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1.
J Magn Reson ; 361: 107653, 2024 Apr.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38471414

RÉSUMÉ

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.


Sujet(s)
Isotopes , Protons , Spectroscopie par résonance magnétique/méthodes , Mélanges complexes , Lipides
2.
Magn Reson Chem ; 62(5): 345-360, 2024 May.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37811556

RÉSUMÉ

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.


Sujet(s)
Acides aminés , Spectroscopie par résonance magnétique
3.
Anal Chem ; 95(46): 17054-17063, 2023 11 21.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37934172

RÉSUMÉ

HR-MAS NMR is a powerful tool, capable of monitoring molecular changes in intact heterogeneous samples. However, one of the biggest limitations of 1H NMR is its narrow spectral width which leads to considerable overlap in complex natural samples. DREAMTIME NMR is a highly selective technique that allows users to isolate suites of metabolites from congested spectra. This permits targeted metabolomics by NMR and is ideal for monitoring specific processes. To date, DREAMTIME has only been employed in solution-state NMR, here it is adapted for HR-MAS applications. At high spinning speeds (>5 kHz), DREAMTIME works with minimal modifications. However, spinning over 3-4 kHz leads to cell lysis, and if maintaining sample integrity is necessary, slower spinning (<2.5 kHz) is required. Very slow spinning (≤500 Hz) is advantageous for in vivo analysis to increase organism survival; however, sidebands from water pose a problem. To address this, a version of DREAMTIME, termed DREAMTIME-SLOWMAS, is introduced. Both techniques are compared at 2500, 500, and 50 Hz, using ex vivo worm tissue. Following this, DREAMTIME-SLOWMAS is applied to monitor key metabolites of anoxic stress in living shrimp at 500 Hz. Thus, standard DREAMTIME works well under MAS conditions and is recommended for samples reswollen in D2O or spun >2500 Hz. For slow spinning in vivo or intact tissue samples, DREAMTIME-SLOWMAS provides an excellent way to target process-specific metabolites while maintaining sample integrity. Overall, DREAMTIME should find widespread application wherever targeted molecular information is required from complex samples with a high degree of spectral overlap.


Sujet(s)
Imagerie par résonance magnétique , Eau , Animaux , Spectroscopie par résonance magnétique/méthodes , Crustacea , Métabolomique
4.
Anal Chem ; 95(38): 14392-14401, 2023 09 26.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37713676

RÉSUMÉ

Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) is a powerful technique with applications ranging from small molecule structure elucidation to metabolomics studies of living organisms. Typically, solution-state NMR requires a homogeneous liquid, and the whole sample is analyzed as a single entity. While adequate for homogeneous samples, such an approach is limited if the composition varies as would be the case in samples that are naturally heterogeneous or layered. In complex samples such as living organisms, magnetic susceptibility distortions lead to broad 1H line shapes, and thus, the additional spectral dispersion afforded by 2D heteronuclear experiments is often required for metabolite discrimination. Here, a novel, slice-selective 2D, 1H-13C heteronuclear single quantum coherence (HSQC) sequence was developed that exclusively employs shaped pulses such that only spins in the desired volume are perturbed. In turn, this permits multiple volumes in the tube to be studied during a single relaxation delay, increasing sensitivity and throughput. The approach is first demonstrated on standards and then used to isolate specific sample/sensor elements from a microcoil array and finally study slices within a living earthworm, allowing metabolite changes to be discerned with feeding. Overall, slice-selective NMR is demonstrated to have significant potential for the study of layered and other inhomogeneous samples of varying complexity. In particular, its ability to select subelements is an important step toward developing microcoil receive-only arrays to study environmental toxicity in tiny eggs, cells, and neonates, whereas localization in larger living species could help better correlate toxin-induced biochemical responses to the physical localities or organs involved.


