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1.
Fluorescence Correlation Spectroscopy (FCS) was used to investigate the excited-state properties of flavins and flavoproteins in solution at the single molecule level. Flavin mononucleotide (FMN), flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) and lipoamide dehydrogenase served as model systems in which the flavin cofactor is either free in solution (FMN, FAD) or enclosed in a protein environment as prosthetic group (lipoamide dehydrogenase). Parameters such as excitation light intensity, detection time and chromophore concentration were varied in order to optimize the autocorrelation traces. Only in experiments with very low light intensity ( < 10 kW/cm2), FMN and FAD displayed fluorescence properties equivalent to those found with conventional fluorescence detection methods. Due to the high triplet quantum yield of FMN, the system very soon starts to build up a population of non-fluorescent molecules, which is reflected in an apparent particle number far too low for the concentration used. Intramolecular photoreduction and subsequent photobleaching may well explain these observations. The effect of photoreduction was clearly shown by titration of FMN with ascorbic acid. While titration of FMN with the quenching agent potassium iodide at higher concentrations ( > 50 mM of I-) resulted in quenched flavin fluorescence as expected, low concentrations of potassium iodide led to a net enhancement of the de-excitation rate from the triplet state, thereby improving the fluorescence signal. FCS experiments on FAD exhibited an improved photostability of FAD as compared to FMN: As a result of stacking of the adenine and flavin moieties, FAD has a considerably lower triplet quantum yield. Correlation curves of lipoamide dehydrogenase yielded correct values for the diffusion time and number of molecules at low excitation intensities. However, experiments at higher light intensities revealed a process which can be explained by photophysical relaxation or photochemical destruction of the enzyme. As the time constant of the process induced at higher light intensities resembles the diffusion time constant of free flavin, photodestruction with the concomitant release of the cofactor offers a reasonable explanation.  相似文献   

2.
Abstract— The triplet states of proteins, bovine serum albumin, ovalbumin and d-amino acid oxidase, were observed by electron paramagnetic resonance at 77°K.
The triplet state of aromatic amino acids, tryptophan, tyrosine and phenylalanine was also detected.
The protein triplet originates from the tryptophan residues of these proteins.
It is suggested that an energy transfer takes place between tyrosine and tryptophan.  相似文献   

3.
The photolysis of lumichrome, riboflavin, flavin mononucleotide (FMN) and flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) was studied in air-saturated aqueous solution at room temperature in the presence of appropriate electron donors: ascorbic acid, aromatic amino acids or amines, e.g. ethylenediaminetetraacetate (EDTA). The overall reaction is conversion of oxygen via the hydroperoxyl/superoxide radical into hydrogen peroxide. The quantum yield of oxygen uptake increases with the donor concentration, e.g. up to 0.3 for riboflavin, FMN or FAD in the presence of EDTA or ascorbic acid (0.3-10mM). The formation of H(2)O(2) is initiated by quenching of the acceptor triplet state by the electron donor and subsequent reaction of the semiquinone radical with oxygen. Specific properties of flavins are discussed including the radicals involved and the pH and concentration dependences. The quantum yield of photodegradation is low under air, but substantial under argon, where the major product absorbing in the visible spectral range is the corresponding hydroquinone.  相似文献   

4.
The photogenerated triplet states of riboflavin and flavin mononucleotide (FMN) have been examined by time-resolved electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy at low temperature (T = 80 K). Because of the high time resolution of the utilized EPR instrumentation, the triplets are for the first time observed in the nonequilibrated electron-spin polarized state and not in their equilibrated forms with the population of the triplet sublevels governed by Boltzmann distribution. The electron-spin polarization pattern directly reflects the anisotropy of the intersystem crossing from the excited singlet-state precursor. Spectral analysis of the resulting enhanced absorptive and emissive EPR signals yields the zero-field splitting parameters, |D| and |E|, and the zero-field populations of the triplet at high accuracy. These parameters are sensitive probes for the protonation state of the flavin's isoalloxazine ring, as becomes evident by a comparison of the spectra recorded at different pH values of the solvent. The three protonation states of the flavins can furthermore be distinguished by the kinetics of the transient EPR signals, which are dominated by spin-lattice relaxation. The fastest decays are observed for the protonated FMN and riboflavin triplets, followed by the deprotonated flavin triplets. Slow decays are measured for the triplet states of neutral FMN and riboflavin. Because proton transfer is found to be slow on the time scale of spin-polarized triplet detection by transient EPR, the pH-dependent spin-relaxation and zero-field splitting parameters offer a novel approach to probe the protonation state of flavins in their singlet ground state through the characterization of their triplet-state properties.  相似文献   

