Spin relaxation and chemical shifts by lanthanide chelate complexes are used to distinguish 23Na signals in a simulated two-compartment model. Both effects are significant in EDTA, DTPA, and TPP complexes of Gd and in the TPP complex of Dy. The simultaneous measurement of these properties is illustr
A Caged Lanthanide Complex as a Paramagnetic Shift Agent for Protein NMR
✍ Scribed by Miguel Prudêncio; Jan Rohovec; Joop A. Peters; Elitza Tocheva; Martin J. Boulanger; Michael E. P. Murphy; Hermen-Jan Hupkes; Walter Kosters; Antonietta Impagliazzo; Marcellus Ubbink
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2004
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 273 KB
- Volume
- 10
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0947-6539
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✦ Synopsis
Abstract
A lanthanide complex, named CLaNP (caged lanthanide NMR probe) has been developed for the characterisation of proteins by paramagnetic NMR spectroscopy. The probe consists of a lanthanide chelated by a derivative of DTPA (diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid) with two thiol reactive functional groups. The CLaNP molecule is attached to a protein by two engineered, surface‐exposed, Cys residues in a bidentate manner. This drastically limits the dynamics of the metal relative to the protein and enables measurements of pseudocontact shifts. NMR spectroscopy experiments on a diamagnetic control and the crystal structure of the probe‐protein complex demonstrate that the protein structure is not affected by probe attachment. The probe is able to induce pseudocontact shifts to at least 40 Å from the metal and causes residual dipolar couplings due to alignment at a high magnetic field. The molecule exists in several isomeric forms with different paramagnetic tensors; this provides a fast way to obtain long‐range distance restraints.
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