2012
DOI: 10.1007/978-94-007-4954-2_6
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Amino Acid Selective Labeling and Unlabeling for Protein Resonance Assignments

Abstract: Structural characterization of proteins by NMR spectroscopy begins with the process of sequence specific resonance assignments in which the (1)H, (13)C and (15)N chemical shifts of all backbone and side-chain nuclei in the polypeptide are assigned. This process requires different isotope labeled forms of the protein together with specific experiments for establishing the sequential connectivity between the neighboring amino acid residues. In the case of spectral overlap, it is useful to identify spin systems c… Show more

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Cited by 29 publications
(24 citation statements)
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“…As described above, conventional CSL schemes generally uses two SI-labeling levels, enabling that 1 bit information is contained in each labeled sample (Parker et al 2004;Shi et al 2004;Trbovic et al 2005;Staunton et al 2006;Wu et al 2006;Maslennikov et al 2010;Sobhanifar et al 2010;Hefke et al 2011;Krishnarjuna et al 2011;Jaipuria et al 2012; Maslennikov and Choe 2013). In the previously mentioned triple selective CSL approach (Löhr et al 2012), three SIlabeling types can be discriminated for both residues i and i -1: unlabeled, 15 N-labeled, or 2-13 C/ 15 N-labeled for the residue i and unlabeled, 1-13 C-labeled, or 1,2-13 C-labeled for the residue i -1, respectively, being considered that 1 trit (ternary digit) information is contained in each sample.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…As described above, conventional CSL schemes generally uses two SI-labeling levels, enabling that 1 bit information is contained in each labeled sample (Parker et al 2004;Shi et al 2004;Trbovic et al 2005;Staunton et al 2006;Wu et al 2006;Maslennikov et al 2010;Sobhanifar et al 2010;Hefke et al 2011;Krishnarjuna et al 2011;Jaipuria et al 2012; Maslennikov and Choe 2013). In the previously mentioned triple selective CSL approach (Löhr et al 2012), three SIlabeling types can be discriminated for both residues i and i -1: unlabeled, 15 N-labeled, or 2-13 C/ 15 N-labeled for the residue i and unlabeled, 1-13 C-labeled, or 1,2-13 C-labeled for the residue i -1, respectively, being considered that 1 trit (ternary digit) information is contained in each sample.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, for the discrimination of all amino-acids, these simple AASIL schemes require a large number of samples, which are typically the same as the number of amino acids (19 for nitrogen or 20 for carbon). For this reason, various combinatorial selective labeling (CSL) schemes (Parker et al 2004;Shi et al 2004;Trbovic et al 2005;Staunton et al 2006;Wu et al 2006;Maslennikov et al 2010;Sobhanifar et al 2010;Hefke et al 2011;Krishnarjuna et al 2011;Jaipuria et al 2012;Löhr et al 2012; Maslennikov and Choe 2013) were developed to reduce required number of samples, by representing amino acids as combination of SI labeled samples rather than simply assigning one amino acid to one SI labeled sample. For example, a CSL scheme developed by Parker et al (2004), which is based on the dual selective approach, can discriminate 16 amino-acids with one uniformly 13 C and 15 N-labeled reference and four selectively (100 or 0 % for 13 C and 100 or 50 % for 15 N, respectively) labeled samples.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Aiming at full backbone assignments, separate samples with different pairs of amino acids would have to be prepared, and data to be collected on, to an extent of the same order of magnitude as the number of residues present in the protein, which is clearly unfeasible. To this end, recently reviewed combinatorial methods (Jaipuria et al 2012) using multiple mixtures, each containing different subsets of labeled amino acids rather than a single of each labeling type, are much more efficient (Parker et al 2004;Shi et al 2004;Shortle 1994;Staunton et al 2006;Trbovic et al 2005;Wu et al 2006).…”
Section: Merits Of Combinatorial Selective Labelingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Relaxation experiments are not the only case when specific isotopic labeling is necessary, other examples are methyl group labeling for very large systems [67], segmental labeling for multi domain protein studies [68] and amino acid selective labeling and unlabeling for protein assignments [69].…”
Section: Specific Isotopic Labelingmentioning
confidence: 99%