Abstract

Although very effective in decreasing NMR relaxation of large proteins, homogeneous deuteration can be costly, and anyway unsuitable for recombinant production in metazoan systems. We sought to explore other deuteration schemes, which would be adapted to protein expression in mammalian cells. Here, we evaluate the benefits of the deuteration on alpha- and beta-positions of amino acids for a typical middle size protein domain, namely the model 40 kDa-large kinase p38α. We report the position-specific deuteration of free amino acids by using enzyme-assisted H/D exchange, executed by the cystathionine gamma-synthase and a newly designed high-performance mutant E325A. Then, we used cell-free expression in bacterial extracts to avoid any scrambling and back-protonation of the tested isotopically labelled amino acids (Ala, Leu, Lys, Ser, Asp, Glu, Gly). Our results show signal enhancements up to three in 1H-15N spectra when these α/β-deuterated amino acids are integrated. Because our approach relies on single 2Hα/β-15N-amino acid labeling, an additional three-fold increase in sensitivity is obtained by the possible use of moderate resolution SOFAST-HMQC instead of the classical HSQC or TROSY experiments. This allows recording residue-resolved solution 1H-15N NMR spectra of 100 μg of p38α in one hour with S/N∼10.

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