Issue 20, 2013

An efficient NMR method for the characterisation of 14N sites through indirect 13C detection

Abstract

Nitrogen is one of the most abundant elements and plays a key role in the chemistry of biological systems. Despite its widespread distribution, the study of the naturally occurring isotope of nitrogen, 14N (99.6%), has been relatively limited as it is a spin-1 nucleus that typically exhibits a large quadrupolar interaction. Accordingly, most studies of nitrogen sites in biomolecules have been performed on samples enriched with 15N, limiting the application of NMR to samples which can be isotopically enriched. This precludes the analysis of naturally occurring samples and results in the loss of the wealth of structural and dynamic information that the quadrupolar interaction can provide. Recently, several experimental approaches have been developed to characterize 14N sites through their interaction with neighboring ‘spy’ nuclei. Here we describe a novel version of these experiments whereby coherence between the 14N site and the spy nucleus is mediated by the application of a moderate rf field to the 14N. The resulting 13C/14N spectra show good sensitivity on natural abundance and labeled materials; whilst the 14N lineshapes permit the quantitative analysis of the quadrupolar interaction.

Graphical abstract: An efficient NMR method for the characterisation of 14N sites through indirect 13C detection

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
21 Feb 2013
Accepted
04 Apr 2013
First published
05 Apr 2013
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2013,15, 7613-7620

An efficient NMR method for the characterisation of 14N sites through indirect 13C detection

J. A. Jarvis, I. M. Haies, P. T. F. Williamson and M. Carravetta, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2013, 15, 7613 DOI: 10.1039/C3CP50787D

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