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1.
Green fluorescent proteins (GFPs) have become powerful markers for numerous biological studies due to their robust fluorescence properties, site-specific labeling, pH sensitivity, and mutations for multiple-site labeling. Fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS) studies have indicated that fluorescence blinking of anionic GFP mutants takes place on a time scale of 45-300 ms, depending on pH, and have been attributed to external proton transfer. Here we present experimental evidence indicating that conformational change in the protein &beta-barrel is a determining step for the external protonation of GFP-S65T (at low pH) using time-resolved fluorescence and polarization anisotropy measurements. While the average anionic fluorescence lifetime of GFP-S65T is reduced by approximately 18% over a pH range of 3.6-10.0, the fluorescence polarization anisotropy decays mostly as a single exponential with a rotational time of phi = 17 +/- 1 ns, which indicates an intact beta-barrel with a hydrodynamic volume of 78 +/- 5 nm3. In contrast, the total fluorescence (525 +/- 50 nm) of the excited neutral state of S65T reveals a strong correlation between the fluorescence lifetime, structural conformation, and pH. The average fluorescence lifetime of the excited neutral state of S65T as a function of pH yields pKa approximately 5.9 in agreement with literature values using steady-state techniques. In contrast to the intact beta-barrel at high pH, the anisotropy of neutral S65T (at pH 相似文献   

2.
Fluorescence emission of wild‐type green fluorescent protein (GFP) is lost in the S65T mutant, but partly recovered in the S65T/H148D double mutant. These experimental findings are rationalized by a combined quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics (QM/MM) study at the QM(CASPT2//CASSCF)/AMBER level. A barrierless excited‐state proton transfer, which is exclusively driven by the Asp148 residue introduced in the double mutant, is responsible for the ultrafast formation of the anionic fluorescent state, which can be deactivated through a concerted asynchronous hula‐twist photoisomerization. This causes the lower fluorescence quantum yield in S65T/H148D compared to wild‐type GFP. Hydrogen out‐of‐plane motion plays an important role in the deactivation of the S65T/H148D fluorescent state.  相似文献   

3.
Green fluorescent protein (GFP) mutant S65T/H148D has been proposed to host a photocycle that involves an excited‐state proton transfer between the chromophore (Cro) and the Asp148 residue and takes place in less than 50 fs without a measurable kinetic isotope effect. It has been suggested that the interaction between the unsuspected Tyr145 residue and the chromophore is needed for the ultrafast sub‐50 fs rise in fluorescence. To verify this, we have performed a computer‐aided mutagenic study to introduce the additional mutation Y145F, which eliminates this interaction. By means of QM/MM molecular dynamics simulations and time‐dependent density functional theory studies, we have assessed the importance of the Cro–Tyr145 interaction and the solvation of Asp148 and shown that in the triple mutant S65T/H148D/Y145F a significant loss in the ultrafast rise of the Stokes‐shifted fluorescence should be expected.  相似文献   

4.
We present a detailed mechanism for the proton transfer from a protein‐bound protonated water cluster to the bulk water directed by protein side chains in the membrane protein bacteriorhodopsin. We use a combined approach of time‐resolved Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, molecular dynamics simulations, and X‐ray structure analysis to elucidate the functional role of a hydrogen bond between Ser193 and Glu204. These two residues seal the internal protonated water cluster from the bulk water and the protein surface. During the photocycle of bacteriorhodopsin, a transient protonation of Glu204 leads to a breaking of this hydrogen bond. This breaking opens the gate to the extracellular bulk water, leading to a subsequent proton release from the protonated water cluster. We show in detail how the protein achieves vectorial proton transfer via protonated water clusters in contrast to random proton transfer in liquid water.  相似文献   

5.
Green fluorescent protein (GFP) is used as a biological marker. It is a protein in the jellyfish, Aequorea victorea, which is found in the cold Pacific Northwest. Mature GFP, i.e. fully fluorescent GFP, is most efficiently formed at temperatures well below 37 °C. The GFPuv (F99S/M153T/V163A) and S147P-GFP mutants mature more efficiently at room temperature than wild-type GFP, and therefore result in increased fluorescence at room temperature. Computational methods have been used to examine whether the low-energy precyclized forms of these improved GFP-mutants are preorganized so that they can more efficiently form the chromophore than the wild-type and S65T-GFP. All mutations examined (S147P, F99S, M153T, V163A and F99S/M153T/V163A) more efficiently preorganize the immature precyclized forms of GFP for chromophore formation than immature wild-type GFP. It has been proposed that Arg96 is involved in chromophore formation. Our calculations suggest that the M153T and V163A mutations in GFPuv maybe partially responsible for the increased maturation efficiency observed in GFPuv because they improve the Arg96–Tyr66 interaction. The same is true for the S147P mutation in S147P-GFP.  相似文献   

