A two-dimensional solid-state NMR method for the measurement of chemical shift anisotropy tensors of X nuclei (15N or 13C) from multiple sites of a polypeptide powder sample is presented. This method employs rotor-synchronized pi pulses to amplify the magnitude of the inhomogeneous X-CSA and 1H-X dipolar coupling interactions. A combination of on-resonance and magic angle rf irradiation of protons is used to vary the ratio of the magnitudes of the 1H-X dipolar and X-CSA interactions which are recovered under MAS, in addition to suppressing the 1H-1H dipolar interactions. The increased number of spinning sidebands in the recovered anisotropic interactions is useful to determine the CSA tensors accurately. The performance of this method is examined for powder samples of N-acetyl-(15)N-L-valine (NAV), N-acetyl-15N-L-valyl-15N-L-leucine (NAVL), and alpha-13C-L-leucine. The sources of experimental errors in the measurement of CSA tensors and the application of the pulse sequences under high-field fast MAS operations are discussed.
Copyright 2002 Elsevier Science (USA)