The ability of nonlinear electronic spectroscopy to track folding/unfolding processes of proteins in solution by monitoring aromatic interactions is investigated by first-principles simulations of two-dimensional (2D) electronic spectra of a model peptide. A dominant reaction pathway approach is employed to determine the unfolding pathway of a tetrapeptide, which connects the initial folded configuration with stacked aromatic side chains and the final unfolded state with distant noninteracting aromatic residues. The p-stacking and excitonic coupling effects are included through ab initio simulations based on multiconfigurational methods within a hybrid quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics scheme. It is shown that linear absorption spectroscopy in the ultraviolet (UV) region is unable to resolve the unstacking dynamics characterized by the three-step process: T-shaped → twisted offset stacking → unstacking. Conversely, pump–probe spectroscopy can be used to resolve aromatic interactions by probing in the visible region, the excited-state absorptions (ESAs) that involve charge-transfer states. 2D UV spectroscopy offers the highest sensitivity to the unfolding process, by providing the disentan- glement of ESA signals belonging to different aromatic chromophores and high correlation between the conformational dynamics and the quartic splitting.
Artur Nenov, Silvio a Beccara, Ivan Rivalta, Giulio Cerullo, Shaul Mukamel, Marco Garavelli (2014). Tracking Conformational Dynamics of Polypeptides by Nonlinear Electronic Spectroscopy of Aromatic Residues: A First-Principles Simulation Study. CHEMPHYSCHEM, 15, 3282-3290 [10.1002/cphc.201402374].
Tracking Conformational Dynamics of Polypeptides by Nonlinear Electronic Spectroscopy of Aromatic Residues: A First-Principles Simulation Study
NENOV, ARTUR;RIVALTA, IVAN;GARAVELLI, MARCO
2014
Abstract
The ability of nonlinear electronic spectroscopy to track folding/unfolding processes of proteins in solution by monitoring aromatic interactions is investigated by first-principles simulations of two-dimensional (2D) electronic spectra of a model peptide. A dominant reaction pathway approach is employed to determine the unfolding pathway of a tetrapeptide, which connects the initial folded configuration with stacked aromatic side chains and the final unfolded state with distant noninteracting aromatic residues. The p-stacking and excitonic coupling effects are included through ab initio simulations based on multiconfigurational methods within a hybrid quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics scheme. It is shown that linear absorption spectroscopy in the ultraviolet (UV) region is unable to resolve the unstacking dynamics characterized by the three-step process: T-shaped → twisted offset stacking → unstacking. Conversely, pump–probe spectroscopy can be used to resolve aromatic interactions by probing in the visible region, the excited-state absorptions (ESAs) that involve charge-transfer states. 2D UV spectroscopy offers the highest sensitivity to the unfolding process, by providing the disentan- glement of ESA signals belonging to different aromatic chromophores and high correlation between the conformational dynamics and the quartic splitting.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.