Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Thorsten Marquardsen is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Thorsten Marquardsen.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

1H and 13C dynamic nuclear polarization in aqueous solution with a two-field (0.35 T/14 T) shuttle DNP spectrometer.

Marcel Reese; Maria-Teresa Türke; Igor Tkach; Giacomo Parigi; Claudio Luchinat; Thorsten Marquardsen; Andreas Tavernier; Peter Höfer; Frank Engelke; Christian Griesinger; Marina Bennati

Dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) permits increasing the NMR signal of nuclei by pumping the electronic spin transitions of paramagnetic centers nearby. This method is emerging as a powerful tool to increase the inherent sensitivity of NMR in structural biology aiming at detection of macromolecules. In aqueous solution, additional technical issues associated with the penetration of microwaves in water and heating effects aggravate the performance of the experiment. To examine the feasibility of low-field (9.7 GHz/0.35 T) DNP in high resolution NMR, we have constructed the prototype of a two-field shuttle DNP spectrometer that polarizes nuclei at 9.7 GHz/0.35 T and detects the NMR spectrum at 14 T. We report our first (1)H and (13)C DNP enhancements with this spectrometer. Effective enhancements up to 15 were observed for small molecules at (1)H 600 MHz/14 T as compared to the Boltzmann signal. The results provide a proof of principle for the feasibility of a shuttle DNP experiment and open up perspectives for the application potential of this method in solution NMR.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Nanosecond Time Scale Motions in Proteins Revealed by High-Resolution NMR Relaxometry

Cyril Charlier; Shahid Nawaz Khan; Thorsten Marquardsen; Philippe Pelupessy; Volker Reiss; Dimitrios Sakellariou; Geoffrey Bodenhausen; Frank Engelke; Fabien Ferrage

Understanding the molecular determinants underlying protein function requires the characterization of both structure and dynamics at atomic resolution. Nuclear relaxation rates allow a precise characterization of protein dynamics at the Larmor frequencies of spins. This usually limits the sampling of motions to a narrow range of frequencies corresponding to high magnetic fields. At lower fields one cannot achieve sufficient sensitivity and resolution in NMR. Here, we use a fast shuttle device where the polarization builds up and the signals are detected at high field, while longitudinal relaxation takes place at low fields 0.5 < B0 < 14.1 T. The sample is propelled over a distance up to 50 cm by a blowgun-like system in about 50 ms. The analysis of nitrogen-15 relaxation in the protein ubiquitin over such a wide range of magnetic fields offers unprecedented insights into molecular dynamics. Some key regions of the protein feature structural fluctuations on nanosecond time scales, which have so far been overlooked in high-field relaxation studies. Nanosecond motions in proteins may have been underestimated by traditional high-field approaches, and slower supra-τc motions that have no effect on relaxation may have been overestimated. High-resolution relaxometry thus opens the way to a quantitative characterization of nanosecond motions in proteins.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2016

High-resolution two-field nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy

Samuel F. Cousin; Cyril Charlier; Pavel Kadeřávek; Thorsten Marquardsen; Jean-Max Tyburn; Pierre-Alain Bovier; Simone Ulzega; Thomas Speck; Dirk Wilhelm; Frank Engelke; Werner E. Maas; Dimitrios Sakellariou; Geoffrey Bodenhausen; Philippe Pelupessy; Fabien Ferrage

Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) is a ubiquitous branch of spectroscopy that can explore matter at the scale of an atom. Significant improvements in sensitivity and resolution have been driven by a steady increase of static magnetic field strengths. However, some properties of nuclei may be more favourable at low magnetic fields. For example, transverse relaxation due to chemical shift anisotropy increases sharply at higher magnetic fields leading to line-broadening and inefficient coherence transfers. Here, we present a two-field NMR spectrometer that permits the application of rf-pulses and acquisition of NMR signals in two magnetic centres. Our prototype operates at 14.1 T and 0.33 T. The main features of this system are demonstrated by novel NMR experiments, in particular a proof-of-concept correlation between zero-quantum coherences at low magnetic field and single quantum coherences at high magnetic field, so that high resolution can be achieved in both dimensions, despite a ca. 10 ppm inhomogeneity of the low-field centre. Two-field NMR spectroscopy offers the possibility to circumvent the limits of high magnetic fields, while benefiting from their exceptional sensitivity and resolution. This approach opens new avenues for NMR above 1 GHz.


Angewandte Chemie | 2016

Recovering Invisible Signals by Two-Field NMR Spectroscopy

Samuel F. Cousin; Pavel Kadeřávek; Baptiste Haddou; Cyril Charlier; Thorsten Marquardsen; Jean-Max Tyburn; Pierre-Alain Bovier; Frank Engelke; Werner E. Maas; Geoffrey Bodenhausen; Philippe Pelupessy; Fabien Ferrage

Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) studies have benefited tremendously from the steady increase in the strength of magnetic fields. Spectacular improvements in both sensitivity and resolution have enabled the investigation of molecular systems of rising complexity. At very high fields, this progress may be jeopardized by line broadening, which is due to chemical exchange or relaxation by chemical shift anisotropy. In this work, we introduce a two-field NMR spectrometer designed for both excitation and observation of nuclear spins in two distinct magnetic fields in a single experiment. NMR spectra of several small molecules as well as a protein were obtained, with two dimensions acquired at vastly different magnetic fields. Resonances of exchanging groups that are broadened beyond recognition at high field can be sharpened to narrow peaks in the low-field dimension. Two-field NMR spectroscopy enables the measurement of chemical shifts at optimal fields and the study of molecular systems that suffer from internal dynamics, and opens new avenues for NMR spectroscopy at very high magnetic fields.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Field-cycling NMR with high-resolution detection under magic-angle spinning : determination of field-window for nuclear hyperpolarization in a photosynthetic reaction center.

