Real-Time Monitoring of Chromophore Isomerization and Deprotonation during the Photoactivation of the Fluorescent Protein Dronpa

Dronpa is a photochromic green fluorescent protein (GFP) homologue used as a probe in super-resolution microscopy. It is known that the photochromic reaction involves cis/trans isomerization of the chromophore and protonation/deprotonation of its phenol group, but the sequence in time of the two ste...

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Veröffentlicht in:The journal of physical chemistry. B 2015-02, Vol.119 (6), p.2404-2414
Hauptverfasser: Yadav, Dheerendra, Lacombat, Fabien, Dozova, Nadia, Rappaport, Fabrice, Plaza, Pascal, Espagne, Agathe
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container_end_page 2414
container_issue 6
container_start_page 2404
container_title The journal of physical chemistry. B
container_volume 119
creator Yadav, Dheerendra
Lacombat, Fabien
Dozova, Nadia
Rappaport, Fabrice
Plaza, Pascal
Espagne, Agathe
description Dronpa is a photochromic green fluorescent protein (GFP) homologue used as a probe in super-resolution microscopy. It is known that the photochromic reaction involves cis/trans isomerization of the chromophore and protonation/deprotonation of its phenol group, but the sequence in time of the two steps and their characteristic time scales are still the subject of much debate. We report here a comprehensive UV–visible transient absorption spectroscopy study of the photoactivation mechanism of Dronpa, covering all relevant time scales from ∼100 fs to milliseconds. The Dronpa-2 variant was also studied and showed the same behavior. By carefully controlling the excitation energy to avoid multiphoton processes, we could measure both the spectrum and the anisotropy of the first photoactivation intermediate. We show that the observed few nanometer blue-shift of this intermediate is characteristic for a neutral cis chromophore, and that its anisotropy of ∼0.2 is in good agreement with the reorientation of the transition dipole moment expected upon isomerization. These data constitute the first clear evidence that trans → cis isomerization of the chromophore precedes its deprotonation and occurs on the picosecond time scale, concomitantly to the excited-state decay. We found the deprotonation step to follow in ∼10 μs and lead directly from the neutral cis intermediate to the final state.
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subjects Chemical Sciences
Green Fluorescent Proteins - chemistry
Models, Molecular
or physical chemistry
Protein Conformation
Protons
Stereoisomerism
Theoretical and
Ultraviolet Rays
title Real-Time Monitoring of Chromophore Isomerization and Deprotonation during the Photoactivation of the Fluorescent Protein Dronpa
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