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1.
Phys Rev E ; 107(3-2): 035303, 2023 Mar.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37073023

J-driven dynamic nuclear polarization (JDNP) was recently proposed for enhancing the sensitivity of solution-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), while bypassing the limitations faced by conventional (Overhauser) DNP at magnetic fields of interest in analytical applications. Like Overhauser DNP, JDNP also requires saturating the electronic polarization using high-frequency microwaves known to have poor penetration and associated heating effects in most liquids. The present microwave-free JDNP (MF-JDNP) proposal seeks to enhance solution NMR's sensitivity by shuttling the sample between higher and lower magnetic fields, with one of these fields providing an electron Larmor frequency that matches the interelectron exchange coupling J_{ex}. If spins cross this so-called JDNP condition sufficiently fast, we predict that a sizable nuclear polarization will be created without microwave irradiation. This MF-JDNP proposal requires radicals whose singlet-triplet self-relaxation rates are dominated by dipolar hyperfine relaxation, and shuttling times that can compete with these electron relaxation processes. This paper discusses the theory behind the MF-JDNP, as well as proposals for radicals and conditions that could enable this new approach to NMR sensitivity enhancement.

2.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 24(4): 2118-2125, 2022 Jan 26.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35024715

Dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) is widely used to enhance solid state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) sensitivity. Its efficiency as a generic signal-enhancing approach for liquid state NMR, however, decays rapidly with magnetic field B0, unless mediated by scalar interactions arising only in exceptional cases. This has prevented a more widespread use of DNP in structural and dynamical solution NMR analyses. This study introduces a potential solution to this problem, relying on biradicals with exchange couplings Jex of the order of the electron Larmor frequency ωE. Numerical and analytical calculations show that in such Jex ≈ ±ωE cases a phenomenon akin to that occurring in chemically induced DNP (CIDNP) happens, leading to different relaxation rates for the biradical singlet and triplet states which are hyperfine-coupled to the nuclear α or ß states. Microwave irradiation can then generate a transient nuclear polarization build-up with high efficiency, at all magnetic fields that are relevant in contemporary NMR, and for all rotational diffusion correlation times that occur in small- and medium-sized molecules in conventional solvents.

3.
J Magn Reson ; 333: 107083, 2021 12.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34688177

INEPT- and HMQC-based pulse sequences are widely used to transfer polarization between heteronuclei, particularly in biomolecular spectroscopy: they are easy to setup and involve low power deposition. Still, these short-pulse polarization transfers schemes are challenged by fast solvent chemical exchange. An alternative to improve these heteronuclear transfers is J-driven cross polarization (J-CP), which transfers polarization by spin-locking the coupled spins under Hartmann-Hahn conditions. J-CP provides certain immunity against chemical exchange and other T2-like relaxation effects, a behavior that is here examined in depth by both Liouville-space numerical and analytical derivations describing the transfer efficiency. While superior to INEPT-based transfers, fast exchange may also slow down these J-CP transfers, hurting their efficiency. This study therefore explores the potential of repeated projective operations to improve 1H→15N and 1H→15N→13C J-CP transfers in the presence of fast solvent chemical exchanges. It is found that while repeating J-CP provides little 1H→15N transfer advantages over a prolonged CP, multiple contacts that keep both the water and the labile protons effectively spin-locked can improve 1H→15N→13C transfers in the presence of chemical exchange. The ensuing Looped, Concatenated Cross Polarization (L-CCP) compensates for single J-CP losses by relying on the 13C's longer lifetimes, leading to a kind of "algorithmic cooling" that can provide high polarization for the 15N as well as carbonyl and alpha 13Cs. This can facilitate certain experiments, as demonstrated with triple resonance experiments on intrinsically disordered proteins involving labile, chemically exchanging protons.


Intrinsically Disordered Proteins , Protons , Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular , Solvents , Water
4.
J Am Chem Soc ; 143(23): 8935-8948, 2021 06 16.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34085814

Glycan structures are often stabilized by a repertoire of hydrogen-bonded donor/acceptor groups, revealing longer-lived structures that could represent biologically relevant conformations. NMR provides unique data on these hydrogen-bonded networks from multidimensional experiments detecting cross-peaks resulting from through-bond (TOCSY) or through-space (NOESY) interactions. However, fast OH/H2O exchange, and the spectral proximity among these NMR resonances, hamper the use of glycans' labile protons in such analyses; consequently, studies are often restricted to aprotic solvents or supercooled aqueous solutions. These nonphysiological conditions may lead to unrepresentative structures or to probing a small subset of accessible conformations that may miss "active" glycan conformations. Looped, projected spectroscopy (L-PROSY) has been recently shown to substantially enhance protein NOESY and TOCSY cross-peaks, for 1Hs that undergo fast exchange with water. This study shows that even larger enhancements can be obtained for rapidly exchanging OHs in saccharides, leading to the retrieval of previously undetectable 2D TOCSY/NOESY cross-peaks with nonlabile protons. After demonstrating ≥300% signal enhancements on model monosaccharides, these experiments were applied at 1 GHz to elucidate the structural network adopted by a sialic acid homotetramer, used as a model for α,2-8 linked polysaccharides. High-field L-PROSY NMR enabled these studies at higher temperatures and provided insight previously unavailable from lower-field NMR investigations on supercooled samples, involving mostly nonlabile nuclei. Using L-PROSY's NOEs and other restraints, a revised structural model for the homotetramer was obtained combining rigid motifs and flexible segments, that is well represented by conformations derived from 40 µs molecular dynamics simulations.

