2021 journal article

Hyperpolarization of common antifungal agents with SABRE

Magnetic Resonance in Chemistry.

By: K. MacCulloch n, P. Tomhon n, A. Browning n, E. Akeroyd n, S. Lehmkuhl n, E. Chekmenev*, T. Theis n

co-author countries: Russian Federation 🇷🇺 United States of America 🇺🇸
author keywords: N-15; H-1; antifungals; clotrimazole and fluconazole; contrast agents; hyperpolarization; NMR; parahydrogen; SABRE; voriconazole
MeSH headings : Antifungal Agents; Catalysis; Magnetic Resonance Imaging; Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy; Nitrogen Isotopes
Source: ORCID
Added: June 21, 2021

Signal amplification by reversible exchange (SABRE) is a robust and inexpensive hyperpolarization (HP) technique to enhance nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) signals using parahydrogen (pH2 ). The substrate scope of SABRE is continually expanding. Here, we present the polarization of three antifungal drugs (voriconazole, clotrimazole, and fluconazole) and elicit the detailed HP mechanisms for 1 H and 15 N nuclei. In this exploratory work, 15 N polarization values of ~1% were achieved using 50% pH2 in solution of 3-mM catalyst and 60-mM substrate in perdeuterated methanol. All hyperpolarized 15 N sites exhibited long T1 in excess of 1 min at a clinically relevant field of 1 T. Hyperpolarizing common drugs is of interest due to their potential biomedical applications as MRI contrast agents or to enable studies on protein dynamics at physiological concentrations. We optimize the polarization with respect to temperature and the polarization transfer field (PTF) for 1 H nuclei in the millitesla regime and for 15 N nuclei in the microtesla regime, which provides detailed insights into exchange kinetics and spin evolution. This work broadens the SABRE substrate scope and provides mechanistic and kinetic insights into the HP process.