Publication | Open Access
Improved Sensitivity for Long-Distance Measurements in Biomolecules: Five-Pulse Double Electron–Electron Resonance
154
Citations
49
References
2012
Year
MicroscopyMagnetic ResonanceMolecular BiologySingle Molecule BiophysicsBiosensing SystemsNuclear Quadrupole ResonanceElectron Paramagnetic ResonanceExtra PulseDistance ResolutionMolecular ImagingBiophysicsMolecular SpectroscopyFive-pulse Deer SequenceMolecular SciencesBiochemistryMedicineDna ReplicationBiomolecular ScienceStructural BiologyBiomolecular EngineeringSingle-molecule DetectionNatural SciencesSpectroscopyExperimental BiophysicsDouble ResonanceDynamic Nuclear PolarizationMolecular BiophysicsLong-distance Measurements
We describe significantly improved long-distance measurements in biomolecules by use of the new multipulse double electron-electron spin resonance (DEER) illustrated with the example of a five-pulse DEER sequence. In this sequence, an extra pulse at the pump frequency is used compared with standard four-pulse DEER. The position of the extra pulse is fixed relative to the three pulses of the detection sequence. This significantly reduces the effect of nuclear spin-diffusion on the electron-spin phase relaxation, thereby enabling longer dipolar evolution times that are required to measure longer distances. Using spin-labeled T4 lysozyme at a concentration less than 50 μM, as an example, we show that the evolution time increases by a factor of 1.8 in protonated solution and 1.4 in deuterated solution to 8 and 12 μs, respectively, with the potential to increase them further. This enables a significant increase in the measurable distances, improved distance resolution, or both.
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