Sujet(s)
Oeufs , Oligochaeta , Humains , Nouveau-né , Animaux , Résonance magnétique nucléaire biomoléculaire , Produits dangereux , Métabolomique
5.
Anal Chem ; 95(32): 11926-11933, 2023 08 15.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37535003

RÉSUMÉ

Many key building blocks of life contain nitrogen moieties. Despite the prevalence of nitrogen-containing metabolites in nature, 15N nuclei are seldom used in NMR-based metabolite assignment due to their low natural abundance and lack of comprehensive chemical shift databases. However, with advancements in isotope labeling strategies, 13C and 15N enriched metabolites are becoming more common in metabolomic studies. Simple multidimensional nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) experiments that correlate 1H and 15N via single bond 1JNH or multiple bond 2-3JNH couplings using heteronuclear single quantum coherence (HSQC) or heteronuclear multiple bond coherence are well established and routinely applied for structure elucidation. However, a 1H-15N correlation spectrum of a metabolite mixture can be difficult to deconvolute, due to the lack of a 15N specific database. In order to bridge this gap, we present here a broadband 15N-edited 1H-13C HSQC NMR experiment that targets metabolites containing 15N moieties. Through this approach, nitrogen-containing metabolites, such as amino acids, nucleotide bases, and nucleosides, are identified based on their 13C, 1H, and 15N chemical shift information. This approach was tested and validated using a [15N, 13C] enriched Daphnia magna (water flea) metabolite extract, where the number of clearly resolved 15N-containing peaks increased from only 11 in a standard HSQC to 51 in the 15N-edited HSQC, and the number of obscured peaks decreased from 59 to just 7. The approach complements the current repertoire of NMR techniques for mixture deconvolution and holds considerable potential for targeted metabolite NMR in 15N, 13C enriched systems.


Sujet(s)
Acides aminés , Métabolomique , Spectroscopie par résonance magnétique/méthodes , Résonance magnétique nucléaire biomoléculaire/méthodes , Métabolomique/méthodes , Azote
6.
Anal Chem ; 95(16): 6709-6717, 2023 04 25.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37037008

RÉSUMÉ

Chemical characterization of complex mixtures by Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) spectroscopy is challenging due to a high degree of spectral overlap and inherently low sensitivity. Therefore, NMR experiments that reduce overlap and increase signal intensity hold immense potential for the analysis of mixtures such as biological and environmental media. Here, we introduce a 13C version of DREAMTIME (Designed Refocused Excitation And Mixing for Targets In Vivo and Mixture Elucidation) NMR, which, when analyzing 13C-enriched materials, allows the user to selectively detect only the compound(s) of interest and remove all other peaks in a 13C spectrum. Selected peaks can additionally be "focused" into sharp "spikes" to increase sensitivity. 13C-DREAMTIME is first demonstrated at high field strength (500 MHz) with simultaneous selection of eight amino acids in a 13C-enriched cell free amino acid mixture and of six metabolites in an extract of 13C-enriched green algae and demonstrated at low field strength (80 MHz) with a standard solution of 13C-d-glucose and 13C-l-phenylalanine. 13C-DREAMTIME is then applied at high-field to analyze metabolic changes in 13C-enrichedDaphnia magna after exposure to polystyrene "microplastics," as well as at low-field to track fermentation of 13C-d-glucose using wine yeast. Ultimately, 13C-DREAMTIME reduces spectral overlap as only selected compounds are recorded, resulting in the detection of analyte peaks that may otherwise not have been discernable. In combination with focusing, up to a 6-fold increase in signal intensity can be obtained for a given peak. 13C-DREAMTIME is a promising experiment type for future reaction monitoring and for tracking metabolic processes with 13C-enriched compounds.


Sujet(s)
Matières plastiques , Vin , Acides aminés , Glucose , Spectroscopie par résonance magnétique/méthodes , Saccharomyces cerevisiae , Isotopes du carbone
7.
Anal Chem ; 95(14): 5858-5866, 2023 04 11.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36996326

RÉSUMÉ

Toxicity testing is currently undergoing a paradigm shift from examining apical end points such as death, to monitoring sub-lethal toxicity in vivo. In vivo nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy is a key platform in this endeavor. A proof-of-principle study is presented which directly interfaces NMR with digital microfluidics (DMF). DMF is a "lab on a chip" method allowing for the movement, mixing, splitting, and dispensing of µL-sized droplets. The goal is for DMF to supply oxygenated water to keep the organisms alive while NMR detects metabolomic changes. Here, both vertical and horizontal NMR coil configurations are compared. While a horizontal configuration is ideal for DMF, NMR performance was found to be sub-par and instead, a vertical-optimized single-sided stripline showed most promise. In this configuration, three organisms were monitored in vivo using 1H-13C 2D NMR. Without support from DMF droplet exchange, the organisms quickly showed signs of anoxic stress; however, with droplet exchange, this was completely suppressed. The results demonstrate that DMF can be used to maintain living organisms and holds potential for automated exposures in future. However, due to numerous limitations of vertically orientated DMF, along with space limitations in standard bore NMR spectrometers, we recommend future development be performed using a horizontal (MRI style) magnet which would eliminate practically all the drawbacks identified here.


