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      Molecular factors that determine Curie spin relaxation in dysprosium complexes.

      1 , ,
      Magnetic resonance in medicine

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          Abstract

          Dysprosium complexes can serve as transverse relaxation (T(2)) agents for water protons through chemical exchange and the Curie spin relaxation mechanism. Using a pair of matched dysprosium(III) complexes, Dy-L1 (contains one inner-sphere water) and Dy-L2 (no inner-sphere water), it is shown that the transverse relaxation of bulk water is predominantly an inner-sphere effect. The kinetics of water exchange at Dy-L1 were determined by (17)O NMR. Proton transverse relaxation by Dy-L1 at high fields is governed primarily through a large chemical shift difference between free and bound water. Dy-L1 forms a noncovalent adduct with human serum albumin which dramatically lengthens the rotational correlation time, tau(R), causing the dipole-dipole component of the Curie spin mechanism to become significant and transverse relaxivity to increase by 3-8 times that of the unbound chelate. These findings aid in the design of new molecular species as efficient r(2) agents.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Magn Reson Med
          Magnetic resonance in medicine
          0740-3194
          0740-3194
          Nov 2001
          : 46
          : 5
          Affiliations
          [1 ] EPIX Medical, Inc., Cambridge, Massachusetts 02142-1118, USA. pcaravan@epixmed.com
          Article
          10.1002/mrm.1277
          10.1002/mrm.1277
          11675643
          14d27998-f682-4daf-b1f7-5adeb0ef9799
          History

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