Magic-Angle Spinning Solid-State NMR Spectroscopy of the
β1 Immunoglobulin Binding Domain of Protein G (GB1): 15N
and 13C Chemical Shift Assignments and Conformational
Analysis
posted on 2005-09-07, 00:00authored byW. Trent Franks, Donghua H. Zhou, Benjamin J. Wylie, Brian G. Money, Daniel T. Graesser, Heather L. Frericks, Gurmukh Sahota, Chad M. Rienstra
Magic-angle spinning solid-state NMR (SSNMR) studies of the β1 immunoglobulin binding domain
of protein G (GB1) are presented. Chemical shift correlation spectra at 11.7 T (500 MHz 1H frequency)
were employed to identify signals specific to each amino acid residue type and to establish backbone
connectivities. High sensitivity and resolution facilitated the detection and assignment of every 15N and 13C
site, including the N-terminal (M1) 15NH3, the C-terminal (E56) 13C‘, and side-chain resonances from residues
exhibiting fast-limit conformational exchange near room temperature. The assigned spectra lend novel
insight into the structure and dynamics of microcrystalline GB1. Secondary isotropic chemical shifts report
on conformation, enabling a detailed comparison of the microcrystalline state with the conformation of
single crystals and the protein in solution; the consistency of backbone conformation in these three
preparations is the best among proteins studied so far. Signal intensities and line widths vary as a function
of amino acid position and temperature. High-resolution spectra are observed near room temperature (280
K) and at <180 K, whereas resolution and sensitivity greatly degrade substantially near 210 K; the magnitude
of this effect is greatest among the side chains of residues at the intermolecular interface of the microcrystal
lattice, which we attribute to intermediate-rate translational diffusion of solvent molecules near the glass
transition. These features of GB1 will enable its use as an excellent model protein not only for SSNMR
methods development but also for fundamental studies of protein thermodynamics in the solid state.