4.8 Article

Photoswitching Behavior of Flavin-Inhibitor Complex in a Nonphotocatalytic Flavoenzyme

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Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.2c04763

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  1. China Scholarship Council

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An unprecedented photoswitching phenomenon of flavin-inhibitor complexes in a flavoenzyme was revealed by femtosecond transient absorption spectroscopy. The results showed that the charge transfer interactions in the complex vanish upon excitation and re-form in a thermally activated way after a few nanoseconds.
An unprecedented photoswitching phenomenon of flavin-inhibitor complexes in a flavoenzyme was revealed by femtosecond transient absorption spectroscopy. The vast majority of flavoenzymes, including monomeric sarcosine oxidase (MSOX), perform non-light-driven physiological functions. Yet, the participation of flavin cofactors in photoinduced electron transfer reactions is widespread. MSOX catalyzes the oxidative demethylation of sarcosine; methylthioacetate (MTA) is a substrate analog inhibitor that forms a complex with MSOX exhibiting intense absorption bands over the whole visible range due to flavin-MTA charge transfer (CT) interactions. Here, we demonstrate that upon excitation, these CT interactions vanish during a barrierless high quantum yield reaction in similar to 300 fs. The initial complex subsequently geminately re-forms in a few nanoseconds near room temperature in a thermally activated way with an activation energy of 28 kJ/mol. We attribute this hitherto undocumented process to a well-defined photoinduced isomerization of MTA in the active site, as corroborated by experiments with the heavier ligand methylselenoacetate. Photoisomerization phenomena involving CT transitions may be further explored in photocatalytic and photoswitching applications of flavoenzymes.

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