Abstract

It has recently become more widely appreciated that the presence of rotational diffusional anisotropy in proteins and other macromolecules can have a significant affect on the interpretation of NMR relaxation data in terms of molecular motion. In this paper, we show how commonly used NMR relaxation data (R(1), R(2), and NOE) obtained at two spectrometer frequencies can be analyzed using a Bayesian statistical approach to reliably detect and quantify the degree of rotational diffusion anisotropy. Our approach differs from previous methods in that it does not make assumptions concerning the internal motions experienced by the residues which are used to quantify the diffusion anisotropy, but rather averages the results over all internal motions consistent with the data. We demonstrate our method using synthetic data corresponding to isotropic, axially symmetric anisotropic, and fully asymmetric anisotropic rotational diffusion, as well as experimental NMR data. We compare the Bayesian statistical approach with a widely used method for extracting tumbling parameters using both synthetic and experimental data. While it can be difficult to separate the effects of chemical exchange from rotational anisotropy using this "standard" method, these effects are readily separated using Bayesian statistics. In addition, we find that the Bayesian statistical approach requires considerably less CPU time than an equivalent standard analysis.

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