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1.
J Phys Chem B ; 127(37): 7858-7871, 2023 09 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37698525

RESUMO

Novel fluorescent nucleic acid base analogues (FBAs) with improved optical properties are needed in a variety of biological applications. 2-Amino-6-chloro-8-vinylpurine (2A6Cl8VP) is structural analogue of two existing highly fluorescent FBAs, 2-aminopurine (2AP) and 8-vinyladenine (8VA), and can therefore be expected to have similar base pairing as well as better optical properties compared to its counterparts. In order to determine the absorption and fluorescence properties of 2A6Cl8VP, as a first step, we used TD-DFT calculations and the polarizable continuum model for simulating the solvents and computationally predicted absorption and fluorescence maxima. To test the computational predictions, we also synthesized 2A6Cl8VP and measured its UV/vis absorbance, fluorescence emission, and fluorescence lifetime. The computationally predicted absorbance and fluorescence maxima of 2A6Cl8VP are in reasonable agreement to the experimental values and are significantly redshifted compared to 2AP and 8VA, allowing for its specific excitation. The fluorescence quantum yield of 2A6Cl8VP, however, is significantly lower than those of 2AP and 8VA. Overall, 2A6Cl8VP is a novel fluorescent nucleobase analogue, which can be useful in studying structural, biophysical, and biochemical applications.


Assuntos
2-Aminopurina , Purinas , Biofísica , Corantes
2.
J Phys Chem B ; 126(41): 8177-8187, 2022 10 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36219580

RESUMO

Oxidoreductases have evolved over millions of years to perform a variety of metabolic tasks crucial for life. Understanding how these tasks are engineered relies on delivering external electron donors or acceptors to initiate electron transfer reactions. This is a challenge. Small-molecule redox reagents can act indiscriminately, poisoning the cell. Natural redox proteins are more selective, but finding the right partner can be difficult due to the limited number of redox potentials and difficulty tuning them. De novo proteins offer an alternative path. They are robust and can withstand mutations that allow for tailorable changes. They are also devoid of evolutionary artifacts and readily bind redox cofactors. However, no reliable set of engineering principles have been developed that allow for these proteins to be fine-tuned so their redox midpoint potential (Em) can form donor/acceptor pairs with any natural oxidoreductase. This work dissects protein-cofactor interactions that can be tuned to modulate redox potentials of acceptors and donors using a mutable de novo designed tetrahelical protein platform with iron tetrapyrrole cofactors as a test case. We show a series of engineered heme b-binding de novo proteins and quantify their resulting effect on Em. By focusing on the surface charge and buried charges, as well as cofactor placement, chemical modification, and ligation of cofactors, we are able to achieve a broad range of Em values spanning a range of 330 mV. We anticipate this work will guide the design of proteinaceous tools that can interface with natural oxidoreductases inside and outside the cell while shedding light on how natural proteins modulate Em values of bound cofactors.


Assuntos
Heme , Proteínas , Oxirredução , Heme/química , Proteínas/química , Oxirredutases/química , Tetrapirróis , Ferro
3.
Biochemistry ; 57(49): 6752-6756, 2018 12 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30468389

RESUMO

We report the rational construction of de novo-designed biliverdin-binding proteins by first principles of protein design, informed by energy minimization modeling in Rosetta. The self-assembling tetrahelical bundles bind biliverdin IXa (BV) cofactor autocatalytically in vitro, like photosensory proteins that bind BV (and related bilins or linear tetrapyrroles) despite lacking sequence and structural homology to the natural counterparts. Upon identification of a suitable site for ligation of the cofactor to the protein scaffold, stepwise placement of residues stabilized BV within the hydrophobic core. Rosetta modeling was used in the absence of a high-resolution structure to inform the structure-function relationships of the cofactor binding pocket. Holoprotein formation stabilized BV, resulting in increased far-red BV fluorescence. Via removal of segments extraneous to cofactor stabilization or bundle stability, the initial 15 kDa de novo-designed fluorescence-activating protein was truncated without any change to its optical properties, down to a miniature 10 kDa "mini", in which the protein scaffold extends only a half-heptad repeat beyond the hypothetical position of the bilin D-ring. This work demonstrates how highly compact holoprotein fluorochromes can be rationally constructed using de novo protein design technology and natural cofactors.


