Abstract
Spin–lattice relaxation rates of protein and water protons in dry and hydrated immobilized bovine serum albumin were measured in the range of 1H Larmor frequency from 10 kHz to 30 MHz at temperatures from 154 to 302 K. The water proton spin–lattice relaxation reports on that of protein protons, which causes the characteristic power law dependence on the magnetic field strength. Isotope substitution of deuterium for hydrogen in water and studies at different temperatures expose three classes of water molecule dynamics that contribute to the spin–lattice relaxation dispersion profile. At 185 K, a water 1H relaxation contribution derives from reorientation of protein-bound molecules that are dynamically uncoupled from the protein backbone and is characterized by a Lorentzian function. Bound-water-molecule motions that can be dynamically uncoupled or coupled to the protein fluctuations make dominant contributions at higher temperatures as well. Surface water translational diffusion that is magnetically two-dimensional makes relaxation contributions at frequencies above 10 MHz. It is shown using isotope substitution that the exponent of the power law of the water signal in hydrated immobilized protein systems is the same as that for protons in lyophilized proteins over four orders of magnitude in the Larmor frequency, which implies that changes in the protein structure associated with hydration do not affect the 1H spin relaxation.
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