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Dive into the research topics where Guido Pintacuda is active.

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Featured researches published by Guido Pintacuda.


Journal of Biomolecular NMR | 2009

Characterization of different water pools in solid-state NMR protein samples

Anja Böckmann; Carole Gardiennet; René Verel; Andreas Hunkeler; Antoine Loquet; Guido Pintacuda; Lyndon Emsley; Beat H. Meier; Anne Lesage

We observed and characterized two distinct signals originating from different pools of water protons in solid-state NMR protein samples, namely from crystal water which exchanges polarization with the protein (on the NMR timescale) and is located in the protein-rich fraction at the periphery of the magic-angle spinning (MAS) sample container, and supernatant water located close to the axis of the sample container. The polarization transfer between the water and the protein can be probed by two-dimensional exchange spectroscopy, and we show that the supernatant water does not interact with protein on the timescale of the experiments. The two water pools have different spectroscopic properties, including resonance frequency, longitudinal, transverse and rotating frame relaxation times. The supernatant water can be removed almost completely physically or can be frozen selectively. Both measures lead to an enhancement of the quality factor of the probe circuit, accompanied by an improvement of the experimental signal/noise, and greatly simplify solvent-suppression by substantially reducing the water signal. We also present a tool, which allows filling solid-state NMR sample containers in a more efficient manner, greatly reducing the amount of supernatant water and maximizing signal/noise.


Angewandte Chemie | 2011

Fast Resonance Assignment and Fold Determination of Human Superoxide Dismutase by High-Resolution Proton-Detected Solid-State MAS NMR Spectroscopy

Michael J. Knight; Amy L. Webber; Andrew J. Pell; Paul Guerry; Emeline Barbet-Massin; Ivano Bertini; Isabella C. Felli; Leonardo Gonnelli; Roberta Pierattelli; Lyndon Emsley; Anne Lesage; Torsten Herrmann; Guido Pintacuda

Re-protonation is key: A combination of a high magnetic field (1 GHz) and ultra-fast magic-angle spinning (60 kHz) allows easy detection of NMR spectra revealing details of secondary and tertiary structures of medium-sized proteins. The technique was applied to the 153-residue microcrystalline Zn II-loaded superoxide dismutase (ZnII-SOD) fully [ 2H,13C,15N]-labeled and 100% re-protonated at the exchangeable sites. Copyright


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Structure and backbone dynamics of a microcrystalline metalloprotein by solid-state NMR

Michael J. Knight; Andrew J. Pell; Ivano Bertini; Isabella C. Felli; Leonardo Gonnelli; Roberta Pierattelli; Torsten Herrmann; Lyndon Emsley; Guido Pintacuda

We introduce a new approach to improve structural and dynamical determination of large metalloproteins using solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) with 1H detection under ultrafast magic angle spinning (MAS). The approach is based on the rapid and sensitive acquisition of an extensive set of 15N and 13C nuclear relaxation rates. The system on which we demonstrate these methods is the enzyme Cu, Zn superoxide dismutase (SOD), which coordinates a Cu ion available either in Cu+ (diamagnetic) or Cu2+ (paramagnetic) form. Paramagnetic relaxation enhancements are obtained from the difference in rates measured in the two forms and are employed as structural constraints for the determination of the protein structure. When added to 1H-1H distance restraints, they are shown to yield a twofold improvement of the precision of the structure. Site-specific order parameters and timescales of motion are obtained by a Gaussian axial fluctuation (GAF) analysis of the relaxation rates of the diamagnetic molecule, and interpreted in relation to backbone structure and metal binding. Timescales for motion are found to be in the range of the overall correlation time in solution, where internal motions characterized here would not be observable.


Applied Categorical Structures | 2014

Rapid Proton-Detected NMR Assignment for Proteins with Fast Magic Angle Spinning

Emeline Barbet-Massin; Andrew J. Pell; Joren S. Retel; Loren B. Andreas; Kristaps Jaudzems; W. Trent Franks; Andrew J. Nieuwkoop; Matthias Hiller; Victoria A. Higman; Paul Guerry; Andrea Bertarello; Michael J. Knight; Michele Felletti; Tanguy Le Marchand; Svetlana Kotelovica; Inara Akopjana; Kaspars Tars; Monica Stoppini; Vittorio Bellotti; Martino Bolognesi; Stefano Ricagno; James J. Chou; Robert G. Griffin; Hartmut Oschkinat; Anne Lesage; Lyndon Emsley; Torsten Herrmann; Guido Pintacuda