Sujet(s)
Imagerie par résonance magnétique , Microfluidique , Spectroscopie par résonance magnétique/méthodes , Métabolomique/méthodes , Laboratoires sur puces
8.
Magn Reson Chem ; 61(12): 728-739, 2023 12.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36137948

RÉSUMÉ

Superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles (SPIONs) are a contaminant of emerging interest, often used in the medical field as an imaging contrast agent, with additional uses in wastewater treatment and as food additives. Although the use of SPIONs is increasing, little research has been conducted on the toxic impacts to living organisms beyond traditional lethal concentration endpoints. Daphnia magna are model organisms for aquatic toxicity testing with a well understood metabolome and high sensitivity to SPIONs. Thus, as environmental concentrations continue to increase, it is becoming critical to understand their sub-lethal toxicity. Due to the paramagnetic nature of SPIONs, a range of potential nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (NMR) experiments are possible, offering the potential to probe the physical location (via imaging), binding (via relaxation weighted spectroscopy), and the biochemical pathways impacted (via in vivo metabolomics). Results indicate binding to carbohydrates, likely chitin in the exoskeleton, along with a decrease in energy metabolites and specific biomarkers of oxidative stress. The holistic NMR framework used here helps provide a more comprehensive understanding of SPIONs impacts on D. magna and showcases NMR's versatility in providing physical, chemical, and biochemical insights.


Sujet(s)
Daphnia , Imagerie par résonance magnétique , Animaux , Daphnia/métabolisme , Spectroscopie par résonance magnétique/méthodes , Métabolomique/méthodes , Nanoparticules magnétiques d'oxyde de fer
9.
J Biomol NMR ; 76(5-6): 185-195, 2022 Dec.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36418752

RÉSUMÉ

Biomolecular NMR spectroscopy requires large magnetic field strengths for high spectral resolution. Today's highest fields comprise proton Larmor frequencies of 1.2 GHz and even larger field strengths are to be expected in the future. In protein triple resonance experiments, various carbon bandwidths need to be excited by selective pulses including the large aliphatic chemical shift range. When the spectrometer field strength is increased, the length of these pulses has to be decreased by the same factor, resulting in higher rf-amplitudes being necessary in order to cover the required frequency region. Currently available band-selective pulses like Q3/Q5 excite a narrow bandwidth compared to the necessary rf-amplitude. Because the maximum rf-power allowed in probeheads is limited, none of the selective universal rotation pulses reported so far is able to cover the full [Formula: see text]C aliphatic region on 1.2 GHz spectrometers. In this work, we present band-selective 90° and 180° universal rotation pulses (SURBOP90 and SURBOP180) that have a higher ratio of selective bandwidth to maximum rf-amplitude than standard pulses. Simulations show that these pulses perform better than standard pulses, e. g. Q3/Q5, especially when rf-inhomogeneity is taken into account. The theoretical and experimental performance is demonstrated in offset profiles and by implementing the SURBOP pulses in an HNCACB experiment at 1.2 GHz.


Sujet(s)
Carbone , Protons , Rotation , Résonance magnétique nucléaire biomoléculaire
10.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 58(68): 9512-9515, 2022 Aug 23.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35920752

RÉSUMÉ

Intrinsically disordered regions (IDRs) of proteins are critical in the regulation of biological processes but difficult to study structurally. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) is uniquely equipped to provide structural information on IDRs at atomic resolution; however, existing NMR methods often pose a challenge for large molecular weight IDRs. Resonance assignment of IDRs using 15ND-detection was previously demonstrated and shown to overcome some of these limitations. Here, we improve the methodology by overcoming the need for deuterated buffers and provide better sensitivity and resolution at higher magnetic fields and physiological salt concentrations using transverse relaxation optimized spectroscopy (TROSY). Finally, large disordered regions with low sequence complexity can be assigned efficiently using these new methods as demonstrated by achieving near complete assignment of the 398-residue N-terminal IDR of the transcription factor NFAT1 harboring 18% prolines.


