ABSTRACT
In the brains of Alzheimer's disease patients, fibrillar aggregates containing amyloid-beta (Aß) peptides are found, along with elevated concentrations of Cu(II) ions. The aggregation pathways of Aß peptides can be modulated by Cu(II) ions and is determined by the formation and nature of the Cu(II)-Aß complex. If spin-labeled, the Cu(II)-Aß complex contains two dipolar coupled paramagnetic centers, the spin label and the Cu(II) ion. Measurement of the dipolar coupling between these paramagnetic centers by relaxation-induced dipolar modulation enhancement (RIDME) allows to monitor the complex formation and thus opens a way to follow the Cu(II) transfer between peptides if a mixture of wild-type and spin-labeled ones is used. We evaluate this approach for a specific Cu(II)-Aß complex, the aggregation-inert Componentâ II. The kinetics of the Cu(II) transfer can be resolved by performing RIDME in a time-dependent manner. A temporal resolution of seconds has been achieved, with the potential to reach milliseconds, using a rapid-freeze quench device to stop the Cu(II) transfer in solution after defined incubation times.
Subject(s)
Amyloid beta-Peptides , Copper , Copper/chemistry , Amyloid beta-Peptides/chemistry , Amyloid beta-Peptides/metabolism , Kinetics , Humans , Electron Spin Resonance SpectroscopyABSTRACT
Distance distribution information obtained by pulsed dipolar EPR spectroscopy provides an important contribution to many studies in structural biology. Increasingly, such information is used in integrative structural modeling, where it delivers unique restraints on the width of conformational ensembles. In order to ensure reliability of the structural models and of biological conclusions, we herein define quality standards for sample preparation and characterization, for measurements of distributed dipole-dipole couplings between paramagnetic labels, for conversion of the primary time-domain data into distance distributions, for interpreting these distributions, and for reporting results. These guidelines are substantiated by a multi-laboratory benchmark study and by analysis of data sets with known distance distribution ground truth. The study and the guidelines focus on proteins labeled with nitroxides and on double electron-electron resonance (DEER aka PELDOR) measurements and provide suggestions on how to proceed analogously in other cases.
Subject(s)
Cyclic N-Oxides/chemistry , Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy/standards , Proteins/chemistry , Spin Labels , Benchmarking , Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy/methods , Reproducibility of ResultsABSTRACT
Three new electrochromic ferrocenyl triarylmethylium dyes with fluorenylium (1 a+ , 1 b+ ) or thioxanthylium (1 c+ ) residues were selected in order to keep the intrinsic differences of redox potentials for ferrocene oxidation and triarylmethylium reduction small and to trigger valence tautomerism (VT). UV/Vis/NIR and quantitative EPR spectroscopy identified paramagnetic diradical isomers 1 a..+ -1 c..+ alongside diamagnetic forms 1 a+ -1 c+ , which renders these complexes magnetochemical switches. The diradical forms 1 a..+ -1 c..+ as well as the one-electron-reduced triarylmethyl forms of the complexes were found to dimerize in solution. For radical 1 a. , dimerization occurs on the timescale of cyclic voltammetry; this allowed us to determine the kinetics and equilibrium constant for this process by digital simulation. Mößbauer spectroscopy indicated that 1 a+ and 1 b+ retain VT even in the solid state. UV/Vis/NIR spectro-electrochemistry revealed the poly-electrochromic behaviour of these complexes by establishing the distinctly different electronic absorption profiles of the corresponding oxidized and reduced forms.
ABSTRACT
Multi-frequency EPR spectroscopy can provide high-level structural information on high-spin Fe3+ sites in proteins and enzymes. Unfortunately, analysis of the EPR spectra of these spin systems is hindered by the presence of broad distributions in the zero-field-splitting (ZFS) parameters, which reflect conformational heterogeneity of the iron sites. We present the analysis of EPR spectra of high-spin Fe3+ bound to human serum transferrin. We apply a method termed the grid-of-errors to extract the distributions of the individual ZFS parameters from EPR spectra recorded in the high-field limit at a microwave frequency of 275 GHz. Study of a series of transferrin variants shows that the ZFS distributions are as characteristic of the structure of a high-spin Fe3+ site as the ZFS parameters themselves. Simulations based on the extracted ZFS distributions reproduce spectra recorded at 34 GHz (Q band) and 9.7 GHz (X band), including subtle variations that were previously difficult to quantify. The X-band spectrum of transferrin shows a characteristic double peak, which has puzzled researchers for decades. We show that the double peak is uniquely related to the term B4-3O4-3(S) in the spin Hamiltonian. Our method is generally applicable in the analysis of spectra that arise from a broad distribution of parameters.
