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Creators/Authors contains: "Sweger, Sarah R"

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  1. Double electron−electron resonance (DEER) spectroscopy measures distance distributions between spin labels in proteins, yielding important structural and energetic information about conformational landscapes. Analysis of an experimental DEER signal in terms of a distance distribution is a nontrivial task due to the ill-posed nature of the underlying mathematical inversion problem. This work introduces a Bayesian probabilistic inference approach to analyze DEER data, assuming a nonparametric distance distribution with a Tikhonov smoothness prior. The method uses Markov Chain Monte Carlo sampling with a compositional Gibbs sampler to determine a posterior probability distribution over the entire parameter space, including the distance distribution, given an experimental data set. This posterior contains all of the information available from the data, including a full quantification of the uncertainty about the model parameters. The corresponding uncertainty about the distance distribution is visually captured via an ensemble of posterior predictive distributions. Several examples are presented to illustrate the method. Compared with bootstrapping, it performs faster and provides slightly larger uncertainty intervals. 
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  2. Abstract. Double electron–electron resonance (DEER) spectroscopy measures the distribution of distances between two electron spins in the nanometer range, often on doubly spin-labeled proteins, via the modulation of a refocused spin echo by the dipolar interaction between the spins. DEER is commonly conducted under conditions where the polarization of the spins is small. Here, we examine the DEER signal under conditions of high spin polarization, thermally obtainable at low temperatures and high magnetic fields, and show that the signal acquires a polarization-dependent out-of-phase component both for the intramolecular and intermolecular contributions. For the latter, this corresponds to a phase shift of the spin echo that is linear in the pump pulse position. We derive a compact analytical form of this phase shift and show experimental measurements using monoradical and biradical nitroxides at several fields and temperatures. The effect highlights a novel aspect of the fundamental spin physics underlying DEER spectroscopy. 
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