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1.
J Magn Reson ; 361: 107653, 2024 Apr.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38471414

RESUMEN

Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) based 13C tracing has broad applications across medical and environmental research. As many biological and environmental samples are heterogeneous, they experience considerable spectral overlap and relatively low signal. Here a 1D 1H-12C/13C is introduced that uses "in-phase/opposite-phase" encoding to simultaneously detect and discriminate both protons attached to 12C and 13C at full 1H sensitivity in every scan. Unlike traditional approaches that focus on the 12C/13C satellite ratios in a 1H spectrum, this approach creates separate sub-spectra for the 12C and 13C bound protons. These spectra can be used for both quantitative and qualitative analysis of complex samples with significant spectral overlap. Due to the presence of the 13C dipole, faster relaxation of the 1H-13C pairs results in slight underestimation compared to the 1H-12C pairs. However, this is easily compensated for, by collecting an additional reference spectrum, from which the absolute percentage of 13C can be calculated by difference. When combined with the result, 12C and 13C percent enrichment in both 1H-12C and 1H-13C fractions are obtained. As the approach uses isotope filtered 1H NMR for detection, it retains nearly the same sensitivity as a standard 1H spectrum. Here, a proof-of-concept is performed using simple mixtures of 12C and 13C glucose, followed by suspended algal cells with varying 12C /13C ratios representing a complex mixture. The results consistently return 12C/13C ratios that deviate less than 1 % on average from the expected. Finally, the sequence was used to monitor and quantify 13C% enrichment in Daphnia magna neonates which were fed a 13C diet over 1 week. The approach helped reveal how the organisms utilized the 12C lipids they are born with vs. the 13C lipids they assimilate from their diet during growth. Given the experiments simplicity, versatility, and sensitivity, we anticipate it should find broad application in a wide range of tracer studies, such as fluxomics, with applications spanning various disciplines.


Asunto(s)
Isótopos , Protones , Espectroscopía de Resonancia Magnética/métodos , Mezclas Complejas , Lípidos
3.
Magn Reson Chem ; 62(5): 345-360, 2024 May.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37811556

RESUMEN

Understanding environmental change is challenging and requires molecular-level tools to explain the physicochemical phenomena behind complex processes. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy is a key tool that provides information on both molecular structures and interactions but is underutilized in environmental research because standard "high-field" NMR is financially and physically inaccessible for many and can be overwhelming to those outside of disciplines that routinely use NMR. "Low-field" NMR is an accessible alternative but has reduced sensitivity and increased spectral overlap, which is especially problematic for natural, heterogeneous samples. Therefore, the goal of this study is to investigate and apply innovative experiments that could minimize these challenges and improve low-field NMR analysis of environmental and biological samples. Spectral simplification (JRES, PSYCHE, singlet-only, multiple quantum filters), selective detection (GEMSTONE, DREAMTIME), and heteronuclear (reverse and CH3/CH2/CH-only HSQCs) NMR experiments are tested on samples of increasing complexity (amino acids, spruce resin, and intact water fleas) at-high field (500 MHz) and at low-field (80 MHz). A novel experiment called Doubly Selective HSQC is also introduced, wherein 1H signals are selectively detected based on the 1H and 13C chemical shifts of 1H-13C J-coupled pairs. The most promising approaches identified are the selective techniques (namely for monitoring), and the reverse and CH3-only HSQCs. Findings ultimately demonstrate that low-field NMR holds great potential for biological and environmental research. The multitude of NMR experiments available makes NMR tailorable to nearly any research need, and low-field NMR is therefore anticipated to become a valuable and widely used analytical tool moving forward.


Asunto(s)
Aminoácidos , Espectroscopía de Resonancia Magnética
4.
Anal Chem ; 95(37): 13932-13940, 2023 09 19.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37676066

RESUMEN

In environmental research, it is critical to understand how toxins impact invertebrate eggs and egg banks, which, due to their tiny size, are very challenging to study by conventional nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. Microcoil technology has been extensively utilized to enhance the mass-sensitivity of NMR. In a previous study, 5-axis computer numerical control (CNC) micromilling (shown to be a viable alternative to traditional microcoil production methods) was used to create a prototype copper slotted-tube resonator (STR). Despite the excellent limit of detection (LOD) of the resonator, the quality of the line shape was very poor due to the magnetic susceptibility of the copper resonator itself. This is best solved using magnetic susceptibility-matched materials. In this study, approaches are investigated that improve the susceptibility while retaining the versatility of coil milling. One method involves machining STRs from various copper/aluminum alloys, while the other involves machining ones from an aluminum 2011 alloy and electroplating them with copper. In all cases, combining copper and aluminum to produce resonators resulted in improved line shape and SNR compared to pure copper resonators due to their reduced magnetic susceptibility. However, the copper-plated aluminum resonators showed optimal performance from the devices tested. The enhanced LOD of these STRs allowed for the first 1H-13C heteronuclear multiple quantum coherence (HMQC) of a single intact 13C-labeled Daphnia magna egg (∼4 µg total biomass). This is a key step toward future screening programs that aim to elucidate the toxic processes in aquatic eggs.


