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Pick and Choose the Spectroscopic Method to Calibrate the Local Electric Field inside Proteins

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dc.contributor.advisor Bagchi, Sayan
dc.contributor.author Haldar, Tapas
dc.contributor.author Kashid, Somnath
dc.contributor.author Deb, Pranab
dc.contributor.author Kesh, Sandeep
dc.contributor.author Bagchi, Sayan
dc.date.accessioned 2023-10-10T05:15:59Z
dc.date.available 2023-10-10T05:15:59Z
dc.date.issued 2016-06-13
dc.identifier.other https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpclett.6b00852
dc.identifier.uri https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12252/6242
dc.description.abstract Electrostatic interactions in proteins play a crucial role in determining the structure–function relation in biomolecules. In recent years, fluorescent probes have been extensively employed to interrogate the polarity in biological cavities through dielectric constants or semiempirical polarity scales. A choice of multiple spectroscopic methods, not limited by fluorophores, along with a molecular level description of electrostatics involving solute–solvent interactions, would allow more flexibility to pick and choose the experimental technique to determine the local electrostatics within protein interiors. In this work we report that ultraviolet/visible-absorption, infrared-absorption, or 13C NMR can be used to calibrate the local electric field in both hydrogen bonded and non-hydrogen bonded protein environments. The local electric field at the binding site of a serum protein has been determined using the absorption wavelength as well as the carbonyl stretching frequency of its natural steroid substrate, testosterone. Excellent agreement is observed in the results obtained from two independent spectroscopic techniques. en
dc.format.extent 5 en
dc.language.iso en_US en
dc.publisher The Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters en
dc.subject Electric fields en
dc.subject Electrostatics en
dc.subject spectroscopy en
dc.title Pick and Choose the Spectroscopic Method to Calibrate the Local Electric Field inside Proteins en
dc.type Article en
local.division.division Physical and Materials Chemistry Division en
dc.description.university -- en


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