977 resultados para Electron-paramagnetic Resonance
Resumo:
Der Haupt-Lichtsammenkomplex II (LHCII) höherer Pflanzen ist das häufigsternMembranprotein der Welt und in die chloroplastidäre Thylakoidmembran integriert. DerrnLHCII kann als Modellsystem genutzt werden, um die Funktionsweise vonrnMembranproteinen besser zu verstehen, da 96 % seiner Struktur kristallografisch aufgelöstrnist und er in rekombinanter Form in vitro rückgefaltet werden kann. Hierbei entsteht einrnvoll funktionaler Protein-Pigment.Komplex, der nahezu identisch mit der in vivo Varianternist.rnElektronenparamagnetischen Resonanz (EPR) Spektroskopie ist eine hoch sensitive undrnideal geeignete Methode, um die Strukturdynamik von Proteinen zu untersuchen. Hierzurnist eine ortsspezifische Markierung mit Spinsonden notwendig, die kovalent an Cysteinernbinden. Möglich wird dies, indem sorgfältig ausgewählte Aminosäuren gegen Cysteinerngetauscht werden, ohne dass die Funktionsweise des LHCII beeinträchtigt wird.rnIm Rahmen dieser Arbeit wurden die Stabilität des verwendeten Spinmarkers und diernProbenqualität verbessert, indem alle Schritte der Probenpräparation untersucht wurden.rnMithilfe dieser Erkenntnisse konnte sowohl die Gefahr einer Proteinaggregation als auchrnein Verlust des EPR Signals deutlich vermindert werden. In Kombination mit derrngleichzeitigen Etablierung des Q-Band EPR können nun deutlich geringer konzentrierternProben zuverlässig vermessen werden. Darüber hinaus wurde eine reproduzierbarernMethode entwickelt, um heterogene Trimere herzustellen. Diese bestehen aus einemrndoppelt markierten Monomer und zwei unmarkierten Monomeren und erlauben es, diernkristallografisch unvollständig aufgelöste N-terminale Domäne im monomeren undrntrimeren Assemblierungsgrad zu untersuchen. Die Ergebnisse konnten einerseits diernVermutung bestätigen, dass diese Domäne im Vergleich zum starren Proteinkern sehrrnflexibel ist und andererseits, dass sie in Monomeren noch mobiler ist als in Trimeren.rnZudem wurde die lumenale Schleifenregion bei unterschiedlichen pH Werten undrnvariierender Pigmentzusammensetzung untersucht, da dieser Bereich sehr kontroversrndiskutiert wird. Die Messergebnisse offenbarten, dass diese Region starre und flexiblerernSektionen aufweist. Während der pH Wert keinen Einfluss auf die Konformation hatte,rnzeigte sich, dass die Abwesenheit von Neoxanthin zu einer Änderung der Konformationrnführt. Weiterführende Analysen der strukturellen Dynamik des LHCII in einerrnLipidmembran konnten hingegen nicht durchgeführt werden, da dies eine gerichteternInsertion des rückgefalteten Proteins in Liposomen erfordert, was trotz intensiverrnVersuche nicht zum Erfolg führte.
Resumo:
We have used Mössbauer and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy to study a heme-N-alkylated derivative of chloroperoxidase (CPO) prepared by mechanism-based inactivation with allylbenzene and hydrogen peroxide. The freshly prepared inactivated enzyme (“green CPO”) displayed a nearly pure low-spin ferric EPR signal with g = 1.94, 2.15, 2.31. The Mössbauer spectrum of the same species recorded at 4.2 K showed magnetic hyperfine splittings, which could be simulated in terms of a spin Hamiltonian with a complete set of hyperfine parameters in the slow spin fluctuation limit. The EPR spectrum of green CPO was simulated using a three-term crystal field model including g-strain. The best-fit parameters implied a very strong octahedral field in which the three 2T2 levels of the (3d)5 configuration in green CPO were lowest in energy, followed by a quartet. In native CPO, the 6A1 states follow the 2T2 ground state doublet. The alkene-mediated inactivation of CPO is spontaneously reversible. Warming of a sample of green CPO to 22°C for increasing times before freezing revealed slow conversion of the novel EPR species to two further spin S = ½ ferric species. One of these species displayed g = 1.82, 2.25, 2.60 indistinguishable from native CPO. By subtracting spectral components due to native and green CPO, a third species with g = 1.86, 2.24, 2.50 could be generated. The EPR spectrum of this “quasi-native CPO,” which appears at intermediate times during the reactivation, was simulated using best-fit parameters similar to those used for native CPO.