Assuntos
Biliverdina/química , Biliverdina/metabolismo , Proteínas de Transporte/química , Proteínas de Transporte/metabolismo , Sequência de Aminoácidos , Sítios de Ligação , Proteínas de Transporte/genética , Evolução Molecular Direcionada , Interações Hidrofóbicas e Hidrofílicas , Proteínas Luminescentes/química , Proteínas Luminescentes/genética , Proteínas Luminescentes/metabolismo , Modelos Moleculares , Engenharia de Proteínas , Estabilidade Proteica , Biologia Sintética
4.
Nanoscale ; 10(27): 13064-13073, 2018 Jul 13.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29956712

RESUMO

In strong plasmon-exciton coupling, a surface plasmon mode is coupled to an array of localized emitters to yield new hybrid light-matter states (plexcitons), whose properties may in principle be controlled via modification of the arrangement of emitters. We show that plasmon modes are strongly coupled to synthetic light-harvesting maquette proteins, and that the coupling can be controlled via alteration of the protein structure. For maquettes with a single chlorin binding site, the exciton energy (2.06 ± 0.07 eV) is close to the expected energy of the Qy transition. However, for maquettes containing two chlorin binding sites that are collinear in the field direction, an exciton energy of 2.20 ± 0.01 eV is obtained, intermediate between the energies of the Qx and Qy transitions of the chlorin. This observation is attributed to strong coupling of the LSPR to an H-dimer state not observed under weak coupling.


Assuntos
Complexos de Proteínas Captadores de Luz/química , Dispositivos Ópticos , Teoria Quântica , Modelos Químicos , Porfirinas , Pontos Quânticos , Ressonância de Plasmônio de Superfície
5.
J Am Chem Soc ; 140(28): 8705-8713, 2018 07 18.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29940116

RESUMO

It is a remarkable fact that ∼50 µT magnetic fields can alter the rates and yields of certain free-radical reactions and that such effects might be the basis of the light-dependent ability of migratory birds to sense the direction of the Earth's magnetic field. The most likely sensory molecule at the heart of this chemical compass is cryptochrome, a flavin-containing protein that undergoes intramolecular, blue-light-induced electron transfer to produce magnetically sensitive radical pairs. To learn more about the factors that control the magnetic sensitivity of cryptochromes, we have used a set of de novo designed protein maquettes that self-assemble as four-α-helical proteins incorporating a single tryptophan residue as an electron donor placed approximately 0.6, 1.1, or 1.7 nm away from a covalently attached riboflavin as chromophore and electron acceptor. Using a specifically developed form of cavity ring-down spectroscopy, we have characterized the photochemistry of these designed flavoprotein maquettes to determine the identities and kinetics of the transient radicals responsible for the magnetic field effects. Given the gross structural and dynamic differences from the natural proteins, it is remarkable that the maquettes show magnetic field effects that are so similar to those observed for cryptochromes.


Assuntos
Proteínas Aviárias/metabolismo , Aves/metabolismo , Criptocromos/metabolismo , Radicais Livres/metabolismo , Animais , Proteínas Aviárias/química , Criptocromos/química , Transporte de Elétrons , Radicais Livres/química , Luz , Campos Magnéticos , Modelos Moleculares , Processos Fotoquímicos , Conformação Proteica em alfa-Hélice
6.
J R Soc Interface ; 15(141)2018 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29618529

