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Dive into the research topics where Ole G. Johannessen is active.

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Featured researches published by Ole G. Johannessen.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Quantum rotation of ortho and para-water encapsulated in a fullerene cage

C. Beduz; Marina Carravetta; Judy Y.-C. Chen; Maria Concistrè; Mark Denning; Michael Frunzi; A.J. Horsewill; Ole G. Johannessen; Ronald G. Lawler; Xuegong Lei; Malcolm H. Levitt; Yongjun Li; Salvatore Mamone; Yasujiro Murata; Urmas Nagel; Tomoko Nishida; Jacques Ollivier; S. Rols; Toomas Room; Riddhiman Sarkar; Nicholas J. Turro; Y. Yang

Inelastic neutron scattering, far-infrared spectroscopy, and cryogenic nuclear magnetic resonance are used to investigate the quantized rotation and ortho–para conversion of single water molecules trapped inside closed fullerene cages. The existence of metastable ortho-water molecules is demonstrated, and the interconversion of ortho-and para-water spin isomers is tracked in real time. Our investigation reveals that the ground state of encapsulated ortho water has a lifted degeneracy, associated with symmetry-breaking of the water environment.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2006

Cryogenic NMR spectroscopy of endohedral hydrogen-fullerene complexes

Marina Carravetta; Ole G. Johannessen; Malcolm H. Levitt; Ivo Heinmaa; Raivo Stern; Ago Samoson; A.J. Horsewill; Yasujiro Murata; Koichi Komatsu

We have observed 1H NMR spectra of hydrogen molecules trapped inside modified fullerene cages under cryogenic conditions. Experiments on static samples were performed at sample temperatures down to 4.3 K, while magic-angle-spinning (MAS) experiments were performed at temperatures down to 20 K at spinning frequencies of 15 kHz. Both types of NMR spectra show a large increase in the intramolecular 1H-1H dipolar coupling at temperatures below 50 K, revealing thermal selection of a small number of spatial rotational states. The static and MAS spectra were compared to estimate the degree of sample heating in high-speed cryogenic MAS-NMR experiments. The cryogenic MAS-NMR data show that the site resolution of magic-angle-spinning NMR may be combined with the high signal strength of cryogenic operation and that cryogenic phenomena may be studied with chemical site selectivity.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008

Double-Quantum 13C Nuclear Magnetic Resonance of Bathorhodopsin, the First Photointermediate in Mammalian Vision

Maria Concistrè; Axel Gansmüller; Neville McLean; Ole G. Johannessen; Ildefonso Marin Montesinos; Petra H. M. Bovee-Geurts; Peter Verdegem; Johan Lugtenburg; Richard C. D. Brown; Willem J. DeGrip; Malcolm H. Levitt

The 13C chemical shifts of the primary visual photointermediate bathorhodopsin have been observed by performing double-quantum magic-angle-spinning NMR at low temperature in the presence of illumination. Strong isomerization shifts have been observed upon the conversion of rhodopsin into bathorhodopsin.


Accounts of Chemical Research | 2013

Magic-angle spinning NMR of cold samples.

Maria Concistrè; Ole G. Johannessen; Elisa Carignani; Marco Geppi; Malcolm H. Levitt

