Publication | Open Access
Ester Carbonyl Vibration as a Sensitive Probe of Protein Local Electric Field
79
Citations
40
References
2014
Year
Peptide ScienceAnalytical UltracentrifugationLocal Electrostatic EnvironmentSingle Molecule BiophysicsProtein FoldingBioanalysisProtein MisfoldingMolecular SimulationBiophysicsProtein ChemistryBiochemistryEster Carbonyl VibrationMolecular ModelingSensitive ProbeBiophysical AspectLocal Dielectric ConstantLocal Electrostatic FieldNatural SciencesMedicine
The ability to quantify the local electrostatic environment of proteins and protein/peptide assemblies is key to gaining a microscopic understanding of many biological interactions and processes. Herein, we show that the ester carbonyl stretching vibration of two non-natural amino acids, L-aspartic acid 4-methyl ester and L-glutamic acid 5-methyl ester, is a convenient and sensitive probe in this regard, since its frequency correlates linearly with the local electrostatic field for both hydrogen-bonding and non-hydrogen-bonding environments. We expect that the resultant frequency-electric-field map will find use in various applications. Furthermore, we show that, when situated in a non-hydrogen-bonding environment, this probe can also be used to measure the local dielectric constant (ε). For example, its application to amyloid fibrils formed by Aβ(16-22) revealed that the interior of such β-sheet assemblies has an ε value of approximately 5.6.
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