5.
The pH dependent behavior of two flavin cofactors, flavin-adenine dinucleotide (FAD) and flavin mononucleotide (FMN), has been characterized using femtosecond transient absorption spectroscopy for the first time. The flavin excited state was characterized in three states of protonation (Fl(-), Fl, and FlH(+)). We found that Fl and Fl(-) exhibit the same excited state absorption but that the lifetime of Fl(-) is much shorter than that of Fl. The transient absorption spectrum of FlH(+) is significantly different from Fl and Fl(-), suggesting that the electronic properties of the flavin chromophore become appreciably modified by protonation. We further studied the excited state protonation of the flavin and found that the protonation sites of the flavin in the ground and excited state are not equivalent. In the case of FAD, its excited state dynamics are controlled by the two conformations it adopts. At low and high pH, FAD adopts an "open" conformation and behaves the same as FMN. In a neutral pH range, FAD undergoes a fast excited state deactivation due to the "stacked" conformer. The transition from stacked to open conformer occurs at pH ~ 3 (because of adenine protonation) and pH ~ 10 (because of flavin deprotonation).  相似文献   

6.
Abstract— A continuation of studies is presented on the excited triplet state of flavins using EPR techniques. Detailed experiments are reported on the triplet state of flavin-mono-nucleotide (FMN) and flavin-adenine-dinucleotide (FAD). Action spectra of triplet yield are explained in terms of the optical absorption for FMN and FAD. Effects of light saturation, concentration quenching and oxygen on the triplet state are discussed. It is suggested that the rate constant k 3 for the intersystem crossover from the excited singlet to the triplet state is increased by oxygen and quenchers such as KI. Detailed kinetic studies are presented on the formation of the triplet state.  相似文献   

7.
The electrochemical properties (such as the values of the formal potentials, the dependence of the formal potentials on solution pH, the reversibility of the electrochemical process) of flavin mononucleotide (FMN) and flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) adsorbed on a titanium electrode were dependent on the electrolyte. The formal potentials of adsorbed FMN and FAD in phosphate, HEPES and PIPES buffers at pH 7 were similar to those for dissolved flavins (-460 to -480 mV vs. SCE) and changed linearly with a slope of about 52 mV per pH unit in the pH region 3 to 8. In TRIS buffer, the formal potentials of adsorbed FMN and FAD were also pH-dependent, however, with invariance in the pH range 4.5 to 5.5. In non-buffered solutions (KCl, LiCl, NaCl, CsCl, CaCl(2), Na(2)SO(4) at different concentrations), the electrochemical behavior of adsorbed FMN and FAD differed from that of dissolved flavins and was dependent on the electrolyte (especially at pH 4.5 and pH 5). Under certain conditions (electrolyte, concentration, pH), a two-step oxidation of FMN could be observed.  相似文献   

8.
The time dependence of the fluorescence of flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) was measured with a subnanosecond-resolving fluorometer. In contrast to the fluorescence decay of FMN, the decay of FAD was proved to be nonexponential. The time-dependent fluorescence of FAD can be interpreted by assuming an equilibrium between closed and open conformers in the ground state. The rate constant for folding in the excited state and the fluorescence lifetime of the intramolecular complex could be evaluated from analysis of the observed fluorescence decay. The results on FAD were compared to those on NADH obtained earlier.  相似文献   

