1D screening
1D 1H NMR Screening
Initial screening of NMR samples can be done with 1D 1H NMR on labeled or unlabeled protein samples in aqueous buffer with 5-10% D2O.
It is helpful to have an estimation of the protein concentration obtained from a method such as UV absorption and also to add 50 uM DSS as an internal standard for both referencing (to 0 ppm) and for estimating the protein concentration.
The criteria for judging the NMR spectrum are:
- good signal to noise as compared to the DSS peak
- chemical shifts dispersion upfield of 0 ppm is good, since it indicates methyl protons that are in a folded core and nearby to methyl groups (not essential if the protein does not have aromatic residues)
- chemical shifts dispersion in the amide region is good (will be much less if protein is predicted to be mostly helical vs. mosty beta strand.
- peaks should not be too broad, allowing resolved peaks to be observed
- uniform intensity of peaks in the amide regions is ideal.
At Rutger's University, samples are screened at 20 degrees using 1.7-mm NMR tubes that are loaded into a Bruker B-ACS 60 samples handler and run on a Bruker TCI 1.7 MicroCryoprobe. [1]
Samples with promising 1D <sup>1</sup>H spectra should be <sup>15</sup>N labeled so that the [<sup>15</sup>N-<sup>1</sup>H] HSQC can be recorded.
References
- ↑ Paolo