Sujet(s)
Protéines intrinsèquement désordonnées , Aimants , Protéines intrinsèquement désordonnées/composition chimique , Champs magnétiques , Spectroscopie par résonance magnétique/méthodes , Résonance magnétique nucléaire biomoléculaire/méthodes , Conformation des protéines , Facteurs de transcription
11.
Int J Mol Sci ; 23(11)2022 May 30.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35682829

RÉSUMÉ

The 96-residue-long loop of EZH2 is proposed to play a role in the interaction with long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) and to contribute to EZH2 recruitment to the chromatin. However, molecular details of RNA recognition have not been described so far. Cellular studies have suggested that phosphorylation of the Thr345 residue localized in this loop influences RNA binding; however, no mechanistic explanation has been offered. To address these issues, a systematic NMR study was performed. As the 1HN-detected NMR approach presents many challenges under physiological conditions, our earlier developed, as well as improved, 1Hα-detected experiments were used. As a result of the successful resonance assignment, the obtained chemical shift values indicate the highly disordered nature of the EZH2 loop, with some nascent helical tendency in the Ser407-Ser412 region. Further investigations conducted on the phosphomimetic mutant EZH2T345D showed that the mutation has only a local effect, and that the loop remains disordered. On the other hand, the mutation influences the cis/trans Pro346 equilibrium. Interactions of both the wild-type and the phosphomimetic mutant with the lncRNA HOTAIR140 (1-140 nt) highlight that the Thr367-Ser375 region is affected. This segment does not resemble any of the previously reported RNA-binding motifs, therefore the identified binding region is unique. As no structural changes occur in the EZH2 loop upon RNA binding, we can consider the protein-RNA interaction as a "fuzzy" complex.


Sujet(s)
ARN long non codant , Protéine-2 homologue de l'activateur de Zeste/génétique , Protéine-2 homologue de l'activateur de Zeste/métabolisme , ARN long non codant/génétique , ARN long non codant/métabolisme
12.
Anal Chem ; 94(24): 8756-8765, 2022 06 21.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35675504

RÉSUMÉ

Comprehensive multiphase-nuclear magnetic resonance (CMP-NMR) is a non-invasive approach designed to observe all phases (solutions, gels, and solids) in intact samples using a single NMR probe. Studies of dead and living organisms are important to understand processes ranging from biological growth to environmental stress. Historically, such studies have utilized 1H-based phase editing for the detection of soluble/swollen components and 1H-detected 2D NMR for metabolite assignments/screening. However, living organisms require slow spinning rates (∼500 Hz) to increase survivability, but at such low speeds, complications from water sidebands and spectral overlap from the modest chemical shift window (∼0-10 ppm) make 1H NMR challenging. Here, a novel 13C-optimized E-Free magic angle spinning CMP probe is applied to study all phases in ex vivo and in vivo samples. This probe consists of a two-coil design, with an inner single-tuned 13C coil providing a 113% increase in 13C sensitivity relative to a traditional multichannel single-CMP coil design. For organisms with a large biomass (∼0.1 g) like the Ganges River sprat (ex vivo), 13C-detected full spectral editing and 13C-detected heteronuclear correlation (HETCOR) can be performed at natural abundance. Unfortunately, for a single living shrimp (∼2 mg), 13C enrichment was still required, but 13C-detected HETCOR shows superior data relative to heteronuclear single-quantum coherence at low spinning speeds (due to complications from water sidebands in the latter). The probe is equipped with automatic-tuning-matching and is compatible with automated gradient shimming─a key step toward conducting multiphase screening of dead and living organisms under automation in the near future.


