Mtsl
MTSL is an acronym for Methanethiosulfonate Spin Label , a specialized chemical compound widely used in structural biology, biophysics, and molecular medicine. Its core value lies in its dual functionality: a highly reactive chemical group that can selectively attach to proteins, combined with a stable, unpaired electron that makes it detectable by a technique called Electron Paramagnetic Resonance (EPR) spectroscopy.
| Feature | MTSL / EPR | Fluorescence (FRET) | NMR | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | Virtually none | Virtually none | Small to medium | | Distance range | 1.8 - 8 nm (ideal) | 2 - 10 nm | < 2 nm | | Sample state | Solution, membrane, cell | Solution, cell | Mostly solution | | Information type | Distance, dynamics, accessibility | Distance, proximity | Atomic resolution | | Radical stability | Moderate (sensitive to reductants) | High (no radical) | Not applicable | MTSL is an acronym for Methanethiosulfonate Spin Label
MTSL is far more than a simple chemical reagent; it is the cornerstone of SDSL EPR spectroscopy. By enabling the precise attachment of a paramagnetic probe to specific protein sites, MTSL allows researchers to "light up" invisible structural and dynamic features of biomolecules. Its ability to work under native, non-crystalline conditions (in membranes, solutions, and even living cells) makes it indispensable for understanding how proteins function in their natural environments. As EPR instrumentation becomes more sensitive and new, more robust spin labels are developed, MTSL and its derivatives will continue to play a critical role in unraveling the molecular choreography of life. By enabling the precise attachment of a paramagnetic
