Bulletin of the American Physical Society
APS March Meeting 2020
Volume 65, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 2–6, 2020; Denver, Colorado
Session U58: Ultrafast Spectroscopies and Coherent Phenomena in the X-ray Domain II
2:30 PM–5:18 PM,
Thursday, March 5, 2020
Room: Mile High Ballroom 3B
Sponsoring
Units:
DCP DAMOP DLS DCMP
Chair: Michael Schuurman, Natl Research Council-Canada
Abstract: U58.00003 : Ultrafast spin cross-over dynamics in heme proteins
Presenter:
Majed Chergui
(Ecole polytechnique federale de Lausanne)
Author:
Majed Chergui
(Ecole polytechnique federale de Lausanne)
to and dissociation of small diatomic ligands (O 2 , CO, NO, CN) from the Fe atom of the heme
porphyrin represents the primary events of these processes. These can be mimicked by
photodissociating them with a pulse of light and monitoring the recombination with a probe pulse. With
the advent of XFELs, fs photon-in/photon-out experiments such as X-ray emission (XES), X-ray
Raman scattering (XRS) and resonant-inelastic X-ray scattering (RIXS) have become possible that
could never be achieved before due to their requirement for high fluxes and high temporal resolution.
We have investigated the case of Nitrosyl-Myoglobin (MbNO) in order to address crucial questions
about the change from the planar low spin (LS) hexacoordinated heme configuration to the domed
high spin (HS) pentacoordinated one. We excite the system into the Q-bands and probed its evolution
by fs-XES using X-ray pulses from the SACLA, SwissFEL and European-XFEL free electron lasers.
We found that the entire photocycle from planar to domed and back, after ligand recombination, is a
series of spin cross-over (SCO) and back SCO events. We also investigated the most important
electron transfer protein in our body, ferric cyctochrome c, for which no ligand dissociation was ever
reported, and therefore neither doming nor spin states. Here too we establish the photocycle as a
SCO event, and propose that doming is crucial for the electron transfer properties of the protein,
rather than heme ruffling as previously proposed.
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