Sujet(s)
Carbone , Eau , Isotopes du carbone , Spectroscopie par résonance magnétique
13.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 61(19): e202110044, 2022 05 02.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35170183

RÉSUMÉ

NMR/MRI are critical tools for studying molecular structure and interactions but suffer from relatively low sensitivity and spectral overlap. Here, a Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) approach, termed DREAMTIME, is introduced that provides "a molecular window" inside complex systems, capable of showing only what the user desires, with complete molecular specificity. The user chooses a list of molecules of interest, and the approach detects only those targets while all other molecules are invisible. The approach is demonstrated in whole human blood and urine, small living aquatic organisms in 1D/2D NMR, and MRI. Finally, as proof-of-concept, once overlap is removed via DREAMTIME, a novel "multi-focusing" approach can be used to increase sensitivity. In human blood and urine, sensitivity increases of 7-12 fold over standard 1 H NMR are observed. Applicable even to unknowns, DREAMTIME has widespread application, from monitoring product formation in organic chemistry to monitoring/identifying suites of molecular targets in complex media or in vivo.


Sujet(s)
Liquides biologiques , Imagerie par résonance magnétique , Humains , Limite de détection , Spectroscopie par résonance magnétique , Structure moléculaire
14.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 61(1): e202108361, 2022 01 03.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34585830

RÉSUMÉ

It is important to identify proline cis/trans isomers that appear in several regulatory mechanisms of proteins, and to characterize minor species that are present due to the conformational heterogeneity in intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs). To obtain residue level information on these mobile systems we introduce two 1 Hα -detected, proline selective, real-time homodecoupled NMR experiments and analyze the proline abundant transactivation domain of p53. The measurements are sensitive enough to identify minor conformers present in 4-15 % amounts; moreover, we show the consequences of CK2 phosphorylation on the cis/trans-proline equilibrium. Using our results and available literature data we perform a statistical analysis on how the amino acid type effects the cis/trans-proline distribution. The methods are applicable under physiological conditions, they can contribute to find key proline isomers in proteins, and statistical analysis results may help in amino acid sequence optimization for biotechnological purposes.


Sujet(s)
Protéines intrinsèquement désordonnées/composition chimique , Résonance magnétique nucléaire biomoléculaire , Proline/composition chimique , Protéome/composition chimique , Conformation moléculaire , Phosphorylation , Protons , Stéréoisomérie
15.
Magn Reson Chem ; 60(3): 386-397, 2022 03.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34647646

RÉSUMÉ

Microcoils provide a cost-effective approach to improve detection limits for mass-limited samples. Single-sided planar microcoils are advantageous in comparison to volume coils, in that the sample can simply be placed on top. However, the considerable drawback is that the RF field that is produced by the coil decreases with distance from the coil surface, which potentially limits more complex multi-pulse NMR pulse sequences. Unfortunately, 1 H NMR alone is not very informative for intact biological samples due to line broadening caused by magnetic susceptibility distortions, and 1 H-13 C 2D NMR correlations are required to provide the additional spectral dispersion for metabolic assignments in vivo or in situ. To our knowledge, double-tuned single-sided microcoils have not been applied for the 2D 1 H-13 C analysis of intact 13 C enriched biological samples. Questions include the following: Can 1 H-13 C 2D NMR be performed on single-sided planar microcoils? If so, do they still hold sensitivity advantages over conventional 5 mm NMR technology for mass limited samples? Here, 2D 1 H-13 C HSQC, HMQC, and HETCOR variants were compared and then applied to 13 C enriched broccoli seeds and Daphnia magna (water fleas). Compared to 5 mm NMR probes, the microcoils showed a sixfold improvement in mass sensitivity (albeit only for a small localized region) and allowed for the identification of metabolites in a single intact D. magna for the first time. Single-sided planar microcoils show practical benefit for 1 H-13 C NMR of intact biological samples, if localized information within ~0.7 mm of the 1 mm I.D. planar microcoil surface is of specific interest.


