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Featured researches published by Peizhi Zhu.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Time-Resolved Dehydration-Induced Structural Changes in an Intact Bovine Cortical Bone Revealed by Solid-State NMR Spectroscopy

Peizhi Zhu; Nadder Sahar; Michael D. Morris; David H. Kohn; Ayyalusamy Ramamoorthy

Understanding the structure and structural changes of bone, a highly heterogeneous material with a complex hierarchical architecture, continues to be a significant challenge even for high-resolution solid-state NMR spectroscopy. While it is known that dehydration affects mechanical properties of bone by decreasing its strength and toughness, the underlying structural mechanism at the atomic level is unknown. Solid-state NMR spectroscopy, controlled dehydration, and H/D exchange were used for the first time to reveal the structural changes of an intact piece of bovine cortical bone. (1)H spectra were used to monitor the dehydration of the bone inside the rotor, and high-resolution (13)C chemical shift spectra obtained under magic-angle spinning were used evaluate the dehydration-induced conformational changes in the bone. The experiments revealed the slow denaturation of collagen due to dehydration while the trans-Xaa-Pro conformation in collagen remained unchanged. Our results suggest that glycosaminoglycans in the collagen fiber and mineral interface may chelate with a Ca(2+) ion present on the surface of the mineral through sulfate or carboxylate groups. These results provide insights into the role of water molecules in the bone structure and shed light on the relationship between the structure and mechanics of bone.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010

Natural-Abundance 43Ca Solid-State NMR Spectroscopy of Bone

Peizhi Zhu; Zhehong Gan; Nadder Sahar; Mary M. J. Tecklenburg; Michael D. Morris; David H. Kohn; Ayyalusamy Ramamoorthy

Structural information about the coordination environment of calcium present in bone is highly valuable in understanding the role of calcium in bone formation, biomineralization, and bone diseases like osteoporosis. While a high-resolution structural study on bone has been considered to be extremely challenging, NMR studies on model compounds and bone minerals have provided valuable insight into the structure of bone. Particularly, the recent demonstration of (43)Ca solid-state NMR experiments on model compounds is an important advance in this field. However, application of (43)Ca NMR is hampered due to the low natural-abundance and poor sensitivity of (43)Ca. In this study, we report the first demonstration of natural-abundance (43)Ca magic angle spinning (MAS) NMR experiments on bone, using powdered bovine cortical bone samples. (43)Ca NMR spectra of bovine cortical bone are analyzed by comparing to the natural-abundance (43)Ca NMR spectra of model compounds including hydroxyapatite and carbonated apatite. While (43)Ca NMR spectra of hydroxyapatite and carbonated apatite are very similar, they significantly differ from those of cortical bone. Raman spectroscopy shows that the calcium environment in bone is more similar to carbonated apatite than hydroxyapatite. A close analysis of (43)Ca NMR spectra reveals that the chemical shift frequencies of cortical bone and 10% carbonated apatite are similar but the quadrupole coupling constant of cortical bone is larger than that measured for model compounds. In addition, our results suggest that an increase in the carbonate concentration decreases the observed (43)Ca chemical shift frequency. A comparison of experimentally obtained (43)Ca MAS spectra with simulations reveal a 3:4 mol ratio of Ca-I/Ca-II sites in carbonated apatite and a 2.3:3 mol ratio for hydroxyapatite. 2D triple-quantum (43)Ca MAS experiments performed on a mixture of carbonated apatite and the bone protein osteocalcin reveal the presence of protein-bound and free calcium sites, which is in agreement with a model developed from X-ray crystal structure of the protein.


Journal of Solid State Chemistry | 2013

Crystallinity and compositional changes in carbonated apatites: Evidence from 31P solid-state NMR, Raman, and AFM analysis

John David P. McElderry; Peizhi Zhu; Kamal H. Mroue; Barbara Pavan; Ming Fang; Guisheng Zhao; Erin McNerny; David H. Kohn; Renny T. Franceschi; Mark M. Banaszak Holl; Mary M. J. Tecklenburg; Ayyalusamy Ramamoorthy; Michael D. Morris

