Water irradiation devoid pulses enhance the sensitivity of 1H,1H nuclear Overhauser effects

J Biomol NMR. 2023 Apr;77(1-2):1-14. doi: 10.1007/s10858-022-00407-y. Epub 2022 Dec 19.

Abstract

The nuclear Overhauser effect (NOE) is one of NMR spectroscopy's most important and versatile parameters. NOE is routinely utilized to determine the structures of medium-to-large size biomolecules and characterize protein-protein, protein-RNA, protein-DNA, and protein-ligand interactions in aqueous solutions. Typical [1H,1H] NOESY pulse sequences incorporate water suppression schemes to reduce the water signal that dominates 1H-detected spectra and minimize NOE intensity losses due to unwanted polarization exchange between water and labile protons. However, at high- and ultra-high magnetic fields, the excitation of the water signal during the execution of the NOESY pulse sequences may cause significant attenuation of NOE cross-peak intensities. Using an evolutionary algorithm coupled with artificial intelligence, we recently designed high-fidelity pulses [Water irrAdiation DEvoid (WADE) pulses] that elude water excitation and irradiate broader bandwidths relative to commonly used pulses. Here, we demonstrate that WADE pulses, implemented into the 2D [1H,1H] NOESY experiments, increase the intensity of the NOE cross-peaks for labile and, to a lesser extent, non-exchangeable protons. We applied the new 2D [1H,1H] WADE-NOESY pulse sequence to two well-folded, medium-size proteins, i.e., the K48C mutant of ubiquitin and the Raf kinase inhibitor protein. We observed a net increase of the NOE intensities varying from 30 to 170% compared to the commonly used NOESY experiments. The new WADE pulses can be easily engineered into 2D and 3D homo- and hetero-nuclear NOESY pulse sequences to boost their sensitivity.

Keywords: Artificial intelligence; Evolutionary algorithm; GENETICS-AI; Nuclear Overhauser effect; Pulse design; WADE pulses; [1H,1H] NOESY.

MeSH terms

  • Artificial Intelligence*
  • Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular
  • Proteins / chemistry
  • Protons*
  • Water / chemistry

Substances

  • Protons
  • Water
  • Proteins