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Dive into the research topics where Anne Lesage is active.

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Featured researches published by Anne Lesage.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010

Surface Enhanced NMR Spectroscopy by Dynamic Nuclear Polarization

Anne Lesage; Moreno Lelli; David Gajan; Marc A. Caporini; Veronika Vitzthum; Pascal Miéville; Johan Alauzun; Arthur Roussey; Chloé Thieuleux; Ahmad Mehdi; Geoffrey Bodenhausen; Christophe Copéret; Lyndon Emsley

It is shown that surface NMR spectra can be greatly enhanced using dynamic nuclear polarization. Polarization is transferred from the protons of the solvent to the rare nuclei (here carbon-13 at natural isotopic abundance) at the surface, yielding at least a 50-fold signal enhancement for surface species covalently incorporated into a silica framework.


Chemical Physics Letters | 2000

Homonuclear dipolar decoupling in solid-state NMR using continuous phase modulation

Dimitris Sakellariou; Anne Lesage; Paul Hodgkinson; Lyndon Emsley

Abstract We present a theoretical framework for the use of continuously phase modulated radio-frequency pulses for homonuclear decoupling in solid-state NMR. Within this framework, we have derived new families of decoupling sequences using numerical optimization. One of these sequences is tested experimentally on an ordinary organic solid, and its performance is compared with standard multiple-pulse sequences.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

Fast Characterization of Functionalized Silica Materials by Silicon-29 Surface-Enhanced NMR Spectroscopy Using Dynamic Nuclear Polarization

Moreno Lelli; David Gajan; Anne Lesage; Marc A. Caporini; Veronika Vitzthum; Pascal Miéville; Florent Héroguel; Fernando Rascón; Arthur Roussey; Chloé Thieuleux; Malika Boualleg; Laurent Veyre; Geoffrey Bodenhausen; Christophe Copéret; Lyndon Emsley

We demonstrate fast characterization of the distribution of surface bonding modes and interactions in a series of functionalized materials via surface-enhanced nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy using dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP). Surface-enhanced silicon-29 DNP NMR spectra were obtained by using incipient wetness impregnation of the sample with a solution containing a polarizing radical (TOTAPOL). We identify and compare the bonding topology of functional groups in materials obtained via a sol-gel process and in materials prepared by post-grafting reactions. Furthermore, the remarkable gain in time provided by surface-enhanced silicon-29 DNP NMR spectroscopy (typically on the order of a factor 400) allows the facile acquisition of two-dimensional correlation spectra.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Large Molecular Weight Nitroxide Biradicals Providing Efficient Dynamic Nuclear Polarization at Temperatures up to 200 K

Alexandre Zagdoun; Gilles Casano; Olivier Ouari; Martin Schwarzwälder; Aaron J. Rossini; Fabien Aussenac; Maxim Yulikov; Gunnar Jeschke; Christophe Copéret; Anne Lesage; Paul Tordo; Lyndon Emsley

A series of seven functionalized nitroxide biradicals (the bTbK biradical and six derivatives) are investigated as exogenous polarization sources for dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) solid-state NMR at 9.4 T and with ca. 100 K sample temperatures. The impact of electron relaxation times on the DNP enhancement (ε) is examined, and we observe that longer inversion recovery and phase memory relaxation times provide larger ε. All radicals are tested in both bulk 1,1,2,2-tetrachloroethane solutions and in mesoporous materials, and the difference in ε between the two cases is discussed. The impact of the sample temperature and magic angle spinning frequency on ε is investigated for several radicals each characterized by a range of electron relaxation times. In particular, TEKPol, a bulky derivative of bTbK with a molecular weight of 905 g·mol(-1), is presented. Its high-saturation factor makes it a very efficient polarizing agent for DNP, yielding unprecedented proton enhancements of over 200 in both bulk and materials samples at 9.4 T and 100 K. TEKPol also yields encouraging enhancements of 33 at 180 K and 12 at 200 K, suggesting that with the continued improvement of radicals large ε may be obtained at higher temperatures.