RESUMO

Bilins are linear tetrapyrrole chromophores with a wide range of visible and near-visible light absorption and emission properties. These properties are tuned upon binding to natural proteins and exploited in photosynthetic light-harvesting and non-photosynthetic light-sensitive signalling. These pigmented proteins are now being manipulated to develop fluorescent experimental tools. To engineer the optical properties of bound bilins for specific applications more flexibly, we have used first principles of protein folding to design novel, stable and highly adaptable bilin-binding four-α-helix bundle protein frames, called maquettes, and explored the minimal requirements underlying covalent bilin ligation and conformational restriction responsible for the strong and variable absorption, fluorescence and excitation energy transfer of these proteins. Biliverdin, phycocyanobilin and phycoerythrobilin bind covalently to maquette Cys in vitro A blue-shifted tripyrrole formed from maquette-bound phycocyanobilin displays a quantum yield of 26%. Although unrelated in fold and sequence to natural phycobiliproteins, bilin lyases nevertheless interact with maquettes during co-expression in Escherichia coli to improve the efficiency of bilin binding and influence bilin structure. Bilins bind in vitro and in vivo to Cys residues placed in loops, towards the amino end or in the middle of helices but bind poorly at the carboxyl end of helices. Bilin-binding efficiency and fluorescence yield are improved by Arg and Asp residues adjacent to the ligating Cys on the same helix and by His residues on adjacent helices.


Assuntos
Transferência de Energia , Ficobiliproteínas/química , Materiais Biomiméticos , Metabolismo Energético , Modelos Moleculares , Fotossíntese/fisiologia , Ficobiliproteínas/fisiologia , Engenharia de Proteínas , Dobramento de Proteína
8.
Chem Sci ; 8(1): 316-324, 2017 Jan 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28261441

RESUMO

Natural selection in photosynthesis has engineered tetrapyrrole based, nanometer scale, light harvesting and energy capture in light-induced charge separation. By designing and creating nanometer scale artificial light harvesting and charge separating proteins, we have the opportunity to reengineer and overcome the limitations of natural selection to extend energy capture to new wavelengths and to tailor efficient systems that better meet human as opposed to cellular energetic needs. While tetrapyrrole cofactor incorporation in natural proteins is complex and often assisted by accessory proteins for cofactor transport and insertion, artificial protein functionalization relies on a practical understanding of the basic physical chemistry of protein and cofactors that drive nanometer scale self-assembly. Patterning and balancing of hydrophobic and hydrophilic tetrapyrrole substituents is critical to avoid natural or synthetic porphyrin and chlorin aggregation in aqueous media and speed cofactor partitioning into the non-polar core of a man-made water soluble protein designed according to elementary first principles of protein folding. This partitioning is followed by site-specific anchoring of tetrapyrroles to histidine ligands strategically placed for design control of rates and efficiencies of light energy and electron transfer while orienting at least one polar group towards the aqueous phase.

9.
J R Soc Interface ; 14(127)2017 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28179548

RESUMO

Synthetic proteins designed and constructed from first principles with minimal reference to the sequence of any natural protein have proven robust and extraordinarily adaptable for engineering a range of functions. Here for the first time we describe the expression and genetic fusion of a natural photosynthetic light-harvesting subunit with a synthetic protein designed for light energy capture and multi-step transfer. We demonstrate excitation energy transfer from the bilin of the CpcA subunit (phycocyanin α subunit) of the cyanobacterial photosynthetic light-harvesting phycobilisome to synthetic four-helix-bundle proteins accommodating sites that specifically bind a variety of selected photoactive tetrapyrroles positioned to enhance energy transfer by relay. The examination of combinations of different bilin, chlorin and bacteriochlorin cofactors has led to identification of the preconditions for directing energy from the bilin light-harvesting antenna into synthetic protein-cofactor constructs that can be customized for light-activated chemistry in the cell.


