A significant problem with paramagnetic tags attached to proteins and nucleic acids is their conformational mobility. Each tag is statistically distributed within a volume between 5 and 10 Angstroms across; structural biology conclusions from NMR and EPR work are necessarily diluted by this uncertainty. The problem is solved in electron spin resonance, but remains open in the other major branch of paramagnetic resonance – pseudocontact shift (PCS) NMR spectroscopy, where structural biologists have so far been reluctantly using the point paramagnetic centre approximation. Here we describe a new method for extracting probability densities of lanthanide tags from PCS data. The method relies on Tikhonov-regularised 3D reconstruction and opens a...
Pseudocontact shifts (PCS) encode long-range information on 3D structures of protein backbones and s...
As many key proteins evade crystallization and remain too large for nuclear magnetic resonance spect...
As many key proteins evade crystallization and remain too large for nuclear magnetic resonance spect...
A significant problem with paramagnetic tags attached to proteins and nucleic acids is their conform...
Paramagnetic centers in biomolecules, such as specific metal ions that are bound to a protein, affec...
Paramagnetic metal ions bound to proteins generate a dipolar field that can be accurately probed by ...
Capturing conformational changes in proteins or protein-protein complexes is a challenge for both ex...
Pseudocontact shifts (PCSs) generated by a paramagnetic metal ion provide valuable long-range inform...
This paper presents a detailed analysis of the pseudocontact shift (PCS) field induced by a mobile s...
Understanding biological phenomena at atomic resolution is one of the keys to modern drug design. In...
Structural studies of proteins and protein-ligand complexes by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spec...
Structural studies of proteins and protein-ligand complexes by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spec...
The advent of different lanthanide-binding reagents has made site-specific labelling of proteins wit...
Pseudocontact shifts (PCS) induced by tags loaded with paramagnetic lanthanide ions provide powerful...
Site-specific attachment of paramagnetic lanthanide ions to a protein generates pseudocontact shifts...
Pseudocontact shifts (PCS) encode long-range information on 3D structures of protein backbones and s...
As many key proteins evade crystallization and remain too large for nuclear magnetic resonance spect...
As many key proteins evade crystallization and remain too large for nuclear magnetic resonance spect...
A significant problem with paramagnetic tags attached to proteins and nucleic acids is their conform...
Paramagnetic centers in biomolecules, such as specific metal ions that are bound to a protein, affec...
Paramagnetic metal ions bound to proteins generate a dipolar field that can be accurately probed by ...
Capturing conformational changes in proteins or protein-protein complexes is a challenge for both ex...
Pseudocontact shifts (PCSs) generated by a paramagnetic metal ion provide valuable long-range inform...
This paper presents a detailed analysis of the pseudocontact shift (PCS) field induced by a mobile s...
Understanding biological phenomena at atomic resolution is one of the keys to modern drug design. In...
Structural studies of proteins and protein-ligand complexes by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spec...
Structural studies of proteins and protein-ligand complexes by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spec...
The advent of different lanthanide-binding reagents has made site-specific labelling of proteins wit...
Pseudocontact shifts (PCS) induced by tags loaded with paramagnetic lanthanide ions provide powerful...
Site-specific attachment of paramagnetic lanthanide ions to a protein generates pseudocontact shifts...
Pseudocontact shifts (PCS) encode long-range information on 3D structures of protein backbones and s...
As many key proteins evade crystallization and remain too large for nuclear magnetic resonance spect...
As many key proteins evade crystallization and remain too large for nuclear magnetic resonance spect...