Login / Signup

Hyperpolarizing DNA Nucleobases via NMR Signal Amplification by Reversible Exchange.

Bryce E KiddMax E GemeinhardtJamil A MashniJonathan L GesiorskiLiana B BalesMiranda N LimbachRoman V ShchepinKirill V KovtunovIgor V KoptyugEduard Y ChekmenevBoyd M Goodson
Published in: Molecules (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
The present work investigates the potential for enhancing the NMR signals of DNA nucleobases by parahydrogen-based hyperpolarization. Signal amplification by reversible exchange (SABRE) and SABRE in Shield Enables Alignment Transfer to Heteronuclei (SABRE-SHEATH) of selected DNA nucleobases is demonstrated with the enhancement ( ε ) of 1 H, 15 N, and/or 13 C spins in 3-methyladenine, cytosine, and 6-O-guanine. Solutions of the standard SABRE homogenous catalyst Ir(1,5-cyclooctadeine)(1,3-bis(2,4,6-trimethylphenyl)imidazolium)Cl ("IrIMes") and a given nucleobase in deuterated ethanol/water solutions yielded low 1 H ε values (≤10), likely reflecting weak catalyst binding. However, we achieved natural-abundance enhancement of 15 N signals for 3-methyladenine of ~3300 and ~1900 for the imidazole ring nitrogen atoms. 1 H and 15 N 3-methyladenine studies revealed that methylation of adenine affords preferential binding of the imidazole ring over the pyrimidine ring. Interestingly, signal enhancements ( ε ~240) of both 15 N atoms for doubly labelled cytosine reveal the preferential binding of specific tautomer(s), thus giving insight into the matching of polarization-transfer and tautomerization time scales. 13 C enhancements of up to nearly 50-fold were also obtained for this cytosine isotopomer. These efforts may enable the future investigation of processes underlying cellular function and/or dysfunction, including how DNA nucleobase tautomerization influences mismatching in base-pairing.
Keyphrases