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      Enantiotopic discrimination in the NMR spectrum of prochiral solutes in chiral liquid crystals

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          Abstract

          Theory and applications to stereo- and bio-chemistry of the discrimination of enantiotopic elements observed in the NMR spectra of prochiral solutes dissolved in chiral liquid crystals are comprehensively discussed.

          Abstract

          The splitting of signals in the NMR spectra originating from enantiotopic sites in prochiral molecules when dissolved in chiral solvents is referred to as spectral enantiotopic discrimination. This phenomenon is particularly noticeable in chiral liquid crystals (CLCs) due to the combined effect of the anisotropic magnetic interactions and the ordering of the solute in the mesophase. The enantiorecognition mechanisms are different for rigid and flexible solutes. For the former, discrimination results from symmetry breaking and is restricted to solutes whose point groups belong to one of the following four (“allowed”) symmetries, C s, C 2v, D 2d and S 4. The nature of the symmetry breaking for each one of these groups is discussed and experimental examples, using mainly 2H 1D/2D-NMR in chiral polypeptide lyotropic mesophases, are presented and analyzed. When flexible optically active solutes undergo fast racemization (on the NMR timescale) their spectrum corresponds to that of an average prochiral molecule and may exhibit enantiotopic sites. In CLCs, such sites will become discriminated, irrespective of their average (improper) symmetry. This enantiodiscrimination results mainly from the different ordering of the interchanging enantiomers. Several examples of such flexible molecules, including solutes with average axial and planar symmetries, are commented. Dynamic processes in solution that are not accompanied by the modulation of magnetic interactions remain “NMR blind”. This is sometimes the case for interconversion of enantiomers (racemization) or exchange of enantiotopic sites in isotropic solvents. The limitation can be lifted by using CLCs. In such solvents, non-equivalence between enantiomers or between enantiotopic sites is induced by the chiral environment, thus providing the necessary interactions to be modulated by the dynamic processes. Illustrative examples involving exchange of both, enantiotopic sites and enantiomers are examined. In this comprehensive review, various important aspects of enantiodiscrimination by NMR are presented. Thus the possibility to reveal enantiotopic recognition using residual dipolar couplings or to determine the absolute configuration of enantiotopic NMR signals is discussed. The various kinds of chiral mesophases able to reveal enantiotopic discrimination in guest prochiral molecules are also described and compared with each other. Finally to illustrate the high analytical potentialities of NMR in CLCs, several and various applications involving the enantiodiscrimination phenomenon are described. A strategy for assigning the NMR signals of meso compound in a mesothreo mixture of cyclic molecules is first discussed. This is followed by a description of advantages of the method for the determination of (D/H) natural isotopic fractionation in biocompounds.

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          Direct measurement of distances and angles in biomolecules by NMR in a dilute liquid crystalline medium.

          In isotropic solution, internuclear dipolar couplings average to zero as a result of rotational diffusion. By dissolving macromolecules in a dilute aqueous nematic discotic liquid-crystalline medium containing widely spaced magnetically oriented particles, a tunable degree of solute alignment with the magnetic field can be created while retaining the high resolution and sensitivity of the regular isotropic nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectrum. Dipolar couplings between 1H-1H, 1H-13C, 1H-15N, and 13C-13C pairs in such an oriented macromolecule no longer average to zero, and are readily measured. Distances and angles derived from dipolar couplings in human ubiquitin are in excellent agreement with its crystal structure. The approach promises to improve the accuracy of structures determined by NMR, and extend the size limit.
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            Tracing the geographical origin of food: The application of multi-element and multi-isotope analysis

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              DNA-nanotube-induced alignment of membrane proteins for NMR structure determination.

              Membrane proteins are encoded by 20-35% of genes but represent 15 kDa in size, Nuclear-Overhauser effect-derived distance restraints are difficult to obtain, and RDCs could serve as the main reliable source of NMR structural information. In many of these cases, RDCs would enable full structure determination that otherwise would be impossible. However, none of the existing liquid-crystalline media used to align water-soluble proteins are compatible with the detergents required to solubilize membrane proteins. We report the design and construction of a detergent-resistant liquid crystal of 0.8-microm-long DNA-nanotubes that can be used to induce weak alignment of membrane proteins. The nanotubes are heterodimers of 0.4-microm-long six-helix bundles each self-assembled from a 7.3-kb scaffold strand and >170 short oligonucleotide staple strands. We show that the DNA-nanotube liquid crystal enables the accurate measurement of backbone N(H) and C(alpha)H(alpha) RDCs for the detergent-reconstituted zeta-zeta transmembrane domain of the T cell receptor. The measured RDCs validate the high-resolution structure of this transmembrane dimer. We anticipate that this medium will extend the advantages of weak alignment to NMR structure determination of a broad range of detergent-solubilized membrane proteins.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                CSRVBR
                Chemical Society Reviews
                Chem. Soc. Rev.
                Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)
                0306-0012
                1460-4744
                2015
                2015
                : 44
                : 8
                : 2330-2375
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Laboratoire de RMN en Milieu Orienté CNRS UMR 8182
                [2 ]ICMMO
                [3 ]91405 Orsay cedex
                [4 ]France
                [5 ]Abteilung Biophysik
                [6 ]Max-Planck-Institut für Medizinische Forschung
                [7 ]69120 Heidelberg
                [8 ]Germany
                [9 ]Weizmann Institute of Science
                [10 ]Department of Chemical Physics
                [11 ]Rehovot 76100
                [12 ]Israel
                Article
                10.1039/C4CS00260A
                25676790
                a0faaa41-e27b-41d9-a172-bc6611aac7d9
                © 2015
                History

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