NMR Study on the Interaction of Trehalose with Lactose and Its Effect on the Hydrogen Bond Interaction in Lactose

Trehalose, a well-known stress-protector of biomolecules, has been investigated for its effect on the mobility, hydration and hydrogen bond interaction of lactose using diffusion-ordered NMR spectroscopy and NMR of hydroxy protons. In ternary mixtures of trehalose, lactose and water, the two sugars...

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Main Authors: Eric Morssing Vilén, Corine Sandström
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2013-08-01
Series:Molecules
Subjects:
NMR
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/1420-3049/18/8/9735
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spelling doaj-306436ff2a4f47c1a960d2dc912aa9772020-11-24T23:15:04ZengMDPI AGMolecules1420-30492013-08-011889735975410.3390/molecules18089735NMR Study on the Interaction of Trehalose with Lactose and Its Effect on the Hydrogen Bond Interaction in LactoseEric Morssing VilénCorine SandströmTrehalose, a well-known stress-protector of biomolecules, has been investigated for its effect on the mobility, hydration and hydrogen bond interaction of lactose using diffusion-ordered NMR spectroscopy and NMR of hydroxy protons. In ternary mixtures of trehalose, lactose and water, the two sugars have the same rate of diffusion. The chemical shifts, temperature coefficients, vicinal coupling constants and ROE of the hydroxy protons in trehalose, lactose and sucrose were measured for the disaccharides alone in water/acetone-d6 solutions as well as in mixtures. The data indicated that addition of trehalose did not change significantly the strength of the hydrogen bond interaction between GlcOH3 and GalO5' in lactose. Small upfield shifts were however measured for all hydroxy protons when the sugar concentration was increased. The chemical shift of the GlcOH3 signal in lactose showed less change, attributed to the spatial proximity to GalO5'. Chemical exchange between hydroxy protons of lactose and trehalose was observed in the ROESY NMR spectra. Similar effects were observed with sucrose indicating no specific effect of trehalose at the concentrations investigated (73 to 763 mg/mL) and suggesting that it is the concentration of hydroxy groups more than the type of sugars which is guiding intermolecular interactions.http://www.mdpi.com/1420-3049/18/8/9735trehaloselactosesucroseNMRhydroxy protonshydrogen bondinginteraction
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Eric Morssing Vilén
Corine Sandström
spellingShingle Eric Morssing Vilén
Corine Sandström
NMR Study on the Interaction of Trehalose with Lactose and Its Effect on the Hydrogen Bond Interaction in Lactose
Molecules
trehalose
lactose
sucrose
NMR
hydroxy protons
hydrogen bonding
interaction
author_facet Eric Morssing Vilén
Corine Sandström
author_sort Eric Morssing Vilén
title NMR Study on the Interaction of Trehalose with Lactose and Its Effect on the Hydrogen Bond Interaction in Lactose
title_short NMR Study on the Interaction of Trehalose with Lactose and Its Effect on the Hydrogen Bond Interaction in Lactose
title_full NMR Study on the Interaction of Trehalose with Lactose and Its Effect on the Hydrogen Bond Interaction in Lactose
title_fullStr NMR Study on the Interaction of Trehalose with Lactose and Its Effect on the Hydrogen Bond Interaction in Lactose
title_full_unstemmed NMR Study on the Interaction of Trehalose with Lactose and Its Effect on the Hydrogen Bond Interaction in Lactose
title_sort nmr study on the interaction of trehalose with lactose and its effect on the hydrogen bond interaction in lactose
publisher MDPI AG
series Molecules
issn 1420-3049
publishDate 2013-08-01
description Trehalose, a well-known stress-protector of biomolecules, has been investigated for its effect on the mobility, hydration and hydrogen bond interaction of lactose using diffusion-ordered NMR spectroscopy and NMR of hydroxy protons. In ternary mixtures of trehalose, lactose and water, the two sugars have the same rate of diffusion. The chemical shifts, temperature coefficients, vicinal coupling constants and ROE of the hydroxy protons in trehalose, lactose and sucrose were measured for the disaccharides alone in water/acetone-d6 solutions as well as in mixtures. The data indicated that addition of trehalose did not change significantly the strength of the hydrogen bond interaction between GlcOH3 and GalO5' in lactose. Small upfield shifts were however measured for all hydroxy protons when the sugar concentration was increased. The chemical shift of the GlcOH3 signal in lactose showed less change, attributed to the spatial proximity to GalO5'. Chemical exchange between hydroxy protons of lactose and trehalose was observed in the ROESY NMR spectra. Similar effects were observed with sucrose indicating no specific effect of trehalose at the concentrations investigated (73 to 763 mg/mL) and suggesting that it is the concentration of hydroxy groups more than the type of sugars which is guiding intermolecular interactions.
topic trehalose
lactose
sucrose
NMR
hydroxy protons
hydrogen bonding
interaction
url http://www.mdpi.com/1420-3049/18/8/9735
work_keys_str_mv AT ericmorssingvilen nmrstudyontheinteractionoftrehalosewithlactoseanditseffectonthehydrogenbondinteractioninlactose
AT corinesandstrom nmrstudyontheinteractionoftrehalosewithlactoseanditseffectonthehydrogenbondinteractioninlactose
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