6.
We investigated femtosecond and picosecond time-resolved fluorescence dynamics of a tetrameric fluorescent protein Kaede with a red chromophore (red Kaede) to examine a relationship between the excited-state dynamics and a quaternary structure of the fluorescent protein. Red Kaede was obtained by photoconversion from green Kaede that was cloned from a stony coral Trachyphyllia geoffroyi. In common with other typical fluorescent proteins, a chromophore of red Kaede has two protonation states, the neutral and the anionic forms in equilibrium. Time-resolved fluorescence measurements clarified that excitation of the neutral form gives the anionic excited state with a time constant of 13 ps at pH 7.5. This conversion process was attributed to fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) from the photoexcited neutral form to the ground-state anionic form that is located in an adjacent subunit in the tetramer. The time-resolved fluorescence data measured at different pH revealed that excited-state proton transfer (ESPT) also occurs with a time constant of 300 ps and hence that the FRET and ESPT take place simultaneously in the fluorescent protein as competing processes. The ESPT rate in red Kaede was significantly slower than the rate in Aequorea GFP, which highly likely arises from the different hydrogen bond network around the chromophore.  相似文献   

7.
Two blue absorbing and emitting mutants (S65G/T203V/E222Q and S65T at pH 5.5) of the green fluorescent protein (GFP) have been investigated through ultrafast time resolved infra-red (TRIR) and fluorescence spectroscopy. In these mutants, in which the excited state proton transfer reaction observed in wild-type GFP has been blocked, the photophysics are dominated by the neutral A state. It was found that the A* excited state lifetime is short, indicating that it is relatively less stabilised in the protein matrix than the anionic form. However, the lifetime of the A state can be increased through modifications to the protein structure. The TRIR spectra show that a large shifts in protein vibrational modes on excitation of the A state occurs in both these GFP mutants. This is ascribed to a change in H-bonding interactions between the protein matrix and the excited state.  相似文献   

8.
The dynamics and electronic absorption spectrum of enhanced cyan fluorescent protein (ECFP), a mutant of green fluorescent protein (GFP), have been studied by means of a 1 ns molecular dynamics (MD) simulation. The two X-ray conformations A' and B' of ECFP were considered. The chromophore was assumed to be neutral, and all titratable residues were taken in their standard protonation state at neutral pH. The protein was embedded in a box of water molecules (and counterions). The first result is that the two conformations A' and B' are found to be stable all along the simulation. Then, an analysis of the hydrogen-bond networks shows strong differences between the two conformations in the surroundings of the nitrogen atom of the indolic part of the chromophore. This is partly due to the imperfection in the beta barrel near the His148 residue, which allows the access of one solvent molecule inside the protein in conformation A'. Finally, quantum mechanical calculations of the electronic transition energies of the chromophore in the charge cloud of the protein and solvent water molecules were performed using the TDDFT method on 160 snapshots extracted every 5 ps of the MD trajectories. It is found that conformations A' and B' exhibit very similar spectra despite different H-bond networks involving the chromophore. This similarity is related to the weak charge transfer involved in the electronic transition and the weak electrostatic field created by ECFP near the chromophore, within the hypotheses made in the present simulation.  相似文献   

9.
Proton transfer is one of the most important elementary processes in biology. Green fluorescent protein (GFP) serves as an important model system to elucidate the mechanistic details of this reaction, because in GFP proton transfer can be induced by light absorption. Illumination initiates proton transfer through a 'proton-wire', formed by the chromophore (the proton donor), water molecule W22, Ser205 and Glu222 (the acceptor), on a picosecond time scale. To obtain a more refined view of this process, we have used a combined approach of time resolved mid-infrared spectroscopy and visible pump-dump-probe spectroscopy to resolve with atomic resolution how and how fast protons move through this wire. Our results indicate that absorption of light by GFP induces in 3 ps (10 ps in D(2)O) a shift of the equilibrium positions of all protons in the H-bonded network, leading to a partial protonation of Glu222 and to a so-called low barrier hydrogen bond (LBHB) for the chromophore's proton, giving rise to dual emission at 475 and 508 nm. This state is followed by a repositioning of the protons on the wire in 10 ps (80 ps in D(2)O), ultimately forming the fully deprotonated chromophore and protonated Glu222.  相似文献   

