Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy of carbohydrates
Carbohydrate NMR Spectroscopy is the application of nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy to structural and conformational analysis of carbohydrates. This method allows the scientists to elucidate structure of monosaccharides, oligosaccharides, polysaccharides, glycoconjugates and other carbohydrate derivatives from synthetic and natural sources. Among structural properties that could be determined by NMR are primary structure, saccharide conformation, stoichiometry of substituents, and ratio of individual saccharides in a mixture. Modern high field NMR instruments used for carbohydrate samples, typically 500 MHz or higher, are able to run a suite of 1D, 2D, and 3D experiments to determine a structure of carbohydrate compounds.
Carbohydrate NMR observables
Chemical shift
Common chemical shift ranges for nuclei within carbohydrate residues are:- Typical 1H NMR chemical shifts of carbohydrate ring protons are 3–6 ppm.
- Typical 13C NMR chemical shifts of carbohydrate ring carbons are 60–110 ppm
The typical ranges of specific carbohydrate carbon chemical shifts in the unsubstituted monosaccharides are:
- Anomeric carbons: 90-100 ppm
- Sugar ring carbons bearing a hydroxy function: 68-77
- Open-form sugar carbons bearing a hydroxy function: 71-75
- Sugar ring carbons bearing an amino function: 50-56
- Exocyclic hydroxymethyl groups: 60-64
- Exocyclic carboxy groups: 172-176
- Desoxygenated sugar ring carbons: 31-40
- A carbon at pyranose ring closure: 71-73, 74-76
- A carbon at furanose ring closure: 80-83, 83-86
Coupling constants
Vicinal proton-proton coupling constants are used to study stereo orientation of protons relatively to the other protons within a sugar ring, thus identifying a monosaccharide.
Vicinal heteronuclear H-C-O-C coupling constants are used to study torsional angles along glycosidic bond between sugars or along exocyclic fragments, thus revealing a molecular conformation.
Sugar rings are relatively rigid molecular fragments, thus vicinal proton-proton couplings are characteristic:
- Equatorial to axial: 1–4 Hz
- Equatorial to equatorial: 0–2 Hz
- Axial to axial non-anomeric: 9–11 Hz
- Axial to axial anomeric: 7–9 Hz
- Axial to exocyclic hydroxymethyl: 5 Hz, 2 Hz
- Geminal between hydroxymethyl protons: 12 Hz
Nuclear Overhauser effects (NOEs)
Other NMR observables
Relaxivities, nuclear relaxation rates, line shape and other parameters were reported useful in structural studies of carbohydrates.Elucidation of carbohydrate structure by NMR spectroscopy
Structural parameters of carbohydrates
The following is a list of structural features that can be elucidated by NMR:- Chemical structure of each carbohydrate residue in a molecule, including
- * carbon skeleton size and sugar type
- * cycle size
- * stereo configuration of all carbons
- * stereo configuration of anomeric carbon
- * absolute configuration
- * location of amino-, carboxy-, deoxy- and other functions
- Chemical structure of non-carbohydrate residues in molecule
- Substitution positions in residues
- Sequence of residues
- Stoichiometry of terminal residues and side chains
- Location of phosphate and sulfate diester bonds
- Polymerization degree and frame positioning
NMR spectroscopy vs. other methods
Absolute configuration and polymerization degree are not always determinable using NMR only, so the process of structural elucidation may require additional methods. Although monomeric composition can be solved by NMR, chromatographic and mass-spectroscopic methods provide this information sometimes easier. The other structural features listed above can be determined solely by the NMR spectroscopic methods.
The limitation of the NMR structural studies of carbohydrates is that structure elucidation can hardly be automatized and require a human expert to derive a structure from NMR spectra.
Application of various NMR techniques to carbohydrates
Complex glycans possess a multitude of overlapping signals, especially in a proton spectrum. Therefore, it is advantageous to utilize 2D experiments for the assignment of signals.The table and figures below list most widespread NMR techniques used in carbohydrate studies.