9.
A method is described for the rapid determination of flavins in sea water, based on solid-phase extraction followed by ion-pair high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) with fluorescence detection. Riboflavin, flavin mononucleotide (FMN), and flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) and their photochemical breakdown products, lumiflavin, formylmethylflavin, and lumichrome can be determined with subpicomolar detection limits. The method was used at sea in the analysis of coastal and open ocean waters. In both environments, riboflavin, lumiflavin and lumichrome were routinely observed at concentrations in the picomolar range; lumiflavin and lumichrome were generally confined to the photic zone while riboflavin was present throughout the water column. Formylmethylflavin, FMN, and FAD were only occasionally observed; when present, these flavins were observed at consistently higher concentrations than riboflavin, lumiflavin and lumichrome.  相似文献   

10.
The phototropins are blue-light receptors that base their light-dependent action on the reversible formation of a covalent bond between a flavin mononucleotide (FMN) cofactor and a conserved cysteine in light, oxygen or voltage (LOV) domains. The primary reactions of the Avena sativa phototropin 1 LOV2 domain were investigated by means of time-resolved and low-temperature fluorescence spectroscopy. Synchroscan streak camera experiments revealed a fluorescence lifetime of 2.2 ns in LOV2. A weak long-lived component with emission intensity from 600 to 650 nm was assigned to phosphorescence from the reactive FMN triplet state. This observation allowed determination of the LOV2 triplet state energy level at physiological temperature at 16600 cm(-1). FMN dissolved in aqueous solution showed pH-dependent fluorescence lifetimes of 2.7 ns at pH 2 and 3.9-4.1 ns at pH 3-8. Here, too, a weak phosphorescence band was observed. The fluorescence quantum yield of LOV2 increased from 0.13 to 0.41 upon cooling the sample from 293 to 77 K. A pronounced phosphorescence emission around 600 nm was observed in the LOV2 domain between 77 and 120 K in the steady-state emission.  相似文献   

11.
Negatively charged vesicle suspensions containing chlorophyll a (chl) dissolved in the lipid bilayer, flavin mononucleotide (FMN) and/or ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA) enclosed in the inner compartment as electron sources and oxidized cytochrome c (cyt c[ox]) in the outer compartment as an electron acceptor have been studied using laser flash photolysis and steady-state irradiation methods. Cytochrome c initially quenches the chl triplet state (3chl) generating the chlorophyll cation radical (chi+′) in the membrane. Reverse electron transfer from cyt c(red) to chl+. subsequently occurs in a kinetically biphasic reaction, with rate constants of 430 pT 30 and 21.9 pT 1.7 s?1 for the fast and slow phases, respectively. In the absence of FMN, reduction of chl+′ by EDTA in the inner compartment can be observed during steady-state irradiation but not in a laser flash photolysis experiment. This is due to a low reaction yield, which is probably limited by the repulsive electrostatic interaction between EDTA and the negatively charged membrane. When FMN was enclosed together with EDTA in the inner Compartment, the reaction yield of vectorial electron transfer across the bilayer from EDTA to cyt c(oX) was increased by a factor of six during steadystate white light irradiation. Laser flash photolysis and steady-state irradiation experiments using red and blue light excitation have demonstrated that the enhancement mechanism involves the formation of fully reduced FMN by blue light-sensitized photooxidation of EDTA via the flavin triplet state, occumng simultaneously with red lightsensitized electron transfer to cyt c via the chlorophyll triplet state.  相似文献   

12.
In LOV2, the blue-light sensitive domain of phototropin, the primary photophysical event involves intersystem crossing (ISC) from the singlet-excited state to the triplet state. The ISC rate is enhanced in LOV2 as compared to flavin mononucleotide (FMN) in solution, which likely results from a heavy-atom effect of a nearby conserved cysteine, C450. Here, we applied fluorescence line narrowing (FLN), resonance Raman (RR) and Fourier-transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy to investigate the electronic structure of FMN bound to Avena sativa LOV2 (AsLOV2), its C450A mutant and Adiantum LOV2 (Phy3LOV2). We demonstrate that FLN is the method of choice to obtain accurate vibrational spectra on highly fluorescent flavoproteins. The vibrational spectrum of AsLOV2-C450A showed small but significant shifts with respect to those of wild type AsLOV2 and Phy3LOV2, with a systematic down-shift of Ring I vibrations, upshifts of Ring II and III vibrations and an upshift of the C2=O mode. These trends are similar to those in FMN model systems with an electron-donating group substituted at Ring I, known to induce a quinoid character to the electronic structure of oxidized flavin. Thus, enhancement of the ISC rate in LOV2 is induced through weak electron donation by the cysteine which mixes the FMN pi-electrons with the heavy sulfur orbitals, manifesting itself in a quinoid character of the ground electronic state of oxidized FMN. The proximity of the cysteine to FMN thus not only enables formation of a covalent adduct between FMN and cysteine, but also facilitates the rapid electronic formation of the reactive FMN triplet state.  相似文献   

