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Addressing high excitation conditions in time-resolved X-ray diffraction experiments and issues of biological relevance

authors
Jessica E. Besaw, R.J. Dwayne Miller
date published
June 16, 2023
journal
Current Opinion in Structural Biology
volume, number
81
pages
102624
doi
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.sbi.2023.102624
abstract

One of the most important fundamental questions connecting chemistry to biology is how chemistry scales in complexity up to biological systems where there are innumerable possible pathways and competing processes. With the development of ultrabright electron and x-ray sources, it has been possible to literally light up atomic motions to directly observe the reduction in dimensionality in the barrier crossing region to a few key reaction modes. How do these chemical processes further couple to the surrounding protein or macromolecular assembly to drive biological functions? Optical methods to trigger photoactive biological processes are needed to probe this issue on the relevant timescales. However, the excitation conditions have been in the highly nonlinear regime, which questions the biological relevance of the observed structural dynamics.