Programme outline


Monday, 18 September 2023

Time   Programme Room

11:30-20:00

 

Registration (Desk open every day)

Level R5

9:30-12:30

 

JEOL User Meeting

M630

11:30-12:30

 

Lunch

Mensa, building K

12:30-15:30

 

Tutorials

R711

12:30-13:30

 

Mykhailo Azarkh, University of Konstanz, Germany
Product Operator Formalism

 

13:30-14:30

 

Arno P.M. Kentgens, Radboud University Nijmegen, Netherlands
Solid-State NMR of Quadrupolar Nuclei

 

14:30-15:30

 

Friedemann Reinhard, University of Rostock, Germany
The quest for nanoscale magnetic resonance

 

12:30-15:00

 

Board Meeting

P603

13:30-15:30

 

JEOL Workshop

NMR-laboratory

15:30-16:00

 

Coffee break

Foyers, building R

16:00-19:00

 

Opening and Awards Ceremony
Chair: Malte Drescher

R712

16:00-16:15

 

Malte Drescher, University of Konstanz
Welcome/Introduction

 

16:15-17:45

 

Ernst awards – Chair: Karsten Seidel
- Paolo C. Bruzzese
- Ilia Kulikov
- Christian F. Pantoja

 

17:45-18:15

 

Albert Overhauser award – Chair: Henrike Heise
- Leif Antonschmidt

 

18:15-19:00

 

Felix Bloch Lectureship – Chair: Jörg Matysik
- Loren B. Andreas

 

19:00-21:00

 

Welcome Reception

Mensa, level K7

Tuesday, 19 September 2023

Time   Programme Room

8:30-10:30

 

Plenary Session 1
Chair: Arno Kentgens

R712

8:30-9:10

 

Ilya Kuprov, University of Southhampton, United Kingdom
Simulation of complex magnetokinetic processes

 

9:10-9:50

 

Ulrich Weininger, Martin-Luther-Universität Halle-Wittenberg, Germany
Aromatic Ring Flips in Proteins: Conformational Fluctuations and Their Transition States 

 

9:50-10:30

 

Anne Schütz, LMU München, Germany
Unravelling ATP processing by a human enzyme at the atomic level

 

10:30-11:00

 

Coffee break

Foyers, building R

11:00-12:00

 

Parallel Session 1A - Protein dynamics and relaxation
Chair: Katja Petzold

R711

11:00–11:20

 

Sara Medina-Gomez, TU-Dortmund University, Germany
Solid-State NMR Study of the Dynamics of Human p38α MAP Kinase

 

11:20-11:40

 

Albert Smith-Penzel, Universität Leipzig, Germany
pyDIFRATE: Deep Insight into Dynamics with NMR and MD

 

11:40-12:00

 

Nils-Alexander Lakomek, Heinrich-Heine-Universität Düsseldorf, Germany
15N NMR relaxation experiments for the investigation of intrinsically disordered proteins at high magnetic fields

 

11:00-12:00

 

Parallel Session 1B - Pulsed diploar spectroscopy applications
Chair: Thomas Prisner

R611

11:00-11:20

 

Benesh Joseph, Freie Universität Berlin, Germany
Time-resolved Mn2+–NO and NO–NO distance measurements reveal that catalytic asymmetry regulates alternating access  in an ABC transporter

 

11:20-11:40

 

Juliane Stehle, Universität Konstanz, Germany
Hopping of copper(II) ions as event preceding copper-assisted fibrillization of amyloid-beta peptides

 

11:40-12:00

 

Maxim Yulikov, ETH Zürich, Switzerland
Describing Structural Ensembles and Local Sites Heterogeneity in Dietary Fibers Solutions by Pulse EPR

 

11:00-12:00

 

Parallel Session 1C – Spectrometer-to-go
Chair: Jens Anders

R513

11:00-11:20

 

Selina Eckel, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), Germany
Development of a Broadband On-Chip EPR Spectrometer

 

11:20-11:40

 

Ke Xu, University of Siegen, Germany
Fast Sample Spinning by 3D Printing

 

11:40-12:00

 

Rouven Maier, University of Stuttgart, Germany
Application of high magnetic fields to micron-scale NMR spectroscopy with quantum sensors in diamond

 

12:00-13:00

 

Lunch break

Mensa, building K

13:00-14:30

 

Plenary Session 2
Chair: Henrike Heise

R712

13:00-13:40

 

Sabine Richert, University of Freiburg, Germany
Exploring spin communication in photogenerated molecular multi-spin systems

 

13:40-14:20

 

Yoh Matsuki, Osaka University, Japan
Methods and Instruments for High-Field MAS DNP toward Intracellular Structural Biology

