Abstract

An experimental strategy for determining the extent to which multiply isotopically labeled fragments are incorporated intact into relatively complicated compounds of interest is presented. The NMR methods employed are based on isotope-filtered one-dimensional spectra and difference HSQC spectra incorporating a spin echo designed to report on the presence of a second NMR active isotope at a coupled site. They supplement existing methods for determining the extent of isotopic incorporation at individual sites to reveal whether two coupled labeled sites in a precursor are incorporated as an intact unit into products. The methods described also circumvent1H signal overlap and distinguish between the effects of different nitrogens coupled to individual carbons. The somewhat complicated case of valclavam illustrates the method's utility in measuring theJcoupling constants between13C and nearby sites that are only fractionally labeled with15N, and measuring the fraction of molecules in which13C is coupled to15N, at each of several sites. The15N of [2-13C,15N]-labeled glycine is found to be incorporated into all three N positions of valclavam but most heavily into the N11 position. Specifically,15N and13C are incorporated into the N11 and C10 positions together as an15N13C fragment approximately 8% of the time, whereas15N is incorporated largely independently at the other positions.

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