4.5 Article

Hydrogen Bond Switching among Flavin and Amino Acid Side Chains in the BLUF Photoreceptor Observed by Ultrafast Infrared Spectroscopy

Journal

BIOPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 95, Issue 10, Pages 4790-4802

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1529/biophysj.108.139246

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Funding

  1. European Union
  2. Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research
  3. 635.000.014 from the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research [635.000.014]

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BLUF domains constitute a recently discovered class of photoreceptor proteins found in bacteria and eukaryotic algae. BLUF domains are blue-light sensitive through a FAD cofactor that is involved in an extensive hydrogen-bond network with nearby amino acid side chains, including a highly conserved tyrosine and glutamine. The participation of particular amino acid side chains in the ultrafast hydrogen-bond switching reaction with FAD that underlies photoactivation of BLUF domains is assessed by means of ultrafast infrared spectroscopy. Blue-light absorption by FAD results in formation of FAD(center dot-) and a bleach of the tyrosine ring vibrational mode on a picosecond timescale, showing that electron transfer from tyrosine to FAD constitutes the primary photochemistry. This interpretation is supported by the absence of a kinetic isotope effect on the fluorescence decay on H/D exchange. Subsequent protonation of FAD(center dot-) to result in FADH(center dot) on a picosecond timescale is evidenced by the appearance of a N-H bending mode at the FAD N5 protonation site and of a FADH(center dot) C = N stretch marker mode, with tyrosine as the likely proton donor. FADH(center dot) is reoxidized in 67 ps (180 ps in D2O) to result in a long-lived hydrogen-bond switched network around FAD. This hydrogen-bond switch shows infrared signatures from the C-OH stretch of tyrosine and the FAD C4=O and C=N stretches, which indicate increased hydrogen-bond strength at all these sites. The results support a previously hypothesized rotation of glutamine by similar to 180 degrees through a light- driven radicalpair mechanism as the determinant of the hydrogen- bond switch.

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