13.
Phototropin is a plant blue-light sensor protein that possesses a flavin mononucleotide (FMN) as the chromophore in LOV domains. Its photoreaction is an adduct formation between FMN and a nearby cysteine that takes place in the triplet excited state of FMN. In this communication, we revealed that the reactive cysteine is protonated in the triplet excited state of the LOV2 domain of Adiantum phytochrome3 by means of low-temperature FTIR spectroscopy. Its hydrogen-bonding interaction is strengthened in the triplet excited state, presumably with the FMN chromophore. Such strong interaction drives adduct formation on a microsecond time scale.  相似文献   

14.
The fluorescence behaviour of the flavins riboflavin, flavin mononucleotide (FMN), flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD), and lumiflavin in aqueous solution at pH 8 in the presence of the reducing agents β-mercaptoethanol (β-ME), dithiothreitol (DTT), and sodium nitrite (NaNO2) is studied under aerobic conditions. The fluorescence quantum yields and fluorescence lifetimes are determined as a function of the reducing agent concentration. For all three reducing agents diffusion controlled dynamic fluorescence quenching is observed which is thought to be due to photo-induced reductive electron transfer. For DTT additionally static fluorescence quenching occurs.  相似文献   

15.
Blue-light sensitive photoreceptory BLUF domains are flavoproteins, which regulate various, mostly stress-related processes in bacteria and eukaryotes. The photoreactivity of the flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) cofactor in three BLUF domains from Rhodobacter sphaeroides, Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 and Escherichia coli have been studied at low temperature using time-resolved electron paramagnetic resonance. Photoinduced flavin triplet states and radical-pair species have been detected on a microsecond time scale. Differences in the electronic structures of the FAD cofactors as reflected by altered zero-field splitting parameters of the triplet states could be correlated with changes in the amino-acid composition of the various BLUF domains' cofactor binding pockets. For the generation of the light-induced, spin-correlated radical-pair species in the BLUF domain from Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803, a tyrosine residue near the flavin's isoalloxazine moiety plays a critical role.  相似文献   

16.
Abstract— Primary and secondary photochemical processes in oxygen-free aqueous solution have been characterised for FMN alone and in the presence of EDTA and four amino acids using nanosecond and microsecond flash photolysis and continuous photolysis techniques. The relative contributions of oneelectron and two-electron (group or hydride transfer) reactions to the deactivation of the triplet has been determined by comparing the radical concentration (560 nm) with the bleaching of the ground state (446 nm). It was concluded that one-electron reactions (hydrogen atom or electron abstraction) are the major mode of reactivity of the flavin triplet state with all the suhstrates studied.
The nature of the reactions of the flavin semiquinone radical have been studied quantitatively by microsecond flash photolysis. These secondary reactions consist of either a 'back reaction' between the flavin and substrate radicals (tryptophan or glycyl-tyrosine) or the transfer of a second electron (or hydrogen atom) from the substrate radical to the flavin radical (EDTA, methionine and possibly cysteine) to form reduced flavin and oxidised substrate. From a comparison of the quantum yields of formation of reduced flavin using 'flash' and continuous irradiation, an additional pathway for the decay of the flavin radical is suggested to occur at low light intensities in the presence of glycyl-tyrosine or histidine.  相似文献   