Assuntos
Proteínas de Bactérias/química , Ficocianina/química , Porfirinas/química , Synechocystis/química , Proteínas de Bactérias/genética , Ficocianina/genética , Porfirinas/genética , Synechocystis/genética
10.
Photochem Photobiol ; 93(1): 343-354, 2017 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27935052

RESUMO

Reduced anionic flavin adenine dinucleotide (FADH- ) is the critical cofactor in DNA photolyase (PL) for the repair of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (CPD) in UV-damaged DNA. The initial step involves photoinduced electron transfer from *FADH- to the CPD. The adenine (Ade) moiety is nearly stacked with the flavin ring, an unusual conformation compared to other FAD-dependent proteins. The role of this proximity has not been unequivocally elucidated. Some studies suggest that Ade is a radical intermediate, but others conclude that Ade modulates the electron transfer rate constant (kET ) through superexchange. No study has succeeded in removing or modifying this Ade to test these hypotheses. Here, FAD analogs containing either an ethano- or etheno-bridged Ade between the AN1 and AN6 atoms (e-FAD and ε-FAD, respectively) were used to reconstitute apo-PL, giving e-PL and ε-PL respectively. The reconstitution yield of e-PL was very poor, suggesting that the hydrophobicity of the ethano group prevented its uptake, while ε-PL showed 50% reconstitution yield. The substrate binding constants for ε-PL and rPL were identical. ε-PL showed a 15% higher steady-state repair yield compared to FAD-reconstituted photolyase (rPL). The acceleration of repair in ε-PL is discussed in terms of an ε-Ade radical intermediate vs superexchange mechanism.


Assuntos
Adenina/metabolismo , Reparo do DNA , Desoxirribodipirimidina Fotoliase/metabolismo , Flavina-Adenina Dinucleotídeo/metabolismo , Dímeros de Pirimidina/metabolismo , Raios Ultravioleta , Adenina/química , Dimerização , Elétrons , Interações Hidrofóbicas e Hidrofílicas , Conformação Proteica , Especificidade por Substrato
11.
J Am Chem Soc ; 138(51): 16584-16587, 2016 12 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27958724

RESUMO

Migratory birds use the Earth's magnetic field as a source of navigational information. This light-dependent magnetic compass is thought to be mediated by cryptochrome proteins in the retina. Upon light activation, electron transfer between the flavin adenine dinucleotide cofactor and tryptophan residues leads to the formation of a spin-correlated radical pair, whose subsequent fate is sensitive to external magnetic fields. To learn more about the functional requirements of this complex chemical compass, we have created a family of simplified, adaptable proteins-maquettes-that contain a single tryptophan residue at different distances from a covalently bound flavin. Despite the complete absence of structural resemblance to the native cryptochrome fold or sequence, the maquettes exhibit a strong magnetic field effect that rivals those observed in the natural proteins in vitro. These novel maquette designs offer unprecedented flexibility to explore the basic requirements for magnetic sensing in a protein environment.


Assuntos
Flavoproteínas/genética , Flavoproteínas/metabolismo , Campos Magnéticos , Engenharia de Proteínas , Flavoproteínas/química , Conformação Proteica em alfa-Hélice
12.
Nano Lett ; 16(11): 6850-6856, 2016 11 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27689237

RESUMO

Gold nanostructure arrays exhibit surface plasmon resonances that split after attaching light harvesting complexes 1 and 2 (LH1 and LH2) from purple bacteria. The splitting is attributed to strong coupling between the localized surface plasmon resonances and excitons in the light-harvesting complexes. Wild-type and mutant LH1 and LH2 from Rhodobacter sphaeroides containing different carotenoids yield different splitting energies, demonstrating that the coupling mechanism is sensitive to the electronic states in the light harvesting complexes. Plasmon-exciton coupling models reveal different coupling strengths depending on the molecular organization and the protein coverage, consistent with strong coupling. Strong coupling was also observed for self-assembling polypeptide maquettes that contain only chlorins. However, it is not observed for monolayers of bacteriochlorophyll, indicating that strong plasmon-exciton coupling is sensitive to the specific presentation of the pigment molecules.