Resumo:
Rapid scan electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) was developed in the Eaton laboratory at the University of Denver. Applications of rapid scan to wider spectra, such as for immobilized nitroxides, spin-labeled proteins, irradiated tooth and fingernail samples were demonstrated in this dissertation. The scan width has been increased from 55 G to 160 G. The signal to noise (S/N) improvement for slowly tumbling spin-labeled protein samples that is provided by rapid scan EPR will be highly advantageous for biophysical studies. With substantial improvement in S/N by rapid scan, the dose estimation for irradiated tooth enamels became more reliable than the traditional continuous wave (CW) EPR. An alternate approach of rapid scan, called field-stepped direct detection EPR, was developed to reconstruct wider EPR signals. A Mn2+ containing crystal was measured by field-stepped direct detection EPR, which had a spectrum more than 6000 G wide. Since the field-stepped direct detection extends the advantages of rapid scan to much wider scan ranges, this methodology has a great potential to replace the traditional CW EPR. With recent advances in digital electronics, a digital rapid scan spectrometer was built based on an arbitrary waveform generator (AWG), which can excite spins and detect EPR signals with a fully digital system. A near-baseband detection method was used to acquire the in-phase and quadrature signals in one physical channel. The signal was analyzed digitally to generate ideally orthogonal quadrature signals. A multiharmonic algorithm was developed that employed harmonics of the modulation frequencies acquired in the spectrometer transient mode. It was applied for signals with complicated lineshapes, and can simplify the selection of modulation amplitude. A digital saturation recovery system based on an AWG was built at X-band (9.6 GHz). To demonstrate performance of the system, the spin-lattice relaxation time of a fused quartz rod was measured at room temperature with fully digital excitation and detection.
Resumo:
The XSophe computer simulation software suite consisting of a daemon, the XSophe interface and the computational program Sophe is a state of the art package for the simulation of electron paramagnetic resonance spectra. The Sophe program performs the computer simulation and includes a number of new technologies including; the SOPHE partition and interpolation schemes, a field segmentation algorithm, homotopy, parallelisation and spectral optimisation. The SOPHE partition and interpolation scheme along with a field segmentation algorithm greatly increases the speed of simulations for most systems. Multidimensional homotopy provides an efficient method for accurately tracing energy levels and hence tracing transitions in the presence of energy level anticrossings and looping transitions and allowing computer simulations in frequency space. Recent enhancements to Sophe include the generalised treatment of distributions of orientational parameters, termed the mosaic misorientation linewidth model and a faster more efficient algorithm for the calculation of resonant field positions and transition probabilities. For complex systems the parallelisation enables the simulation of these systems on a parallel computer and the optimisation algorithms in the suite provide the experimentalist with the possibility of finding the spin Hamiltonian parameters in a systematic manner rather than a trial-and-error process. The XSophe software suite has been used to simulate multifrequency EPR spectra (200 MHz to 6 00 GHz) from isolated spin systems (S > ~½) and coupled centres (Si, Sj _> I/2). Griffin, M.; Muys, A.; Noble, C.; Wang, D.; Eldershaw, C.; Gates, K.E.; Burrage, K.; Hanson, G.R."XSophe, a Computer Simulation Software Suite for the Analysis of Electron Paramagnetic Resonance Spectra", 1999, Mol. Phys. Rep., 26, 60-84.