2022
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Biomolecular and Biological Applications of Solid-State NMR with Dynamic Nuclear Polarization Enhancement.
Wing Ying Chow, Gaël De Paëpe, and Sabine Hediger.
Chemical Reviews.
[abstract]
Solid-state NMR spectroscopy (ssNMR) with magic-angle spinning (MAS) enables the investigation of biological systems within their native context, such as lipid membranes, viral capsid assemblies, and cells. However, such ambitious investigations often suffer from low sensitivity due to the presence of significant amounts of other molecular species, which reduces the effective concentration of the biomolecule or interaction of interest. Certain investigations requiring the detection of very low concentration species remain unfeasible even with increasing experimental time for signal averaging. By applying dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) to overcome the sensitivity challenge, the experimental time required can be reduced by orders of magnitude, broadening the feasible scope of applications for biological solid-state NMR. In this review, we outline strategies commonly adopted for biological applications of DNP, indicate ongoing challenges, and present a comprehensive overview of biological investigations where MAS-DNP has led to unique insights.
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Overcoming mass transfer limitations in cross-linked polyethyleneimine-based adsorbents to enable selective CO 2 capture at ambient temperature.
Louise B. Hamdy, Abel Gougsa, Wing Ying Chow, James E Russell, Enrique García-Díez, Viktoriia Kulakova, Susana Garcia, Andrew Ross Barron, Marco Taddei, and Enrico Andreoli.
Materials Advances.
[abstract]
New triazine-based linker used to cross-link PEI into an unsupported adsorbent with high CO 2 uptake at ambient temperature.
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2020
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Pigmentation Chemistry and Radical-Based Collagen Degradation in Alkaptonuria and Osteoarthritic Cartilage.
Wing Ying Chow, Brendan P Norman, Norman B Roberts, Lakshminarayan R Ranganath, Christian Teutloff, Robert Bittl, Melinda J Duer, James A Gallagher, and Hartmut Oschkinat.
Angewandte Chemie - International Edition 59(29).
[abstract]
Alkaptonuria (AKU) is a rare disease characterized by high levels of homogentisic acid (HGA); patients suffer from tissue ochronosis: dark brown pigmentation, especially of joint cartilage, leading to severe early osteoarthropathy. No molecular mechanism links elevated HGA to ochronosis; the pigment #39;s chemical identity is still not known, nor how it induces joint cartilage degradation. Here we give key insight on HGA-derived pigment composition and collagen disruption in AKU cartilage. Synthetic pigment and pigmented human cartilage tissue both showed hydroquinone-resembling NMR signals. EPR spectroscopy showed that the synthetic pigment contains radicals. Moreover, we observed intrastrand disruption of collagen triple helix in pigmented AKU human cartilage, and in cartilage from patients with osteoarthritis. We propose that collagen degradation can occur via transient glycyl radicals, the formation of which is enhanced in AKU due to the redox environment generated by pigmentation.
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Cobalt‐Exchanged Poly(Heptazine Imides) as Transition Metal–N x Electrocatalysts for the Oxygen Evolution Reaction.
Meng‐Yang Ye, Shuang Li, Xiaojia Zhao, Nadezda V. Tarakina, Christian Teutloff, Wing Ying Chow, Robert Bittl, and Arne Thomas.
Advanced Materials 32(9).
[abstract]
Poly(heptazine imides) hosting cobalt ions as countercations are presented as promising electrocatalysts for the oxygen evolution reaction (OER). A facile mixed-salt melt-assisted condensation is developed to prepare such cobalt poly(heptazine imides) (PHI-Co). The Co ions can be introduced in well-controlled amounts using this method, and are shown to be atomically dispersed within the imide-linked heptazine matrix. When applied to electrocatalytic OER, PHI-Co shows a remarkable activity with an overpotential of 324 mV and Tafel slope of 44 mV dec−1 in 1 m KOH.
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2019
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Detection of nucleic acids and other low abundance components in native bone and osteosarcoma extracellular matrix by isotope enrichment and DNP-enhanced NMR.
