Abstract

Three-dimensional electron diffraction crystallography (microED) can solve structures of sub-micrometer crystals, which are too small for single crystal X-ray crystallography. However, R factors for the microED-based structures are generally high because of dynamic scattering. That means R factor may not be reliable provided that kinetic analysis is used. Consequently, there remains ambiguity to locate hydrogens and to assign nuclei with close atomic numbers, like carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen. Herein, we employed microED and ssNMR dipolar-based experiments together with spin dynamics numerical simulations. The NMR dipolar-based experiments were 1H-14N phase-modulated rotational-echo saturation-pulse double-resonance (PM-S-RESPDOR) and 1H-1H selective recoupling of proton (SERP) experiments. The former examined the dephasing effect of a specific 1H resonance under multiple 1H-14N dipolar couplings. The latter examined the selective polarization transfer between a 1H-1H pair. The structure was solved by microED and then validated by evaluating the agreement between experimental and calculated dipolar-based NMR results. As the measurements were performed on 1H and 14N, the method can be employed for natural abundance samples. Furthermore, the whole validation procedure was conducted at 293 K unlike widely used chemical shift calculation at 0 K using the GIPAW method. This combined method was demonstrated on monoclinic l-histidine.

Highlights

  • X-ray diffraction (XRD) crystallography is a fundanmental technique for structural determination in chemistry and biology because it provides three-dimensional structure at the atomic level

  • We have recently demonstrated that solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance

  • We have demonstrated that the solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (ssNMR) dipolar-based experiments can provide a reliable measure of structure validation

Read more

Summary

Introduction

X-ray diffraction (XRD) crystallography is a fundanmental technique for structural determination in chemistry and biology because it provides three-dimensional structure at the atomic level. This technique requires that the target molecule must yield sufficiently large crystals. MicroED, three-dimensional electron diffraction crystallography, has gained attraction since it is able to solve the crystalline structure from submicron-sized single crystals including small molecules to proteins [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13].

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call