Ultrafast cooling reveals microsecond-scale biomolecular dynamics

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Abstract

The temperature-jump technique, in which the sample is rapidly heated by a powerful laser pulse, has been widely used to probe the fast dynamics of folding of proteins and nucleic acids. However, the existing temperature-jump setups tend to involve sophisticated and expensive instrumentation, while providing only modest temperature changes of ∼10-15 €‰°C, and the temperature changes are only rapid for heating, but not cooling. Here we present a setup comprising a thermally conductive sapphire substrate with light-absorptive nano-coating, a microfluidic device and a rapidly switched moderate-power infrared laser with the laser beam focused on the nano-coating, enabling heating and cooling of aqueous solutions by ∼50 €‰°C on a 1- 1/4s time scale. The setup is used to probe folding and unfolding dynamics of DNA hairpins after direct and inverse temperature jumps, revealing low-pass filter behaviour during periodic temperature variations.

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Polinkovsky, M. E., Gambin, Y., Banerjee, P. R., Erickstad, M. J., Groisman, A., & Deniz, A. A. (2014). Ultrafast cooling reveals microsecond-scale biomolecular dynamics. Nature Communications, 5. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms6737

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