4.8 Article

Photoactivation of the BLUF Protein PixD Probed by the Site-Specific Incorporation of Fluorotyrosine Residues

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 139, Issue 41, Pages 14638-14648

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.7b07849

Keywords

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Funding

  1. EPSRC [EP/G002916, EP/N033647/1]
  2. NSF [CHE-1223819]
  3. NIH Chemistry Biology Interface training grant [T32GM092714]
  4. OTKA [NN113090]

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The flavin chromophore in blue-light-using FAD (BLUF) photoreceptors is surrounded by a hydrogen bond network that senses and responds to changes in the electronic structure of the flavin on the ultrafast time scale. The hydrogen bond network includes a strictly conserved Tyr residue, and previously we explored the role of this residue, Y21, in the photoactivation mechahism of the BLUF protein AppAnup by the introduction of fluorotyrosine (F-Tyr) analogues that modulated the pKa and reduction potential of Y21 by 3.5 pH units and 200 mV, respectively. Although life impact on the forward (dark-to light-adapted form) photoreaction was obServed; the change in Y21 pKa led to a 4000-fold increase in the rate of dark-state recovery. In the present work we have extended these studies to the BLUF protein PixD, where, in contrast to AppAnuF, Modulation in the Tyr (Y8) plc has a profound impact on the forward photoreaction. In particular, a decrease in. Y8 pKa by 2 or more pH units prevents formation of a stable light state, consistent with a photoactivation mechanism that involves proton transfer or proton-coupled electron transfer from Y8 to the electronically excited FAD. Conversely, the effect of pKa on the rate of dark recovery is markedly reduced in PixD. These observations highlight very significant differences between the photo cycles of PixD and AppABLuF, despite their sharing highly conserved FAD binding architectures.

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