Sujet(s)
Daphnia , Imagerie par résonance magnétique , Animaux , Spectroscopie par résonance magnétique/méthodes , Résonance magnétique nucléaire biomoléculaire
16.
Sci Rep ; 11(1): 21566, 2021 11 03.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34732770

RÉSUMÉ

Over decades multidimensional NMR spectroscopy has become an indispensable tool for structure elucidation of natural products, peptides and medium sized to large proteins. Heteronuclear single quantum coherence (HSQC) spectroscopy is one of the work horses in that field often used to map structural connectivity between protons and carbons or other hetero nuclei. In overcrowded HSQC spectra, proton multiplet structures of cross peaks set a limit to the power of resolution and make a straightforward assignment difficult. In this work, we provide a solution to improve these penalties by completely removing the proton spin multiplet structure of HSQC cross peaks. Previously reported sideband artefacts are diminished leading to HSQC spectra with singlet responses for all types of proton multiplicities. For sideband suppression, the idea of restricted random delay (RRD) in chunk interrupted data acquisition is introduced and exemplified. The problem of irreducible residual doublet splitting of diastereotopic CH2 groups is simply solved by using a phase sensitive JRES approach in conjunction with echo processing and real time broadband homodecoupling (BBHD) HSQC, applied as a 3D experiment. Advantages and limitations of the method is presented and discussed.


Sujet(s)
Spectroscopie par résonance magnétique/méthodes , Résonance magnétique nucléaire biomoléculaire/méthodes , Artéfacts , Isotopes du carbone , Ciclosporine/analyse , Imagerie par résonance magnétique , Méthanol , Peptides/composition chimique , Protonthérapie , Protons , Terpènes/analyse
17.
Analyst ; 146(14): 4461-4472, 2021 Jul 12.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34136891

RÉSUMÉ

Comprehensive multiphase NMR combines the ability to study and differentiate all phases (solids, gels, and liquids) using a single NMR probe. The general goal of CMP-NMR is to study intact environmental and biological samples to better understand conformation, organization, association, and transfer between and across phases/interfaces that may be lost with conventional sample preparation such as drying or solubilization. To date, all CMP-NMR studies have used 4 mm probes and rotors. Here, a larger 7 mm probehead is introduced which provides ∼3 times the volume and ∼2.4 times the signal over a 4 mm version. This offers two main advantages: (1) the additional biomass reduces experiment time, making 13C detection at natural abundance more feasible; (2) it allows the analysis of larger samples that cannot fit within a 4 mm rotor. Chicken heart tissue and Hyalella azteca (freshwater shrimp) are used to demonstrate that phase-based spectral editing works with 7 mm rotors and that the additional biomass from the larger volumes allows detection with 13C at natural abundance. Additionally, a whole pomegranate seed berry (aril) and an intact softgel capsule of hydroxyzine hydrochloride are used to demonstrate the analysis of samples too large to fit inside a conventional 4 mm CMP probe. The 7 mm version introduced here extends the range of applications and sample types that can be studied and is recommended when 4 mm CMP probes cannot provide adequate signal-to-noise (S/N), or intact samples are simply too big for 4 mm rotors.


Sujet(s)
Imagerie par résonance magnétique , Biomasse , Spectroscopie par résonance magnétique
18.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 60(44): 23540-23544, 2021 10 25.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34143912

RÉSUMÉ

Dysregulation of post-translational modifications (PTMs) like phosphorylation is often involved in disease. NMR may elucidate exact loci and time courses of PTMs at atomic resolution and near-physiological conditions but requires signal assignment to individual atoms. Conventional NMR methods for this base on tedious global signal assignment that may often fail, as for large intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs). We present a sensitive, robust alternative to rapidly obtain only the local assignment near affected signals, based on FOcused SpectroscopY (FOSY) experiments using selective polarisation transfer (SPT). We prove its efficiency by identifying two phosphorylation sites of glycogen synthase kinase 3 beta (GSK3ß) in human Tau40, an IDP of 441 residues, where the extreme spectral dispersion in FOSY revealed unprimed phosphorylation also of Ser409. FOSY may broadly benefit NMR studies of PTMs and other hotspots in IDPs, including sites involved in molecular interactions.


