Source: Danis, C. et. al., Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy for the Identification of Multiple Phosphorylations of Intrinsically Disordered Proteins. J. Vis. Exp. (2016).
This video demonstrates the use of nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (NMR) techniques to identify multiple phosphorylations in a protein. The phosphorylation of a protein at specific amino acid causes the deshielding of the neighboring amide hydrogen, which generates the spectral difference.
1. Production of 15N, 13C-Tau (Figure 1)
2. Purification of 15N, 13C-Tau (Figure 2)
3. In Vitro Phosphorylation of 15N-Tau
4. Acquisition of NMR Spectra (Figure 5)
Figure 1: Scheme of the main steps of recombinant protein production and isotopic labeling. Steps from bacteria transformation to recombinant protein production are outlined as described in paragraph 1 of the protocol.
Figure 2: Scheme of the main steps of recombinant Tau protein purification. Steps from bacterial cell lysis to recombinant protein purification are outlined as described in paragraph 2 of the protocol.
Figure 3: Liquid chromatography steps of the protocol. (A) Cation exchange chromatography fractionation of the heated bacterial extract. The absorbance at 280 nm, 260 nm, and the conductivity correspond respectively to solid and dashed black lines and dotted red lines. 12% SDS-PAGE analysis of the collected fractions is shown above the chromatogram. (B) Desalting of the Tau protein into a buffer suitable for lyophilization. The amount of purified Tau protein estimated from the peak area (2,260 mAU*ml) is 16 mg of Tau.
Figure 4: 12% SDS-PAGE analysis of Tau. Lane 1, molecular weight marker; lane 2, 10 µg of Tau; lane 3, 10 µg of ERK-phosphorylated Tau. Tau, as other IDPs, runs in an anomalous manner on SDS-PAGE, at an apparent molecular weight of about 60 kDa instead of the expected 46 kDa.
Figure 5: Scheme of the main steps for NMR sample preparation, NMR spectroscopy data acquisition, and data processing. Steps from NMR sample preparation to data acquisition and processing are outlined as described in paragraph 4 of the protocol.
Figure 6: Set-up of the p1 parameter for NMR data acquisition. This parameter differs between samples and is mainly dependent on salt concentration. A standard 1H nutation curve for 80% H2O in D2O is shown. Single-scan spectra with a recycle delay of 30 sec were collected and plotted horizontally. The pulse (p1) was varied from 1 µsec to 55 µsec in steps of 1 µsec. In theory, the signal should be maximal for a 90° pulse and equal to zero for a 180° pulse. However, in practice, radiation damping causes asymmetry and phase distortion problems which make it difficult to determine the 90° or 180° pulses directly. The second null point corresponds to a 360° pulse duration. The enlarged region shows a residual signal for a 360° pulse that is used to define the o1p frequency parameter.
Figure 7: NMR data processing. (A) Free induction signal decay in the time domain. 1D proton spectra (B) resulting from Fourier transformation of the FID from panel A into the frequency domain but with incorrect phase (PHC0 -206°). (C) phased (PHC0 -113°) and referenced (TMSP signal at 0 ppm).
The authors have nothing to disclose.