Have you seen this paper published in J. Chem. Educ.?
https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/ed101169t
Thank you! So, quick definitions from that paper:
- Off-resonance spectrum - This refers to the spectrum that is recorded without selective saturation of the protein protons. The signal intensities of this spectrum is referred by the paper as I0;
- On-resonance spectrum - This refers to the spectrum that is recorded with selective saturation of the protein protons. The signal intensities of this spectrum is referred by the paper as ISAT;
From the two spectra, a difference spectrum is determined through subtraction between the signal intensities of the off-resonance spectrum and on-resonance spectrum:
[tex]I_{STD} = I_{0}-I_{SAT}[/tex]
In the difference spectrum, only the signals of the ligand that received saturation transfer from the protein will remain. According to the paper, the saturation transfer from protein to ligand occurs via spin diffusion, through the so-called
nuclear Overhauser effect. If I remember correctly, NOE is the modification of the signal intensity of a resonance by saturation of another. For example, in a very simple AX system in which the two spins interact through a magnetic dipole-dipole interaction, if we saturate the transition of X (that is, we equalize the populations of the X levels), we observe that the signal intensity of A is either enhanced or diminished.
Also, according to the paper, in order to observe STD effects, the dissociation constant or K
D of the protein-ligand complex must be lower than 10
-3 M but higher than 10
-8 M. If the ligand binds more tightly than the acceptable range of the K
D required for the experiment to work, then according to the paper, relaxation occurs and saturation transfer does not occur.
Have I understood and summarized the concepts well? Also, right now I'm confused about why saturation transfer doesn't occur when relaxation occurs. Why? (Sorry for asking stupid questions...)