4.3 Article

TmDOTP: An NMR-based thermometer for magic angle spinning NMR experiments

Journal

JOURNAL OF MAGNETIC RESONANCE
Volume 308, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.jmr.2019.106574

Keywords

Nuclear magnetic resonance; Magic-angle spinning; Sample Heating; Real-time NMR temperature measurement; Dielectric loss; TmDOTP5-

Funding

  1. U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [P41 GM118302]
  2. Office of Research Infrastructure Programs/NIH Facility Improvement Grant [CO6RR015495]
  3. NIH [R01 GM088724]
  4. Center on Macromolecular Dynamics by NMR Spectroscopy (CoMD/NMR) a Biomedical Technology Research Resource (BTRR)
  5. Empire State Division of Science Technology and Innovation

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Solid state NMR is a powerful tool to probe membrane protein structure and dynamics in native lipid membranes. Sample heating during solid state NMR experiments can be caused by magic angle spinning and radio frequency irradiation such heating produces uncertainties in the sample temperature and temperature distribution, which can in turn lead to line broadening and sample deterioration. To measure sample temperatures in real time and to quantify thermal gradients and their dependence on radio frequency irradiation or spinning frequency, we use the chemical shift thermometer TmDOTP, a lanthanide complex. The H6 TmDOTP proton NMR peak has a large chemical shift (-176.3 ppm at 275 K) and it is well resolved from the protein and lipid proton spectrum. Compared to other NMR thermometers (e.g., the proton NMR signal of water), the proton spectrum of TmDOTP, particularly the H6 proton line, exhibits very high thermal sensitivity and resolution. In MAS studies of proteoliposomes we identify two populations of TmDOTP with differing temperatures and dependency on the radio frequency irradiation power. We interpret these populations as arising from the supernatant and the pellet, which is sedimented during sample spinning. In this study, we demonstrate that TmDOTP is an excellent internal standard for monitoring real-time temperatures of biopolymers without changing their properties or obscuring their spectra. Real time temperature calibration is expected to be important for the interpretation of dynamics and other properties of biopolymers. (C) 2019 Published by Elsevier Inc.

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