Stark Spectroscopy of Lumichrome: A Possible Candidate for Stand-Off Detection of Bacterial Quorum Sensing.
Cornelius van GalenDavid T BarnardRobert J StanleyPublished in: The journal of physical chemistry. B (2020)
Lumichrome (7,8-dimethylalloxazine, LC) is a natural photodegradation product and catabolite of flavin coenzymes. Although not a coenzyme itself, LC is used for biosignaling in plants and single-celled organisms, including quorum sensing in the formation of biofilms. The noninvasive detection of in vivo lumichrome would be useful for monitoring this signaling event. For molecules that undergo significant charge redistribution upon light excitation (e.g., intramolecular charge transfer), there are optical detection methods (e.g., second-harmonic generation) that would be well suited to this task. Here, we have used Stark spectroscopy to measure the extent and direction of charge redistribution in photoexcited LC. Stark and low-temperature absorption spectra were obtained at 77 K on LC in ethanol glasses and analyzed using the Liptay analysis to obtain the difference dipole moments and polarizabilities. These data were complemented by a computational analysis of the excited states using density functional theory (DFT) at the TD-B3LYP/6-311+G(2d,p) level of theory.
Keyphrases
- density functional theory
- simultaneous determination
- high resolution
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- molecular dynamics
- real time pcr
- label free
- mass spectrometry
- energy transfer
- solid phase extraction
- machine learning
- electronic health record
- tandem mass spectrometry
- solid state
- artificial intelligence
- solar cells
- quantum dots
- crystal structure