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Dive into the research topics where Juan F. Espinosa is active.

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Featured researches published by Juan F. Espinosa.


Journal of Magnetic Resonance | 2010

IPAP–HSQMBC: Measurement of long-range heteronuclear coupling constants from spin-state selective multiplets

Sergi Gil; Juan F. Espinosa; Teodor Parella

A new NMR approach is proposed for the measurement of long-range heteronuclear coupling constants ((n)J(XH), n>1) in natural abundance molecules. Two complementary in-phase (IP) and anti-phase (AP) data are separately recorded from a modified HSQMBC experiment and then added/subtracted to provide spin-state-selective α/β-HSQMBC spectra. The magnitude of (n)J(XH) can be directly determined by simple analysis of the relative displacement between α- and β-cross-peaks. The robustness of this IPAP-HSQMBC experiment is evaluated experimentally and by simulation using a variety of different conditions. Important aspects such as signal intensity dependence and presence of unwanted cross-talk effects are discussed and examples on the measurement of small proton-carbon ((n)J(CH)) and proton-nitrogen ((n)J(NH)) coupling constants are provided.


Journal of Magnetic Resonance | 2011

Accurate measurement of small heteronuclear coupling constants from pure-phase α/β HSQMBC cross-peaks.

Sergi Gil; Juan F. Espinosa; Teodor Parella

A simple proton-selective α/β-HSQMBC experiment is proposed for the accurate measurement of long-range proton-carbon coupling constants (nJCH) in small molecules without need for an individualized and time-consuming post-processing fitting procedure. The method acquires two pure-phase In-phase (IP) and Anti-phase (AP) multiplets completely free of any phase distortion due to the absence of JHH evolution. Accurate nJCH values can be directly measured analyzing the relative displacement of the resulting IPAP cross-peaks. Discussion about signal intensity dependence and cross-talk is made for a range of experimental conditions. The robustness of the method is evaluated by comparing the nJCH value measured from the analysis of the three available IP, AP and IPAP multiplet patterns. Multiple-frequency and region-selective versions of the method can also be efficiently recorded provided that excited protons are not mutually coupled.


Magnetic Resonance in Chemistry | 2011

Measurement of long-range proton-carbon coupling constants from pure in-phase 1D multiplets.

Juan F. Espinosa; Paloma Vidal; Teodor Parella; Sergi Gil

The SELective INverse detection of carbon–proton CORrelation pulse sequence that yields a 1D spectrum of a proton directly bonded to a selected carbon resonance has been converted into a proton and carbon double‐selective variant that provides a 1H spectrum of a selected proton that is long‐range coupled to a specific carbon resonance. The resulting 1D proton multiplet exhibits a pure absorptive in‐phase lineshape for precise measurement of specific long‐range proton–carbon coupling constants in small organic molecules at natural abundance. Copyright


Analytical Chemistry | 2016

Two-Site Evaluation of the Repeatability and Precision of an Automated Dual-Column Hydrogen/Deuterium Exchange Mass Spectrometry Platform

David J. Cummins; Alfonso Espada; Scott Novick; Manuel Molina-Martin; Ryan Edward Stites; Juan F. Espinosa; Howard Broughton; Devrishi Goswami; Bruce D. Pascal; Jeffrey Alan Dodge; Michael J. Chalmers; Patrick R. Griffin

Hydrogen/deuterium exchange coupled with mass spectrometry (HDX-MS) is an information-rich biophysical method for the characterization of protein dynamics. Successful applications of differential HDX-MS include the characterization of protein-ligand binding. A single differential HDX-MS data set (protein ± ligand) is often comprised of more than 40 individual HDX-MS experiments. To eliminate laborious manual processing of samples, and to minimize random and gross errors, automated systems for HDX-MS analysis have become routine in many laboratories. However, an automated system, while less prone to random errors introduced by human operators, may have systematic errors that go unnoticed without proper detection. Although the application of automated (and manual) HDX-MS has become common, there are only a handful of studies reporting the systematic evaluation of the performance of HDX-MS experiments, and no reports have been published describing a cross-site comparison of HDX-MS experiments. Here, we describe an automated HDX-MS platform that operates with a parallel, two-trap, two-column configuration that has been installed in two remote laboratories. To understand the performance of the system both within and between laboratories, we have designed and completed a test-retest repeatability study for differential HDX-MS experiments implemented at each of two laboratories, one in Florida and the other in Spain. This study provided sufficient data to do both within and between laboratory variability assessments. Initial results revealed a systematic run-order effect within one of the two systems. Therefore, the study was repeated, and this time the conclusion was that the experimental conditions were successfully replicated with minimal systematic error.


Journal of Magnetic Resonance | 2006

Optimum spin-state selection for all multiplicities in the acquisition dimension of the HSQC experiment.

Pau Nolis; Juan F. Espinosa; Teodor Parella


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2004

Aminoimidazo[1,2-a]pyridines as a new structural class of cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors. Part 1: Design, synthesis, and biological evaluation

Carlos Jaramillo; J.Eugenio de Diego; Chafiq Hamdouchi; Elizabeth Collins; Heather Keyser; Concha Sánchez-Martı́nez; Miriam del Prado; Bryan H. Norman; Harold B. Brooks; Scott A. Watkins; Charles D. Spencer; Jack Dempsey; Bryan D. Anderson; Robert M. Campbell; Tellie Leggett; Bharvin Patel; Richard M. Schultz; Juan F. Espinosa; Michal Vieth; Faming Zhang; David E. Timm


Molecular Cancer Therapeutics | 2004

The discovery of a new structural class of cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors, aminoimidazo[1,2-a]pyridines

Chafiq Hamdouchi; Heather Keyser; Elizabeth Collins; Carlos Jaramillo; José Eugenio de Diego; Charles D. Spencer; Jack Dempsey; Bryan D. Anderson; Tillie Leggett; Nancy B. Stamm; Richard M. Schultz; Scott A. Watkins; Kim Cocke; Stephanie Lemke; Teresa F. Burke; Richard P. Beckmann; Jeffrey T. Dixon; Thomas M. Gurganus; Nancy B. Rankl; Keith A. Houck; Faming Zhang; Michal Vieth; Juan F. Espinosa; David E. Timm; Robert M. Campbell; Bharvin Patel; Harold B. Brooks


Organic and Biomolecular Chemistry | 2013

CLIP-HSQMBC: easy measurement of small proton–carbon coupling constants in organic molecules

Josep Saurí; Teodor Parella; Juan F. Espinosa


ACS Chemical Biology | 2016

Protein-Observed Fluorine NMR Is a Complementary Ligand Discovery Method to 1H CPMG Ligand-Observed NMR

Andrew K. Urick; Luis Pablo Calle; Juan F. Espinosa; Haitao Hu; William C. Pomerantz


Magnetic Resonance in Chemistry | 2004

Structural characterization and quantitation of compound loading of disubstituted benzoates bound to Wang resin through high-resolution magic angle spinning NMR spectroscopy.

Jesús Blas; Alfonso Rivera-Sagredo; Rafael Ferritto; Juan F. Espinosa

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Teodor Parella

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Sergi Gil

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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