Asunto(s)
Aluminio , Cobre , Animales , Aleaciones , Biomasa , Daphnia
5.
Molecules ; 28(13)2023 Jun 29.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37446742

RESUMEN

With sensitivity being the Achilles' heel of nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), the superior mass sensitivity offered by micro-coils can be an excellent choice for tiny, mass limited samples such as eggs and small organisms. Recently, complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS)-based micro-coil transceivers have been reported and demonstrate excellent mass sensitivity. However, the ability of broadband CMOS micro-coils to study heteronuclei has yet to be investigated, and here their potential is explored within the lens of environmental research. Eleven nuclei including 7Li, 19F, 31P and, 205Tl were studied and detection limits in the low to mid picomole range were found for an extended experiment. Further, two environmentally relevant samples (a sprouting broccoli seed and a D. magna egg) were successfully studied using the CMOS micro-coil system. 13C NMR was used to help resolve broad signals in the 1H spectrum of the 13C enriched broccoli seed, and steady state free precession was used to improve the signal-to-noise ratio by a factor of six. 19F NMR was used to track fluorinated contaminants in a single D. magna egg, showing potential for studying egg-pollutant interactions. Overall, CMOS micro-coil NMR demonstrates significant promise in environmental research, especially when the future potential to scale to multiple coil arrays (greatly improving throughput) is considered.


Asunto(s)
Contaminantes Ambientales , Flúor , Espectroscopía de Resonancia Magnética , Óxidos , Semiconductores , Espectroscopía de Resonancia Magnética/métodos , Brassica/química , Semillas/química , Daphnia magna , Animales , Contaminantes Ambientales/análisis
6.
Molecules ; 28(12)2023 Jun 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37375418

RESUMEN

Environmental metabolomics provides insight into how anthropogenic activities have an impact on the health of an organism at the molecular level. Within this field, in vivo NMR stands out as a powerful tool for monitoring real-time changes in an organism's metabolome. Typically, these studies use 2D 13C-1H experiments on 13C-enriched organisms. Daphnia are the most studied species, given their widespread use in toxicity testing. However, with COVID-19 and other geopolitical factors, the cost of isotope enrichment increased ~6-7 fold over the last two years, making 13C-enriched cultures difficult to maintain. Thus, it is essential to revisit proton-only in vivo NMR and ask, "Can any metabolic information be obtained from Daphnia using proton-only experiments?". Two samples are considered here: living and whole reswollen organisms. A range of filters are tested, including relaxation, lipid suppression, multiple-quantum, J-coupling suppression, 2D 1H-1H experiments, selective experiments, and those exploiting intermolecular single-quantum coherence. While most filters improve the ex vivo spectra, only the most complex filters succeed in vivo. If non-enriched organisms must be used, then, DREAMTIME is recommended for targeted monitoring, while IP-iSQC was the only experiment that allowed non-targeted metabolite identification in vivo. This paper is critically important as it documents not just the experiments that succeed in vivo but also those that fail and demonstrates first-hand the difficulties associated with proton-only in vivo NMR.


Asunto(s)
COVID-19 , Daphnia , Animales , Daphnia/metabolismo , Protones , Espectroscopía de Resonancia Magnética , Imagen por Resonancia Magnética , Metabolómica
7.
Dalton Trans ; 50(43): 15533-15537, 2021 Nov 09.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34647949

RESUMEN

The cross-coupling of N-tosylhydrazones and aryl halides forms carbon-carbon bonds, producing 1,1-disubstituted alkenes. Though it has proven extremely useful in several fields of chemistry, its mechanism remains experimentally unexplored. Combining benchtop NMR and real-time mass spectrometry afforded the ability to monitor the catalytic intermediates as well as the rate of product formation.

8.
Plants (Basel) ; 9(11)2020 Nov 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33182648

RESUMEN

Nutrient leaching losses from horticultural production threaten the quality of groundwater and freshwater systems worldwide. The objectives of this study were to (a) assess the effects of annual applications of ammonium sulfate fertilizer through fertigation (FERT) and broadcast (BROAD) on nutrient leaching losses and (b) determine the links among chemical property changes in leachates and soil with berry yields after 9 and 11 years of blueberry production. The long-term blueberry site was established in 2008 using seven combinations of treatments including an unfertilized control (CONT) and three N fertilizer rates (100%, 150%, 200% of recommended rates) using BROAD and FERT methods. Nutrients concentrations (NO3--N, NH4+-N and SO42--S) and chemical properties (pH and electrical conductivity (EC)) of leachate, sawdust and soil and berries were assessed. All FERT methods resulted in concentrations of NO3--N in the leachates > 100 mg L-1 with a maximum of 200 mg L-1 for FERT-200 during the growing season due to the easy transport of dissolved nutrients with the irrigation water. All BROAD methods resulted into concentrations of NO3--N in the leachates >10 mg L-1 with a maximum of 35 mg L-1 for BROAD-200 between April and July, as well as between November and April, indicating two periods of NO3--N leaching losses. The pattern observed with BROAD indicates that irrigation water in the summer and heavy rainfall in the winter contribute to NO3--N leaching losses. Concentrations of NH4+-N in the leachates >1 mg L-1 were measured under FERT with a peak at 64.78 mg L-1 for FERT-200, during the period April to August, due to NH4+'s ability to quickly move through the sawdust layer with irrigation water. Principal component analysis linked berry yield decrease with ammonium sulfate applications above recommended rates (FERT and BROAD) and with changes in soil pH and EC. Our results demonstrated that excess fertilizer applications above recommended rates using FERT and BROAD can threaten the sustainability of blueberry production by enhancing nutrient leaching losses and reducing berry yield.

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