The Incorporation of Labile Protons into Multidimensional NMR Analyses: Glycan Structures Revisited

Mihajlo Novakovic, Marcos D Battistel, Hugo F Azurmendi, Maria-Grazia Concilio, Darón I Freedberg, Lucio Frydman

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Glycan structures are often stabilized by a repertoire of hydrogen-bonded donor/acceptor groups, revealing longer-lived structures that could represent biologically relevant conformations. NMR provides unique data on these hydrogen-bonded networks from multidimensional experiments detecting cross-peaks resulting from through-bond (TOCSY) or through-space (NOESY) interactions. However, fast OH/H2O exchange, and the spectral proximity among these NMR resonances, hamper the use of glycans’ labile protons in such analyses; consequently, studies are often restricted to aprotic solvents or supercooled aqueous solutions. These nonphysiological conditions may lead to unrepresentative structures or to probing a small subset of accessible conformations that may miss “active” glycan conformations. Looped, projected spectroscopy (L-PROSY) has been recently shown to substantially enhance protein NOESY and TOCSY cross-peaks, for 1Hs that undergo fast exchange with water. This study shows that even larger enhancements can be obtained for rapidly exchanging OHs in saccharides, leading to the retrieval of previously undetectable 2D TOCSY/NOESY cross-peaks with nonlabile protons. After demonstrating ≥300% signal enhancements on model monosaccharides, these experiments were applied at 1 GHz to elucidate the structural network adopted by a sialic acid homotetramer, used as a model for α,2–8 linked polysaccharides. High-field L-PROSY NMR enabled these studies at higher temperatures and provided insight previously unavailable from lower-field NMR investigations on supercooled samples, involving mostly nonlabile nuclei. Using L-PROSY’s NOEs and other restraints, a revised structural model for the homotetramer was obtained combining rigid motifs and flexible segments, that is well represented by conformations derived from 40 μs molecular dynamics simulations.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)8935-8948
Number of pages14
JournalJournal of the American Chemical Society
Volume143
Issue number23
Early online date4 Jun 2021
DOIs
StatePublished - 16 Jun 2021

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'The Incorporation of Labile Protons into Multidimensional NMR Analyses: Glycan Structures Revisited'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this