1 H-Detected Solid-State NMR Studies of Water-Inaccessible Proteins In Vitro and In Situ.
1 H detection can significantly improve solid-state NMR spectral sensitivity and thereby allows studying more complex proteins. However, the common prerequisite for 1 H detection is the introduction of exchangeable protons in otherwise deuterated proteins, which has thus far significantly hampered studies of partly water-inaccessible proteins, such as membrane proteins. Herein, we present an approach that enables high-resolution 1 H-detected solid-state NMR (ssNMR) studies of water-inaccessible proteins, and that even works in highly complex environments such as cellular surfaces. In particular, the method was applied to study the K+ channel KcsA in liposomes and in situ in native bacterial cell membranes. We used our data for a dynamic analysis, and we show that the selectivity filter, which is responsible for ion conduction and highly conserved in K+ channels, undergoes pronounced molecular motion. We expect this approach to open new avenues for biomolecular ssNMR.