Journal of Magnetic Resonance | 2003

Experimental aspects of proton NMR spectroscopy in solids using phase-modulated homonuclear dipolar decoupling

Anne Lesage; Dimitris Sakellariou; Sabine Hediger; Bénédicte Elena; Patrick Charmont; Stefan Steuernagel; Lyndon Emsley

In this paper we demonstrate experimentally that the continuously phase-modulated homonuclear decoupling sequence DUMBO-1 is suitable for high-resolution proton NMR spectroscopy of rigid solids. Over a wide range of experimental conditions, we show on the model sample L-alanine as well as on small peptides that proton linewidths of less than 0.5 ppm can be obtained under DUMBO-1 decoupling. In particular the DUMBO-1 sequence yields well resolved proton spectra both at slow and fast MAS. The DUMBO-1 decoupling scheme can in principle be inserted in any multi-nuclear or multi-dimensional solid-state NMR experiment which requires a high-resolution 1H dimension. An example is provided with the 13C-1H MAS-J-HMQC experiment.


Journal of Biomolecular NMR | 2009

Characterization of different water pools in solid-state NMR protein samples

Anja Böckmann; Carole Gardiennet; René Verel; Andreas Hunkeler; Antoine Loquet; Guido Pintacuda; Lyndon Emsley; Beat H. Meier; Anne Lesage

We observed and characterized two distinct signals originating from different pools of water protons in solid-state NMR protein samples, namely from crystal water which exchanges polarization with the protein (on the NMR timescale) and is located in the protein-rich fraction at the periphery of the magic-angle spinning (MAS) sample container, and supernatant water located close to the axis of the sample container. The polarization transfer between the water and the protein can be probed by two-dimensional exchange spectroscopy, and we show that the supernatant water does not interact with protein on the timescale of the experiments. The two water pools have different spectroscopic properties, including resonance frequency, longitudinal, transverse and rotating frame relaxation times. The supernatant water can be removed almost completely physically or can be frozen selectively. Both measures lead to an enhancement of the quality factor of the probe circuit, accompanied by an improvement of the experimental signal/noise, and greatly simplify solvent-suppression by substantially reducing the water signal. We also present a tool, which allows filling solid-state NMR sample containers in a more efficient manner, greatly reducing the amount of supernatant water and maximizing signal/noise.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Dynamic Nuclear Polarization NMR Spectroscopy of Microcrystalline Solids

Aaron J. Rossini; Alexandre Zagdoun; Franziska Hegner; Martin Schwarzwälder; David Gajan; Christophe Copéret; Anne Lesage; Lyndon Emsley

Dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) solid-state NMR has been applied to powdered microcrystalline solids to obtain sensitivity enhancements on the order of 100. Glucose, sulfathiazole, and paracetamol were impregnated with bis-nitroxide biradical (bis-cyclohexyl-TEMPO-bisketal, bCTbK) solutions of organic solvents. The organic solvents were carefully chosen to be nonsolvents for the compounds, so that DNP-enhanced solid-state NMR spectra of the unaltered solids could be acquired. A theoretical model is presented that illustrates that for externally doped organic solids characterized by long spin-lattice relaxation times (T(1)((1)H) > 200 s), (1)H-(1)H spin diffusion can relay enhanced polarization over micrometer length scales yielding substantial DNP enhancements (ε). ε on the order of 60 are obtained for microcrystalline glucose and sulfathiazole at 9.4 T and with temperatures of ca. 105 K. The large gain in sensitivity enables the rapid acquisition of (13)C-(13)C correlation spectra at natural isotopic abundance. It is anticipated that this will be a general method for enhancing the sensitivity of solid-state NMR experiments of organic solids.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

A Slowly Relaxing Rigid Biradical for Efficient Dynamic Nuclear Polarization Surface-Enhanced NMR Spectroscopy: Expeditious Characterization of Functional Group Manipulation in Hybrid Materials

Alexandre Zagdoun; Gilles Casano; Olivier Ouari; Giuseppe Lapadula; Aaron J. Rossini; Moreno Lelli; Mathieu Baffert; David Gajan; Laurent Veyre; Werner E. Maas; Melanie Rosay; Ralph T. Weber; Chloé Thieuleux; Christophe Copéret; Anne Lesage; Paul Tordo; Lyndon Emsley

