Speaker: Junyu Guo
Title: Nuclear magnetic resonance transverse relaxation times of water protons in skeletal muscle.
Authors:
Hazlewood CF, Chang DC, Nichols BL, Woessner DE.
Reference:
Biophys J. 1974 Aug;14(8):583-606
Abstract:
The observation of the spin-echo decay in a long time domain
has revealed that there exist at least three different
fractions of non-(or slowly) exchanging water in the rat
gastrocnemius muscle. These fractions of water are
characterized with different nuclear magnetic resonance
(NMR) relaxation times and are identified with the different
parts of tissue water. The water associated with the
macromolecules was found to be approximately 8% of the total
tissue water and not to exchange rapidly with the rest of
the intracellular water. The transverse relaxation time (
T2) of the myoplasm is 45 ms which is roughly a 40-fold
reduction from that of a dilute electrolyte solution. This
fraction of water accounts for 82% of the tissue water. The
reduced relaxation time is shown neither to be caused by
fast exchange between the hydration and myoplasmic water nor
by the diffusion of water across the local magnetic field
gradients which arise from the heterogeneity in the sample.
About 10% of the tissue water was resolved to be associated
with the extracellular space, the relaxation time of which
is approximately four times that of the myoplasm.
Mathematical treatments of the proposed mechanisms which may
be responsible for the reduction of tissue water relaxation
times are given in this paper. The results of our study are
consistent with the notion that the structure and /or
motions of all or part the cellular water are affected by
the macromolecular interface and this causes a change in the
NMR relaxation rates.