4.3 Article

Optimizing water hyperpolarization and dissolution for sensitivity-enhanced 2D biomolecular NMR

Journal

JOURNAL OF MAGNETIC RESONANCE
Volume 264, Issue -, Pages 49-58

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.jmr.2016.01.005

Keywords

Dissolution DNP; Water hyperpolarization; Labile protons; Unfolded proteins; 2D HMQC

Funding

  1. Israel Science Foundation [795/13]
  2. Program of the Planning and Budgeting Committee from the Israel Science Foundation (iCORE) Project [1775/12]
  3. Kimmel Institute of Magnetic Resonance (Weizmann Institute)
  4. EU [261863]
  5. DIP Project [710907]
  6. Perlman Family Foundation

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A recent study explored the use of hyperpolarized water, to enhance the sensitivity of nuclei in biomolecules thanks to rapid proton exchanges with labile amide backbone and sidechain groups. Further optimizations of this approach have now allowed us to achieve proton polarizations approaching 25% in the water transferred into the NMR spectrometer, effective water T-1 times approaching 40 s, and a reduction in the dilution demanded for the cryogenic dissolution process. Further hardware developments have allowed us to perform these experiments, repeatedly and reliably, in 5 mm NMR tubes. All these ingredients - particularly the >= 3000x H-1 polarization enhancements over 11.7 T thermal counterparts, long T-1 times and a compatibility with high-resolution biomolecular NMR setups - augur well for hyperpolarized 2D NMR studies of peptides, unfolded proteins and intrinsically disordered systems undergoing fast exchanges of their protons with the solvent. This hypothesis is here explored by detailing the provisions that lead to these significant improvements over previous reports, and demonstrating 1D coherence transfer experiments and 2D biomolecular HMQC acquisitions delivering NMR spectral enhancements of 100-500x over their optimized, thermally-polarized, counterparts. (C) 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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