13C and 15N Benchtop NMR Detection of Metabolites via Relayed Hyperpolarization**

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Abstract

Parahydrogen-based nuclear spin hyperpolarization allows various magnetic-resonance applications, and it is particularly attractive because of its technical simplicity, low cost, and ability to quickly (in seconds) produce large volumes of hyperpolarized material. Although many parahydrogen-based techniques have emerged, some of them remain unexplored due to the lack of careful optimization studies. In this work, we investigate and optimize a novel parahydrogen-induced polarization (PHIP) technique that relies on proton exchange referred to below as PHIP-relay. An INEPT (insensitive nuclei enhanced by polarization transfer) sequence is employed to transfer polarization from hyperpolarized protons to heteronuclei ((Formula presented.) N and (Formula presented.) C) and nuclear signals are detected using benchtop NMR spectrometers (1 T and 1.4 T, respectively). We demonstrate the applicability of the PHIP-relay technique for hyperpolarization of a wide range of biochemicals by examining such key metabolites as urea, ammonium, glucose, amino acid glycine, and a drug precursor benzamide. By optimizing chemical and NMR parameters of the PHIP-relay, we achieve a 17,100-fold enhancement of (Formula presented.) N signal of [(Formula presented.) C, (Formula presented.) N (Formula presented.)]-urea compared to the thermal signal measured at 1 T. We also show that repeated measurements with shorter exposure to parahydrogen provide a higher effective signal-to-noise ratio compared to longer parahydrogen bubbling.

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Alcicek, S., Van Dyke, E., Xu, J., Pustelny, S., & Barskiy, D. A. (2023). 13C and 15N Benchtop NMR Detection of Metabolites via Relayed Hyperpolarization**. Chemistry-Methods, 3(7). https://doi.org/10.1002/cmtd.202200075

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