posted on 2023-04-07, 13:08authored byPravin
P. Taware, Mukul G. Jain, Sreejith Raran-Kurussi, Vipin Agarwal, P. K. Madhu, Kaustubh R. Mote
Proteins are dynamic molecules, relying on conformational
changes
to carry out function. Measurement of these conformational changes
can provide insight into how function is achieved. For proteins in
the solid state, this can be done by measuring the decrease in the
strength of anisotropic interactions due to motion-induced fluctuations.
The measurement of one-bond heteronuclear dipole–dipole coupling
at magic-angle-spinning (MAS) frequencies >60 kHz is ideal for
this
purpose. However, rotational-echo double resonance (REDOR), an otherwise
gold-standard technique for the quantitative measurement of these
couplings, is difficult to implement under these conditions, especially
in nondeuterated samples. We present here a combination of strategies
based on REDOR variants ϵ-REDOR and DEDOR (deferred REDOR) and
simultaneously measure residue-specific 15N–1H and 13Cα–1Hα dipole–dipole couplings in nondeuterated
systems at the MAS frequency of 100 kHz. These strategies open up
avenues to access dipolar order parameters in a variety of systems
at the increasingly fast MAS frequencies that are now available.