 

14:20-15:00

 

Silvia Cavagnero, University of Wisconsin-Madison, United States
Nuclear-Spin Hyperpolarization of Amino Acids and Proteins in Solution  via LC-photo-CIDNP

 

15:00-17:00

 

Coffee break parallel to poster session

Level P/L6

15:00-17:00

 

Poster Session 1

Poster areas P6

17:00-18:20

 

Parallel Session 2A - Advanced NMR applications
Chair: Michael Kovermann

R711

17:00-17:20

 

Thomas Wiegand, Max-Planck-Institute for Chemical Energy Conversion, Germany
Potentials of solid-state NMR in organic mechanochemistry

Replaced by: Muslim Dvoyashkin, Leipzig University, Germany
Capability of In Situ NMR Spectroscopy for Studying Nonequilibrium Nanoconfined Fluids

 

17:20-17:40

 

Sebastian Scheidel, Würzburg University, Germany
Life is Short, Make it Sweet: Structure-Property-Relationships of Sugar Surfactant-Boron-Complexes and Their Formulations

 

17:40-18:00

 

Franziska Rüttger, Georg August Universität Göttingen, Germany
Boron Signal Assignment in Borane Clusters using 11B Residual Quadrupolar Couplings

 

18:00-18:20

 

Ulrich Scheler, Leibniz-Institut für Polymerforschung Dresden e. V., Germany
In-situ electric field during NMR experiments- orientation and charge

 

17:00-18:00

 

Parallel Session 2B – EPR methods
Chair: Mykhailo Azarkh

R611

17:00-17:20

 

Andreas Meyer, Max-Planck-Institute for Multidisciplinary Sciences, Germany
High Resolution 19F Electron Nuclear Double Resonance for Structural Biology

 

17:20-17:40

 

Joshua Wort, University of Bonn, Germany
Enhanced Sensitivity for Pulse Dipolar EPR Spectroscopy Using Variable-time RIDME

 

17:40-18:00

 

Maximilian Gauger, Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany
Combining orientation-selective PELDOR and 19F ENDOR to investigate the conformational dynamics of dsRNA

 

17:00-18:20

 

Parallel Session 2C - Hyperpolarization and spin dynamics
Chair: Guinevere Mathies

R513

17:00-17:20

 

Alex Van der Ham, Max Planck Institut für multidisziplinäre Naturwissenschaften, Germany
Hyperpolarization Transfer Experiments for Liquid-state Overhauser Dynamic Nuclear Polarization

 

17:20-17:40

 

Anna Parker, Nvision Imaging Technologies GmbH, Germany
Hyperpolarized solution-state NMR spectroscopy via intermolecular NOE utilizing overwhelming source magnetization

 

17:40-18:00

 

Lisa Fries, Max Planck Institut für multidisziplinäre Naturwissenschaften, Germany
Real-Time Metabolic Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopic Imaging of Pancreatic and Colon Cancer Tumor-Xenografts with Para-Hydrogen Hyperpolarized 1-13C Pyruvate

 

18:00-18:20

 

Marvin Lenjer, Max Planck Institute for Multidisciplinary Sciences, Germany
Exploring Spin Dynamics during Electron Spinlock Pulses

 

18:30-19:30

 

Members‘ Assembly

R712

Wednesday, 20 September 2023

Time

 

Programme

Location/Room

8:30-10:30

 

Plenary Session 3
Chair: Michael Kovermann

R712

8:30-9:10

 

Roland Riek, ETH Zürich, Switzerland
FASTER NMR: On automated protein structure determination and photo-CIDNP based fragment-based drug screening

 

9:10-9:50

 

Jens Anders, University of Stuttgart, Germany
MR meets microelectronics: Recent advances in chip-based MR detectors

 

9:50-10:30

 

Katja Petzold, Uppsala University, Sweden
RNA dynamics by NMR

 

10:30-11:00

 

Coffee break

Foyers, building R

11:00-12:00

 

Parallel Session 3A - Phase separation
Chair: Paul Schanda

R711

11:00-11:20

 

Narsollah Rezaie Ghaleh, Heinrich Heine Universität Düsseldorf, Germany
Biomolecular phase separation monitored through combined NMR and EPR probes of dynamics

 

11:20-11:40

 

Jochen Balbach, Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg, Germany
UV-B damage and liquid-liquid phase separation of eye lens gammaD crystallin

 

11:40-12:00

 

Sanjay Vinod Kumar, Universität Konstanz, Germany
Dynamics study by NMR shows inhomogenous structure of amorphous calcium carbonate

 

11:00-12:00

 

