Enhancing NMR Signals in Liquids by Fluorine-19 Overhauser Effect Dynamic Nuclear Polarization (DNP) and Hyperpolarization Transfer to Carbon-13
M Reinhard, A van der Ham, L Bröker, T Orlando, I Tkach, M Levien, M Bennati
ANGIE, e202517498 (2025)
In this work we explored the use of galvinoxyl as a particularly effective polarizing agent over Overhauser DNP of fluorine in the liquid-stae at high magnetic field. It's performance was tested on a wide range of chemical functionalities, supported by DFT calculations. The hyperpolarization on 19F was then transferred to scalar coupled 13C, even across multiple chemical bonds, using INEPT-based NMR experiments
Nanoparticle-assisted dynamic nuclear polarization in liquids
B Mascitti, G Zanoni, A van der Ham, L Yang, L Franco, F Mancin, F Rastrelli, T Orlando.
PCCP 27(42), 22366-22374 (2025)
In the context of nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), AuNPs can act as magnetization reservoirs, allowing selective transfer to interacting molecules and making them promising chemosensors. While NMR chemosensing typically exploits nucleus–nucleus magnetization transfer mechanisms, in this work we explored the potential of electron–nucleus interactions to allow selectively enhanced Overhauser effect dynamic nuclear polarization.
Discontinuous hyperpolarization schemes in liquid-state Overhauser Dynamic Nuclear Polarization experiments
A. van der Ham*
Journal of Magnetic Resonance Open, 21, 100160 (2024)
Liquid-state Overhauser Dynamic Nuclear Polarization (ODNP) is an emerging technique, aimed at shortening NMR experiment times. It achieves this by increasing the otherwise poor nuclear polarization at room temperature, by polarization transfer from excited electron spins. The present work explores two ideas, aimed at achieving the optimal signal-to-noise per time unit for a given system, and quantitation of spectra showing a large disparity in ODNP enhancements at high magnetic fields (≥ 9.4 T). Both of these ideas are predicated on, perhaps counterintuitively, not allowing full dynamic nuclear polarization to build up, either by rapid rf pulsing, or gating of the microwave irradiation.
Overhauser enhanced liquid state Nuclear Magnetic Resonance spectroscopy in one and two dimensions
M. Levien, L. Yang, A. van der Ham, M. Reinhard, M. John, A. Purea, J. Ganz, T. Marquardsen, I. Tkach, T. Orlando, M. Bennati
Nature Communications 15(1), 5904 (2024)
Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) is fundamental in the natural sciences, from chemical analysis and structural biology, to medicine and physics. Despite its enormous achievements, one of its most severe limitations is the low sensitivity, which arises from the small population difference of nuclear spin states. Methods such as dissolution dynamic nuclear polarization and parahydrogen induced hyperpolarization can enhance the NMR signal by several orders of magnitude, however, their intrinsic limitations render multidimensional hyperpolarized liquid-state NMR a challenge. Here, we report an instrumental design for 9.4 Tesla liquid-state dynamic nuclear polarization that enabled enhanced high-resolution NMR spectra in one and two-dimensions for small molecules, including drugs and metabolites. Achieved enhancements of up to two orders of magnitude translate to signal acquisition gains up to a factor of 10,000. We show that hyperpolarization can be transferred between nuclei, allowing DNP-enhanced two-dimensional 13C–13C correlation experiments at 13C natural abundance. The enhanced sensitivity opens up perspectives for structural determination of natural products or characterization of drugs, available in small quantities. The results provide a starting point for a broader implementation of DNP in liquid-state NMR.
Azobenzene-based amino acids for the photocontrol of coiled-coil peptides
N. S. A. Crone, N. van Hilten, A. van der Ham, H. J. Risselada, A. Kros, A. L. Boyle
Bioconjugate Chemistry 34(2), 345-357 (2023)
Coiled-coil peptides are high-affinity, selective, self-assembling binding motifs, making them attractive components for the preparation of functional biomaterials. Photocontrol of coiled-coil self-assembly allows for the precise localization of their activity. To rationally explore photoactivity in a model coiled coil, three azobenzene-containing amino acids were prepared and substituted into the hydrophobic core of the E3/K3 coiled-coil heterodimer. Two of the non-natural amino acids, APhe1 and APhe2, are based on phenylalanine and differ in the presence of a carboxylic acid group. These have previously been demonstrated to modulate protein activity. When incorporated into peptide K3, coiled-coil binding strength was affected upon isomerization, with the two variants differing in their most folded state. The third azobenzene-containing amino acid, APgly, is based on phenylglycine and was prepared to investigate the effect of amino acid size on photoisomerization. When APgly is incorporated into the coiled coil, a 4.7-fold decrease in folding constant is observed upon trans-to-cis isomerization─the largest difference for all three amino acids. Omitting the methylene group between azobenzene and α-carbon was theorized to both position the diazene of APgly closer to the hydrophobic amino acids and reduce the possible rotations of the amino acid, with molecular dynamics simulations supporting these hypotheses. These results demonstrate the ability of photoswitchable amino acids to control coiled-coil assembly through disruption of the hydrophobic interface, a strategy that should be widely applicable.
