4.8 Article

Exploring Sulfur Sites in Proteins via Triple-Resonance 1H-Detected 77Se NMR

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 145, Issue 45, Pages 24648-24656

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.3c07225

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NMR spectroscopy has been widely used in proteins and biomolecules, but observing sulfur sites has been challenging. Recent studies have explored the use of Se-77 as a replacement for sulfur and applied Se-77 NMR in both solution and solid states. A double-labeling method using C-13 and Se-77 in proteins has been developed, enabling more sensitive triple-resonance schemes.
NMR spectroscopy has been applied to virtually all sites within proteins and biomolecules; however, the observation of sulfur sites remains very challenging. Recent studies have examined Se-77 as a replacement for sulfur and applied Se-77 NMR in both the solution and solid states. As a spin-1/2 nuclide, Se-77 is attractive as a probe of sulfur sites, and it has a very large chemical shift range (due to a large chemical shift anisotropy), which makes it potentially very sensitive to structural and/or binding interactions as well as dynamics. Despite being a spin-1/2 nuclide, there have been rather limited studies of Se-77, and the ability to use H-1-indirect detection has been sparse. Some examples exist, but in the absence of a directly bonded, nonexchangeable H-1, these have been largely limited to smaller molecules. We develop and illustrate approaches using double-labeling of C-13 and Se-77 in proteins that enable more sensitive triple-resonance schemes via multistep coherence transfers and H-1-detection. These methods require specialized hardware and decoupling schemes, which we developed and will be discussed.

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