ABSTRACT
In-cell DEER (in-cell double electron electron resonance) is applied to investigate quadruplex formation of the human telomeric repeat d[AGGG(TTAGGG)(3)]. The initially unfolded DNA sequence forms a mixture of different quadruplex topologies upon injection into living cells. In addition, time-dependent distance measurements are carried out to monitor quadruplex folding.
Subject(s)
Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy , Telomere/chemistry , Base Sequence , Humans , Nucleic Acid Conformation , Telomere/geneticsABSTRACT
Relaxation-induced dipolar modulation enhancement (RIDME) is a pulse EPR technique that is particularly suitable to determine distances between paramagnetic centers with a broad EPR spectrum, e.g. metal-ion-based ones. As far as high-spin systems (S > ½) are concerned, the RIDME experiment provides not only the basic dipolar frequency but also its overtones, which complicates the determination of interspin distances. Here, we present and discuss in a step-by-step fashion an r.m.s.d.-based approach for the calibration of the overtone coefficients for a series of molecular rulers doubly labeled with Gd(III)-PyMTA tags. The constructed 2D total-penalty diagrams help revealing that there is no unique set of overtone coefficients but rather a certain pool, which can be used to extract distance distributions between high-spin paramagnetic centers, as determined from the RIDME experiment. This is of particular importance for comparing RIDME overtone calibration and distance distributions obtained in different labs.
Subject(s)
Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy , Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy/methodsABSTRACT
DNA three-way junctions are frequently used in nanoarchitectures. Ligand-dependent designs that provide well-characterized building blocks for structure-switching DNA nanodevices are presented.
Subject(s)
DNA/chemistry , Base Sequence , Ligands , Molecular Sequence Data , Molecular Weight , NanotechnologyABSTRACT
In-cell distance determination by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy reveals essential structural information about biomacromolecules under native conditions. We demonstrate that the pulsed EPR technique RIDME (relaxation induced dipolar modulation enhancement) can be utilized for such distance determination. The performance of in-cell RIDME has been assessed at Q-band using stiff molecular rulers labeled with Gd(III)-PyMTA and microinjected into Xenopus laevis oocytes. The overtone coefficients are determined to be the same for protonated aqueous solutions and inside cells. As compared to in-cell DEER (double electron-electron resonance, also abbreviated as PELDOR), in-cell RIDME features approximately 5 times larger modulation depth and does not show artificial broadening in the distance distributions due to the effect of pseudosecular terms.
ABSTRACT
Scalable quantum technologies require an unprecedented combination of precision and complexity for designing stable structures of well-controllable quantum systems on the nanoscale. It is a challenging task to find a suitable elementary building block, of which a quantum network can be comprised in a scalable way. We present the working principle of such a basic unit, engineered using molecular chemistry, whose collective control and readout are executed using a nitrogen vacancy (NV) center in diamond. The basic unit we investigate is a synthetic polyproline with electron spins localized on attached molecular side groups separated by a few nanometers. We demonstrate the collective readout and coherent manipulation of very few (≤ 6) of these S = 1/2 electronic spin systems and access their direct dipolar coupling tensor. Our results show that it is feasible to use spin-labeled peptides as a resource for a molecular qubit-based network, while at the same time providing simple optical readout of single quantum states through NV magnetometry. This work lays the foundation for building arbitrary quantum networks using well-established chemistry methods, which has many applications ranging from mapping distances in single molecules to quantum information processing.
ABSTRACT
Second-moment analysis along two dimensions of continuous-wave EPR spectra of nitroxides enables EPR thermometry in a broad temperature range. Simulations show that the temperature can be derived in both the slow-motion and the fast-motion regime, which is experimentally verified at 275 GHz for H2O/glycerol (50/50% by volume) and pure water. We demonstrate that this tool allows the calibration of temperature jumps induced by infrared laser irradiation of a submicroliter sample in the single-mode cavity of a 275 GHz spectrometer, which prepares for kinetic studies of processes involving paramagnetic species.
