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Light-Induced Triplet–Triplet Electron Resonance Spectroscopy
Author(s) -
Arnau Bertran,
Kevin B. Henbest,
Marta De Zotti,
Marina Gobbo,
Christiane R. Timmel,
Marilena Di Valentin,
Alice M. Bowen
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
the journal of physical chemistry letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.563
H-Index - 203
ISSN - 1948-7185
DOI - 10.1021/acs.jpclett.0c02884
Subject(s) - spectroscopy , electron paramagnetic resonance , dipole , resonance (particle physics) , chemistry , porphyrin , density functional theory , triplet state , photochemistry , chemical physics , molecular physics , nuclear magnetic resonance , atomic physics , computational chemistry , molecule , physics , organic chemistry , quantum mechanics
We present a new technique, light-induced triplet-triplet electron resonance spectroscopy (LITTER), which measures the dipolar interaction between two photoexcited triplet states, enabling both the distance and angular distributions between the two triplet moieties to be determined on a nanometer scale. This is demonstrated for a model bis-porphyrin peptide that renders dipolar traces with strong orientation selection effects. Using simulations and density functional theory calculations, we extract distance distributions and relative orientations of the porphyrin moieties, allowing the dominant conformation of the peptide in a frozen solution to be identified. LITTER removes the requirement of current light-induced electron spin resonance pulse dipolar spectroscopy techniques to have a permanent paramagnetic moiety, becoming more suitable for in-cell applications and facilitating access to distance determination in unmodified macromolecular systems containing photoexcitable moieties. LITTER also has the potential to enable direct comparison with Förster resonance energy transfer and combination with microscopy inside cells.

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