Abstract

Gas-phase Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) combines mass spectrometry and fluorescence spectroscopy for the conformational analysis of mass-selected biomolecular ions. In FRET, fluorophore pairs are typically covalently attached to a biomolecule using short linkers, which affect the mobility of the dye and the relative orientation of the transition dipole moments of the donor and acceptor. Intramolecular interactions may further influence the range of motion. Yet, little is known about this factor, despite the importance of intramolecular interactions in the absence of a solvent. In this study, we applied transition metal ion FRET (tmFRET) to probe the mobility of a single chromophore pair (Rhodamine 110 and Cu2+) as a function of linker lengths to assess the relevance of intramolecular interactions. Increasing FRET efficiencies were observed with increasing linker length, ranging from 5% (2 atoms) to 28% (13 atoms). To rationalize this trend, we profiled the conformational landscape of each model system using molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. We captured intramolecular interactions that promote a population shift toward smaller donor-acceptor separation for longer linker lengths and induce a significant increase in the acceptor's transition dipole moment. The presented methodology is a first step toward the explicit consideration of a fluorophore's range of motion in the interpretation of gas-phase FRET experiments.

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