13.
J Am Chem Soc ; 138(45): 14880-14889, 2016 11 16.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27686753

RESUMO

Chromophoric biomolecules are exploited as reporters of a diverse set of phenomena, acting as internal distance monitors, environment and redox sensors, and endogenous imaging probes. The extent to which they can be exploited is dependent on an accurate knowledge of their fundamental electronic properties. Arguably of greatest importance is a precise knowledge of the direction(s) of the absorption transition dipole moment(s) (TDMs) in the molecular frame of reference. Such is the case for flavins, fluorescent redox cofactors utilized for ground- and excited-state redox and photochemical processes. The directions of the TDMs in oxidized and semiquinone flavins were characterized decades ago, and the details of charge redistribution in these forms have also been studied by Stark spectroscopy. The electronic structure of the fully reduced hydroquinone anionic state, FlH-, however, has been the subject of unfounded assumptions and estimates about the number and direction of TDMs in FlH-, as well the electronic structure changes that occur upon light absorption. Here we have used Stark spectroscopy to measure the magnitude and direction of charge redistribution in FlH- upon optical excitation. These data were analyzed using TD-DFT calculations. The results show unequivocally that not one but two nearly orientation-degenerate electronic transitions are required to explain the 340-500 nm absorption spectral range, demolishing the commonly held assumption of a single transition. The difference dipole moments for these states show that electron density shifts toward the xylene ring for both transitions. These measurements force a reappraisal of previous studies that have used erroneous assumptions and unsubstantiated estimates of these quantities. The results put future optical studies of reduced flavins/flavoproteins on a firm photophysical footing.

14.
Chemistry ; 22(32): 11371-81, 2016 Aug 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27362906

RESUMO

DNA photolyase has been the topic of extensive studies due to its important role of repairing photodamaged DNA, and its unique feature of using light as an energy source. A crucial step in the repair by DNA photolyase is the forward electron transfer from its cofactor (FADH(-) ) to the damaged DNA, and the detailed mechanism of this process has been controversial. In the present study, we examine the forward electron transfer in DNA photolyase by carrying out high-level ab initio calculations in combination with a quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical (QM/MM) approach, and by measuring fluorescence emission spectra at low temperature. On the basis of these computational and experimental results, we demonstrate that multiple decay pathways exist in DNA photolyase depending on the wavelength at excitation and the subsequent transition. This implies that the forward electron transfer in DNA photolyase occurs not only by superexchange mechanism but also by sequential electron transfer.


Assuntos
Reparo do DNA/fisiologia , Desoxirribodipirimidina Fotoliase/química , Desoxirribodipirimidina Fotoliase/metabolismo , Flavina-Adenina Dinucleotídeo/química , Dano ao DNA , Transporte de Elétrons , Flavina-Adenina Dinucleotídeo/metabolismo , Fotoquímica
15.
J Phys Chem A ; 118(37): 8320-8, 2014 Sep 18.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24814224

RESUMO

Folates are ubiquitous cofactors that participate in a wide variety of critical biological processes. 5,10-Methenyltetrahydrofolate and its photodegradation product 5,10-methylenetetrahydrofolate are both associated with the light-driven DNA repair protein DNA photolyase and its homologues (e.g., cryptochromes). The excited state electronic properties of these folate molecules have been studied here using Stark spectroscopy and complementary quantum calculations. The tetrahydrofolates have relatively large difference dipole moments (ca. 6-8 Debye) and difference polarizabilities (ca. 100 Å(3)). This extensive excited state charge redistribution appears to be due largely to the pendant p-aminobenzoic acid group, which helps shuttle charge over the entirety of the molecule. Simple calculations based on the experimental difference dipole moments suggest that tetrahydrofolates should have large two photon cross sections sufficient to enable two photon microscopy to selectively detect and follow folate-containing proteins both in vitro and in vivo.