Magic-angle-spinning solid-state NMR provides site-resolved structural and chemical information about molecules that complements many other physical techniques. Recent technical advances have made it possible to perform magic-angle-spinning NMR experiments at low temperatures, allowing researchers to trap reaction intermediates and to perform site-resolved studies of low-temperature physical phenomena such as quantum rotations, quantum tunneling, ortho-para conversion between spin isomers, and superconductivity. In examining biological molecules, the improved sensitivity provided by cryogenic NMR facilitates the study of protein assembly or membrane proteins. The combination of low-temperatures with dynamic nuclear polarization has the potential to boost sensitivity even further. Many research groups, including ours, have addressed the technical challenges and developed hardware for magic-angle-spinning of samples cooled down to a few tens of degrees Kelvin. In this Account, we briefly describe these hardware developments and review several recent activities of our group which involve low-temperature magic-angle-spinning NMR. Low-temperature operation allows us to trap intermediates that cannot be studied under ambient conditions by NMR because of their short lifetime. We have used low-temperature NMR to study the electronic structure of bathorhodopsin, the primary photoproduct of the light-sensitive membrane protein, rhodopsin. This project used a custom-built NMR probe that allows low-temperature NMR in the presence of illumination (the image shows the illuminated spinner module). We have also used this technique to study the behavior of molecules within a restricted environment. Small-molecule endofullerenes are interesting molecular systems in which molecular rotors are confined to a well-insulated, well-defined, and highly symmetric environment. We discuss how cryogenic solid state NMR can give information on the dynamics of ortho-water confined in a fullerene cage. Molecular motions are often connected with fundamental chemical properties; therefore, an understanding of molecular dynamics can be important in fields ranging from material science to biochemistry. We present the case of ibuprofen sodium salt which exhibits different degrees of conformational freedom in different parts of the same molecule, leading to a range of line broadening and line narrowing phenomena as a function of temperature.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2014

Nuclear spin conversion of water inside fullerene cages detected by low-temperature nuclear magnetic resonance

Salvatore Mamone; Maria Concistrè; Elisa Carignani; Benno Meier; Andrea Krachmalnicoff; Ole G. Johannessen; Xuegong Lei; Yongjun Li; Mark Denning; Marina Carravetta; Kelvin S. K. Goh; A.J. Horsewill; Richard J. Whitby; Malcolm H. Levitt

The water-endofullerene H2O@C60 provides a unique chemical system in which freely rotating water molecules are confined inside homogeneous and symmetrical carbon cages. The spin conversion between the ortho and para species of the endohedral H2O was studied in the solid phase by low-temperature nuclear magnetic resonance. The experimental data are consistent with a second-order kinetics, indicating a bimolecular spin conversion process. Numerical simulations suggest the simultaneous presence of a spin diffusion process allowing neighbouring ortho and para molecules to exchange their angular momenta. Cross-polarization experiments found no evidence that the spin conversion of the endohedral H2O molecules is catalysed by (13)C nuclei present in the cages.


Journal of Magnetic Resonance | 2011

An NMR thermometer for cryogenic magic-angle spinning NMR: the spin-lattice relaxation of 127I in cesium iodide

Riddhiman Sarkar; Maria Concistrè; Ole G. Johannessen; Peter Beckett; Mark Denning; Marina Carravetta; M.K. Al-Mosawi; C. Beduz; Y. Yang; Malcolm H. Levitt

The accurate temperature measurement of solid samples under magic-angle spinning (MAS) is difficult in the cryogenic regime. It has been demonstrated by Thurber et al. (J. Magn. Reson., 196 (2009) 84-87) [10] that the temperature dependent spin-lattice relaxation time constant of (79)Br in KBr powder can be useful for measuring sample temperature under MAS over a wide temperature range (20-296 K). However the value of T(1) exceeds 3 min at temperatures below 20K, which is inconveniently long. In this communication, we show that the spin-lattice relaxation time constant of (127)I in CsI powder can be used to accurately measure sample temperature under MAS within a reasonable experimental time down to 10 K.


Journal of Magnetic Resonance | 2003

Application of amplitude-modulated radiofrequency fields to the magic-angle spinning NMR of spin- nuclei

P.K. Madhu; Ole G. Johannessen; Kevin J. Pike; Ray Dupree; Mark E. Smith; Malcolm H. Levitt

We report pulse sequences for the sensitivity enhancement of magic-angle spinning and multiple-quantum magic-angle spinning spectra of spin-72 systems. Sensitivity enhancement is obtained with the use of fast amplitude-modulated (FAM) radiofrequency pulses. In one-dimensional magic-angle spinning experiments, signal enhancement of 3 is obtained by a FAM pulse followed by a soft 90 degrees pulse. In two-dimensional multiple-quantum magic-angle spinning experiments, FAM pulses are used for both the excitation of multiple-quantum coherences and for their conversion into observable single-quantum coherences. The observed signal enhancements are 2.2 in 3Q experiments, 3.1 in 5Q experiments, and 4.1 in 7Q experiments, compared to the conventional two-pulse scheme. The pulse schemes are demonstrated on the 45Sc NMR of Sc2(SO4)3 x 5H2O and the 139La NMR of LaAlO3. We also demonstrate the generation of FAM pulses by double-frequency irradiation.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2009

Towards an interpretation of 13C chemical shifts in bathorhodopsin, a functional intermediate of a G-protein coupled receptor.