Daniel Gräsing; Pavlo Bielytskyi; Isaac F. Céspedes-Camacho; A. Alia; Thorsten Marquardsen; Frank Engelke; Jörg Matysik

Several parameters in NMR depend on the magnetic field strength. Field-cycling NMR is an elegant way to explore the field dependence of these properties. The technique is well developed for solution state and in relaxometry. Here, a shuttle system with magic-angle spinning (MAS) detection is presented to allow for field-dependent studies on solids. The function of this system is demonstrated by exploring the magnetic field dependence of the solid-state photochemically induced nuclear polarization (photo-CIDNP) effect. The effect allows for strong nuclear spin-hyperpolarization in light-induced spin-correlated radical pairs (SCRPs) under solid-state conditions. To this end, 13C MAS NMR is applied to a photosynthetic reaction center (RC) of the purple bacterium Rhodobacter (R.) sphaeroides wildtype (WT). For induction of the effect in the stray field of the magnet and its subsequent observation at 9.4 T under MAS NMR conditions, the sample is shuttled by the use of an aerodynamically driven sample transfer technique. In the RC, we observe the effect down to 0.25 T allowing to determine the window for the occurrence of the effect to be between about 0.2 and 20 T.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2018

Time-resolved protein side-chain motions unraveled by high-resolution relaxometry and molecular dynamics simulations

Samuel F. Cousin; Pavel Kadeřávek; Nicolas Bolik-Coulon; Yina Gu; Cyril Charlier; Ludovic Carlier; Lei Bruschweiler-Li; Thorsten Marquardsen; Jean-Max Tyburn; Rafael Brüschweiler; Fabien Ferrage

Motions of proteins are essential for the performance of their functions. Aliphatic protein side chains and their motions play critical roles in protein interactions: for recognition and binding of partner molecules at the surface or serving as an entropy reservoir within the hydrophobic core. Here, we present a new NMR method based on high-resolution relaxometry and high-field relaxation to determine quantitatively both motional amplitudes and time scales of methyl-bearing side chains in the picosecond-to-nanosecond range. We detect a wide variety of motions in isoleucine side chains in the protein ubiquitin. We unambiguously identify slow motions in the low nanosecond range, which, in conjunction with molecular dynamics computer simulations, could be assigned to transitions between rotamers. Our approach provides unmatched detailed insight into the motions of aliphatic side chains in proteins and provides a better understanding of the nature and functional role of protein side-chain motions.


ChemPhysChem | 2017

Full correlations across broad NMR spectra by two-field total correlation spectroscopy

Pavel Kadeřávek; Léonard Strouk; Samuel F. Cousin; Cyril Charlier; Geoffrey Bodenhausen; Thorsten Marquardsen; Jean-Max Tyburn; Pierre-Alain Bovier; Frank Engelke; Werner E. Maas; Fabien Ferrage

Total correlation spectroscopy (TOCSY) is a key experiment to assign nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectra of complex molecules. Carbon-13 TOCSY experiments are essential to assign signals of protein side chains. However, the performance of carbon-13 TOCSY deteriorates at high magnetic fields since the necessarily limited radiofrequency irradiation fails to cover the broad range of carbon-13 frequencies. Here, we introduce a new concept to overcome the limitations of TOCSY by using two-field NMR spectroscopy. In two-field TOCSY experiments, chemical shifts are labelled at high field but isotropic mixing is performed at a much lower magnetic field, where the frequency range of the spectrum is drastically reduced. We obtain complete correlations between all carbon-13 nuclei belonging to amino acids across the entire spectrum: aromatic, aliphatic and carboxylic. Two-field TOCSY should be a robust and general approach for the assignment of uniformly carbon-13 labelled molecules in high-field and ultra-high field NMR spectrometers beyond 1000 MHz.


Journal of Magnetic Resonance | 2006

Development of a dual cell, flow-injection sample holder, and NMR probe for comparative ligand-binding studies.

Thorsten Marquardsen; Martin Hofmann; Johan Hollander; Caroline Loch; Suzanne Kiihne; Frank Engelke; Gregg Siegal


Applied Magnetic Resonance | 2016

Sample Shuttling Relaxometry of Contrast Agents: NMRD Profiles above 1 T with a Single Device

Yves Gossuin; Zeinab Serhan; Lydia Sandiford; Daniel Henrard; Thorsten Marquardsen; Rafael T. M. de Rosales; Dimitrios Sakellariou; Fabien Ferrage


Journal of Magnetic Resonance | 2015

A temperature-jump NMR probe setup using rf heating optimized for the analysis of temperature-induced biomacromolecular kinetic processes

Jörg Rinnenthal; Dominic Wagner; Thorsten Marquardsen; Alexander Krahn; Frank Engelke; Harald Schwalbe

Collaboration


Dive into the Thorsten Marquardsen's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Fabien Ferrage

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jean-Max Tyburn

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Samuel F. Cousin

École Normale Supérieure

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Pavel Kadeřávek

École Normale Supérieure

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Cyril Charlier

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge