June 4, 2020
Journal Article

Cryogenic “Iodide-Tagging” Photoelectron Spectroscopy: A Sensitive Probe for Specific Binding Sites of Amino Acids

Abstract

This work showcases cryogenic and temperature-dependent “iodide-tagging” photoelectron spectroscopy to probe specific binding sites of amino acids using the glycine-iodide complex (Gly?I-) as a case study. Multiple Gly?I- isomers were generated from ambient electrospray ionization and kinetically isolated in a cryogenic ion trap. These structures were characterized with temperature-dependent “iodide-tagging” negative ion photoelectron spectroscopy (NIPES) where iodide was used as the “messenger” to interpret electronic energetics and structural information of various Gly?I- isomers. Accompanied by theoretical computations and Franck-Condon simulations, a total of five cluster structures have been identified along with their various binding motifs. This work demonstrates that “iodide-tagging” NIPES is a powerful general means for probing specific binding interactions in biological molecules of interest.

Revised: July 21, 2020 | Published: June 4, 2020

Citation

Zhang H., W. Cao, Q. Yuan, X. Zhou, M. Valiev, S.R. Kass, and X. Wang. 2020. Cryogenic “Iodide-Tagging” Photoelectron Spectroscopy: A Sensitive Probe for Specific Binding Sites of Amino Acids. The Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters 11, no. 11:4346–4352. PNNL-SA-152646. doi:10.1021/acs.jpclett.0c01099