Q.25 The helix content of a protein can be determined using (A) an infrared spectrometer (B) a fluorescence spectrometer (C) a circular dichroism spectrometer (D) a UV-Visible spectrophotometer

Q.25 The helix content of a protein can be determined using
(A) an infrared spectrometer (B) a fluorescence spectrometer
(C) a circular dichroism spectrometer (D) a UV-Visible spectrophotometer

Circular dichroism spectroscopy serves as the gold standard for quantifying alpha-helix content in proteins through characteristic spectral signatures. The correct answer is (C) a circular dichroism spectrometer.

Correct Answer

C) a circular dichroism spectrometer.
CD spectrometers measure differential absorption of left- and right-circularly polarized light, producing distinct negative peaks at 208 nm and 222 nm for alpha-helices, enabling precise secondary structure quantification even with additives.
Algorithms like DichroWeb analyze far-UV CD spectra (190-260 nm) to estimate helix percentages from reference datasets.

Option Breakdown

A) An Infrared Spectrometer

Infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy detects amide I (1650 cm⁻¹) and amide II (1550 cm⁻¹) bands, deconvoluting them to estimate helix content via curve fitting.
While useful for hydrogen-deuterium exchange studies, FTIR resolution suffers from water interference compared to CD’s aqueous compatibility.

B) A Fluorescence Spectrometer

Fluorescence monitors tryptophan or extrinsic probes sensitive to conformational changes, but lacks direct helix quantification.
It excels in folding dynamics rather than static secondary structure percentages.

D) A UV-Visible Spectrophotometer

UV-Vis measures aromatic amino acid absorbance at 280 nm for concentration, not structure-specific signals.
Helix content requires differential techniques like CD for chiral information.

Biophysical Applications

Biotechnologists employ CD to validate recombinant protein folding in fermentation processes or assess enzyme stability during directed evolution.
Quantitative helix analysis supports structure-function studies in molecular biology and drug design.

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