Photoreversal kinetics of the I1 and I2 intermediates in the photocycle of photoactive yellow protein by double flash experiments with variable time delay

被引:37
作者
Joshi, CP
Borucki, B
Otto, H
Meyer, TE
Cusanovich, MA
Heyn, MP
机构
[1] Free Univ Berlin, Dept Phys, Biophys Grp, D-14195 Berlin, Germany
[2] Univ Arizona, Dept Biochem & Mol Biophys, Tucson, AZ 85721 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1021/bi0481141
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
We investigated the kinetics of photoreversal from the I-1 and I-2 intermediates of photoactive yellow protein (PYP) by tithe-resolved optical absorption spectroscopy with double flash excitation. A first flash, at 430 urn, initiated the photocycle. After a variable time delay, the I, intermediate was photoreversed by a second flash, at 500 nm, or a mixture of I-2 and I-2' intermediates was photoreversed by a second flash, at 355 nm. By varying the delay from 1 mus to 3 s, we were able to selectively excite the intermediates I-1, I-2, and I-2'. The photoreversal kinetics of I-2 and I-2' at 21 different delays and two wavelengths (340 and 450 nm) required two exponentials for a global fit with tine constants of tau(1) = 57 +/- 5 mus and tau(2) = 380 +/- 40 us (pH 6, 20degreesC). These were assigned to photoreversal from sequential I-2 and I-2' intermediates, respectively. The good agreement of the delay dependence of the two amplitudes, A(1) and A(2), with the time dependence of the I-2 and I-2' populations provided strong evidence for the sequential model. The persistence of A(1) beyond delay times of 5 ms and its decay, together with A(2) around 500 ms, suggest moreover that I-2 and I-2' are in thermal equilibrium. The wavelength dependence of the photoreversal kinetics was measured at 26 wavelengths from 510 to 330 nm at the two fixed delays of 1 and 10 ms. These data also required two exponentials for a global fit with tau(1) = 59 +/- 5 mus and tau(2) = 400 +/- 40 mus, in good agreement with the delay results. Photoreversal from I-2' is slower than from I-2, since, in addition to chromophore protonation, the global conformational change has to be reversed. Our data thus provide a first estimate of about 59 mus for deprotonation and 400 mus for the structural change, which also occurs in the thermal decay of the signaling state but is obscured there since reisomerization is rate-limiting. The first step in photoreversal is rapid cis-traps isomerization of the chromophore, which we could not resolve, but which was detected by the instantaneous increase in absorbance between 330 and 380 nm. In agreement with this observation, the spectrum of the intermediate, derived from the A amplitude spectrum, has a much larger extinction coefficient than the spectrum of the I-2'(cis) intermediate. With a first flash, at 430 nm, and a second flash, at 500 nm, we observed efficient photoreversal of the I-1 intermediate at a delay of 20 mus when most molecules in the cycle are in I-1. We conclude that each of the three intermediates studied can be reversed by a laser flash. Depending on the progression of the photocycle, reversal becomes slower with the tithe delay, thus mirroring the individual steps of the forward photocycle.
引用
收藏
页码:656 / 665
页数:10
相关论文
共 29 条
[1]   1.4 ANGSTROM STRUCTURE OF PHOTOACTIVE YELLOW PROTEIN, A CYTOSOLIC PHOTORECEPTOR - UNUSUAL FOLD, ACTIVE-SITE, AND CHROMOPHORE [J].
BORGSTAHL, GEO ;
WILLIAMS, DR ;
GETZOFF, ED .
BIOCHEMISTRY, 1995, 34 (19) :6278-6287
[2]   pH dependence of the photocycle kinetics of the E46Q mutant of photoactive yellow protein:: Protonation equilibrium between I1 and I2 intermediates, chromophore deprotonation by hydroxyl uptake, and protonation relaxation of the dark state [J].
Borucki, B ;
Otto, H ;
Joshi, CP ;
Gasperi, C ;
Cusanovich, MA ;
Devanathan, S ;
Tollin, G ;
Heyn, MP .
BIOCHEMISTRY, 2003, 42 (29) :8780-8790
[3]   Kinetics of proton uptake and dye binding by photoactive yellow protein in wild type and in the E46Q and E46A mutants [J].
Borucki, B ;
Devanathan, S ;
Otto, H ;
Cusanovich, MA ;
Tollin, G ;
Heyn, MP .
BIOCHEMISTRY, 2002, 41 (31) :10026-10037
[4]   Reorientation of the retinylidene chromophore in the K, L, and M intermediates of bacteriorhodopsin from time-resolved linear dichroism: Resolving kinetically and spectrally overlapping intermediates of chromoproteins [J].
Borucki, B ;
Otto, H ;
Heyn, MP .
JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY B, 1999, 103 (30) :6371-6383
[5]   Structure of the I1 early intermediate of photoactive yellow protein by FTIR spectroscopy [J].
Brudler, R ;
Rammelsberg, R ;
Woo, TT ;
Getzoff, ED ;
Gerwert, K .
NATURE STRUCTURAL BIOLOGY, 2001, 8 (03) :265-270
[6]   Photoactive yellow protein: A prototypic PAS domain sensory protein and development of a common signaling mechanism [J].
Cusanovich, MA ;
Meyer, TE .
BIOCHEMISTRY, 2003, 42 (17) :4759-4770
[7]   New insights into the photocycle of Ectothiorhodospira halophila photoactive yellow protein:: Photorecovery of the long-lived photobleached intermediate in the Met100Ala mutant [J].
Devanathan, S ;
Genick, UK ;
Canestrelli, IL ;
Meyer, TE ;
Cusanovich, MA ;
Getzoff, ED ;
Tollin, G .
BIOCHEMISTRY, 1998, 37 (33) :11563-11568
[8]   Evidence for the first phase of the reprotonation switch of bacteriorhodopsin from time-resolved photovoltage and flash photolysis experiments on the photoreversal of the M-intermediate [J].
Dickopf, S ;
Heyn, MP .
BIOPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 1997, 73 (06) :3171-3181
[9]   Kinetics of the light-induced proton translocation associated with the pH-dependent formation of the metarhodopsin I/II equilibrium of bovine rhodopsin [J].
Dickopf, S ;
Mielke, T ;
Heyn, MP .
BIOCHEMISTRY, 1998, 37 (48) :16888-16897
[10]   THERMAL EQUILIBRATION BETWEEN THE M-INTERMEDIATES AND N-INTERMEDIATES IN THE PHOTOCYCLE OF BACTERIORHODOPSIN [J].
DRUCKMANN, S ;
HEYN, MP ;
LANYI, JK ;
OTTOLENGHI, M ;
ZIMANYI, L .
BIOPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 1993, 65 (03) :1231-1234