Literature DB >> 25867553

Electron spin resonance scanning probe spectroscopy for ultrasensitive biochemical studies.

Jason P Campbell1, Jason T Ryan1, Pragya R Shrestha1, Zhanglong Liu1, Canute Vaz1, Ji-Hong Kim1, Vasileia Georgiou1,2, Kin P Cheung1.   

Abstract

Electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroscopy's affinity for detecting paramagnetic free radicals, or spins, has been increasingly employed to examine a large variety of biochemical interactions. Such paramagnetic species are broadly found in nature and can be intrinsic (defects in solid-state materials systems, electron/hole pairs, stable radicals in proteins) or, more often, purposefully introduced into the material of interest (doping/attachment of paramagnetic spin labels to biomolecules of interest). Using ESR to trace the reactionary path of paramagnetic spins or spin-active proxy molecules provides detailed information about the reaction's transient species and the label's local environment. For many biochemical systems, like those involving membrane proteins, synthesizing the necessary quantity of spin-labeled biomolecules (typically 50 pmol to 100 pmol) is quite challenging and often limits the possible biochemical reactions available for investigation. Quite simply, ESR is too insensitive. Here, we demonstrate an innovative approach that greatly enhances ESR's sensitivity (>20000× improvement) by developing a near-field, nonresonant, X-band ESR spectrometric method. Sensitivity improvement is confirmed via measurement of 140 amol of the most common nitroxide spin label in a ≈593 fL liquid cell at ambient temperature and pressure. This experimental approach eliminates many of the typical ESR sample restrictions imposed by conventional resonator-based ESR detection and renders the technique feasible for spatially resolved measurements on a wider variety of biochemical samples. Thus, our approach broadens the pool of possible biochemical and structural biology studies, as well as greatly enhances the analytical power of existing ESR applications.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 25867553     DOI: 10.1021/acs.analchem.5b00487

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Anal Chem        ISSN: 0003-2700            Impact factor:   6.986


  1 in total

1.  Slow- and rapid-scan frequency-swept electrically detected magnetic resonance of MOSFETs with a non-resonant microwave probe within a semiconductor wafer-probing station.

Authors:  Duane J McCrory; Mark A Anders; Jason T Ryan; Pragya R Shrestha; Kin P Cheung; Patrick M Lenahan; Jason P Campbell
Journal:  Rev Sci Instrum       Date:  2019-01       Impact factor: 1.523

  1 in total

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