Abstract

Homonuclear (1)H residual dipolar couplings (RDCs) truncate the evolution of transverse (1)H magnetization of weakly aligned molecules in high-resolution NMR experiments. This leads to losses in sensitivity or resolution in experiments that require extended (1)H evolution times. Lee-Goldburg decoupling schemes have been shown to remove the effects of homonuclear dipolar couplings, while preserving chemical shift evolution in a number of solid-state NMR applications. Here, it is shown that the Lee-Goldburg sequence can be effectively incorporated into INEPT- or HMQC-type transfer schemes in liquid state weak alignment experiments in order to increase the efficiency of the magnetization transfer. The method is applied to the sensitive detection of (1)H(N)-(13)C long-range RDCs in a three-dimensional HCN experiment. As compared to a conventional HCN experiment, an average sensitivity increase by a factor of 2.4 is obtained for a sample of weakly aligned protein G. This makes it possible to detect 170 long-range (1)H(N)-(13)C RDCs for distances up to 4.9 angstroms.

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