10.
The molecular modeling of structural forms of the green fluorescent protein (GFP) with the Ser65Thr single-site mutation was performed by the quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics (QM/MM) method. Two model systems were constructed based on the crystallographic structure from the Protein Data Bank (PDB entry code 1EMA.) The model systems differ in the initial protonation state of the side chain of the amino acid residue Glu222 near the chromophore. The atomic coordinates of the protein macromolecule corresponding to the equilibrium geometric configurations were determined by total energy minimization using the QM/MM method within the density functional theory approximation PBE0/cc-pVDZ for the quantum subsystem that consists of the chromophore, a water molecule, and the side chains of Arg96, Glu222, and Ser205, and with the parameters of the AMBER force field for the molecular mechanics subsystem. In the analysis of the results, particular attention was given to the hydrogen bond redistribution in the chromophore-containing region of the protein caused by a change in the protonation state of the chromophore. The results obtained from the model containing the initially protonated side chain of Glu222 suggest a new interpretation of the photophysical processes in the green fluorescent protein.  相似文献   

11.
While green fluorescent proteins (GFPs) have been widely used as tools in biochemistry, cell biology, and molecular genetics, novel red fluorescent proteins (RFPs) with red fluorescence emission have also been identified, as complements to the existing GFP technology. The unusual spectrophotometric and fluorescence properties of GFPs and RFPs are controlled by the protonation states and possibly cis/trans isomerization within their chromophores. In this work, we have investigated the electronic structures, liquid structures, and solvent shifts of the possible neutral and anionic protonated states and the cis/trans isomerization of a RFP chromophore model compound HBMPI in aqueous solutions. The calculations reproduced the experimental absorption solvatochromatic shifts of dilute HBMPI in water under neutral and anionic conditions. Unlike the GFP chromophore, the RFP chromophore model compound HBMPI in basic solution can only adopt a conformation where the C=C bond between the bridge group and the imidazolinone ring and the C-C bond between the imidazolinone and ethylene groups exist in cis and trans conformations, respectively. Moreover, the solvent-solute hydrogen-bonding interactions are found to contribute significantly to the total solvent shifts of pi-pi* excitations of aqueous HBMPI solutions, signifying the importance of protein environment in the determination of the conformation of the chromophores in red fluorescent proteins.  相似文献   

12.
The neutral form of the chromophore in wild-type green fluorescent protein (wtGFP) undergoes excited-state proton transfer (ESPT) upon excitation, resulting in characteristic green (508 nm) fluorescence. This ESPT reaction involves a proton relay from the phenol hydroxyl of the chromophore to the ionized side chain of E222, and results in formation of the anionic chromophore in a protein environment optimized for the neutral species (the I* state). Reorientation or replacement of E222, as occurs in the S65T and E222Q GFP mutants, disables the ESPT reaction and results in loss of green emission following excitation of the neutral chromophore. Previously, it has been shown that the introduction of a second mutation (H148D) into S65T GFP allows the recovery of green emission, implying that ESPT is again possible. A similar recovery of green fluorescence is also observed for the E222Q/H148D mutant, suggesting that D148 is the proton acceptor for the ESPT reaction in both double mutants. The mechanism of fluorescence emission following excitation of the neutral chromophore in S65T/H148D and E222Q/H148D has been explored through the use of steady state and ultrafast time-resolved fluorescence and vibrational spectroscopy. The data are contrasted with those of the single mutant S65T GFP. Time-resolved fluorescence studies indicate very rapid (< 1 ps) formation of I* in the double mutants, followed by vibrational cooling on the picosecond time scale. The time-resolved IR difference spectra are markedly different to those of wtGFP or its anionic mutants. In particular, no spectral signatures are apparent in the picosecond IR difference spectra that would correspond to alteration in the ionization state of D148, leading to the proposal that a low-barrier hydrogen bond (LBHB) is present between the phenol hydroxyl of the chromophore and the side chain of D148, with different potential energy surfaces for the ground and excited states. This model is consistent with recent high-resolution structural data in which the distance between the donor and acceptor oxygen atoms is < or = 2.4 A. Importantly, these studies indicate that the hydrogen-bond network in wtGFP can be replaced by a single residue, an observation which, when fully explored, will add to our understanding of the various requirements for proton-transfer reactions within proteins.  相似文献   

