Chiral sensing of amino acids and proteins chelating with Eu(III) complexes by Raman optical activity spectroscopy
Language English Country Great Britain, England Media print-electronic
Document type Journal Article
PubMed
27523964
DOI
10.1039/c6cp03968e
Knihovny.cz E-resources
- MeSH
- Amino Acids chemistry MeSH
- Chelating Agents chemistry MeSH
- Circular Dichroism MeSH
- Europium chemistry MeSH
- Coordination Complexes chemical synthesis chemistry MeSH
- Chickens MeSH
- Humans MeSH
- Magnetics MeSH
- Milk, Human metabolism MeSH
- Molecular Conformation MeSH
- Muramidase chemistry metabolism MeSH
- Spectrum Analysis, Raman MeSH
- Stereoisomerism MeSH
- Animals MeSH
- Check Tag
- Humans MeSH
- Animals MeSH
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
- Names of Substances
- Amino Acids MeSH
- Chelating Agents MeSH
- Europium MeSH
- Coordination Complexes MeSH
- Muramidase MeSH
Chiroptical spectroscopy of lanthanides sensitively reflects their environment and finds various applications including probing protein structures. However, the measurement is often hampered by instrumental detection limits. In the present study circularly polarized luminescence (CPL) of a europium complex induced by amino acids is monitored by Raman optical activity (ROA) spectroscopy, which enables us to detect weak CPL bands invisible to conventional CPL spectrometers. In detail, the spectroscopic response to the protonation state could be studied, e.g. histidine at pH = 2 showed an opposite sign of the strongest CPL band in contrast to that at pH = 7. The spectra were interpreted qualitatively on the basis of the ligand-field theory and related to CPL induced by an external magnetic field. Free energy profiles obtained by molecular dynamic simulations for differently charged alanine and histidine forms are in qualitative agreement with the spectroscopic data. The sensitivity and specificity of the detection promise future applications in probing peptide and protein side chains, chemical imaging and medical diagnosis. This potential is observed for human milk and hen egg-white lysozymes; these proteins have a similar structure, but very different induced CPL spectra.
References provided by Crossref.org
Recognition of the True and False Resonance Raman Optical Activity
Two Spectroscopies in One: Interference of Circular Dichroism and Raman Optical Activity
Europium (III) as a Circularly Polarized Luminescence Probe of DNA Structure
Induced Lanthanide Circularly Polarized Luminescence as a Probe of Protein Fibrils