Assuntos
Elétrons , Análise Espectral , Tetra-Hidrofolatos/química , Modelos Moleculares , Conformação Molecular , Fotólise , Teoria Quântica
16.
Chem Sci ; 5(2): 507-514, 2014 Feb 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24634717

RESUMO

The successful use of man-made proteins to advance synthetic biology requires both the fabrication of functional artificial proteins in a living environment, and the ability of these proteins to interact productively with other proteins and substrates in that environment. Proteins made by the maquette method integrate sophisticated oxidoreductase function into evolutionarily naive, non-computationally designed protein constructs with sequences that are entirely unrelated to any natural protein. Nevertheless, we show here that we can efficiently interface with the natural cellular machinery that covalently incorporates heme into natural cytochromes c to produce in vivo an artificial c-type cytochrome maquette. Furthermore, this c-type cytochrome maquette is designed with a displaceable histidine heme ligand that opens to allow functional oxygen binding, the primary event in more sophisticated functions ranging from oxygen storage and transport to catalytic hydroxylation. To exploit the range of functions that comes from the freedom to bind a variety of redox cofactors within a single maquette framework, this c-type cytochrome maquette is designed with a second, non-heme C, tetrapyrrole binding site, enabling the construction of an elementary electron transport chain, and when the heme C iron is replaced with zinc to create a Zn porphyrin, a light-activatable artificial redox protein. The work we describe here represents a major advance in de novo protein design, offering a robust platform for new c-type heme based oxidoreductase designs and an equally important proof-of-principle that cofactor-equipped man-made proteins can be expressed in living cells, paving the way for constructing functionally useful man-made proteins in vivo.

17.
J Am Chem Soc ; 136(8): 3192-9, 2014 Feb 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24495285

RESUMO

Timely ligation of one or more chemical cofactors at preselected locations in proteins is a critical preamble for catalysis in many natural enzymes, including the oxidoreductases and allied transport and signaling proteins. Likewise, ligation strategies must be directly addressed when designing oxidoreductase and molecular transport functions in man-made, first-principle protein constructs intended to operate in vitro or in vivo. As one of the most common catalytic cofactors in biology, we have chosen heme B, along with its chemical analogues, to determine the kinetics and barriers to cofactor incorporation and bishistidine ligation in a range of 4-α-helix proteins. We compare five elementary synthetic designs (maquettes) and the natural cytochrome b562 that differ in oligomeric forms, apo- and holo-tertiary structural stability; qualities that we show can either assist or hinder assembly. The cofactor itself also imposes an assembly barrier if amphiphilicity ranges toward too hydrophobic or hydrophilic. With progressive removal of identified barriers, we achieve maquette assembly rates as fast as native cytochrome b562, paving the way to in vivo assembly of man-made hemoprotein maquettes and integration of artificial proteins into enzymatic pathways.


Assuntos
Heme/química , Proteínas/síntese química , Cinética , Estrutura Secundária de Proteína , Proteínas/química , Espectrofotometria Ultravioleta , Termodinâmica
18.
Nat Chem Biol ; 9(12): 826-833, 2013 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24121554

RESUMO

Emulating functions of natural enzymes in man-made constructs has proven challenging. Here we describe a man-made protein platform that reproduces many of the diverse functions of natural oxidoreductases without importing the complex and obscure interactions common to natural proteins. Our design is founded on an elementary, structurally stable 4-α-helix protein monomer with a minimalist interior malleable enough to accommodate various light- and redox-active cofactors and with an exterior tolerating extensive charge patterning for modulation of redox cofactor potentials and environmental interactions. Despite its modest size, the construct offers several independent domains for functional engineering that targets diverse natural activities, including dioxygen binding and superoxide and peroxide generation, interprotein electron transfer to natural cytochrome c and light-activated intraprotein energy transfer and charge separation approximating the core reactions of photosynthesis, cryptochrome and photolyase. The highly stable, readily expressible and biocompatible characteristics of these open-ended designs promise development of practical in vitro and in vivo applications.


