Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5407687 | Journal of Magnetic Resonance | 2006 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
Amide one-bond 15N-1H scalar couplings of 15N- and [15N,2H]-isotopically enriched ubiquitin have been measured with the Quantitative J approach by monitoring NMR signal intensity modulation. Scalar couplings of the non-deuterated protein are in average â¼0.6Â Hz larger than values of deuterated ubiquitin. This deviation is 30 times the error derived from experiment reproducibility. Refocusing dipole/dipole cross-correlated relaxation decreases the discrepancy to â¼0.1Â Hz, suggesting that it likely originates from relaxation interference. Alternatively, the subtraction of J values obtained at different magnetic fields largely reduces the relaxation effects. In contrast, the dynamic frequency shift whose main contribution to 1J(15N-1H) arises from 15N chemical shielding anisotropy/NH dipole cross-correlation, is not eliminated by refocusing spin evolution under this interaction. Furthermore, the average difference of 1J(15N-1H) values at two magnetic fields closely agrees with the theoretical expected difference in the dynamic frequency shift.
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Authors
Eva de Alba, Nico Tjandra,