The description of the reorientational dynamics of flexible molecules is a challenging task, in particular when the rates of internal and global motions are comparable. The commonly used simple mode-decoupling models are based on the assumption of statistical independence between these motions. This assumption is not valid when the time scale separation between their rates is small, a situation that was found to arise in oligosaccharides in the context of certain internal motions. To make possible the interpretation of NMR spin relaxation data from such molecules, we developed a comprehensive approach generally applicable to flexible rotators with one internal degree of freedom. This approach integrates a stochastic description of coupled global tumbling and internal torsional motion, quantum chemical calculations of the local potential and the local geometry at the site of the restricted torsion, and hydrodynamics-based calculations of the diffusive properties. The method is applied to the disaccharide beta-D-Glcp-(1-->6)-alpha-D-[6-(13)C]-Manp-OMe dissolved in a DMSO-d(6)/D(2)O cryosolvent. The experimental NMR relaxation parameters, associated with the (13)CH(2) probe residing at the glycosidic linkage, include (13)C T(1) and T(2) and (13)C-{(1)H} nuclear Overhauser enhancement (NOE) as well as longitudinal and transverse dipole-dipole cross-correlated relaxation rates, acquired in the temperature range of 253-293 K. These data are predicted successfully by the new theory with only the H-C-H angle allowed to vary. Previous attempts to fit these data using mode-decoupling models failed.
A computational stochastic approach is applied to the description of flexible molecules. By combining (i) molecular dynamics simulations, (ii) hydrodynamics approaches, and (iii) a multidimensional diffusive description for internal and global dynamics, it is possible to build an efficient integrated approach to the interpretation of relaxation processes in flexible systems. In particular, the model is applied to the interpretation of nuclear magnetic relaxation measurements of linear oligosaccharides, namely a mannose-containing trisaccharide and the pentasaccharide LNF-1. Experimental data are reproduced with sufficient accuracy without free model parameters.
Reorientation of 9-(trideuteromethyl)purine and 7-(trideuteromethyl)purine molecules in methanol-d4 solutions has been investigated on the basis of the interpretation of the nuclear spin relaxation rates of their 14N (or 1H) and 13C nuclei. The transverse quadrupole relaxation rates of 14N nuclei have been obtained from the line shape analysis of their 14N NMR spectra. Alternatively, the information on the longitudinal 14N relaxation rates has been obtained via the scalar relaxation of the second kind of protons coupled to 14N. The longitudinal dipolar relaxation rates of the protonated 13C nuclei in the investigated molecules have been determined by measuring their overall relaxation rates and NOE enhancement factors. The molecular geometries, scalar coupling constants, and EFG tensors needed for quantitative interpretation of the above data have been calculated theoretically [DFT B3LYP/6-311++G(2d,p) or B3PW91/6-311+G(df,pd)] including the impact of the solvent by using discrete solvation and the polarizable continuum model. The reorientation of the investigated purines has been described as rotational diffusion of an asymmetrical top. It has been found that to get a fully consistent interpretation of the relaxation data, effective C-H bond lengths being 3% longer than the calculated ones had to be used in analysis to compensate for the ground-state vibrations. The obtained rotational diffusion coefficients and orientations of the principal diffusion axes show that the investigated molecules reorient anisotropically and that the mode of their solvation is remarkably different, in spite of their structural similarity.
In this work, we address the description of the dynamics of cyclodextrins in relation with nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) relaxation data collected for hydroxymethyl groups. We define an integrated computational approach based on the definition and parametrization of a stochastic equation able to describe the relevant degrees of freedom affecting the NMR observables. The computational protocol merges molecular dynamics simulations and hydrodynamics approaches for the evaluation of most of the molecular parameters entering the stochastic description of the system. We apply the method to the interpretation of the (13)C NMR relaxation of the -CH(2)OH group of cyclodextrins. We use γ-cyclodextrin as a case study. Results are in agreement with quantitative and qualitative analyses performed in the past with simpler models and molecular dynamics simulations. The element of novelty in our approach is in the treatment of the coupling of the relevant internal (glucopyranose ring twisting/tilting and hydroxymethyl group jumps) and global (molecular tumbling) degrees of freedom.
Guest-host complex between cryptophane C, possessing two non-equivalent caps, and chloroform is investigated by NMR spectroscopy. The kinetics of the chloroform exchange between the bound and free sites is determined by (1)H exchange spectroscopy. Moreover, the preferential orientation of chloroform molecule with respect to the cryptophane C frame is examined by the NOESY and ROESY experiments. The experimental findings are compared to the results of quantum chemical calculations.
Investigation of 15N NMR spectra of isotopically enriched creatinine has unequivocally shown that in DMSO-d6 solution it exists as amino tautomer (2-amino-1-methylimidazoline-4-one), which in the presence of acid is protonated at N-3. Free energies of activation of the amino group rotation in creatinine and its cation have been determined to be 56 kJ/mol and 60 kJ/mol, respectively, at 298 K, by performing the simultaneous analysis of the lineshapes of -NH2 proton signals in the whole set of 1H NMR spectra recorded at various temperatures and magnetic fields. These results have been theoretically reproduced by the calculations of molecular structures and energies of creatinine and creatininium cation in their ground states and transition states of the amino group rotation, using DFT (B3LYP) method, involving the influence of the solvent.
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