Issue 35, 2019

Quantifying proton NMR coherent linewidth in proteins under fast MAS conditions: a second moment approach

Abstract

Proton detected solid-state NMR under fast magic-angle-spinning (MAS) conditions is currently redefining the applications of solid-state NMR, in particular in structural biology. Understanding the contributions to the spectral linewidth is thereby of paramount importance. When disregarding the sample-dependent inhomogeneous contributions, the NMR proton linewidth is defined by homogeneous broadening, which has incoherent and coherent contributions. Understanding and disentangling these different contributions in multi-spin systems like proteins is still an open issue. The coherent contribution is mainly caused by the dipolar interaction under MAS and is determined by the molecular structure and the proton chemical shifts. Numerical simulation approaches based on numerically exact direct integration of the Liouville–von Neumann equation can give valuable information about the lineshape, but are limited to small spin systems (<12 spins). We present an alternative simulation method for the coherent contributions based on the rapid and partially analytic calculation of the second moments of large spin systems. We first validate the method on a simple system by predicting the 19F linewidth in CaF2 under MAS. We compare simulation results to experimental data for microcrystalline ubiquitin (deuterated 100% back-exchanged at 110 kHz and fully-protonated at 125 kHz). Our results quantitatively explain the observed linewidth per-residue basis for the vast majority of residues.

Graphical abstract: Quantifying proton NMR coherent linewidth in proteins under fast MAS conditions: a second moment approach

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
17 Jun 2019
Accepted
06 Aug 2019
First published
07 Aug 2019
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2019,21, 18850-18865

Quantifying proton NMR coherent linewidth in proteins under fast MAS conditions: a second moment approach

A. A. Malär, S. Smith-Penzel, G. Camenisch, T. Wiegand, A. Samoson, A. Böckmann, M. Ernst and B. H. Meier, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2019, 21, 18850 DOI: 10.1039/C9CP03414E

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