4.8 Article

Spatially Separating the Conformers of a Dipeptide

Journal

ANGEWANDTE CHEMIE-INTERNATIONAL EDITION
Volume 57, Issue 42, Pages 13775-13779

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/anie.201807646

Keywords

biophysics; diffractive imaging; laser spectroscopy; molecular beams; peptides

Funding

  1. European Research Council under the European Union's Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007-2013) through the Consolidator Grant COMOTION [ERC-614507-Kupper]
  2. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (CUI) [DFG-EXC1074]
  3. Helmholtz Gemeinschaft through the Impuls und Vernetzungsfond
  4. Fonds der Chemischen Industrie (FCI)

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Atomic-resolution-imaging approaches for single molecules, such as coherent X-ray diffraction at free-electron lasers, require the delivery of high-density beams of identical molecules. However, even very cold beams of biomolecules typically have multiple conformational states populated. We demonstrate the production of very cold (T-rot approximate to 2.3 K) molecular beams of intact dipeptide molecules, which were then spatially separated into the individual populated conformational states. This is achieved using the combination of supersonic expansion laser-desorption vaporization with electrostatic deflection in strong inhomogeneous fields. This represents the first demonstration of a conformer-separated and rotationally cold molecular beam of a peptide, which enables the investigation of conformer-specific chemistry using inherently non-conformer-specific techniques. It furthermore represents a milestone toward the direct structural imaging of individual biological molecules with atomic resolution by ultrafast diffractive-imaging methods.

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