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Molecular Physics
An International Journal at the Interface Between Chemistry and Physics
Volume 103, 2005 - Issue 11-12: A Special Issue in Honour of Professor John P. Simons-Part I
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Original Articles

Two-dimensional infrared spectroscopy of dipeptides in trehalose glass

Pages 1547-1553 | Received 06 Dec 2004, Accepted 03 Mar 2005, Published online: 21 Feb 2007
 

Abstract

Two-dimensional amide I infrared spectra of three dipeptides in trehalose/D2O glass were collected via heterodyned three-pulse vibrational echo experiments in order to investigate the distribution of peptide structures and the dynamics of structural evolution in this biologically relevant medium. The hydroxylic solvation environment presented to proteins by trehalose/water glasses has been speculated to be similar to water. The 2D IR spectra are spread along the diagonal, revealing the presence of very broad inhomogeneous distributions, and the lack of spectral dependence on waiting-time shows that these distributions are mainly static with only a small spectral diffusion component consistent with the measurements of the frequency–frequency correlation functions. Polarization-dependent measurements show that the average structure of trialanine in trehalose glass is different from that in water (D2O).

Acknowledgements

This research was supported by grants from NIH P41, GM12592 and NSF with instrumentation from the Research Resource NIH RR01348. CHL gratefully acknowledges the National Institutes of Health for NRSA postdoctoral fellowship 1 F32 GM069274-01. We thank Jane Vanderkooi, Wayne Wright and Bogumil Zelent for advice and use of facilities in sample preparation.

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