Solid-state (magic-angle spinning) NMR spectroscopy is a useful tool for obtaining structural information on bone organic and mineral components and synthetic model minerals at the atomic-level. Raman and 31P NMR spectral parameters were investigated in a series of synthetic B-type carbonated apatites (CAps). Inverse 31P NMR linewidth and inverse Raman PO43- ν1 bandwidth were both correlated with powder XRD c-axis crystallinity over the 0.3-10.3 wt% CO32- range investigated. Comparison with bone powder crystallinities showed agreement with values predicted by NMR and Raman calibration curves. Carbonate content was divided into two domains by the 31P NMR chemical shift frequency and the Raman phosphate ν1 band position. These parameters remain stable except for an abrupt transition at 6.5 wt% carbonate, a composition which corresponds to an average of one carbonate per unit cell. This near-binary distribution of spectroscopic properties was also found in AFM-measured particle sizes and Ca/P molar ratios by elemental analysis. We propose that this transition differentiates between two charge-balancing ion-loss mechanisms as measured by Ca/P ratios. These results define a criterion for spectroscopic characterization of B-type carbonate substitution in apatitic minerals.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2011

Solid-state NMR spectroscopy provides atomic-level insights into the dehydration of cartilage.

Peizhi Zhu; Michael D. Morris; Ayyalusamy Ramamoorthy

An atomic-level insight into the functioning of articular cartilage would be useful to develop prevention strategies and therapies for joint diseases such as osteoarthritis. However, the composition and structure of cartilage and their relationship to its unique mechanical properties are quite complex and pose tremendous challenges to most biophysical techniques. In this study, we present an investigation of the structure and dynamics of polymeric molecules of articular cartilage using time-resolved solid-state NMR spectroscopy during dehydration. Full-thickness cartilage explants were used in magic-angle spinning experiments to monitor the structural changes of rigid and mobile carbons. Our results reveal that the dehydration reduced the mobility of collagen amino acid residues and carbon sugar ring structures in glycosaminoglycans but had no effect on the trans-Xaa-Pro conformation. Equally interestingly, our results demonstrate that the dehydration effects are reversible, and the molecular structure and mobility are restored upon rehydration.


Journal of Magnetic Resonance | 2014

Acceleration of natural-abundance solid-state MAS NMR measurements on bone by paramagnetic relaxation from gadolinium-DTPA.

Kamal H. Mroue; Rongchun Zhang; Peizhi Zhu; Erin McNerny; David H. Kohn; Michael D. Morris; Ayyalusamy Ramamoorthy

Reducing the data collection time without affecting the signal intensity and spectral resolution is one of the major challenges for the widespread application of multidimensional nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, especially in experiments conducted on complex heterogeneous biological systems such as bone. In most of these experiments, the NMR data collection time is ultimately governed by the proton spin-lattice relaxation times (T1). For over two decades, gadolinium(III)-DTPA (Gd-DTPA, DTPA=Diethylene triamine pentaacetic acid) has been one of the most widely used contrast-enhancement agents in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). In this study, we demonstrate that Gd-DTPA can also be effectively used to enhance the longitudinal relaxation rates of protons in solid-state NMR experiments conducted on bone without significant line-broadening and chemical-shift-perturbation side effects. Using bovine cortical bone samples incubated in different concentrations of Gd-DTPA complex, the (1)H T1 values were calculated from data collected by (1)H spin-inversion recovery method detected in natural-abundance (13)C cross-polarization magic angle spinning (CPMAS) NMR experiments. Our results reveal that the (1)H T1 values can be successfully reduced by a factor of 3.5 using as low as 10mM Gd-DTPA without reducing the spectral resolution and thus enabling faster data acquisition of the (13)C CPMAS spectra. These results obtained from (13)C-detected CPMAS experiments were further confirmed using (1)H-detected ultrafast MAS experiments on Gd-DTPA doped bone samples. This approach considerably improves the signal-to-noise ratio per unit time of NMR experiments applied to bone samples by reducing the experimental time required to acquire the same number of scans.


Bone | 2016

Loss of BMP signaling through BMPR1A in osteoblasts leads to greater collagen cross-link maturation and material-level mechanical properties in mouse femoral trabecular compartments.

Yanshuai Zhang; Erin Gatenby McNerny; Masahiko Terajima; Mekhala Raghavan; Genevieve Romanowicz; Zhanpeng Zhang; Honghao Zhang; Nobuhiro Kamiya; Margaret Tantillo; Peizhi Zhu; Gregory Scott; Manas K. Ray; Michelle Lynch; Peter X. Ma; Michael D. Morris; Mitsuo Yamauchi; David H. Kohn; Yuji Mishina

Bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) signaling pathways play critical roles in skeletal development and new bone formation. Our previous study, however, showed a negative impact of BMP signaling on bone mass because of the osteoblast-specific loss of a BMP receptor (i.e. BMPR1A) showing increased trabecular bone volume and mineral density in mice. Here, we investigated the bone quality and biomechanical properties of the higher bone mass associated with BMPR1A deficiency using the osteoblast-specific Bmpr1a conditional knockout (cKO) mouse model. Collagen biochemical analysis revealed greater levels of the mature cross-link pyridinoline in the cKO bones, in parallel with upregulation of collagen modifying enzymes. Raman spectroscopy distinguished increases in the mature to immature cross-link ratio and mineral to matrix ratio in the trabecular compartments of cKO femora, but not in the cortical compartments. The mineral crystallinity was unchanged in the cKO in either the trabecular or cortical compartments. Further, we tested the intrinsic material properties by nanoindentation and found significantly higher hardness and elastic modulus in the cKO trabecular compartments, but not in the cortical compartments. Four point bending tests of cortical compartments showed lower structural biomechanical properties (i.e. strength and stiffness) in the cKO bones due to the smaller cortical areas. However, there were no significant differences in biomechanical performance at the material level, which was consistent with the nanoindentation test results on the cortical compartment. These studies emphasize the pivotal role of BMPR1A in the determination of bone quality and mechanical integrity under physiological conditions, with different impact on femoral cortical and trabecular compartments.


Biophysical Journal | 2010

Time-Resolved Dehydration-Induced Structural Changes in An Intact Bovine Cortical Bone Revealed by Solid-State NMR Spectroscopy

Peizhi Zhu; Nadder Sahar; Michael D. Morris; David H. Kohn; Ayyalusamy Ramamoorthy

Understanding the structure and structural changes of bone, a highly heterogeneous material with a complex hierarchical architecture, continues to be a significant challenge even for high-resolution solid-state NMR spectroscopy. While it is known that dehydration affects mechanical properties of bone by decreasing its strength and toughness, the underlying structural mechanism at the atomic level is unknown. Solid-state NMR spectroscopy, controlled dehydration, and H/D exchange were used for the first time to reveal the structural changes of an intact piece of bovine cortical bone. 1H spectra were used to monitor the dehydration of the bone inside the rotor, and high-resolution 13C chemical shift spectra obtained under magic-angle spinning were used evaluate the dehydration-induced conformational changes in the bone. The experiments revealed the slow denaturation of collagen due to dehydration while the trans-Xaa-Pro conformation in collagen remained unchanged. Our results suggest that glycosaminoglycans ...


Progress in Biomedical Optics and Imaging - Proceedings of SPIE | 2009

Quantum dots as mineral- and matrix-specific strain gages for bone biomechanical studies

Peizhi Zhu; Michael W. Morris; Ayyalusamy Ramamoorthy; Nadder Sahar; David H. Kohn

We report the use of quantum dots (Qdots) as strain gages in the study of bone biomechanics using solid state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. We have developed solid state NMR sample cells for investigation of deformations of bone tissue components at loads up to several Mega Pascal. The size constraints of the NMR instrumentation limit the bone specimen diameter and length to be no greater than 2-3 mm and 30 mm respectively. Further, magic angle spinning (MAS) solid state NMR experiments require the use of non-metallic apparatus that can be rotated at kilohertz rates. These experimental constraints preclude the use of standard biomechanical measurement systems. In this paper we explore the use of quantum dot center of gravity measurement as a strain gage technology consistent with the constraints of solid state NMR. We use Qdots that bind calcium (625 nm emission) and collagen (705 nm emission) for measurement of strain in these components. Compressive loads are applied to a specimen in a cell through a fine pitch screw turned with a mini-torque wrench. Displacement is measured as changes in the positions of arrays of quantum dots on the surface of a specimen. Arrays are created by spotting the specimen with dilute suspensions of Qdots. Mineral labeling is achieved with 705 nm carboxylated dots and matrix labeling with 565 nm quantum dots conjugated to collagen I antibodies. After each load increment the new positions of the quantum dots are measured by fluorescence microscopy. Changes in Qdot center of gravity as a function of applied load can be measured with submicron accuracy.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2012

High-Resolution Structural Insights into Bone: A Solid-State NMR Relaxation Study Utilizing Paramagnetic Doping

Kamal H. Mroue; Neil MacKinnon; Peizhi Zhu; Erin McNerny; David H. Kohn; Michael D. Morris; Ayyalusamy Ramamoorthy


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2016

Selective detection and complete identification of triglycerides in cortical bone by high-resolution 1H MAS NMR spectroscopy

Kamal H. Mroue; Peizhi Zhu; Michael D. Morris; Ayyalusamy Ramamoorthy

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