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Default Advanced Solid-State NMR Techniques for Characterization of Membrane Protein Structure and Dynamics: Application to Anabaena Sensory Rhodopsin

Advanced Solid-State NMR Techniques for Characterization of Membrane Protein Structure and Dynamics: Application to Anabaena Sensory Rhodopsin

Publication date: Available online 26 December 2014
Source:Journal of Magnetic Resonance

Author(s): Meaghan E. Ward , Leonid S. Brown , Vladimir Ladizhansky

Studies of the structure, dynamics, and function of membrane proteins (MPs) have long been considered one of the main applications of solid-state NMR (SSNMR). Advances in instrumentation, and the plethora of new SSNMR methodologies developed over the past decade have resulted in a number of high-resolution structures and structural models of both bitopic and polytopic ?-helical MPs. The necessity to retain lipids in the sample, the high proportion of one type of secondary structure, differential dynamics, and the possibility of local disorder in the loop regions all create challenges for structure determination. In this Perspective article we describe our recent efforts directed at determining the structure and functional dynamics of Anabaena Sensory Rhodopsin, a heptahelical transmembrane (7TM) protein. We review some of the established and emerging methods which can be utilized for SSNMR-based structure determination, with a particular focus on those used for ASR, a bacterial protein which shares its 7TM architecture with G-protein coupled receptors.
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