Abstract
We explore the potential of orientation-resolved pulsed dipolar spectroscopy (PDS) in light-induced versions of the experiment. The use of triplets as spin-active moieties for PDS offers an attractive tool for studying biochemical systems containing optically-active cofactors. Cofactors are often rigidly bound within the protein structure, providing an accurate positional marker. The rigidity leads to orientation selection effects in PDS, which can be analyzed to give both distance and mutual orientation information. Here we present a comprehensive analysis of the orientation selection of a full set of light-induced PDS experiments. We exploit the complementary information provided by the different light-induced techniques to yield atomic-level structural information. For the first time, we measure a 2D frequency-correlated laser-induced magnetic dipolar spectrum and we were able to monitor the complete orientation dependence of the system in a single experiment. Alternatively, the summed spectrum enables an orientation independent analysis to determine the distance distribution.
Original language | English |
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Journal | Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters |
Publication status | Accepted/In press - 31 Mar 2021 |
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EPSRC National Research Facility for Electron Paramagnetic Resonance
Collison, D. (Academic lead), Mcinnes, E. (Academic lead), Tuna, F. (Academic lead), Bowen, A. (Academic lead), Shanmugam, M. (Senior Technical Specialist), Brookfield, A. (Technical Specialist), Fleming, E. (Other) & Cliff, M. (Platform Lead)
FSE ResearchFacility/equipment: Facility