NMR experiment | Description | Information obtained |
1H 1D | 1D proton spectrum | measurement of couplings, general information, residue identification, basis for carbon spectrum assignment |
13C BB | Proton-decoupled 1D carbon-13 spectrum | detailed information, residue identification, substitution positions |
31P BB, 15N BB | Proton-decoupled 1D heteronuclei spectra | additional information |
APT, 13C DEPT | attached proton test, driven enhanced polarization transfer | assignment of CH2 groups |
13C Gated, 31P Gated | Proton-coupled 1D carbon-13 and heteronuclei spectra | measurement of heteronuclear couplings, elucidation of anomeric configuration, conformational studies |
1H,1H J-resolved | Proton signals swept on multiplicity | measurement of heteronuclear couplings, signal separation, residue identification |
1H DOSY | Proton spectrum swept on multiplicity | measurement of heteronuclear couplings, signal separation, residue identification |
1H,1H COSY | Proton spin correlation | proton spectrum assignment using vicinal couplings |
COSY RCT, COSY RCT2 | Proton spin correlation with one- or two-step relayed coherence transfer | proton spectrum assignment where signals of neighboring vicinal protons overlap |
DQF COSY | Double-quantum filtered proton spin correlation | assignment of proximal proton signals |
1H HD dif | Selective differential homodecoupling | line shape analysis of the overlapped proton signals |
TOCSY | Total correlation of all protons within a spin system | distinguishing of spin systems of residues |
1D TOCSY | TOCSY of a single signal | extraction of a spin system of a certain residue |
NOESY, ROESY | Homonuclear Nuclear Overhauser effect correlation | revealing of spatially proximal proton pairs, determination of a sequence of residues, determination of averaged conformation |
1H NOE dif | Selective differential NOE measurement | studies of proton spatial contacts |
1H,13C HSQC | Heteronuclear single-quantum coherence, direct proton-carbon spin correlation | carbon spectrum assignment |
1H,31P HSQC | Heteronuclear single-quantum coherence, proton-phosphorus spin correlation | localization of phosphoric acid residues in phosphoglycans |
1H,13C HMBC | Heteronuclear multiple-bond correlation, vicinal proton-carbon spin correlation | determination of residue sequence, acetylation/amidation pattern, confirmation of substitution positions |
1H,X 1D HMBC | HMBC for a single signal | assignment of proton around a certain carbon or heteroatom |
1H,13C HSQC Relay | Implicit carbon-carbon correlation via vicinal couplings of the attached protons | assignment of neighboring carbon atoms |
1H,13C HSQC-TOCSY | Correlation of protons with all carbons within a spin system, and vice versa | assignment of C5 using H6 and solving similar problems, separation of carbon spectrum into subspectra of residues |
1H,X 1D NOE | Heteronuclear NOE measurement | heteronuclear spatial contacts, conformations |
Research scheme
NMR spectroscopic research includes the following steps:- Extraction of carbohydrate material
- Chemical removal of moieties masking regularity
- Separation and purification of carbohydrate material
- Sample preparation
- Acquisition of 1D spectra
- Planning, acquisition and processing of other NMR experiments
- Assignment and interpretation of spectra
- If a structural problem could not be solved: chemical modification/degradation and NMR analysis of products
- Acquisition of spectra of the native compound and their interpretation based on modified structure
- Presentation of results
Carbohydrate NMR databases and tools
Multiple chemical shift databases and related services have been created to aid structural elucidation of and expert analysis of their NMR spectra. Of them, several informatics tools are dedicated solely to carbohydrates:- GlycoSCIENCES.de
- *over 2000 NMR spectra of mammalian glycans
- *search of structure by NMR signals and vice versa
- CSDB contains:
- *over 4000 NMR spectra of bacterial, plant and fungal glycans,
- *search of structure by NMR signals and vice versa
- *empirical spectra simulation routine optimized for carbohydrates,
- *statistical chemical shift estimation based on HOSE algorithm optimized for carbohydrates,
- *structure generation and NMR-based ranking tool.
- CASPER. contains:
- *chemical shift database,
- *empirical spectra simulation routine optimized for carbohydrates,
- *online interface.
- *structure matching tool. Both proton and carbon C and H chemical shifts can be used to access structural information.
Simulation of the NMR observables
- Universal statistical database approaches
- Usage of neural networks to refine the predictions
- Regression based methods
- CHARGE
- Carbohydrate-optimized empirical schemes.
- Combined molecular mechanics/dynamics geometry calculation and quantum-mechanical simulation/iteration of NMR observables
- ONIOM approaches
- Ab initio calculations.
As a representative example, see figure on the right.