Soft x-ray absorption spectroscopy of metalloproteins and high-valent metal-complexes at room temperature using free-electron lasers
Author(s) -
Markus Kubin,
Jan Kern,
Sheraz Gul,
Thomas Kröll,
Ruchira Chatterjee,
Heike Löchel,
Franklin D. Fuller,
Raymond G. Sierra,
Wilson Quevedo,
Christian Weniger,
Jens Rehanek,
А. А. Firsov,
Hartawan Laksmono,
Clemens Weninger,
Roberto AlonsoMori,
Dennis Nordlund,
Benedikt LassalleKaiser,
James M. Glownia,
J. Krzywiński,
Stefan Moeller,
Joshua J. Turner,
Michael P. Minitti,
Georgi L. Dakovski,
Sergey Koroidov,
Anurag Kawde,
Jacob S. Kanady,
Emily Y. Tsui,
Sandy Suseno,
Zhiji Han,
Ethan A. Hill,
Taketo Taguchi,
A. S. Borovik,
Theodor Agapie,
Johannes Messinger,
A. Erko,
Alexander Föhlisch,
Uwe Bergmann,
Rolf Mitzner,
Vittal K. Yachandra,
Junko Yano,
Philippe Wernet
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
structural dynamics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.415
H-Index - 29
ISSN - 2329-7778
DOI - 10.1063/1.4986627
Subject(s) - x ray absorption spectroscopy , spectroscopy , absorption spectroscopy , chemistry , femtosecond , absorption (acoustics) , synchrotron radiation , x ray spectroscopy , synchrotron , laser , materials science , analytical chemistry (journal) , optics , physics , chromatography , quantum mechanics , composite material
X-ray absorption spectroscopy at the L-edge of 3d transition metals provides unique information on the local metal charge and spin states by directly probing 3d-derived molecular orbitals through 2p-3d transitions. However, this soft x-ray technique has been rarely used at synchrotron facilities for mechanistic studies of metalloenzymes due to the difficulties of x-ray-induced sample damage and strong background signals from light elements that can dominate the low metal signal. Here, we combine femtosecond soft x-ray pulses from a free-electron laser with a novel x-ray fluorescence-yield spectrometer to overcome these difficulties. We present L-edge absorption spectra of inorganic high-valent Mn complexes (Mn ∼ 6–15 mmol/l) with no visible effects of radiation damage. We also present the first L-edge absorption spectra of the oxygen evolving complex (Mn 4 CaO 5 ) in Photosystem II (Mn < 1 mmol/l) at room temperature, measured under similar conditions. Our approach opens new ways to study metalloenzymes under functional conditions.
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