The combination of high-field electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) with site-directed spin labeling (SDSL) techniques employing nitroxide radicals has turned out to be particularly powerful in revealing subtle changes of the polarity and proticity profiles in proteins enbedded in membranes. This information can be obtained by orientation-selective high-field EPR resolving principal components of the nitroxide Zeeman (g) and hyperfine ( A) tensors of the spin labels attached to specific molecular sites. In contrast to the g- and A-tensors, the (14)N ( I = 1) quadrupole interaction tensor of the nitroxide spin label has not been exploited in EPR for probing effects of the microenvironment of functional protein sites. In this work it is shown that the W-band (95 GHz) high-field electron spin echo envelope modulation (ESEEM) method is well suited for determining with high accuracy the (14)N quadrupole tensor principal components of a nitroxide spin label in disordered frozen solution. By W-band ESEEM the quadrupole components of a five-ring pyrroline-type nitroxide radical in glassy ortho-terphenyl and glycerol solutions have been determined. This radical is the headgroup of the MTS spin label widely used in SDSL protein studies. By DFT calulations and W-band ESEEM experiments it is demonstrated that the Q(yy) value is especially sensitive to the proticity and polarity of the nitroxide environment in H-bonding and nonbonding situations. The quadrupole tensor is shown to be rather insensitive to structural variations of the nitroxide label itself. When using Q(yy) as a testing probe of the environment, its ruggedness toward temperature changes represents an important advantage over the g xx and A(zz) parameters which are usually employed for probing matrix effects on the spin labeled molecular site. Thus, beyond measurenments of g xx and A(zz) of spin labeled protein sites in disordered solids, W-band high-field ESEEM studies of (14)N quadrupole interactions open a new avenue to reliably probe subtle environmental effects on the electronic structure. This is a significant step forward on the way to differentiate between effects from matrix polarity and hydrogen-bond formation.
An experimental method is described allowing fast field-cycling Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) experiments over a wide range of magnetic fields from 5 nT to 10 T. The method makes use of a hybrid technique: the high field range is covered by positioning the sample in the inhomogeneous stray field of the NMR spectrometer magnet. For fields below 2 mT a magnetic shield is mounted on top of the spectrometer; inside the shield the magnetic field is controlled by a specially designed coil system. This combination allows us to measure T1-relaxation times and nuclear Overhauser effect parameters over the full range in a routine way. For coupled proton-carbon spin systems relaxation with a common T1 is found at low fields, where the spins are "strongly coupled". In some cases, experiments at ultralow fields provide access to heteronuclear long-lived spin states. Efficient coherent polarization transfer is seen for proton-carbon spin systems at ultralow fields as follows from the observation of quantum oscillations in the polarization evolution. Applications to analysis and the manipulation of heteronuclear spin systems are discussed.
In the last decade, joint efforts of biologists, chemists and physicists have helped in understanding the dominant factors determining specificity and directionality of transmembrane transfer processes in proteins. In this endeavor, electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy has played an important role. Characteristic examples of such determining factors are hydrogen-bonding patterns and polarity effects of the microenvironment of protein sites involved in the transfer process. These factors may undergo characteristic changes during the reaction and, thereby, control the efficiency of biological processes, e.g. light-induced electron and proton transfer across photosynthetic membranes or ion-channel formation of bacterial toxins. In case the transfer process does not involve stable or transient paramagnetic species or states, site-directed spin labeling with suitable nitroxide radicals still allows EPR techniques to be used for studying structure and conformational dynamics of the proteins in action. By combining site-directed spin labeling with high-field/high-frequency EPR, unique information on the proteins is revealed, which is complementary to that of X-ray crystallography, solid-state NMR, FRET, fast infrared and optical spectroscopic techniques. The main object of this publication is twofold: (i) to review our recent spin-label high-field EPR work on the bacteriorhodopsin light-driven proton pump from Halobacterium salinarium and the Colicin A ion-channel forming bacterial toxin produced in Escherichia coli, (ii) to report on novel high-field EPR experiments for probing site-specific pK(a) values in protein systems by means of pH-sensitive nitroxide spin labels. Taking advantage of the improved spectral and temporal resolution of high-field EPR at 95 GHz/3.4 T and 360 GHz/12.9 T, as compared to conventional X-band EPR (9.5 GHz/0.34 T), detailed information on the transient intermediates of the proteins in biological action is obtained. These intermediates can be observed and characterized while staying in their working states on biologically relevant timescales. The paper concludes with an outlook of ongoing high-field EPR experiments on site-specific protein mutants in our laboratories at FU Berlin and Osnabrück.
DNA fragments were synthesized consisting of 12 nucleotides and containing non-nucleotide inserts of different length in the middle. Two nitroxide spin labels 4-amino-2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine-1-oxyl were attached at the two ends of the molecules. Single-stranded DNAs and double-stranded DNAs (DNA duplexes) in frozen at 77 K glassy water/glycerol solutions were studied using pulsed electron-electron double resonance (PELDOR). The distance distributions between two spin labels in molecules were obtained from PELDOR data using Tikhonov regularization algorithm, and were found to be close to the Gaussian functions. Experimental PELDOR data were fitted by adjusting precisely the maximum position and the width of these functions. The obtained results show that duplexes possess a substantially narrower distribution, as compared to the single-stranded DNAs. Introduction of a non-nucleotide insert 2-hydroxymethyl-3-hydroxy-tetrahydrofuran leads to a slight but nevertheless detectable decrease of the mean distance between two spin labels. This decrease may be attributed to bending of the molecule around the insert site, by an angle of approximately 20 degrees . An introduction of a non-nucleotide insert bis-(di-ethyleneglycol)-phosphate results in a remarkable broadening of the distance distribution. The results evidence that PELDOR of spin-labeled DNA molecules may be used as a "molecular ruler" for studying the influence of local damages on the DNA conformations.
We report on recent 95 and 360 GHz high-field electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR), electron-nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) and pulsed electron-electron double resonance (PELDOR) studies of wild-type and mutant reaction centers (RCs) from the photosynthetic bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides. Taking advantage of the excellent spectral and temporal resolution of EPR at 95 and 360 GHz, the electron-transfer (ET) cofactors radical ions and spin-correlated radical pairs were characte¡ by their g-and hyperfine-tensor components, their anisotropic T, relaxation as well as by the dipolar interaction between P~~sQ~-radical pairs. The goal of these studies is to better understand the dominant factors determining the specificity and directionality of transmembrane ET processes in photosynthetic RC proteins. In particular, our multifrequency experiments elucidate the subtle cofactor-protein interactions, which are essential for fine-tuning the ET characteristics, e.g., the unidirectionality of the light-induced ET pathways along the A branch of the RC protein. By our high-field techniques, frozen-solution RCs of novel site-specific single and double mutants of R. sphaeroides were studied to modulate the ET characteristics, e.g., even to the extent that dominant B branch ET prevails. The presented multifrequency EPR work culminates in first 360 GHz ENDOR results from organic nitroxide radicals as well as in first 95 GHz high-field PELDOR results from orientationally selected spin-polarized radical pairs Ps which a|low to determine the full geometrical structure of the pairs even in frozen-solution RCs.
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