Parallel Session 3B - EPR applications
Chair: Mykhailo Azarkh

R611

11:00-11:20

 

Yury Kutin, TU Dortmund University, Germany
EPR/ENDOR characterization of triplet vinylidenes

 

11:20-11:40

 

Annalisa Pierro, University of Konstanz, Germany
Dealing with the elephant in the room: protein dynamics at the ribosome interface

 

11:40-12:00

 

Bela Bode, University of St Andrews, United Kingdom
Investigating protein structure and function through paramagnetic substitution of natively bound metal ions

 

11:00-12:00

 

Parallel Session 3C - Pulse shaping
Chair: Ilya Kuprov

R513

11:00-11:20

 

Martha Wachter-Lehn, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), Germany
Development of energy-optimized broadband pulses for fast-pulsing 2D NMR experiments

 

11:20-11:40

 

Paul Trenkler, Goethe University Frankfurt am Main, Germany
Shaped pulses for broadband excitation and their optimization including the spectrometers transfer function    

 

11:40-12:00

 

Hector Cortes Sanchez, Universität Siegen, Germany
Echo pulses for background suppression by optimal control

 

12:00-13:00

 

Lunch break

Mensa, building K

13:00-14:20

 

Plenary Session 4
Chair: Karsten Seidel

R712

13:00-13:40

 

Markus Weingarth, Utrecht University, Netherlands
The mechanisms of Lipid-targeting Antibiotics

 

13:30-14:20

 

Tabea Arndt, KIT - Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany
Superconducting Magnet Technology – status, trends and prospects

 

14:20-16:20

 

Coffee break parallel to poster session

Level P/L6

14:20-16:20

 

Poster Session 2

Poster areas P6

16:20-17:20

 

Parallel Session 4A - NMR structural biology
Chair: Markus Weingarth

R711

16:20-16:40

 

Franz Hagn, TU Munich – BNMRZ, Germany
Structural basis of metabolite transport by the chloroplast outer envelope channel OEP21

 

16:40-17:00

 

Nina Schröder, RWTH Aachen University, Germany
ATP-hydrolysis in the P-loop ATPase SufC studied by solid-state NMR

 

17:00-17:20

 

Luis Gardon, Heinrich Heine Universität Düsseldorf, Germany
Structural Influence of Pyroglutamylation at Position 3 in an Amyloid β (3-42) Fibril Polymorph probed by solid-state NMR

 

16:20-17:20

 

Parallel Session 4B - EPR Discussion
Chair: Müge Kasanmascheff

R611

16:20-16:50

 

Thomas Prisner, Goethe University Frankfurt am Main, Germany
Peter Höfer, Bruker BioSpin GmbH

Panel Discussion on EPR

 

16:50-17:20

 

Klaus-Peter Dinse, Germany
IES Fellow Award

 

16:20-17:20

 

Parallel Session 4C – Surfaces
Chair: Yoh Matsuki

R513

16:20-16:40

 

Jörn Schmedt auf der Günne, Universität Siegen, Germany
NMR at the Surface of Catalytically Active Nano-Scale Materials

 

16:40-17:00

 

Sara Amanzadeh Salout, TU of Dresden, Germany
Solid-state NMR investigation of alcohol adsorption by metal–organic frameworks: adsorption state, selectivity, and adsorption-induced phase transitions

 

17:00-17:20

 

Torsten Gutmann, TU Darmstadt, Germany
Detection of Nanomolar Amounts of Functional Groups on Paper Substrates by Solid-State Dynamic Nuclear Polarization

 

17:30

 

Departure for Boat Trip

Meeting in foyer R5

19:30-22:00

 

Conference Dinner

Konzil Building (by Konstanz Train Station)

Thursday, 21 September 2023

Time

 

Programme

Location/Room

8:30-10:30

 

Plenary Session 5
Chair: Burkhard Luy

R712

8:30-9:10

 

Fedor Jelezko, Ulm University, Germany
Nanoscale NMR enabled by diamond spin qubits

 

9:10-9:50

 

Warren S. Warren, Duke University, United States
Improving SABRE hyperpolarization using non-intuitive fields and sequences

 

9:50-10:30

 

Paul Schanda, Institute of Science and Technology Austria (ISTA), Austria
Function-related dynamics in large proteins on multiple length scales from NMR

 

10:30-11:00

 

Coffee break

Foyers, building R

11:00-11:40

 

Parallel Session 5A – Antibiotics
Chair: Annalisa Pierro

R711

11:00-11:20

 

Raj Kumar, Utrecht University, Netherlands
The mode of action of the lipopeptide antibiotic Daptomycin

 

11:20-11:40

 