Using a set of six 1H-detected triple-resonance NMR experiments, we establish a method for sequence-specific backbone resonance assignment of magic angle spinning (MAS) nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectra of 5–30 kDa proteins. The approach relies on perdeuteration, amide 2H/1H exchange, high magnetic fields, and high-spinning frequencies (ωr/2π ≥ 60 kHz) and yields high-quality NMR data, enabling the use of automated analysis. The method is validated with five examples of proteins in different condensed states, including two microcrystalline proteins, a sedimented virus capsid, and two membrane-embedded systems. In comparison to contemporary 13C/15N-based methods, this approach facilitates and accelerates the MAS NMR assignment process, shortening the spectral acquisition times and enabling the use of unsupervised state-of-the-art computational data analysis protocols originally developed for solution NMR.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010

Ultrafast MAS solid-state NMR permits extensive 13C and 1H detection in paramagnetic metalloproteins.

Ivano Bertini; Lyndon Emsley; Moreno Lelli; Claudio Luchinat; Jiafei Mao; Guido Pintacuda

We show here that by combining tailored approaches based on ultrafast (60 kHz) MAS on the Co(II)-replaced catalytic domain of matrix metalloproteinase 12 (CoMMP-12) we can observe and assign, in a highly paramagnetic protein in the solid state, (13)C and even (1)H resonances from the residues coordinating the metal center. In addition, by exploiting the enhanced relaxation caused by the paramagnetic center, and the low power irradiation enabled by the fast MAS, this can be achieved in remarkably short times and at very high field (21.2 T), with only less than 1 mg of sample. Furthermore, using the known crystal structure of the compound, we are able to distinguish and measure pseudocontact (PCS) contributions to the shifts up to the coordinating ligands and to unveil structural information.


Angewandte Chemie | 2012

Backbone assignment of fully protonated solid proteins by 1H detection and ultrafast magic-angle-spinning NMR spectroscopy

Alessandro Marchetti; Stefan Jehle; Michele Felletti; Michael J. Knight; Yao Wang; Zhi-Qiang Xu; Ah Young Park; Gottfried Otting; Anne Lesage; Lyndon Emsley; Nicholas E. Dixon; Guido Pintacuda

Narrow 1H NMR linewidths can be obtained for fully protonated protein samples in the solid state by using ultrafast magic-angle spinning (60 kHz). Medium-size microcrystalline and noncrystalline proteins can be analyzed without any need for deuteration of the protein sample. This approach provides assignments of the backbone 1H, 15N, 13C α, and 13CO resonances and yields information about 1H-1H proximities. Copyright


Journal of Magnetic Resonance | 2009

Fast acquisition of multi-dimensional spectra in solid-state NMR enabled by ultra-fast MAS

Ségolène Laage; Joseph R. Sachleben; Stefan Steuernagel; Roberta Pierattelli; Guido Pintacuda; Lyndon Emsley

The advantages offered by ultra-fast (>60 kHz) magic angle spinning (MAS) rotation for the study of biological samples, notably containing paramagnetic centers are explored. It is shown that optimal conditions for performing solid-state (13)C NMR under 60 kHz MAS are obtained with low-power CW (1)H decoupling, as well as after a low-power (1)H,(13)C cross-polarization step at a double-quantum matching condition. Acquisition with low-power decoupling highlights the existence of rotational decoupling sidebands. The sideband intensities and the existence of first and second rotary conditions are explained in the framework of the Floquet-van Vleck theory. As a result, optimal (13)C spectra of the oxidized, paramagnetic form of human copper zinc superoxide dismutase (SOD) can be obtained employing rf-fields which do not exceed 40 kHz during the whole experiment. This enables the removal of unwanted heating which can lead to deterioration of the sample. Furthermore, combined with the short (1)H T(1)s, this allows the repetition rate of the experiments to be shortened from 3 s to 500 ms, thus compensating for the sensitivity loss due to the smaller sample volume in a 1.3 mm rotor. The result is that 2D (13)C-(13)C correlation could be acquired in about 24 h on less than 1 mg of SOD sample.