A new nitroxide-based biradical having a long electron spin-lattice relaxation time (T(1e)) has been developed as an exogenous polarization source for DNP solid-state NMR experiments. The performance of this new biradical is demonstrated on hybrid silica-based mesostructured materials impregnated with 1,1,2,2-tetrachloroethane radical containing solutions, as well as in frozen bulk solutions, yielding DNP enhancement factors (ε) of over 100 at a magnetic field of 9.4 T and sample temperatures of ~100 K. The effects of radical concentration on the DNP enhancement factors and on the overall sensitivity enhancements (Σ(†)) are reported. The relatively high DNP efficiency of the biradical is attributed to an increased T(1e), which enables more effective saturation of the electron resonance. This new biradical is shown to outperform the polarizing agents used so far in DNP surface-enhanced NMR spectroscopy of materials, yielding a 113-fold increase in overall sensitivity for silicon-29 CPMAS spectra as compared to conventional NMR experiments at room temperature. This results in a reduction in experimental times by a factor >12,700, making the acquisition of (13)C and (15)N one- and two-dimensional NMR spectra at natural isotopic abundance rapid (hours). It has been used here to monitor a series of chemical reactions carried out on the surface functionalities of a hybrid organic-silica material.


Angewandte Chemie | 2011

Fast Resonance Assignment and Fold Determination of Human Superoxide Dismutase by High-Resolution Proton-Detected Solid-State MAS NMR Spectroscopy

Michael J. Knight; Amy L. Webber; Andrew J. Pell; Paul Guerry; Emeline Barbet-Massin; Ivano Bertini; Isabella C. Felli; Leonardo Gonnelli; Roberta Pierattelli; Lyndon Emsley; Anne Lesage; Torsten Herrmann; Guido Pintacuda

Re-protonation is key: A combination of a high magnetic field (1 GHz) and ultra-fast magic-angle spinning (60 kHz) allows easy detection of NMR spectra revealing details of secondary and tertiary structures of medium-sized proteins. The technique was applied to the 153-residue microcrystalline Zn II-loaded superoxide dismutase (ZnII-SOD) fully [ 2H,13C,15N]-labeled and 100% re-protonated at the exchangeable sites. Copyright


Applied Categorical Structures | 2014

Rapid Proton-Detected NMR Assignment for Proteins with Fast Magic Angle Spinning

Emeline Barbet-Massin; Andrew J. Pell; Joren S. Retel; Loren B. Andreas; Kristaps Jaudzems; W. Trent Franks; Andrew J. Nieuwkoop; Matthias Hiller; Victoria A. Higman; Paul Guerry; Andrea Bertarello; Michael J. Knight; Michele Felletti; Tanguy Le Marchand; Svetlana Kotelovica; Inara Akopjana; Kaspars Tars; Monica Stoppini; Vittorio Bellotti; Martino Bolognesi; Stefano Ricagno; James J. Chou; Robert G. Griffin; Hartmut Oschkinat; Anne Lesage; Lyndon Emsley; Torsten Herrmann; Guido Pintacuda

Using a set of six 1H-detected triple-resonance NMR experiments, we establish a method for sequence-specific backbone resonance assignment of magic angle spinning (MAS) nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectra of 5–30 kDa proteins. The approach relies on perdeuteration, amide 2H/1H exchange, high magnetic fields, and high-spinning frequencies (ωr/2π ≥ 60 kHz) and yields high-quality NMR data, enabling the use of automated analysis. The method is validated with five examples of proteins in different condensed states, including two microcrystalline proteins, a sedimented virus capsid, and two membrane-embedded systems. In comparison to contemporary 13C/15N-based methods, this approach facilitates and accelerates the MAS NMR assignment process, shortening the spectral acquisition times and enabling the use of unsupervised state-of-the-art computational data analysis protocols originally developed for solution NMR.

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Lyndon Emsley

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Moreno Lelli

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Olivier Ouari

Aix-Marseille University

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Paul Tordo

Aix-Marseille University

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Alexandre Zagdoun

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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