Francesca Lavore, Utrecht University, Netherlands
NMR studies of the soluble and insoluble ErmB-32merRNA complex in the context of antibiotic resistance

 

11:00-11:40

 

Parallel Session 5B - Diffusion and Imaging
Chair: Silvia Cavagnero

R611

11:00-11:20

 

Robin Allert, Technical University of Munich, Germany
Imaging local diffusion in microstructures using NV-based pulsed field gradient NMR

 

11:20-11:40

 

Dilara Faderl, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany
Simultaneous Molecular Imaging of Protein-Ligand Interactions Gives Insights into Drug Discovery

 

11:00-11:40

 

Parallel Session 5C - 2D COFs
Chair: Fedor Jelezko

R513

11:00-11:20

 

Nikolaj Lopatik, TU Dresden, Germany
Solid-state NMR Investigations of 2D Materials

 

11:20-11:40

 

Arafat Khan, Technische Universität Dresden, Germany
Ex situ and operando NMR studies of redox two-dimensional covalent organic framework (2D-COFs)  cathodes for durable aluminum batteries

 

11:40-13:00

 

Awards and Closing
Chair: Jörg Matysik

R712

11:40-12:10

 

Otto Stern award

 

12:10-12:40

 

Honorary Membership
- Harald Günther

 

12:40-13:00

 

Poster awards and Closing

 

13:00-13:30

 

Lunch break

Mensa, building K

13:30-15:30

 

Subgroup Sessions

R711, R611, R513

Confirmed speakers and tutors / Awards

Confirmed invited speakers and tutors

Confirmed Invited Speakers

Jens Anders, University of Stuttgart, Germany

Tabea Arndt, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany

Silvia Cavagnero, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA

Peter Höfer, Bruker BioSpin GmbH, Germany

Fedor Jelezko, Ulm University, Germany

Ilya Kuprov, University of Southampton, United Kingdom

Yoh Matsuki, Osaka University, Japan

Katja Petzold, Karolinska Institute Stockholm, Sweden

Thomas Prisner, Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany

Sabine Richert, University of Freiburg, Germany

Roland Riek, ETH Zürich, Switzerland

Paul Schanda, Institute of Science and Technology, Austria

Anne Schütz, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, Germany

Warren S. Warren, Duke University, USA

Markus Weingarth, Utrecht University, The Netherlands

Ulrich Weininger, Martin-Luther-University of Halle-Wittenberg, Germany

The Tutorials will be held by

Mykhailo Azarkh, University of Konstanz, Germany

Arno P.M. Kentgens, Radboud University Nijmegen, The Netherlands

Friedemann Reinhard, University of Rostock, Germany

Awards

The following prizes have been awarded during the conference:

Ernst Award

In honor of Richard R. Ernst's memory and his essential contributions to the application of magnetic resonance in solution, in the solid state and its imaging, the FGMR awards the Ernst Award for an outstanding publication by young scientists (up to doctorate).

Ernst Awards 2023: Paolo C. Bruzzese, Ilia Kulikov, Christian F. Pantoja

Albert-Overhauser Award

In honor of Albert W. Overhauser's pioneering research, the FGMR has been awarding the Albert-Overhauser Award since 2019. The award recognizes an outstanding scientific publication by a young scientist (PostDoc).

Albert-Overhauser Award 2023: Leif Antonschmidt

Felix-Bloch Lectureship

In honor of Felix Bloch's memory, the FGMR awards the Felix-Bloch Lectureship, with which the special achievements of the more mature young scientists in the past five years are recognized - as evidenced by scientific publications.

Felix-Bloch Lectureship 2023: Loren B. Andreas

Otto-Stern Award

In honor of Otto Stern, whose work to prove spin quantization created the basic prerequisites for the use of magnetic resonance, and to honor the professional life's work of internationally outstanding personalities in the field of magnetic resonance, the GDCh Division of Magnetic Resonance established the Otto-Stern Award.

Otto-Stern Award 2023: Jean Jeener

Honorary Membership of the GDCh Division Of Magnetic Resonance 

The award of honorary membership is intended to recognize special services to the Division as an institution and its goals. This includes, in particular, the commitment to founding, maintaining and expanding as well as emphatically and permanently promoting the activities of the Division.

Honorary Membership 2023: Harald Günther

Poster Awards 2023

  • Max Gierth, Universität Rostock, Germany
    "Molecular dynamics of proline derivatives as possible sources for site specifity by DNP"
  • J. Shebha Anandhi, Universität Konstanz, Germany
    "Optimizing DNP pulse sequences with optimal control"
  • Steffen Böckmann, Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität Münster, Germany
    "A software toolbox for analyzing and constructing NMR phase
    cycling schemes"