Magnetic Resonance (Dec 2020)

High-sensitivity Gd<sup>3+</sup>–Gd<sup>3+</sup> EPR distance measurements that eliminate artefacts seen at short distances

  • H. EL Mkami,
  • R. I. Hunter,
  • P. A. S. Cruickshank,
  • M. J. Taylor,
  • J. E. Lovett,
  • A. Feintuch,
  • M. Qi,
  • A. Godt,
  • G. M. Smith

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/mr-1-301-2020
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1
pp. 301 – 313

Abstract

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Gadolinium complexes are attracting increasing attention as spin labels for EPR dipolar distance measurements in biomolecules and particularly for in-cell measurements. It has been shown that flip-flop transitions within the central transition of the high-spin Gd3+ ion can introduce artefacts in dipolar distance measurements, particularly when measuring distances less than 3 nm. Previous work has shown some reduction of these artefacts through increasing the frequency separation between the two frequencies required for the double electron–electron resonance (DEER) experiment. Here we use a high-power (1 kW), wideband, non-resonant system operating at 94 GHz to evaluate DEER measurement protocols using two stiff Gd(III) rulers, consisting of two bis-Gd3+–PyMTA complexes, with separations of 2.1 nm and 6.0 nm, respectively. We show that by avoiding the -12→12 central transition completely, and placing both the pump and the observer pulses on either side of the central transition, we can now observe apparently artefact-free spectra and narrow distance distributions, even for a Gd–Gd distance of 2.1 nm. Importantly we still maintain excellent signal-to-noise ratio and relatively high modulation depths. These results have implications for in-cell EPR measurements at naturally occurring biomolecule concentrations.