Carbon-13 NMR of glycogen: hydration response studied by using solids methods
- 13 June 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Biochemistry
- Vol. 28 (12) , 5024-5028
- https://doi.org/10.1021/bi00438a018
Abstract
The carbon-13 NMR spectra of glycogen are reported by using the methods of magic-angle sample spinning and high-power proton decoupling to provide a dynamic report on the glucose monomer behavior as a function of hydration. Although the glycogen behaves as a typical polymer in the dry state, addition of water makes a significant differene in the spectral appearance. Water addition decreases the carbon spin-lattice relaxation times by 2 orders of magnitude over the range from 7% to 70% water by weight. The proton-carbon dipole-dipole coupling, which broadens the carbon spectrum and permits cross-polarization spectroscopy, is lost with increasing hydration over this range. By 60% water by weight, scalar decoupling methods are sufficient to achieve a reasonably high-resolution spectrum. Further, at this concentration, the carbon spin-lattice relaxation times are near their minimum values at a resonance frequency of 50.3 MHz, making acquisition of carbon spectra relatively insensitive to intensity distortions associated with saturation effects. Though motional averaging places the spectrum in the solution phase limit, the static spectrum shows a residual broader component that would not necessarily be detected readily by using high-resolution liquid-state experiments.This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Natural abundance carbon-13 nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy of liver and adipose tissue of the living ratBiochemistry, 1983
- A comparison of 13C nuclear magnetic resonance and 14C tracer studies of hepatic metabolism.Journal of Biological Chemistry, 1981