Axel Gansmüller; Maria Concistrè; Neville McLean; Ole G. Johannessen; Ildefonso Marin-Montesinos; Petra H. M. Bovee-Geurts; Peter Verdegem; Johan Lugtenburg; Richard C. D. Brown; Willem J. DeGrip; Malcolm H. Levitt

Photoisomerization of the membrane-bound light receptor protein rhodopsin leads to an energy-rich photostate called bathorhodopsin, which may be trapped at temperatures of 120 K or lower. We recently studied bathorhodopsin by low-temperature solid-state NMR, using in situ illumination of the sample in a purpose-built NMR probe. In this way we acquired (13)C chemical shifts along the retinylidene chain of the chromophore. Here we compare these results with the chemical shifts of the dark state chromophore in rhodopsin, as well as with the chemical shifts of retinylidene model compounds in solution. An earlier solid-state NMR study of bathorhodopsin found only small changes in the (13)C chemical shifts upon isomerization, suggesting only minor perturbations of the electronic structure in the isomerized retinylidene chain. This is at variance with our recent measurements which show much larger perturbations of the (13)C chemical shifts. Here we present a tentative interpretation of our NMR results involving an increased charge delocalization inside the polyene chain of the bathorhodopsin chromophore. Our results suggest that the bathochromic shift of bathorhodopsin is due to modified electrostatic interactions between the chromophore and the binding pocket, whereas both electrostatic interactions and torsional strain are involved in the energy storage mechanism of bathorhodopsin.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Light penetration and photoisomerization in rhodopsin studied by numerical simulations and double-quantum solid-state NMR spectroscopy

Maria Concistrè; Axel Gansmüller; Neville McLean; Ole G. Johannessen; Ildefonso Marin Montesinos; Petra H. M. Bovee-Geurts; Richard C. D. Brown; Willem J. DeGrip; Malcolm H. Levitt

The penetration of light into optically thick samples containing the G-protein-coupled receptor rhodopsin is studied by numerical finite-element simulations and double-quantum solid-state NMR experiments. Illumination with white light leads to the generation of the active bathorhodopsin photostate in the outer layer of the sample but generates a large amount of the side product, isorhodopsin, in the sample interior. The overall yield of bathorhodopsin is improved by using monochromatic 420 nm illumination and by mixing the sample with transparent glass beads. The implications of these findings on the interpretation of previously published rhodopsin NMR data are discussed.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2014

Freezing of Molecular Motions Probed by Cryogenic Magic Angle Spinning NMR.

Maria Concistrè; Elisa Carignani; Silvia Borsacchi; Ole G. Johannessen; Benedetta Mennucci; Y. Yang; Marco Geppi; Malcolm H. Levitt

Cryogenic magic angle spinning makes it possible to obtain the NMR spectra of solids at temperatures low enough to freeze out most molecular motions. We have applied cryogenic magic angle spinning NMR to a crystalline small-molecule solid (ibuprofen sodium salt), which displays a variety of molecular dynamics. Magic angle (13)C NMR spectra are shown for a wide range of temperatures, including in the cryogenic regime down to 20 K. The hydrophobic and hydrophilic regions of the molecular structure display different behavior in the cryogenic regime, with the hydrophilic region remaining well-structured, while the hydrophobic region exhibits a broad frozen conformational distribution.

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Petra H. M. Bovee-Geurts

Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre

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Willem J. DeGrip

Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre

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Neville McLean

University of Southampton

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A.J. Horsewill

University of Nottingham

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