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NMR processing:
MDD
NMR assignment:
Backbone:
Autoassign
MARS
UNIO Match
PINE
Side-chains:
UNIO ATNOS-Ascan
NOEs:
UNIO ATNOS-Candid
UNIO Candid
ASDP
Structure from NMR restraints:
Ab initio:
GeNMR
Cyana
XPLOR-NIH
ASDP
UNIO ATNOS-Candid
UNIO Candid
Fragment-based:
BMRB CS-Rosetta
Rosetta-NMR (Robetta)
Template-based:
GeNMR
I-TASSER
Refinement:
Amber
Structure from chemical shifts:
Fragment-based:
WeNMR CS-Rosetta
BMRB CS-Rosetta
Homology-based:
CS23D
Simshift
Torsion angles from chemical shifts:
Preditor
TALOS
Promega- Proline
Secondary structure from chemical shifts:
CSI (via RCI server)
TALOS
MICS caps, β-turns
d2D
PECAN
Flexibility from chemical shifts:
RCI
Interactions from chemical shifts:
HADDOCK
Chemical shifts re-referencing:
Shiftcor
UNIO Shiftinspector
LACS
CheckShift
RefDB
NMR model quality:
NOEs, other restraints:
PROSESS
PSVS
RPF scores
iCing
Chemical shifts:
PROSESS
CheShift2
Vasco
iCing
RDCs:
DC
Anisofit
Pseudocontact shifts:
Anisofit
Protein geomtery:
Resolution-by-Proxy
PROSESS
What-If
iCing
PSVS
MolProbity
SAVES2 or SAVES4
Vadar
Prosa
ProQ
MetaMQAPII
PSQS
Eval123D
STAN
Ramachandran Plot
Rampage
ERRAT
Verify_3D
Harmony
Quality Control Check
NMR spectrum prediction:
FANDAS
MestReS
V-NMR
Flexibility from structure:
Backbone S2
Methyl S2
B-factor
Molecular dynamics:
Gromacs
Amber
Antechamber
Chemical shifts prediction:
From structure:
Shiftx2
Sparta+
Camshift
CH3shift- Methyl
ArShift- Aromatic
ShiftS
Proshift
PPM
CheShift-2- Cα
From sequence:
Shifty
Camcoil
Poulsen_rc_CS
Disordered proteins:
MAXOCC
Format conversion & validation:
CCPN
From NMR-STAR 3.1
Validate NMR-STAR 3.1
NMR sample preparation:
Protein disorder:
DisMeta
Protein solubility:
camLILA
ccSOL
Camfold
camGroEL
Zyggregator
Isotope labeling:
UPLABEL
Solid-state NMR:
sedNMR


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Default Proteins Studied by NMR

Proteins Studied by NMR

Publication date: 2017
Source:Encyclopedia of Spectroscopy and Spectrometry

Author(s): Christina Redfield

Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy is a powerful method for the study of the structure, dynamics, activity, and folding of proteins in solution. Peptides and small proteins (<10kDa) can be studied in detail using 1H NMR and two-dimensional methods including COSY (correlation spectroscopy) and TOCSY (total correlation spectroscopy), which provide ‘through-bond’ correlations, and NOESY (nuclear Overhauser effect spectroscopy), which provides ‘through-space’ information. For larger proteins (10–30kDa), isotope labeling with 15N and 13C is generally required. Resonance assignments are obtained using three-dimensional 15N-edited TOCSY- and NOESY-HSQC or 1H–13C–15N triple-resonance experiments. For proteins larger than ~30kDa, high levels of deuteration, in addition to 15N/13C labeling, and the application of TROSY (transverse relaxation-optimized spectroscopy)-based triple-resonance experiments are required. Once the spectrum has been assigned, structural information is obtained from NOEs, scalar coupling constants, chemical shifts, residual dipolar couplings, and amide exchange data. The restraints derived from these NMR parameters are used as inputs to distance geometry, simulated annealing, and molecular dynamics calculations to derive a three-dimensional structure of the protein molecule in solution. NMR relaxation methods can also be used to describe the dynamics of the polypeptide chain at the level of individual residues.







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