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Dependence of Distance Distributions Derived from Double Electron–Electron Resonance Pulsed EPR Spectroscopy on Pulse‐Sequence Time
Author(s) -
Baber James L.,
Louis John M.,
Clore G. Marius
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
angewandte chemie
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1521-3757
pISSN - 0044-8249
DOI - 10.1002/ange.201500640
Subject(s) - electron paramagnetic resonance , chemistry , electron , extrapolation , analytical chemistry (journal) , relaxation (psychology) , spectroscopy , resonance (particle physics) , crystallography , nuclear magnetic resonance , atomic physics , physics , mathematics , mathematical analysis , quantum mechanics , chromatography , psychology , social psychology
Pulsed double electron–electron resonance (DEER) provides pairwise P( r ) distance distributions in doubly spin labeled proteins. We report that in protonated proteins, P( r ) is dependent on the length of the second echo period T owing to local environmental effects on the spin‐label phase memory relaxation time T m . For the protein ABD, this effect results in a 1.4 Å increase in the P( r ) maximum from T =6 to 20 μs. Protein A has a bimodal P( r ) distribution, and the relative height of the shorter distance peak at T =10 μs, the shortest value required to obtain a reliable P( r ), is reduced by 40 % relative to that found by extrapolation to T =0. Our results indicate that data at a series of T values are essential for quantitative interpretation of DEER to determine the extent of the T dependence and to extrapolate the results to T =0. Complete deuteration (99 %) of the protein was accompanied by a significant increase in T m and effectively abolished the P( r ) dependence on T .