13.
GFP mutants are known to display fluorescence flickering, a process that occurs in a wide time range. Because serine 65, threonine 203, glutamate 222, and histidine 148 have been indicated as key residues in determining the GFP fluorescence photodynamics, we have focused here on the role of histidine 148 and glutamate 222 by studying the fluorescence dynamics of GFPmut2 (S65A, V68L, and S72A GFP) and its H148G (Mut2G) and E222Q (Mut2Q) mutants. Two relaxation components are found in the fluorescence autocorrelation functions of GFPmut2: a 10-100 micros pH-dependent component and a 100-500 micros laser-power-dependent component. The comparison of these three mutants shows that the mutation of histidine 148 to glycine induces a 3-fold increase in the protonation rate, thereby indicating that the protonation-deprotonation of the chromophore occurs via a proton exchange with the solution mediated by the histidine 148 residue. The power-dependent but pH-independent relaxation mode, which is not affected by the E222Q and H148G mutations, is due to an excited-state process that is probably related to conformational rearrangements of the chromophore after the photoexcitation, more than to the chromophore excited-state proton transfer.  相似文献   

14.
15.
The photoactive yellow protein (PYP) acts as a light sensor to its bacterial host: it responds to light by changing shape. After excitation by blue light, PYP undergoes several transformations, to partially unfold into its signaling state. One of the crucial steps in this photocycle is the protonation of p-coumaric acid after excitation and isomerization of this chromophore. Experimentalists still debate on the nature of the proton donor and on whether it donates the hydrogen directly or indirectly. To obtain better knowledge of the mechanism, we studied this proton transfer using Car-Parrinello molecular dynamics, classical molecular dynamics, and computer simulations combining these two methods (quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics, QMMM). The simulations reproduce the chromophore structure and hydrogen-bond network of the protein measured by X-ray crystallography and NMR. When the chromophore is protonated, it leaves the assumed proton donor, glutamic acid 46, with a negative charge in a hydrophobic environment. We show that the stabilization of this charge is a very important factor in the mechanism of protonation. Protonation frequently occurs in simplified ab initio simulations of the chromophore binding pocket in vacuum, where amino acids can easily hydrogen bond to Glu46. When the complete protein environment is incorporated in a QMMM simulation on the complete protein, no proton transfer is observed within 14 ps. The hydrogen-bond rearrangements in this time span are not sufficient to stabilize the new protonation state. Force field molecular dynamics simulations on a much longer time scale have shown which internal rearrangements of the protein are needed. Combining these simulations with more QMMM calculations enabled us to check the stability of protonation states and clarify the initial requirements for the proton transfer in PYP.  相似文献   

16.
Green Fluorescent Protein (GFP) is known to undergo excited-state proton transfer (ESPT). Formation of a short H-bond favors ultrafast ESPT in GFP-like proteins, such as the GFP S65T/H148D mutant, but the detailed mechanism and its quantum nature remain to be resolved. Here we study in vacuo, light-induced proton transfer from the GFP chromophore in hydrogen-bonded complexes with two anionic proton acceptors, I and deprotonated trichloroacetic acid (TCA). We address the role of the strong H-bond and the quantum mechanical proton-density distribution in the excited state, which determines the proton-transfer probability. Our study shows that chemical modifications to the molecular network drastically change the proton-transfer probability and it can become strongly wavelength dependent. The proton-transfer branching ratio is found to be 60 % for the TCA complex and 10 % for the iodide complex, being highly dependent on the photon energy in the latter case. Using high-level ab initio calculations, we show that light-induced proton transfer takes place in S1, revealing intrinsic photoacid properties of the isolated GFP chromophore in strongly bound H-bonded complexes. ESPT is found to be very sensitive to the topography of the highly anharmonic potential in S1, depending on the quantum-density distribution upon vibrational excitation. We also show that the S1 potential-energy surface, and hence excited-state proton transfer, can be controlled by altering the chromophore microenvironment.  相似文献   

