Energetics from Slow Infrared Multiphoton Dissociation of Biomolecules

Abstract
Photodissociation kinetics of the protonated pentapeptide leucine enkephalin measured using a cw CO2 laser and a Fourier-transform mass spectrometer are reported. A short induction period, corresponding to the time required to raise the internal energy of the ion population to a (dissociating) steady state, is observed. After this induction period, the dissociation data are accurately fit by first-order kinetics. A plot of the log of the unimolecular dissociation rate constant, kuni, as a function of the log of laser power is linear at low laser powers (kuni < 0.05 s-1), but tapers off at high laser power (9−33 W, kuni = 0.05−7 s-1). The entire measured dissociation curve can be accurately fit by an exponential function plus a constant. The experiment is simulated using a master equation formalism. In the model, the laser radiation is described as an energetically flat-topped distribution which is spatially uniform. This description is consistent with experimental results which indicate that ion motion within the cell averages out spatial inhomogeneities in the laser light. The model has several adjustable parameters. The effect of varying these parameters on the calculated kinetics and power dependence curves is discussed. A procedure for determining a limited range of threshold dissociation energy, Eo, which fits both the measured induction period and power dependence curves, is presented. Using this procedure, Eo of leucine enkephalin is determined to be 1.12−1.46 eV. This result is consistent with, although less precise than, values measured previously using blackbody infrared radiative dissociation. Although the blackbody dissociation results were used as a starting point to search for fits of the master equation model to experiment, these results demonstrate that it is, in principle, possible to determine a limited range of Eo from slow infrared multiphoton dissociation data alone.

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