. Residues that display dynamics on the μs-ms timescale map on to a continuous surface. (a) Residues that display large Rex values (> 5 s-1), as obtained from an analysis of backbone R1, R2 and 1HN−{15N} NOE data at 600 and 800 MHz using the Lipari-Szabo model-free formalism, are shaded red. Backbone relaxation data corresponding to Ser35 and Gly36 could not be analyzed accurately due to large R2 values, these residues are shaded blue. Ala3 and Leu7 sidechains that were shown to display slow dynamics as determined from multiple-quantum experiments involving methyl groups, are displayed and shaded green. (b) The residues that display slow dynamics map onto a continuous surface contiguous to that implicated in membrane-interaction. The shading scheme is the same as in (a) except in the case Leu7 that shows slow dynamics both in the backbone and sidechain regions and is shaded yellow. (c) Residues that interact with C16PN liposomes and display slow μs-ms timescale motion are shown in red. Residues that interact with C16PN liposomes but are not significantly dynamic on the slow timescale are shown in yellow. Additional residues that are dynamic on the slow timescale are shown in blue. © NYSBC 7 Sep 2006 13