Assuntos
Oxirredutases/metabolismo , Proteínas/química , Heme/química , Heme/metabolismo , Modelos Moleculares , Estrutura Molecular , Ressonância Magnética Nuclear Biomolecular , Oxirredutases/química , Ligação Proteica , Conformação Proteica , Engenharia de Proteínas/métodos
19.
J Phys Chem B ; 117(49): 15684-94, 2013 Dec 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24020957

RESUMO

Chromophores containing a donor-π-acceptor (D-π-A) motif have been shown to exhibit many interesting photophysical properties. The lowest electronic transition of a flavin derivative containing this motif, azobenzylflavin (ABFL), has previously been shown to be highly sensitive to solvent environment and hydrogen bonding ligands. To better understand this sensitivity, we have investigated the excited state charge redistribution and dynamics of ABFL in a low-dielectric, non-hydrogen bonding solvent by steady-state Stark and femtosecond optical transient absorption spectroscopies. The Stark measurements reveal the difference dipole moment, Δµ01, between the ground and first excited states to be 22.3 ± 0.9 D. The direction of Δµ01 in the molecular frame was assigned with the aid of TD-DFT and finite field calculations, verifying the hypothesis that electron density moves from the diethylaniline donor to the flavin acceptor in the excited state. The magnitude of the difference dipole moment was used to estimate the hyperpolarizability of ABFL, ß0 = 720 × 10(-30) esu. Subsequent excited state decay via charge recombination was shown to take place in a few picoseconds. The data was best fit to a kinetic model composed of a sub-picosecond internal conversion step from S2→S1, followed by a 5 ps decay to the ground state. A competing process involving formation of an additional long-lived state from S1 was also observed. Cyclic voltammetry shows one oxidation and two reduction waves and is completely reversible. This analysis lays the groundwork for developing new flavin dyads with the desired excited electronic state properties for applications such as nonlinear optical devices, molecular electronics applications, or dye-sensitized solar cells.

20.
Biochem Soc Trans ; 40(3): 561-6, 2012 Jun 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22616867

RESUMO

The study of natural enzymes is complicated by the fact that only the most recent evolutionary progression can be observed. In particular, natural oxidoreductases stand out as profoundly complex proteins in which the molecular roots of function, structure and biological integration are collectively intertwined and individually obscured. In the present paper, we describe our experimental approach that removes many of these often bewildering complexities to identify in simple terms the necessary and sufficient requirements for oxidoreductase function. Ours is a synthetic biology approach that focuses on from-scratch construction of protein maquettes designed principally to promote or suppress biologically relevant oxidations and reductions. The approach avoids mimicry and divorces the commonly made and almost certainly false ascription of atomistically detailed functionally unique roles to a particular protein primary sequence, to gain a new freedom to explore protein-based enzyme function. Maquette design and construction methods make use of iterative steps, retraceable when necessary, to successfully develop a protein family of sturdy and versatile single-chain three- and four-α-helical structural platforms readily expressible in bacteria. Internally, they prove malleable enough to incorporate in prescribed positions most natural redox cofactors and many more simplified synthetic analogues. External polarity, charge-patterning and chemical linkers direct maquettes to functional assembly in membranes, on nanostructured titania, and to organize on selected planar surfaces and materials. These protein maquettes engage in light harvesting and energy transfer, in photochemical charge separation and electron transfer, in stable dioxygen binding and in simple oxidative chemistry that is the basis of multi-electron oxidative and reductive catalysis.


Assuntos
Oxirredutases/síntese química , Engenharia de Proteínas/métodos , Proteínas Recombinantes/síntese química , Biologia Sintética/métodos , Oxirredução , Oxirredutases/química , Proteínas Recombinantes/química
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