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Guobin Luo

Harbin Engineering University

Publishes on Molecular Junctions and Nanostructures, Spectroscopy and Quantum Chemical Studies, Polymer Surface Interaction Studies. 40 papers and 3.5k citations.

40Publications
3.5kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Protein Conformational Dynamics Probed by Single-Molecule Electron Transfer
Cited by 858

Electron transfer is used as a probe for angstrom-scale structural changes in single protein molecules. In a flavin reductase, the fluorescence of flavin is quenched by a nearby tyrosine residue by means of photo-induced electron transfer. By probing the fluorescence lifetime of the single flavin on a photon-by-photon basis, we were able to observe the variation of flavin-tyrosine distance over time. We could then determine the potential of mean force between the flavin and the tyrosine, and a correlation analysis revealed conformational fluctuation at multiple time scales spanning from hundreds of microseconds to seconds. This phenomenon suggests the existence of multiple interconverting conformers related to the fluctuating catalytic reactivity.

Observation of a Power-Law Memory Kernel for Fluctuations within a Single Protein Molecule
Wei Min, Guobin Luo, Binny J. Cherayil et al.|Physical Review Letters|2005
Cited by 419

The fluctuation of the distance between a fluorescein-tyrosine pair within a single protein complex was directly monitored in real time by photoinduced electron transfer and found to be a stationary, time-reversible, and non-Markovian Gaussian process. Within the generalized Langevin equation formalism, we experimentally determine the memory kernel K(t), which is proportional to the autocorrelation function of the random fluctuating force. K(t) is a power-law decay, t(-0.51 +/- 0.07) in a broad range of time scales (10(-3)-10 s). Such a long-time memory effect could have implications for protein functions.

Fluctuating Enzymes:  Lessons from Single-Molecule Studies
Wei Min, Brian P. English, Guobin Luo et al.|Accounts of Chemical Research|2005
Cited by 360

Recent single-molecule enzymology measurements with improved statistics have demonstrated that a single enzyme molecule exhibits large temporal fluctuations of the turnover rate constant at a broad range of time scales (from 1 ms to 100 s). The rate constant fluctuations, termed as dynamic disorder, are associated with fluctuations of the protein conformations observed on the same time scales. We discuss the unique information extractable from these experiments and the reconciliation of these observations with ensemble-averaged Michaelis-Menten equation. A theoretical model based on the generalized Langevin equation (GLE) treatment of Kramers' barrier crossing problem for chemical reactions accounts naturally for the observation of dynamic disorder and highly dispersed kinetics.