17.
Flash photolysis of flavins. I. Photoreduction in non-aqueous solvents   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Abstract— The photoreduction of riboflavin, FMN, and lumiflavin in a series of hydroxylic solvents has been examined using flash photolysis. A comparison of the relative quantum yields for the photoxidation of several alcohols and esters by lumiflavin demonstrated that the hydroxyl hydrogen of the alcohol is abstracted approximately twice as readily as is the alpha hydrogen. The use of glycerol as both solvent and reductant provided direct evidence that the initial reaction proceeds by a one-electron reduction to form the flavin semi-quinone. In the case of riboflavin (and FMN) the kinetic results are consistent with an initial intramolecular hydrogen atom transfer, analogous to photobleaching in aqueous solution, followed by a reaction of the semi-quinone with the reductant which prevents degradation of the ribityl side-chain. Quenching by iodide indicates that all the reactions proceed via the flavin triplet state, as is the case in aqueous systems.  相似文献   

18.
Phototropin is a blue light-activated photoreceptor that plays a dominant role in the phototropism of plants. The protein contains two subunits that bind flavin mononucleotide (FMN), which are responsible for the initial steps of the light-induced reaction. It has been proposed that the photoexcited flavin molecule adds a cysteine residue of the protein backbone, thus activating autophosphorylation of the enzyme. In this study, the electronic properties of several FMN-related compounds in different charge and spin states are characterized by means of ab initio quantum mechanical calculations. The model compounds serve as idealized model chromophores for phototropism. Reaction energies are estimated for simple model reactions, roughly representing the addition of a cysteine residue to the flavin molecule. Excitation energies were calculated with the help of time-dependent density functional theory. On the basis of these calculations we propose the following mechanism for the addition reaction: (1) after photoexcitation of FMN out of the singlet ground state S0, excited singlet state(s) are populated; these relax to the lowest excited singlet state S1, and subsequently by intersystem crossing FMN in the lowest triplet state, T1 is formed; (2) the triplet easily removes the neutral hydrogen atom from the H-S group of the cysteine residue; and (3) the resulting thio radical is added.  相似文献   

19.
Abstract— Quenching of the degradative photobleaching of FMN in anaerobic aqueous solution, and of the flavin-sensitized photo-oxidation of EDTA, alcohols, glycols, and glycerol, has been examined using flash techniques. The quenching can be produced by addition of KI, by successive flashes, and by increasing the flavin concentration (self-quenching). It is concluded that the lowest triplet is the photoreactive species in all systems, that the successive flash effect is due to triplet quenching by a reaction product, and that the concentration quenching may be due to either triplet-triplet annihilation or to reaction between a ground-state flavin and a flavin triplet.  相似文献   

20.
Flavins were extracted from sporangiophores of the lower fungus Phycomyces blakesleeanus and identified by HPLC with fluorescence detection. In the wild-type strain NRRL1555 they were found to be present at the following concentrations: riboflavin (5.5 x 10(-6) M), flavin mononucleotide (FMN) (4.0 x 10(-6) M) and flavin adenine dinucleotide (1.4 x 10(-6) M). The HPLC elution profiles of the wild type were compared to a set of behavioral mutants (genotype mad) with specific defects in their light-transduction pathway. The photoreceptor mutants C109 (madB), C111 (madB) and L1 (madC) had normal amounts of flavins. The most prominent changes were found in single mutants with a defective madA gene which contained about 25% of riboflavin and about 10% of FMN and FAD normally found in the wild type. A hypertropic mutant with a defective madH gene contained instead 80% of riboflavin and 120% of FMN and FAD. The double mutant L52 (madA madC) and the triple mutant L72 (madA madB madC) had normal amounts of FAD and FMN. This indicates that the madC mutation, which itself causes loss of light sensitivity and which affects the near-UV/blue-light receptor (Galland and Lipson, 1985, Photochem. Photobiol. 41, 331-335) functions as a restorer of the flavin content in a genetic madA background. The double mutant L51 (madA madB) had about 40% of FMN and FAD, suggesting that the madB mutation functions as a partial restorer of flavin content. The photogravitropic thresholds (450 nm) reported for the wild type and the madA and madH mutants were positively correlated to the endogeneous concentrations of FMN and FAD.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

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