The yttrium complex of 1,4,7,10-tetraazacyclododecane-1,4,7,10-tetra(1 0 -13 C-acetic acid) [ 13 C]DOTA was synthesized. Fast dissolution dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) studies revealed that the 89 Y, 13 C, and 15 N nuclei present in the complex could be co-polarized at the same optimum microwave irradiation frequency. The liquid-state spin-lattice relaxation time T 1 of these nuclei were found to be reasonably long to preserve some or most of the DNP-enhanced polarization after dissolution. The hyperpolarized 13 C and 89 Y NMR signals were optimized in different glassing mixtures. The overall results are discussed in light of the thermal mixing model of DNP.
Solid-state NMR has been used to detect an
intercatechol covalent bond in sclerotized cuticle of the
tobacco
hornworm (Manduca
sexta). Rotational-echo,
double-resonance (REDOR) 13C and 15N NMR, in
combination with
1H−13C dipolar modulation and
15N−15N dipolar restoration at the magic
angle, were used to examine hornworm
pupal exuviae labeled with β-[15N]alanine and
either [β-13C]dopamine or
[α-13C,15N]dopamine. The REDOR
spectra
showed the incorporation of N-β-alanyldopamine into insect
cuticle by the formation of a variety of covalent bonds.
One of these bonds links the terminal nitrogen of one
N-β-alanyldopamine molecule to the β carbon of another
to
form an intercatechol covalent bond. This result is interpreted in
terms of a novel structure for stabilized cuticle that
postulates protein−catechol−catechol−protein cross-links.
REDOR spectra also showed oxygen substitution at both
α and β carbons of N-β-alanyldopamine, consistent with
the possibility of intercatechol oxygen bridges in dimeric
or oligomeric forms of catecholamines in the cuticle.
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