13C NMR spectra acquired with 1H decoupling are particularly simple to interpret as every symmetrically unique carbon atom gives rise to a peak in the NMR spectrum. One is usually able to simply count the number of carbons in a molecule by counting the peaks in the 13C NMR spectrum. 1H NMR spectra, on the other hand, are complicated by homonuclear 1H - 1H coupling such that many 1H resonances are complex multiplets spread over a frequency range of some tens of Hz. Furthermore, multiplets often overlap complicating the interpretation of the data. Historically, this problem has been tackled by using higher and higher magnetic field strengths which disperse the chemical shifts over a wider frequency range without affecting the value of the coupling constants. The effect is higher chemical shift resolution at higher fields. In the limit of infinite field, the width of the 1H multiplets would be insignificant with respect to the chemical shift differences and one would obtain 1H NMR spectra containing essentially singlets. Of course, we do not have access to infinite fields however, it would be very desirable to collect 1H decoupled 1H NMR spectra consisting of a singlet for each 1H resonance, much like the 13C signals in proton decoupled 13C NMR spectra. It is not possible to collect proton decoupled 1H NMR spectra in the same way as it is to obtain proton decoupled 13C NMR spectra since one would have to both observe and decouple all of the protons at the same time. There are however very clever techniques to obtain such pure shift 1H spectra.1,2 They are based on selective refocusing pulses applied simultaneously with weak field gradients and hard 180° pulses allowing all chemical shifts to be measured at the same time but from different slices of the column of sample in the NMR tube. For each resonance, the coupling from all of the coupling partners is refocused simultaneously. The data are collected in a conventional 2D matrix with an incremented evolution time. An FID is constructed by concatenating a chunk from each of the individual 2D time domain signals. The Fourier transform of the reconstructed FID is a 1H decoupled 1H NMR spectrum. An example of this is shown in the figure below for a sample of menthol using a Bruker AVANCE II 300 MHz NMR spectrometer.3 The lower spectrum is the conventional 1H NMR spectrum. One can see that it consists of broad complex multiplets some of which overlap with one another. The upper spectrum is the pure shift spectrum. It is greatly simplified compared to the conventional spectrum in that all of the multiplets are collapsed into singlets and each of the 14 types of protons of menthol can be identified.
Obtaining such spectra comes at the cost of much reduced sensitivity and much greater data collection times. There is however, interest in improving this with modifications in the sequence and the way in which data are collected.4
1. Zangger and Sterk. J. Mag. Reson.124, 486 (1997).
2. Aguilar, Faulkner, Nilsson and Morris. Angew. Chem. Int. Ed.49, 3901 (2010).
3. Bruker User Library http://www.bruker.com/ppg .
4. Castanar, Nolis, Virgili and Parella. Chem. Eur. J.19, 17283 (2013).
[NMR paper] Proton-decoupled CPMG: a better experiment for measuring 15N R2 relaxation in disordered proteins
Proton-decoupled CPMG: a better experiment for measuring 15N R2 relaxation in disordered proteins
Publication date: Available online 23 August 2013
Source:Journal of Magnetic Resonance</br>
Author(s): Tairan Yuwen , Nikolai R. Skrynnikov</br>
15N R2 relaxation is one of the most informative experiments for characterization of intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs). Small changes in nitrogen R2 rates are often used to determine how IDPs respond to various biologically relevant perturbations such as point mutations, posttranslational modifications, weak ligand...
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08-24-2013 03:01 AM
[Question from NMRWiki Q&A forum] proton decoupled of 14N
proton decoupled of 14N
Hi everyone,
Has someone tried to run proton decoupled of 14N? How long should be the 14N decoupling pulse? I had some problems with the lock signal (lost it) when I tried the pulse sequence zgig (1H on the observed channel). When recording 1D 14N spectrum, the lock was fine (it had some small distortions, but was not lost). We have a DRX 400 MHz spectrometer, with Topspin 1.3 and a BBFO atma probe.Any suggestions on how to set up this experiment will be highly appreciated. Thanks a lot, alina
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08-05-2013 09:06 AM
[NMR Sparky Yahoo group] diagonal of the spectra doesn't fit with the diagonal of the spectra
diagonal of the spectra doesn't fit with the diagonal of the spectra
Dear sparky users ! The problem is the following, in some of our NOESY spectra c13 and n15 edit the proton dimensions don't have the correct scaling towards
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02-14-2012 03:00 AM
[NMRwiki tweet] nmrwiki: Should deuterium be decoupled in R2, R1 hetnoe expts for 2H/15N labeled samp
nmrwiki: Should deuterium be decoupled in R2, R1 hetnoe expts for 2H/15N labeled sample? http://qa.nmrwiki.org/question/161/
nmrwiki: Should deuterium be decoupled in R2, R1 hetnoe expts for 2H/15N labeled sample? http://qa.nmrwiki.org/question/161/
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08-22-2010 01:49 AM
Structure determination of proteins in 2H2O solution aided by a deuterium-decoupled 3
Abstract We developed an NMR pulse sequence, 3D HCA(N)CO, to correlate the chemical shifts of protein backbone 1Hα and 13Cα to those of 13C� in the preceding residue. By applying 2H decoupling, the experiment was accomplished with high sensitivity comparable to that of HCA(CO)N. When combined with HCACO, HCAN and HCA(CO)N, the HCA(N)CO sequence allows the sequential assignment using backbone 13C� and amide 15N chemical shifts without resort to backbone amide protons. This assignment strategy was demonstrated for 13C/15N-labeled GB1 dissolved in 2H2O. The quality of the GB1 structure...