Ieva Goldberga, Rui Li, Wing Ying Chow, David G. Reid, Ulyana Bashtanova, Rakesh Rajan, Anna Puszkarska, Hartmut Oschkinat, and Melinda J. Duer.
RSC Advances 9(46).
[abstract]
Towards elucidating their biological roles in intact tissue, DNP NMR reveals nucleic acids, and other important low abundance biomolecules in a complex biomaterial, bone, and in cancer extracellular matrix.
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Poly(ADP-Ribose) Links the DNA Damage Response and Biomineralization.
Karin H. Müller, Robert Hayward, Rakesh Rajan, Meredith Whitehead, Andrew M. Cobb, Sadia Ahmad, Mengxi Sun, Ieva Goldberga, Rui Li, Uliana Bashtanova, Anna M. Puszkarska, David G. Reid, Roger A. Brooks, Jeremy N. Skepper, Jayanta Bordoloi, Wing Ying Chow, Hartmut Oschkinat, Alex Groombridge, Oren A. Scherman, James A. Harrison, Anja Verhulst, Patrick C. D'Haese, Ellen Neven, Lisa-Maria Needham, Steven F. Lee, Catherine M. Shanahan, and Melinda J. Duer.
Cell Reports 27(11).
[abstract]
Biomineralization of the extracellular matrix is an essential, regulated process. Inappropriate mineralization of bone and the vasculature has devastating effects on patient health, yet an integrated understanding of the chemical and cell biological processes that lead to mineral nucleation remains elusive. Here, we report that biomineralization of bone and the vasculature is associated with extracellular poly(ADP-ribose) synthesized by poly(ADP-ribose) polymerases in response to oxidative and/or DNA damage. We use ultrastructural methods to show poly(ADP-ribose) can form both calcified spherical particles, reminiscent of those found in vascular calcification, and biomimetically calcified collagen fibrils similar to bone. Importantly, inhibition of poly(ADP-ribose) biosynthesis in vitro and in vivo inhibits biomineralization, suggesting a therapeutic route for the treatment of vascular calcifications. We conclude that poly(ADP-ribose) plays a central chemical role in both pathological and physiological extracellular matrix calcification. M"uller et al. investigate the physicochemical process of extracellular matrix calcification in both physiological (bone) and pathological (vascular calcification) contexts. They find that oxidative stress-induced poly(ADP-ribose) nucleates calcium phosphate mineral crystals on extracellular matrix substrates and that calcification is inhibited by poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) enzyme inhibitors.
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Investigation of Triple-Helix Collagen Hydroxylation by Solid-State NMR Spectroscopy.
Wing Ying Chow.
Methods in Molecular Biology.
[abstract]
Solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (ssNMR) is an emerging technique in structural methods of studying collagen proteins, capable of identifying features on an atomic length scale in tissues and protein samples without extensive extraction or purification. Hydroxylation is a key posttranslational modification of collagen that gives rise to distinctive signals in the ssNMR spectrum of collagen proteins. Here we outline the type of information that ssNMR can provide and describe the procedures involved in a ssNMR structural study, with particular focus on using dynamic nuclear polarization to enhance sensitivity for detecting hydroxylysine residues by ssNMR.
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2018
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Proline provides site-specific flexibility for in vivo collagen.
Wing Ying Chow, Chris J. Forman, Dominique Bihan, Anna M. Puszkarska, Rakesh Rajan, David G. Reid, David A. Slatter, Lucy J. Colwell, David J. Wales, Richard W. Farndale, and Melinda J. Duer.
Scientific Reports 8(1).
