Publications by authors named "Takuya Segawa"

Article Synopsis
  • Optically active spin defects, like nitrogen-vacancy centers, are useful for studying nuclear spin clusters due to their high sensitivity and ability to provide atomic-scale insights.
  • The research introduces advanced Fourier spectroscopy techniques to enhance the mapping and localization of carbon-13 nuclear spins around these defects at room temperature.
  • The study showcases two applications of multidimensional NMR: improved localization of nuclear spins by separating hyperfine components and editing spectral data of nuclear-spin pairs to measure internuclear coupling constants, thus offering new methods for analyzing molecular structures.
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Fragment-based drug design is a well-established strategy for rational drug design, with nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) on high-field spectrometers as the method of reference for screening and hit validation. However, high-field NMR spectrometers are not only expensive, but require specialized maintenance, dedicated space, and depend on liquid helium cooling which became critical over the recurring global helium shortages. We propose an alternative to high-field NMR screening by applying the recently developed approach of fragment screening by photoinduced hyperpolarized NMR on a cryogen-free 80 MHz benchtop NMR spectrometer yielding signal enhancements of up to three orders in magnitude.

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Nanodiamonds containing fluorescent Nitrogen-Vacancy (NV) centers are the smallest single particles, of which a magnetic resonance spectrum can be recorded at room temperature using optically-detected magnetic resonance (ODMR). By recording spectral shift or changes in relaxation rates, various physical and chemical quantities can be measured such as the magnetic field, orientation, temperature, radical concentration, pH or even NMR. This turns NV-nanodiamonds into nanoscale quantum sensors, which can be read out by a sensitive fluorescence microscope equipped with an additional magnetic resonance upgrade.

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Article Synopsis
  • Sicca syndrome, characterized by dry mouth, can occasionally occur as an immune-related side effect of cancer treatments like immune checkpoint inhibitors.
  • A case study of a 70-year-old man treated for metastatic renal cell carcinoma revealed that he developed sicca syndrome after receiving ipilimumab and nivolumab.
  • The patient's symptoms improved after 36 weeks of treatment with pilocarpine hydrochloride, demonstrating that sicca syndrome can be managed without stopping immunotherapy.
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5 nanometer sized detonation nanodiamonds (DNDs) are studied as potential single-particle labels for distance measurements in biomolecules. Nitrogen-vacancy (NV) defects in the crystal lattice can be addressed through their fluorescence and optically-detected magnetic resonance (ODMR) of a single particle can be recorded. To achieve single-particle distance measurements, we propose two complementary approaches based on spin-spin coupling or optical super-resolution imaging.

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Detonation nanodiamonds (DNDs) are a class of very small and spherical diamond nanocrystals. They are used in polymer reinforcement materials or as drug delivery systems in the field of nanomedicine. Synthesized by detonation, only the final deaggregation step down to the single-digit nanometer size (<10 nm) unfolds their full potential.

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Introduction: Subcapsular renal hematoma after ureterorenoscopy using a holmium yttrium-aluminum-garnet laser is a rare complication. We experienced a case of subcapsular hematoma after ureterorenoscopy.

Case Presentation: The patient was a 56-year-old man with a history of hypertension and coronary vasospastic angina, and he was taking antiplatelet drugs.

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Targeting the programmed cell death-1 signaling pathway has been approved for the anti-cancer therapy in several cancers including urothelial cancer. To determine predictive factors of the responsiveness to pembrolizumab in urothelial cancer patients, a retrospective study that used clinical information and paraffin-embedded samples obtained from patients diagnosed with urothelial cancer between 2015 and 2020 were performed. Seventeen patients who underwent total cystectomy or nephroureterectomy of the primary lesion and were treated with pembrolizumab for chemo-resistant disease were enrolled, and immunohistochemical analysis was performed.

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We demonstrate room-temperature C hyperpolarization by dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) using optically polarized triplet electron spins in two polycrystalline systems: pentacene-doped [carboxyl-C] benzoic acid and microdiamonds containing nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centers. For both samples, the integrated solid effect (ISE) is used to polarize the C spin system in magnetic fields of 350-400 mT. In the benzoic acid sample, the C spin polarization is enhanced by up to 0.

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Nanodiamonds containing negatively charged triplet (having an electron spin = 1) nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centers are an extraordinary room-temperature quantum system, whose electron spins may be polarized and read out optically even in a single nanocrystal. In this Viewpoint we promote a simple but reliable method to identify, attribute, and quantify these triplet defects in a polycrystalline sample using electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy. The characterization relies on a specific "forbidden" transition ("Δ = 2"), which appears at about half the central magnetic field and shows a remarkably small anisotropy.

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Nanoscale measurements provide insight into the nano world. For instance, nanometric spatiotemporal distribution of intracellular pH is regulated by and regulates a variety of biological processes. However, there is no general method to fabricate nanoscale pH sensors.

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Nanodiamonds containing negatively charged nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centers are versatile nanosensors thanks to their optical and spin properties. While currently most fluorescent nanodiamonds in use have at least a size of a few tens of nanometers, the challenge lies in engineering the smallest nanodiamonds containing a single NV defect. Such a tiny nanocrystal with a single NV center is an "optical spin label" for biomolecules, which can be detected in a fluorescence microscope.

