4.7 Article

An Engineered Biliverdin-Compatible Cyanobacteriochrome Enables a Unique Ultrafast Reversible Photoswitching Pathway

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22105252

Keywords

far-red/orange cyanobacteriochromes; structure-activity relationships; time-resolved spectroscopy; reversible photoswitching; optogenetics

Funding

  1. U.S. NSF [MCB-1817949, CHE-2003550]
  2. Japanese Science and Technology Agency, Core Research for Evolutional Science and Technology [JPMJCR1653]
  3. U.S. NSF MRI [DMR-1920368]

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CBCRs are promising optogenetic tools with diverse absorption properties. By engineering AnPixJg2_BV4 with only four mutations, researchers have uncovered the reversible photoswitching dynamics and structural motions responsible for the photoconversion with PCB and BV cofactors. The engineered Bbv exhibits a reversible clockwise/counterclockwise photoswitching that requires a two-step twist on similar time scales.
Cyanobacteriochromes (CBCRs) are promising optogenetic tools for their diverse absorption properties with a single compact cofactor-binding domain. We previously uncovered the ultrafast reversible photoswitching dynamics of a red/green photoreceptor AnPixJg2, which binds phycocyanobilin (PCB) that is unavailable in mammalian cells. Biliverdin (BV) is a mammalian cofactor with a similar structure to PCB but exhibits redder absorption. To improve the AnPixJg2 feasibility in mammalian applications, AnPixJg2_BV4 with only four mutations has been engineered to incorporate BV. Herein, we implemented femtosecond transient absorption (fs-TA) and ground state femtosecond stimulated Raman spectroscopy (GS-FSRS) to uncover transient electronic dynamics on molecular time scales and key structural motions responsible for the photoconversion of AnPixJg2_BV4 with PCB (Bpcb) and BV (Bbv) cofactors in comparison with the parent AnPixJg2 (Apcb). Bpcb adopts the same photoconversion scheme as Apcb, while BV4 mutations create a less bulky environment around the cofactor D ring that promotes a faster twist. The engineered Bbv employs a reversible clockwise/counterclockwise photoswitching that requires a two-step twist on similar to 5 and 35 picosecond (ps) time scales. The primary forward P-fr -> P-o transition displays equal amplitude weights between the two processes before reaching a conical intersection. In contrast, the primary reverse P-o -> P-fr transition shows a 2:1 weight ratio of the similar to 35 ps over 5 ps component, implying notable changes to the D-ring-twisting pathway. Moreover, we performed pre-resonance GS-FSRS and quantum calculations to identify the Bbv vibrational marker bands at similar to 659,797, and 1225 cm(-1). These modes reveal a stronger H-bonding network around the BV cofactor A ring with BV4 mutations, corroborating the D-ring-dominant reversible photoswitching pathway in the excited state. Implementation of BV4 mutations in other PCB-binding GAF domains like AnPixJg4, AM1_1870g3, and NpF2164g5 could promote similar efficient reversible photoswitching for more directional bioimaging and optogenetic applications, and inspire other bioengineering advances.

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