[abstract]
Fibrillar collagens have mechanical and biological roles, providing tissues with both tensile strength and cell binding sites which allow molecular interactions with cell-surface receptors such as integrins. A key question is: how do collagens allow tissue flexibility whilst maintaining well-defined ligand binding sites? Here we show that proline residues in collagen glycine-proline-hydroxyproline (Gly-Pro-Hyp) triplets provide local conformational flexibility, which in turn confers well-defined, low energy molecular compression-extension and bending, by employing two-dimensional 13C-13C correlation NMR spectroscopy on 13C-labelled intact ex vivo bone and in vitro osteoblast extracellular matrix. We also find that the positions of Gly-Pro-Hyp triplets are highly conserved between animal species, and are spatially clustered in the currently-accepted model of molecular ordering in collagen type I fibrils. We propose that the Gly-Pro-Hyp triplets in fibrillar collagens provide fibril “expansion joints” to maintain molecular ordering within the fibril, thereby preserving the structural integrity of ligand binding sites.
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Essential but sparse collagen hydroxylysyl post-translational modifications detected by DNP NMR.
Wing Ying Chow, Rui Li, Ieva Goldberga, David G. Reid, Rakesh Rajan, Jonathan Clark, Hartmut Oschkinat, Melinda J. Duer, Robert Hayward, and Catherine M. Shanahan.
Chemical Communications 54(89).
[abstract]
DNP NMR reveals functionally essential sparse collagen hydroxylysyl post-translational modifications, an essential step in elucidating their critical biological roles.
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2016
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Solid state NMR of isotope labelled murine fur: a powerful tool to study atomic level keratin structure and treatment effects.
Wai Ching Veronica Wong, Aurimas Narkevicius, Wing Ying Chow, David G. Reid, Rakesh Rajan, Roger A. Brooks, Maggie Green, and Melinda J. Duer.
Journal of Biomolecular NMR 66(2).
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2015
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Hydroxyproline Ring Pucker Causes Frustration of Helix Parameters in the Collagen Triple Helix.
Wing Y. Chow, Dominique Bihan, Chris J. Forman, David A. Slatter, David G. Reid, David J. Wales, Richard W. Farndale, and Melinda J. Duer.
Scientific Reports 5(1).
[abstract]
Collagens, the most abundant proteins in mammals, are defined by their triple-helical structures and distinctive Gly-Xaa-Yaa repeating sequence, where Xaa is often proline and Yaa, hydroxyproline (Hyp/O). It is known that hydroxyproline in the Yaa position stabilises the triple helix, and that lack of proline hydroxylation in vivo leads to dysfunctional collagen extracellular matrix assembly, due to a range of factors such as a change in hydration properties. In addition, we note that in model peptides, when Yaa is unmodified proline, the Xaa proline has a strong propensity to adopt an endo ring conformation, whilst when Yaa is hydroxyproline, the Xaa proline adopts a range of endo and exo conformations. Here we use a combination of solid-state NMR spectroscopy and potential energy landscape modelling of synthetic triple-helical collagen peptides to understand this effect. We show that hydroxylation of the Yaa proline causes the Xaa proline ring conformation to become metastable, which in turn confers flexibility on the triple helix.
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Preparation of highly and generally enriched mammalian tissues for solid state NMR.
Veronica Wai Ching Wong, David G. Reid, Wing Ying Chow, Rakesh Rajan, Maggie Green, Roger A. Brooks, and Melinda J. Duer.
Journal of Biomolecular NMR 63(2).
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2014
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NMR Spectroscopy of Native and in Vitro Tissues Implicates PolyADP Ribose in Biomineralization.
Wing Ying Chow, Rakesh Rajan, Karin H. Muller, David G. Reid, Jeremy N. Skepper, Wai Ching Wong, Roger A. Brooks, Maggie Green, Dominique Bihan, Richard W. Farndale, David A. Slatter, Cathy M. Shanahan, and Melinda J. Duer.
Science 344(6185).
[abstract]
Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy is useful to determine molecular structure in tissues grown in vitro only if their fidelity, relative to native tissue, can be established. Here, we use multidimensional NMR spectra of animal and in vitro model tissues as fingerprints of their respective molecular structures, allowing us to compare the intact tissues at atomic length scales. To obtain spectra from animal tissues, we developed a heavy mouse enriched by about 20
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A new glycation product 'norpronyl-lysine' and direct characterization of cross linking and other glycation adducts: NMR of model compounds and collagen..