Freestanding non-covalent thin films of the propeller-shaped polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon decacyclene
A. van der Ham, X. Liu, D. Calvani, A. Melcrova, F. Buda, H. S. Overkleeft, W. H. Roos, D. V. Filippov, G. F. Schneider
Nature Communications 13(1), 1920 (2022)
Molecularly thin, nanoporous thin films are of paramount importance in material sciences. Their use in a wide range of applications requires control over their chemical functionalities, which is difficult to achieve using current production methods. Here, the small polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon decacyclene is used to form molecular thin films, without requiring covalent crosslinking of any kind. The 2.5 nm thin films are mechanically stable, able to be free-standing over micrometer distances, held together solely by supramolecular interactions. Using a combination of computational chemistry and microscopic imaging techniques, thin films are studied on both a molecular and microscopic scale. Their mechanical strength is quantified using AFM nanoindentation, showing their capability of withstanding a point load of 26 ± 9 nN, when freely spanning over a 1 μm aperture, with a corresponding Young’s modulus of 6 ± 4 GPa. Our thin films constitute free-standing, non-covalent thin films based on a small PAH.
Inert mask lithography of edge narrowed graphene nanoribbons directly contacted to metallic electrodes
H. Arjmandi-Tash, A. Bellunato, A. van der Ham, G. F. Schneider
Advanced Materials Interfaces 8(20), 2100293 (2021)
Coiled-coil peptides are high-affinity, selective, self-assembling binding motifs, making them attractive components for the preparation of functional biomaterials. Photocontrol of coiled-coil self-assembly allows for the precise localization of their activity. To rationally explore photoactivity in a model coiled coil, three azobenzene-containing amino acids were prepared and substituted into the hydrophobic core of the E3/K3 coiled-coil heterodimer. Two of the non-natural amino acids, APhe1 and APhe2, are based on phenylalanine and differ in the presence of a carboxylic acid group. These have previously been demonstrated to modulate protein activity. When incorporated into peptide K3, coiled-coil binding strength was affected upon isomerization, with the two variants differing in their most folded state. The third azobenzene-containing amino acid, APgly, is based on phenylglycine and was prepared to investigate the effect of amino acid size on photoisomerization. When APgly is incorporated into the coiled coil, a 4.7-fold decrease in folding constant is observed upon trans-to-cis isomerization─the largest difference for all three amino acids. Omitting the methylene group between azobenzene and α-carbon was theorized to both position the diazene of APgly closer to the hydrophobic amino acids and reduce the possible rotations of the amino acid, with molecular dynamics simulations supporting these hypotheses. These results demonstrate the ability of photoswitchable amino acids to control coiled-coil assembly through disruption of the hydrophobic interface, a strategy that should be widely applicable.
A three-step synthesis of 4H-cyclopenta[def]phenanthrene from pyrene
A. van der Ham, H. S. Overkleeft, D. V. Fillipov, G. F. Schneider
European Journal of Organic Chemistry (13), 2013-2017 (2021)
4H-Cyclopenta[def]phenanthrene (CPP) is a valuable building block in the production of photoactive polymers, which find use in a wide range of organic electronic applications. Of particular importance is their use in the development of blue-colored, organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs), which remains a challenge in the field. Unfortunately, commercial sources and synthetic procedures known in the literature are unable to provide enough CPP for large scale implementation. Herein, we report on the development of a novel, gram-scale synthesis of CPP in three steps, starting from pyrene. The key steps in our methodology are the ring contraction of pyrene-4,5-dione to oxoCPP in a single step, as well as the direct reduction of oxoCPP to CPP. Apart from the small number of synthetic steps, our methodology benefits from the use of relatively non-hazardous reagents, together with optimized purification procedures, making CPP accessible in useful quantities.
Computational and NMR studies on the complexation of lithium to 8-crown-4
A. van der Ham, T. Hansen, G. Lodder, J. D. C. Codee, T. A. Hamlin, D. V. Fillipov
ChemPhysChem 20(16), 2103-2109 (2019)
Lithium ion selective crown ethers have been the subject of much research for a multitude of applications. Current research is aimed at structurally rigidifying crown ethers, as restructuring of the crown ether ring upon ion binding is energetically unfavorable. In this work, the lithium ion binding ability of the relatively rigid 8-crown-4 was investigated both computationally by density functional theory calculations and experimentally by 1H and 7Li NMR spectroscopy. Although both computational and experimental results showed 8-crown-4 to bind lithium ion, this binding was found to be weak compared to larger crown ethers. The computational analysis revealed that the complexation is driven by enthalpy rather than entropy, illustrating that rigidity is only of nominal importance. To elucidate the origin of the favorable interaction of lithium ion with crown ethers, activation strain analyses and energy decomposition analyses were performed pointing to the favorable interaction being mainly electrostatic in nature. 8-crown-4 presents the smallest crown ether reported to date capable of binding lithium ion, possessing two distinct conformations from which it is able to do so.