5.
J Magn Reson ; 326: 106940, 2021 May.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33865207

At the magnetic fields of common NMR instruments, electron Zeeman frequencies are too high for efficient electron-nuclear dipolar cross-relaxation to occur in solution. The rate of that process fades with the electron Zeeman frequency as ω-2 - in the absence of isotropic hyperfine couplings, liquid state dynamic nuclear polarisation (DNP) in high-field magnets is therefore impractical. However, contact coupling and dipolar cross-relaxation are not the only mechanisms that can move electron magnetisation to nuclei in liquids: multiple cross-correlated (CC) relaxation processes also exist, involving various combinations of interaction tensor anisotropies. The rates of some of those processes have more favourable high-field behaviour than dipolar cross-relaxation, but due to the difficulty of their numerical - and particularly analytical - treatment, they remain largely uncharted. In this communication, we report analytical evaluation of every rotationally driven relaxation process in liquid state for 1e1n and 2e1n spin systems, as well as numerical optimisations of the steady-state DNP with respect to spin Hamiltonian parameters. A previously unreported cross-correlated DNP (CCDNP) mechanism was identified for the 2e1n system, involving multiple relaxation interference effects and inter-electron exchange coupling. Using simulations, we found realistic spin Hamiltonian parameters that yield stronger nuclear polarisation at high magnetic fields than dipolar cross-relaxation.

6.
Magn Reson Chem ; 58(8): 691-717, 2020 08.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32173898

Computational modeling is becoming an essential tool in magnetic resonance to design and optimize experiments, test the performance of theoretical models, and interpret experimental data. Recent theoretical research and software development made possible simulations of large spin systems, for example, proteins with thousands of spins, in reasonable time. In the last few years, the Fokker-Planck formalism also re-emerged due to its ability to handle spatial dynamics. The purpose of this tutorial is to describe advantages and disadvantages of the most common formalisms, the latest developments and strategies to improve the computational efficiency, and to guide users in the setting up of a simulation using the Spinach software.

7.
Sci Adv ; 5(7): eaaw8962, 2019 Jul.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31334352

We propose a solution to the matrix dimension problem in quantum mechanical simulations of MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) experiments on complex molecules. This problem is very old; it arises when Kronecker products of spin operators and spatial dynamics generators are taken-the resulting matrices are far too large for any current or future computer. However, spin and spatial operators individually have manageable dimensions, and we note here that the action by their Kronecker products on any vector may be computed without opening those products. This eliminates large matrices from the simulation process. MRI simulations for coupled spin systems of complex metabolites in three dimensions with diffusion, flow, chemical kinetics, and quantum mechanical treatment of spin relaxation are now possible. The methods described in this paper are implemented in versions 2.4 and later of the Spinach library.

8.
J Magn Reson ; 301: 85-93, 2019 Apr.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30861457

Diffusion-ordered spectroscopy experiments in which existing delays in a parent pulse sequence are used for diffusion encoding - iDOSY experiments - are potentially attractive because of their simplicity and sensitivity. However the calculation of diffusional attenuation in Zangger-Sterk pure shift iDOSY experiments is a very difficult problem to attack analytically, and is more easily approached numerically. Numerical simulations show that for typical experimental conditions, the dependence of diffusional attenuation on diffusion-encoding gradient amplitude is well represented by a shifted Gaussian function. The shift in gradient can be calculated analytically for the limiting case where the selective pulse is replaced by a hard 180° pulse at its midpoint; numerical simulations show that the effect of using different shapes of selective pulse is to scale down this limiting gradient shift by a constant factor that depends on the pulse shape used. The practical consequence is that under the experimental conditions appropriate for small molecules, the pure shift iDOSY method should allow good diffusion coefficient measurements to be made if appropriate allowance is made for the change in effective diffusion-encoding gradient. Parallel sets of numerical simulations and experiments are presented, and a practical application of a Zangger-Sterk pure shift iDOSY experiment to a simple test mixture is illustrated.