Peter T. B. Bullock, David G. Reid, W. Ying Chow, Wendy P. W. Lau, and Melinda J. Duer.
Bioscience Reports 34(2).
[abstract]
NMR is ideal for characterizing non-enzymatic protein glycation, including AGEs (advanced glycation end products) underlying tissue pathologies in diabetes and ageing. Ribose, ribose-5-phosphate (R5P) and ADP-ribose (ADPR) could be significant and underinvestigated biological glycating agents especially in chronic inflammation. Using [U-13C]ribose we have identified a novel glycoxidation adduct, 5-deoxy-5-desmethylpronyl-lysine, #34;norpronyl-lysine #34;, as well as numerous free ketones, acids, and amino group reaction products. Glycation by R5P and ADPR proceeds rapidly, with R5P generating a brown precipitate with PLL within hours. Solid state NMR (ssNMR) 13C-13C correlation spectroscopy identifies several crosslinking adducts such as the newly identified norpronyl-lysine, in situ, from the glycating reaction of 13C5-ribose with collagen. The same adducts are also identifiable after reaction of collagen with R5P. We also demonstrate for the first time bio-amine (spermidine, N-acetyl lysine, poly-L-lysine (PLL)) catalyzed ribose 2-epimerization to arabinose at physiological pH. This work raises the prospect of advancing understanding of the mechanisms and consequences of glycation in actual tissues, in vitro or even ex vivo, using NMR isotope-labelled glycating agents, without analyses requiring chemical or enzymatic degradations, or prior assumptions about glycation products.
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2011
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Collagen atomic scale molecular disorder in ochronotic cartilage from an alkaptonuria patient, observed by solid state NMR..
Wing Ying Chow, Adam M. Taylor, David G Reid, James A Gallagher, and Melinda J. Duer.
Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease 34(6).
[abstract]
In pilot studies of the usefulness of solid state nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy in characterizing chemical and molecular structural effects of alkaptonuria on connective tissue, we have obtained (13) C spectra from articular cartilage from an AKU patient. An apparently normal anatomical location yielded a cross polarization magic angle spinning spectrum resembling literature spectra and dominated by collagen and glycosaminoglycan signals. All spectral linewidths from strongly pigmented ochronotic cartilage however were considerably increased relative to the control indicating a marked increase in collagen molecular disorder. This disordering of cartilage structural protein parallels, at the atomic level, the disordering revealed at higher length scales by microscopy. We also demonstrate that the abnormal spectra from ochronotic cartilage fit with the abnormality in the structure of collagen fibres at the ultrastructural level, whereby large ochronotic deposits appear to alter the structure of the collagen fibre by invasion and cross linking. Summary: Increased signal linewidths in solid state NMR spectra of ochronotic articular cartilage from an AKU patient relative to linewidths in normal, control, cartilage reveals a marked decrease in collagen molecular order in the diseased tissue. This atomic level disordering parallels higher length scale disorder revealed by microscopic techniques.
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2010
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Fluorosurfactants for microdroplets: interfacial tension analysis..
Daniel J Holt, Richard J Payne, Wing Ying Chow, and Chris Abell.
Journal of Colloid and Interface Science 350(1).
[abstract]
Quantitative analysis of a number of potential fluorous surfactants, prepared with a view to stabilisation of microdroplets in microfluidic systems is presented. The surfactants tested comprised compounds with both perfluoropolyether (PFPE) and perfluoroalkyl (PFA) tails, along with three classes of hydrophilic head group, including crown ethers and hexaethylene gylcol. Surfactants were tested for activity using the pendant drop technique. Six compounds proved highly effective and efficient surfactants, with gamma(CMC) lt;10 mN/m and CMCs in the sub-millimolar range. These six compounds stabilised aqueous microdroplets in fluorous oils within poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS) microdevices to a greater degree than commonly used pseudosurfactants such as perfluorooctanol.
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