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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Excitation-Wavelength-Dependent Photocycle Initiation Dynamics Resolve Heterogeneity in the Photoactive Yellow Protein from Halorhodospira halophila

Jie PanWouter D. HoffDmitry MorozovMasato KumauchiGerrit GroenhofL. Tyler MixDelmar S. LarsenWendy R. GordonWendy R. GordonAndrew F. PhilipAndrew F. PhilipJack FuzellElizabeth C. CarrollIvo H. M. Van Stokkum

subject

LightKineticsQuantum yieldMolecular Dynamics Simulation010402 general chemistryPhotochemistryPhotoreceptors Microbial01 natural sciencesBiochemistry/dk/atira/pure/sustainabledevelopmentgoals/life_below_waterStructure-Activity RelationshipBacterial Proteins0103 physical sciencesSDG 14 - Life Below Waterta116Photoactive Yellow ProteinsQuenching (fluorescence)ta114010304 chemical physicsChemistryHalorhodospira halophilaHydrogen BondingChromophoreFluorescence0104 chemical sciencesHalorhodospira halophilaFemtosecondExcitation

description

Photoactive yellow proteins (PYPs) make up a diverse class of blue-light-absorbing bacterial photoreceptors. Electronic excitation of the p-coumaric acid chromophore covalently bound within PYP results in triphasic quenching kinetics; however, the molecular basis of this behavior remains unresolved. Here we explore this question by examining the excitation-wavelength dependence of the photodynamics of the PYP from Halorhodospira halophila via a combined experimental and computational approach. The fluorescence quantum yield, steady-state fluorescence emission maximum, and cryotrapping spectra are demonstrated to depend on excitation wavelength. We also compare the femtosecond photodynamics in PYP at two excitation wavelengths (435 and 475 nm) with a dual-excitation-wavelength-interleaved pump-probe technique. Multicompartment global analysis of these data demonstrates that the excited-state photochemistry of PYP depends subtly, but convincingly, on excitation wavelength with similar kinetics with distinctly different spectral features, including a shifted ground-state beach and altered stimulated emission oscillator strengths and peak positions. Three models involving multiple excited states, vibrationally enhanced barrier crossing, and inhomogeneity are proposed to interpret the observed excitation-wavelength dependence of the data. Conformational heterogeneity was identified as the most probable model, which was supported with molecular mechanics simulations that identified two levels of inhomogeneity involving the orientation of the R52 residue and different hydrogen bonding networks with the p-coumaric acid chromophore. Quantum calculations were used to confirm that these inhomogeneities track to altered spectral properties consistent with the experimental results.

10.1021/acs.biochem.7b01114https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.biochem.7b01114