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Protein secondary structure controlled with light and photoresponsive surfactants
Authors:Wang Shao-Chun  Lee C Ted
Institution:Department of Chemical Engineering and Material Science, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California 90089-1211, USA.
Abstract:The interaction of a light-responsive azobenzene surfactant with bovine serum albumin (BSA) has been investigated as a means to examine photoreversible changes in protein secondary structure. The cationic azobenzene surfactant undergoes a reversible photoisomeriztion upon exposure to the appropriate wavelength of light, with the visible-light (trans) form being more hydrophobic and, thus, inducing a greater degree of protein unfolding than the UV-light (cis) form. Fourier transform infrared (FT-IR) spectroscopy is used to provide quantitative information on the secondary structure elements in the protein (alpha-helices, beta-strands, beta-turns, and unordered domains). Comparing the secondary structure changes induced by light illumination in the presence of the photoresponsive surfactant with previous measurements of the tertiary structure of BSA obtained from small-angle neutron scattering (SANS) allows the three discrete conformation changes in BSA to be fully characterized. At low surfactant concentrations, an alpha-helix --> beta-structure rearrangement is observed as the tertiary structure of BSA changes from a heart-shaped to a distorted heart-shaped conformation. Intermediate surfactant concentrations lead to a dramatic decrease in the alpha-helix fraction in favor of unordered structures, which is accompanied by an unfolding of the C-terminal portion of the protein as evidenced from SANS. Further increases in photosurfactant concentration lead to a beta --> unordered transition with the protein adopting a highly elongated conformation in solution. Each of these protein conformational changes can be precisely and reversibly controlled with light illumination, as revealed through FT-IR spectra collected during repeated visible-light <--> UV-light cycles.
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