Extending electron paramagnetic resonance to nanoliter volume protein single crystals using a self-resonant microhelix
Author(s) -
Jason W. Sidabras,
Jifu Duan,
Martin Winkler,
Thomas Happe,
Rana Hussein,
Athina Zouni,
Dieter Suter,
Alexander Schnegg,
Wolfgang Lubitz,
Edward J. Reijerse
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
science advances
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.928
H-Index - 146
ISSN - 2375-2548
DOI - 10.1126/sciadv.aay1394
Subject(s) - electron paramagnetic resonance , volume (thermodynamics) , resonance (particle physics) , paramagnetism , nuclear magnetic resonance , materials science , condensed matter physics , atomic physics , physics , quantum mechanics
Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy on protein single crystals is the ultimate method for determining the electronic structure of paramagnetic intermediates at the active site of an enzyme and relating the magnetic tensor to a molecular structure. However, crystals of dimensions typical for protein crystallography (0.05 to 0.3mm) provide insufficient signal intensity. In this work, we present a microwave self-resonant microhelix for nanoliter samples that can be implemented in a commercial X-band (9.5 GHz) EPR spectrometer. The self-resonant microhelix provides a measured signal-to-noise improvement up to a factor of 28 with respect to commercial EPR resonators. This work opens up the possibility to use advanced EPR techniques for studying protein single crystals of dimensions typical for x-ray crystallography. The technique is demonstrated by EPR experiments on single crystal [FeFe]-hydrogenase (; CpI) with dimensions of 0.3 mm by 0.1 mm by 0.1 mm, yielding a proposed -tensor orientation of the H state.
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