17.
The surface of a protein, or a membrane, is spotted with a multitude of proton-binding sites, some of which are only a few angstroms apart. When a proton is released from one site, it propagates through the water by a random walk under the bias of the local electrostatic potential determined by the distribution of the charges on the protein. Some of the released protons disperse into the bulk, but during the first few nanoseconds, the released protons can be trapped by encounter with nearby acceptor sites. This process resembles a scenario which corresponds with the time-dependent Debye-Smoluchowski equation. In the present study, we investigated the mechanism of proton transfer between sites that are only a few angstroms apart, using as a model the proton exchange between sites on a small molecule, fluorescein, having two, spectrally distinguishable, proton-binding sites. The first site is the oxyanion on the chromophore ring structure. The second site is the carboxylate moiety on the benzene ring of the molecule. Through our experiments, we were able to reconstruct the state of protonation at each site and the velocity of proton transfer between them. The fluorescein was protonated by a few nanosecond long proton pulse under specific conditions that ensured that the dye molecules would be protonated only by a single proton. The dynamics of the protonation of the chromophore were measured under varying initial conditions (temperature, ionic strength, and different solvents (H(2)O or D(2)O)), and the velocity of the proton transfer between the two sites was extracted from the overall global analysis of the signals. The dynamics of the proton transfer between the two proton-binding sites of the fluorescein indicated that the efficiency of the site-to-site proton transfer is very sensitive to the presence of the screening electrolyte and has a very high kinetic isotope effect (KIE = 55). These two parameters clearly distinguish the mechanism from proton diffusion in bulk water. The activation energy of the reaction (E(a) = 11 kcal mol(-1)) is also significantly higher than the activation energy for proton dissociation in bulk water (E(a) approximately 2.5 kcal mol(-1)). These observations are discussed with respect to the effect of the solute on the water molecules located within the solvation layer.  相似文献   

18.
Precise two-photon absorption spectra of the green fluorescent protein (GFP) and the mutants sapphire-GFP (T203I) and enhanced GFP (S65T/F64L), as well as a model compound for the chromophore, 4'-hydroxybenzylidene-2,3-dimethylimidazolinone (HBDI) were measured by multiplex two-photon absorption spectroscopy. The observed TPA bands of the anionic forms of enhanced GFP and HBDI were significantly shifted to the higher energy compared with the lowest-energy bands in one-photon absorption spectra. This result indicated the existence of a hidden electronic excited state in the vicinity of the lowest excited singlet (S1) state of the anionic form of the GFP chromophore, which is the origin of the blue shift of the two-photon absorption spectra as well as two-photon fluorescence excitation spectra.  相似文献   

19.
We investigate solvent viscosity and polarity effects on the photoisomerization of the protonated and deprotonated forms of two analogues of the photoactive yellow protein (PYP) chromophore. These are trans-p-hydroxybenzylidene acetone and trans-p-hydroxyphenyl cinnamate, studied in solutions of different polarity and viscosity at room temperature, by means of femtosecond fluorescence up-conversion. The fluorescence lifetimes of the protonated forms are found to be barely sensitive to solvent viscosity, and to increase with increasing solvent polarity. In contrast, the fluorescence decays of the deprotonated forms are significantly slowed down in viscous media and accelerated in polar solvents. These results elucidate the dramatic influence of the protonation state of the PYP chromophore analogues on their photoinduced dynamics. The viscosity and polarity effects are, respectively, interpreted in terms of different isomerization coordinates and charge redistribution in S(1). A trans-to-cis isomerization mechanism involving mainly the ethylenic double-bond torsion and/or solvation is proposed for the anionic forms, whereas "concerted" intramolecular motions are proposed for the neutral forms.  相似文献   

20.
Imaging Ca2+ dynamics in living systems holds great potential to advance neuroscience and cellular biology. G‐GECO1.1 is an intensiometric fluorescent protein Ca2+ biosensor with a Thr‐Tyr‐Gly chromophore. The protonated chromophore emits green upon photoexcitation via excited‐state proton transfer (ESPT). Upon Ca2+ binding, a significant population of the chromophores becomes deprotonated. It remains elusive how the chromophore structurally evolves prior to and during ESPT, and how it is affected by Ca2+. We use femtosecond stimulated Raman spectroscopy to dissect ESPT in both the Ca2+‐free and bound states. The protein chromophores exhibit a sub‐200 fs vibrational frequency shift due to coherent small‐scale proton motions. After wavepackets move out of the Franck–Condon region, ESPT gets faster in the Ca2+‐bound protein, indicative of the formation of a more hydrophilic environment. These results reveal the governing structure–function relationship of Ca2+‐sensing protein biosensors.  相似文献   

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