Assignment of NMR resonances of protons covalently bound to photochemically active cofactors in photosynthetic reaction centers by 13C–1H photo-CIDNP MAS-J-HMQC experiment

Published: Wednesday, 27 February 2019 - 16:00 UTC

Author:

Bielytskyi, Pavlo, Daniel Gräsing, Stefan Zahn, Kaustubh R. Mote, A. Alia, P.K. Madhu, and Jörg Matysik. “Assignment of NMR Resonances of Protons Covalently Bound to Photochemically Active Cofactors in Photosynthetic Reaction Centers by 13C–1H Photo-CIDNP MAS-J-HMQC Experiment.” Journal of Magnetic Resonance 298 (January 2019): 64–76.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmr.2018.11.013

Modified versions of through-bond heteronuclear correlation (HETCOR) experiments are presented to take advantage of the light-induced hyperpolarization that occurs on 13C nuclei due to the solid-state photochemically induced dynamic nuclear polarization (photo-CIDNP) effect. Such 13C–1H photoCIDNP MAS-J-HMQC and photo-CIDNP MAS-J-HSQC experiments are applied to acquire the 2D 13C–1H correlation spectra of selectively 13C-labeled photochemically active cofactors in the frozen quinoneblocked photosynthetic reaction center (RC) of the purple bacterium Rhodobacter (R.) sphaeroides wildtype (WT). Resulting spectra contain no correlation peaks arising from the protein backbone, which greatly simplifies the assignment of aliphatic region. Based on the photo-CIDNP MAS-J-HMQC NMR experiment, we obtained assignment of selective 1H NMR resonances of the cofactors involved in the electron transfer process in the RC and compared them with values theoretically predicted by density functional theory (DFT) calculation as well as with the chemical shifts obtained from monomeric cofactors in the solution. We also compared proton chemical shifts obtained by photo-CIDNP MAS-J-HMQC experiment under continuous illumination with the ones obtained in dark by classical crosspolarization (CP) HETCOR. We expect that the proposed approach will become a method of choice for obtaining 1H chemical shift maps of the active cofactors in photosynthetic RCs and will aid the interpretation of heteronuclear spin-torch experiments.