4.4 Article

Primary intermediate in the photocycle of a blue-light sensory blue-light FAD-protein, Tll0078, of Thermosynechococcus elongatus BP-1

Journal

BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 44, Issue 13, Pages 5149-5158

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/bi048044y

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Proteins with a BLUF (sensor of blue light using flavin adenine dinucleotide) domain represent a newly recognized class of photoreceptors that is widely distributed in the genomes of photosynthetic bacteria, cyanobacteria, and Euglena. Recently, Okajima et al. [Okajima, K., Yoshihara, S., Geng, X., Katayama, M. and Ikeuchi, M. (2003) Plant Cell Physiol. 44 (Suppl), 162] purified BLUF protein T110078 encoded in the genome of thermophilic cyanobacterium Thermosynechococcus elongatus BP-1 by expressing the protein in Escherichia coli. We investigated the photocycle of T110078 by measuring the picosecond fluorescence kinetics, transient absorption changes, and the UV-visible absorption spectra at 10 to 330 K. The absorption spectrum of the FAD moiety of T110078 showed a 10-nm red shift upon illumination at 278-330 K. The quantum efficiency of the formation of the red-shifted form was 29%. Illumination at 10 K, on the other hand, caused only a 5-mn red shift in about one-half of the protein population. The 5-nm-shifted form was stable at 10 K. The 5-mn red-shifted form was converted into the 10-nm red-shifted form at 50-240 K upon warming in the dark. At room temperature, the 10-nm red-shifted final product appeared within 10 ns after laser flash excitation. The lifetime of the fluorescence of FAD was found to be 120 ps at room temperature. These results reveal a fast and efficient photoconversion process from the singlet-excited state to the final product at room temperature. A photocycle of BLUF protein is proposed that includes the 5-nm red-shifted intermediate form as the precursor for the 10-nm red-shifted final product. The temperature dependence of each step of the photocycle is also discussed.

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