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Background: Nanodiamonds (NDs) provide a unique multitasking system for drug delivery and fluorescent imaging in biological environments. Owing to their quantum properties, NDs are expected to be employed as multifunctional probes in the future for the accurate visualization of biophysical parameters such as temperature and magnetic fields. However, the use of NDs for the selective targeting of the biomolecules of interest within a complicated biological system remains a challenge.

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The development of sensors to estimate physical properties, and their temporal and spatial variation, has been a central driving force in scientific breakthroughs. In recent years, nanosensors based on quantum measurements, such as nitrogen-vacancy centres (NVCs) in nanodiamonds, have been attracting much attention as ultrastable, sensitive, accurate and versatile physical sensors for quantitative cellular measurements. However, the nanodiamonds currently available for use as sensors have diameters of several tens of nanometres, much larger than the usual size of a protein.

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Fourier transform (FT) electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) correlation spectroscopy usually requires broader excitation bandwidth than can be achieved by monochromatic rectangular pulses. Replacement of such pulses by frequency-swept pulses affords the correlation spectra, which, however, may not look the same as those that would be obtained with sufficiently broad-banded monochromatic rectangular pulses. This was recently observed for correlating nuclear frequencies to FT-EPR spectra by a three-pulse electron spin echo envelope modulation experiment.

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Water accessibility is a key parameter for the understanding of the structure of biomolecules, especially membrane proteins. Several experimental techniques based on the combination of electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy with site-directed spin labeling are currently available. Among those, we compare relaxation time measurements and electron spin echo envelope modulation (ESEEM) experiments using pulse EPR with Overhauser dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) at X-band frequency and a magnetic field of 0.

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Methanol synthesis by CO2 hydrogenation is attractive in view of avoiding the environmental implications associated with the production of the traditional syngas feedstock and mitigating global warming. However, there still is a lack of efficient catalysts for such alternative processes. Herein, we unveil the high activity, 100 % selectivity, and remarkable stability for 1000 h on stream of In2 O3 supported on ZrO2 under industrially relevant conditions.

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The main limitation of pulse electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy is its narrow excitation bandwidth. Ultra-wideband (UWB) excitation with frequency-swept chirp pulses over several hundreds of megahertz overcomes this drawback. This allows to excite electron spin echo envelope modulation (ESEEM) from paramagnetic copper centers in crystals, whereas up to now, only ESEEM of ligand nuclei like protons or nitrogens at lower frequencies could be detected.

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Homogeneous line-widths that arise from transverse relaxation tend to be masked by B0 field inhomogeneity and by multiplets due to homonuclear J-couplings. Besides well-known spin-locking sequences that lead to signals that decay with a rate R1ρ without any modulations, alternative experiments allow one to determine the transverse relaxation rates R2 in systems with scalar-coupled spins. We evaluate three recent strategies by experiment and simulation: (i) moderate-amplitude SITCOM-CPMG sequences (Dittmer and Bodenhausen, 2006), (ii) multiple-quantum filtered (MQF) sequences (Barrère et al.

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In the long bygone days of continuous-wave nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, a selected transition within a multiplet of a high-resolution spectrum could be irradiated by a highly selective continuous-wave (CW) radio-frequency (rf) field with a very weak amplitude ω(2)/(2π)≤J. This causes splittings of connected transitions, allowing one to map the connectivities of all transitions within the energy-level diagram of the spin system. Such "tickling" experiments stimulated the invention of two-dimensional spectroscopy, but seem to have been forgotten for nearly 50 years.

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A half-century quest for improving resolution in Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) and Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) has enabled the study of molecular structures, biological interactions, and fine details of anatomy. This progress largely relied on the advent of sophisticated superconducting magnets that can provide stable and homogeneous fields with temporal and spatial variations below ΔB(0)/B(0)<0.01 ppm.

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Window-acquired tetrachromatic irradiation allows one to decouple simultaneously four amide protons in cyclosporine A (wavy arrows; see figure) leading to simplified multiplets of the alpha protons. By inserting a manifold of polychromatic pulses in each dwell time, several subsystems can be decoupled simultaneously.

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Among the different fields of research in nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) which are currently investigated in the Laboratory of Biomolecular Magnetic Resonance (LRMB), two subjects that are closely related to each other are presented in this article. On the one hand, we show how to populate long-lived states (LLS) that have long lifetimes T(LLS) which allow one to go beyond the usual limits imposed by the longitudinal relaxation time T1. This makes it possible to extend NMR experiments to longer time-scales.

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Trains of 2π or 4π pulses fail to refocus offsets but can suppress the effects of bilinear interactions such as homonuclear scalar couplings.

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A fully analytical description of the control of the cross-correlated cross relaxation of multiple-quantum coherences in the presence of local dynamics under heteronuclear double-resonance radio-frequency (RF) irradiation is presented. The contribution of chemical exchange to relaxation can be partly or fully quenched by RF fields. We assume a correlated two-site chemical exchange model with arbitrary populations, and show that in the limit of fast exchange the dependence of the effective multiple-quantum cross-relaxation rate on the applied RF amplitude can be described by a compact analytical expression.

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