Beyond Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy: External
Cavity Quantum Cascade Laser-Based Mid-infrared Transmission Spectroscopy
of Proteins in the Amide I and Amide II Region
posted on 2018-05-15, 00:00authored byAndreas Schwaighofer, Milagros Montemurro, Stephan Freitag, Christian Kristament, María J. Culzoni, Bernhard Lendl
In
this work, we present a setup for mid-IR measurements of the
protein amide I and amide II bands in aqueous solution. Employing
a latest generation external cavity-quantum cascade laser (EC-QCL)
at room temperature in pulsed operation mode allowed implementing
a high optical path length of 31 μm that ensures robust sample
handling. By application of a data processing routine, which removes
occasionally deviating EC-QCL scans, the noise level could be lowered
by a factor of 4. The thereby accomplished signal-to-noise ratio is
better by a factor of approximately 2 compared to research-grade Fourier
transform infrared (FT-IR) spectrometers at equal acquisition times.
Employing this setup, characteristic spectral features of three representative
proteins with different secondary structures could be measured at
concentrations as low as 1 mg mL–1. Mathematical
evaluation of the spectral overlap confirms excellent agreement of
the quantum cascade laser infrared spectroscropy (QCL-IR) transmission
measurements with protein spectra acquired by FT-IR spectroscopy.
The presented setup combines performance surpassing FT-IR spectroscopy
with large applicable optical paths and coverage of the relevant spectral
range for protein analysis. This holds high potential for future EC-QCL-based
protein studies, including the investigation of dynamic secondary
structure changes and chemometrics-based protein quantification in
complex matrices.