Publication | Open Access
Microsecond motions probed by near-rotary-resonance R1ρ 15N MAS NMR experiments: the model case of protein overall-rocking in crystals
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Citations
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References
2018
Year
Solid-state near-rotary-resonance measurements of the spin-lattice relaxation rate in the rotating frame (R<sub>1ρ</sub>) is a powerful NMR technique for studying molecular dynamics in the microsecond time scale. The small difference between the spin-lock (SL) and magic-angle-spinning (MAS) frequencies allows sampling very slow motions, at the same time it brings up some methodological challenges. In this work, several issues affecting correct measurements and analysis of <sup>15</sup>N R<sub>1ρ</sub> data are considered in detail. Among them are signal amplitude as a function of the difference between SL and MAS frequencies, "dead time" in the initial part of the relaxation decay caused by transient spin-dynamic oscillations, measurements under HORROR condition and proper treatment of the multi-exponential relaxation decays. The multiple <sup>15</sup>N R<sub>1ρ</sub> measurements at different SL fields and temperatures have been conducted in 1D mode (i.e. without site-specific resolution) for a set of four different microcrystalline protein samples (GB1, SH3, MPD-ubiquitin and cubic-PEG-ubiquitin) to study the overall protein rocking in a crystal. While the amplitude of this motion varies very significantly, its correlation time for all four sample is practically the same, 30-50 μs. The amplitude of the rocking motion correlates with the packing density of a protein crystal. It has been suggested that the rocking motion is not diffusive but likely a jump-like dynamic process.
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