Sujet(s)
Protéines intrinsèquement désordonnées/analyse , Résonance magnétique nucléaire biomoléculaire , Humains , Protéines intrinsèquement désordonnées/métabolisme , Phosphorylation , Maturation post-traductionnelle des protéines
19.
J Magn Reson ; 325: 106928, 2021 04.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33652210

RÉSUMÉ

In NMR spectroscopy, many specialized shaped pulses are available for broadband excitation, beyond the bandwidth of conventional high-powered hard pulses. These shaped pulses typically have long duration. However, long-duration pulses are unsuitable for spectra containing significant homonuclear couplings, such as polyfluorinated compounds in 19F NMR. J-coupling evolution during the excitation pulse leads to spectral artifacts and incorrect peak integrals. Here, we report an approach to optimal control pulse design which significantly reduces the pulse length required to excite large bandwidths of chemical shift frequencies. The target state phase is not chosen beforehand but is instead only constrained to be linearly dependent on offset frequency. The first-order phase of the target state is then treated as a free-variable, to be optimized at the same time as the RF waveform itself. The resulting spectra are easily phased using standard NMR processing software. We observe that the required pulse length is significantly shorter than for currently available in-phase excitation schemes. Spectral artifacts from homonuclear couplings are avoided. We also demonstrate that pure in-phase excitation can be obtained over the same bandwidth by appending two inversion pulses, at the expense of increased overall duration.


Sujet(s)
Spectroscopie par résonance magnétique/méthodes , Algorithmes , Artéfacts , Simulation numérique , Reproductibilité des résultats , Sensibilité et spécificité , Traitement du signal assisté par ordinateur
20.
Anal Chem ; 93(8): 3976-3986, 2021 03 02.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33577736

RÉSUMÉ

We have applied nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy based plasma phenotyping to reveal diagnostic molecular signatures of SARS-CoV-2 infection via combined diffusional and relaxation editing (DIRE). We compared plasma from healthy age-matched controls (n = 26) with SARS-CoV-2 negative non-hospitalized respiratory patients and hospitalized respiratory patients (n = 23 and 11 respectively) with SARS-CoV-2 rRT-PCR positive respiratory patients (n = 17, with longitudinal sampling time-points). DIRE data were modelled using principal component analysis and orthogonal projections to latent structures discriminant analysis (O-PLS-DA), with statistical cross-validation indices indicating excellent model generalization for the classification of SARS-CoV-2 positivity for all comparator groups (area under the receiver operator characteristic curve = 1). DIRE spectra show biomarker signal combinations conferred by differential concentrations of metabolites with selected molecular mobility properties. These comprise the following: (a) composite N-acetyl signals from α-1-acid glycoprotein and other glycoproteins (designated GlycA and GlycB) that were elevated in SARS-CoV-2 positive patients [p = 2.52 × 10-10 (GlycA) and 1.25 × 10-9 (GlycB) vs controls], (b) two diagnostic supramolecular phospholipid composite signals that were identified (SPC-A and SPC-B) from the -+N-(CH3)3 choline headgroups of lysophosphatidylcholines carried on plasma glycoproteins and from phospholipids in high-density lipoprotein subfractions (SPC-A) together with a phospholipid component of low-density lipoprotein (SPC-B). The integrals of the summed SPC signals (SPCtotal) were reduced in SARS-CoV-2 positive patients relative to both controls (p = 1.40 × 10-7) and SARS-CoV-2 negative patients (p = 4.52 × 10-8) but were not significantly different between controls and SARS-CoV-2 negative patients. The identity of the SPC signal components was determined using one and two dimensional diffusional, relaxation, and statistical spectroscopic experiments. The SPCtotal/GlycA ratios were also significantly different for control versus SARS-CoV-2 positive patients (p = 1.23 × 10-10) and for SARS-CoV-2 negatives versus positives (p = 1.60 × 10-9). Thus, plasma SPCtotal and SPCtotal/GlycA are proposed as sensitive molecular markers for SARS-CoV-2 positivity that could effectively augment current COVID-19 diagnostics and may have value in functional assessment of the disease recovery process in patients with long-term symptoms.


Sujet(s)
COVID-19/diagnostic , Orosomucoïde/analyse , Phospholipides/sang , Sujet âgé , Marqueurs biologiques/sang , COVID-19/sang , Femelle , Humains , Mâle , Adulte d'âge moyen , Analyse multifactorielle , Résonance magnétique nucléaire biomoléculaire/méthodes , Orosomucoïde/composition chimique , Phospholipides/composition chimique , Spectroscopie par résonance magnétique du proton/méthodes , Spectroscopie par résonance magnétique du proton/statistiques et données numériques , Courbe ROC , SARS-CoV-2
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