ABSTRACT
We present a numerical procedure called 'grid-of-errors' to extract the distribution of magnetic interactions from continuous-wave electron-paramagnetic-resonance (EPR) spectra at multiple microwave frequencies. The approach is based on the analysis of the lineshape of the spectra and explicitly worked out for high-spin systems for which the lineshape is determined by a distribution of the zero-field splitting. Initial principal values of the zero-field splitting tensor are obtained from the EPR spectrum at a microwave frequency in the high-field limit, and the initial distribution is taken Gaussian. Subsequently, the grid-of-errors procedure optimizes this distribution, without any restriction to its shape, taking into account spectra at various microwave frequencies. The numerical procedure is illustrated for the Fe(III)-EDTA complex. An optimized distribution of the zero-field splitting is obtained, which provides a proper description of the EPR spectra at 9.5, 34, 94, and 275 GHz. The proposed approach can be used as well for distributions of magnetic interactions other than the zero-field splitting.
ABSTRACT
Knowledge of the correlation between structural and spectroscopic properties of transition-metal complexes is essential to deepen the understanding of their role in catalysis, molecular magnetism, and biological inorganic chemistry. It provides topological and, sometimes, functional insight with respect to the active site properties of metalloproteins. The electronic structure of a high-spin mononuclear Mn(II) pseudoclathrochelate complex has been investigated by electron-paramagnetic-resonance (EPR) spectroscopy at 9.5 and 275.7 GHz. A substantial, virtually axial zero-field splitting with D = -9.7 GHz (-0.32 cm(-1)) is found, which is the largest one reported to date for a Mn(II) complex with six nitrogen atoms in the first coordination sphere.
ABSTRACT
Double electron-electron resonance (DEER) is an electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) technique used to determine distance distributions in the nanometer range between spin labels by measuring their dipole-dipole interactions. Here we describe how in-cell DEER can be applied to spin-labeled DNA sequences to unravel their conformations in living cells by long-range distance measurements in cellula. As EPR detects unpaired electron spins only, diamagnetic molecules provide no background and do not reduce detection sensitivity of the specific signal. Compared with in-cell NMR spectroscopy, low concentrations of spin-labeled molecules can be used owing to the higher sensitivity of EPR per spin. This protocol describes the synthesis of the spin labels, their introduction in DNA strands, the injection of labeled DNA solutions in cells and the performance of in-cell EPR measurements. Completion of the entire protocol takes ~20 d.
Subject(s)
DNA/chemistry , Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy/methods , Animals , Models, Molecular , Nucleotides , Oocytes , Spin Labels , Xenopus laevisABSTRACT
G-quadruplex conformations within a sequence of three quadruplex units of human telomeric DNA were studied by two-frequency pulsed electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy. In contrast to some individual G-quadruplexes, within the higher-order human telomeric sequence a (3+1) hybrid structure is formed.
Subject(s)
DNA/chemistry , G-Quadruplexes , Telomere/chemistry , Base Sequence , Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy , Humans , Models, Molecular , Molecular Sequence Data , Telomere/geneticsABSTRACT
Spin-label electron paramagnetic resonance (SL-EPR) spectroscopy has become a powerful and useful tool for studying structure and dynamics of biomacromolecules. However, utilizing these methods at physiological temperatures for in-cell studies is hampered by reduction of the nitroxide spin labels and thus short half-lives in the cellular environment. Consequently, reduction kinetics of two structurally different nitroxides was investigated in cell extracts of Xenopus laevis oocytes using rapid-scan cw-experiments at X-band. The five member heterocyclic ring nitroxide PCA (3-carboxy-2,2,5,5-tetramethylpyrrolidinyl-1-oxy) under investigation features much higher stability against intracellular reduction than the six member ring analog TOAC (2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine-N-oxyl-4-amino-4-carboxilic acid) and is therefore a suitable spin label type for in-cell EPR. The kinetic data can be described according to the Michaelis-Menten model and thus suggest an enzymatic or enzyme-mediated reduction process.