Bioconjugate Chemistry | 2011

DOTA-Amide Lanthanide Tag for Reliable Generation of Pseudocontact Shifts in Protein NMR Spectra

Bim Graham; Choy Theng Loh; James D. Swarbrick; Phuc Ung; James Shin; Hiromasa Yagi; Xinying Jia; Sandeep Chhabra; Nicholas Barlow; Guido Pintacuda; Thomas Huber; Gottfried Otting

Structural studies of proteins and protein-ligand complexes by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy can be greatly enhanced by site-specific attachment of lanthanide ions to create paramagnetic centers. In particular, pseudocontact shifts (PCS) generated by paramagnetic lanthanides contain important and unique long-range structure information. Here, we present a high-affinity lanthanide binding tag that can be attached to single cysteine residues of proteins. The new tag has many advantageous features that are not available in this combination from previously published tags: (i) it binds lanthanide ions very tightly, minimizing the generation of nonspecific effects, (ii) it produces PCSs with high reliability as its bulkiness prevents complete motional averaging of PCSs, (iii) it can be attached to single cysteine residues, alleviating the need of detailed prior knowledge of the 3D structure of the target protein, and (iv) it does not display conformational exchange phenomena that would increase the number of signals in the NMR spectrum. The performance of the tag is demonstrated with the N-terminal domain of the E. coli arginine repressor and the A28C mutant of human ubiquitin.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008

Band-Selective 1H−13C Cross-Polarization in Fast Magic Angle Spinning Solid-State NMR Spectroscopy

Ségolène Laage; Alessandro Marchetti; Julien Sein; Roberta Pierattelli; Hans Juergen Sass; Stephan Grzesiek; Anne Lesage; Guido Pintacuda; Lyndon Emsley

A magic angle spinning (MAS) NMR technique to transfer polarization from protons to a specific set of the (13)C spins is introduced for the study of biomolecular samples in the solid-state. Ultrafast (>60 kHz) MAS and low irradiation rf fields are used to achieve band-selective Hartmann-Hahn cross-polarization (CP) between the whole proton bath and carbons whose resonances are close to the (13)C-transmitter offset. When compared to conventional, broadband (1)H-(13)C CP, the band-selective experiment can be established without any loss of sensitivity when polarizing the aliphatic signals of a protein sample, and with a significant gain when polarizing carbonyls. This scheme can be used as a building block in 2D (13)C-(13)C homonuclear correlation experiments to obtain a faster and more sensitive characterization of biological solids.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Structure of fully protonated proteins by proton-detected magic-angle spinning NMR.

Loren B. Andreas; Kristaps Jaudzems; Jan Stanek; D. Lalli; Andrea Bertarello; Tanguy Le Marchand; Diane Cala-De Paepe; Svetlana Kotelovica; Inara Akopjana; Benno Knott; Sebastian Wegner; Frank Engelke; Anne Lesage; Lyndon Emsley; Kaspars Tars; Torsten Herrmann; Guido Pintacuda

Significance Protein structure determination is key to the detailed description of many biological processes. The critical factor that would allow general application of magic-angle spinning (MAS) solid-state NMR to this end is improvement in sensitivity and resolution for as many nuclear spins as possible. This is achieved here with detection of resolved 1H resonances in protonated proteins by increasing MAS rates to frequencies of 100 kHz and above. For large proteins and assemblies, ultrafast spinning narrows spectral resonances better than Brownian motion on which solution NMR relies, removing a fundamental barrier to the NMR study of large systems. This is exploited here to determine the de novo structure of a 28-kDa protein dimer in a 2.5-MDa viral capsid assembly. Protein structure determination by proton-detected magic-angle spinning (MAS) NMR has focused on highly deuterated samples, in which only a small number of protons are introduced and observation of signals from side chains is extremely limited. Here, we show in two fully protonated proteins that, at 100-kHz MAS and above, spectral resolution is high enough to detect resolved correlations from amide and side-chain protons of all residue types, and to reliably measure a dense network of 1H-1H proximities that define a protein structure. The high data quality allowed the correct identification of internuclear distance restraints encoded in 3D spectra with automated data analysis, resulting in accurate, unbiased, and fast structure determination. Additionally, we find that narrower proton resonance lines, longer coherence lifetimes, and improved magnetization transfer offset the reduced sample size at 100-kHz spinning and above. Less than 2 weeks of experiment time and a single 0.5-mg sample was sufficient for the acquisition of all data necessary for backbone and side-chain resonance assignment and unsupervised structure determination. We expect the technique to pave the way for atomic-resolution structure analysis applicable to a wide range of proteins.

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Lyndon Emsley

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Andrew J. Pell

École normale supérieure de Lyon

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Loren B. Andreas

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Gottfried Otting

University of New South Wales

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Kristaps Jaudzems

Scripps Research Institute

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