9.
Methods Mol Biol ; 1870: 151-163, 2019.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30539553

Based on the nucleobase rich character of the binding pocket of A-site 16S ribosomal RNA of Escherichia coli, it was proposed that the neamine moiety of synthesized Neamine-nucleoside conjugates could bind to the groove of RNA while the nucleobase moiety would bind specifically to the sequence of the 16S rRNA A-site fragment. Thus the designed conjugate compound 5 was found to have the same dissociation constant as neamine for binding to 16S rRNA and the neamine-amino acid substituted nucleoside conjugate 8 and 9 showed 6.3 and 4.8 times greater RNA binding affinity, respectively, as compared with neamine. The results obtained successfully demonstrate the need for chemically modifying neamine and probe the changes induced using NMR protocols to assist in the discovery of new aminoglycoside antibiotics.


Anti-Bacterial Agents/chemical synthesis , Anti-Bacterial Agents/pharmacology , Escherichia coli/drug effects , Escherichia coli/genetics , Framycetin/pharmacology , Nucleosides/pharmacology , RNA, Bacterial , RNA, Ribosomal, 16S , Framycetin/chemistry , Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial/drug effects , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy , Microbial Sensitivity Tests , Molecular Structure , Nucleosides/chemistry
10.
Chemphyschem ; 2018 Sep 21.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30239108

Maximum-quantum (MaxQ) NMR experiments have been introduced to overcome issues related to peak overlap and high spectral density in the NMR spectra of aromatic mixtures. In MaxQ NMR, spin systems are separated on the basis of the highest-quantum coherence that they can form. MaxQ experiments are however time consuming and methods have been introduced to accelerate them. In this article, we demonstrate the ultrafast, single-scan acquisition of MaxQ NMR spectra using spatial encoding of the multiple-quantum dimension. So far, the spatial encoding methodology has been applied only for the encoding of up to double-quantum coherences, and here we show that it can be extended to higher coherence orders, to yield a massive reduction of the acquisition time of multi-quantum spectra of aromatic mixtures, and also to monitor chemical reactions.

11.
Theor Chem Acc ; 135: 97, 2016.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27069413

A quantum mechanical (QM) method rooted on density functional theory (DFT) has been employed to determine conformations of the methane-thiosulfonate spin label (MTSL) attached to a fragment extracted from the activation loop of Aurora-A kinase. The features of the calculated energy surface revealed low energy barriers between isoenergetic minima, and the system could be described in a population of 76 rotamers that can be also considered for other systems since it was found that the [Formula: see text], [Formula: see text] and [Formula: see text] do not depend on the previous two dihedral angles. Conformational states obtained were seen to be comparable to those obtained in the α-helix systems studied previously, indicating that the protein backbone does not affect the torsional profiles significantly and suggesting the possibility to use determined conformations for other protein systems for further modelling studies.

12.
Molecules ; 19(10): 16998-7025, 2014 Oct 23.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25342554

Spin labelling is a chemical technique that enables the integration of a molecule containing an unpaired electron into another framework for study. Given the need to understand the structure, dynamics, and conformational changes of biomacromolecules, spin labelling provides a relatively non-intrusive technique and has certain advantages over X-ray crystallography; which requires high quality crystals. The technique relies on the design of binding probes that target a functional group, for example, the thiol group of a cysteine residue within a protein. The unpaired electron is typically supplied through a nitroxide radical and sterically shielded to preserve stability. Pulsed electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) techniques allow small magnetic couplings to be measured (e.g., <50 MHz) providing information on single label probes or the dipolar coupling between multiple labels. In particular, distances between spin labels pairs can be derived which has led to many protein/enzymes and nucleotides being studied. Here, we summarise recent examples of spin labels used for pulse EPR that serve to illustrate the contribution of chemistry to advancing discoveries in this field.


Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy , Macromolecular Substances/chemistry , Spin Labels , Animals , Humans
13.
Science ; 345(6193): 193-7, 2014 Jul 11.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25013070

Heme enzymes activate oxygen through formation of transient iron-oxo (ferryl) intermediates of the heme iron. A long-standing question has been the nature of the iron-oxygen bond and, in particular, the protonation state. We present neutron structures of the ferric derivative of cytochrome c peroxidase and its ferryl intermediate; these allow direct visualization of protonation states. We demonstrate that the ferryl heme is an Fe(IV)=O species and is not protonated. Comparison of the structures shows that the distal histidine becomes protonated on formation of the ferryl intermediate, which has implications for the understanding of O-O bond cleavage in heme enzymes. The structures highlight the advantages of neutron cryo-crystallography in probing reaction mechanisms and visualizing protonation states in enzyme intermediates.


Cytochrome-c Peroxidase/chemistry , Heme/chemistry , Iron/chemistry , Crystallography, X-Ray/methods , Histidine/chemistry , Neutron Diffraction , Neutrons , Oxygen/chemistry , Protons
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