Literature DB >> 22942758

Reduction-oxidation photocycle dynamics of flavins in starch films.

Alfons Penzkofer1.   

Abstract

The blue-light photo-reduction (conversion of oxidized flavin quinone via flavin semiquinone to fully reduced flavin hydroquinone) and dark re-oxidation of the flavins riboflavin and lumiflavin in starch (α-amylose) films was studied by absorption and luminescence spectroscopy. Blue-light photo-excitation caused an absorption, fluorescence, and phosphorescence decrease which recovered in the dark. The photo-reduction dark-oxidation cycle could be repeated. The efficiency of photo-reduction decreased with exposed excitation energy, and the speed of re-oxidation in the dark slowed down with time after excitation. The absorption did not fully recover. The fluorescence efficiency after a long time of storage in the dark increased beyond the initial flavin quinone fluorescence efficiency. Flavin photo-excitation is thought to cause starch-flavin restructuring (static fluorescence quenching center formation), enabling enhanced photo-induced starch to flavin electron transfer with subsequent flavin reduction and starch oxidation. In the dark, after light switch-off, thermal reversion of flavin reduction and starch oxidation occurred.

Entities:  

Keywords:  delayed fluorescence; flavin photo-reduction cycle; lumiflavin; oxystarch; phosphorescence; photo-induced starch restructuring; riboflavin; starch; starch photo-oxidation cycle; static fluorescence quenching

Mesh:

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22942758      PMCID: PMC3430289          DOI: 10.3390/ijms13079157

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Mol Sci        ISSN: 1422-0067            Impact factor:   6.208


1. Introduction

Riboflavin (vitamin B2, lactoflavin, 7,8-dimethyl-10-ribityl-isoalloxazine, structural formula in Chart 1) and lumiflavin (7,8,10-trimethyl-isoalloxazine, structural formula in Chart 1) belong to the huge family of flavins [1-4]. Riboflavin plays an important role as cofactor in enzymes [1]. Lumiflavin is the core molecule of the flavins (isoalloxazines). It is the dominant photoproduct of riboflavin, flavin mononucleotide (FMN, riboflavin-5′-monophosphate) and flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD, riboflavin-5′-adenosine-diphosphate) in alkaline solution (pH > 9) [2].
Chart 1

Structural formulae of riboflavin (RF), lumiflavin (LF), and anhydrous glucose repeat unit of starch (α-amylose).

The photochemistry of riboflavin in different solvents is very rich with different irreversible and reversible degradation products ([2-7] and references therein). Intra-molecular hydrogen abstraction from the ribityl-side chain was found to play a dominant role in the isoalloxazine core reduction [5]. The photochemistry of lumiflavin and lumiflavin derivatives was studied in [8-10]. The one-electron and two-electron reduction modes of the flavin chromophore were clarified by flash photolysis studies on 3-methyllumiflavin and lumiflavin-3-acetic acid in aqueous solution [11]. FMN and FAD are the chromophores (cofactors) in blue-light sensitive photoreceptors [12-14]: FMN in LOV domains of phototropin [15], FAD and FMN in BLUF proteins [16], FAD in cryptochromes and photolyases [17]. The flavins exist in three redox states which are the flavin quinones (fully oxidized flavin) Fl, the flavin semiquinones (semi-reduced flavin) FlH·, and the flavin hydroquinones (fully reduced flavin) FlH2 [1-4]. The nature of the host determines the flavin redox state. Depending on the pH of aqueous solutions each of theses flavin redox species may exist in cationic, neutral, or anionic form [1-4]. In LOV domains of phototropins, FMN in oxidized neutral form is the cofactor, and the photocycle dynamics is determined by the reversible photo-induced formation of FMN-C4a-cysteinyl adduct [15,18]. In BLUF proteins, photo-induced electron transfer from tyrosine to neutral oxidized FAD or FMN leads to radical anion (FAD·− or FMN·−) formation (flavin quinone radical anion) which causes reversible hydrogen-bond restructuring and possible reduction (proton transfer) to FADH· or FMNH· (flavin semiquinone) and further reduction by electron transfer to FADH− or FMNH− (anionic flavin hydroquinone) [19,20]. In cryptochromes, photocyclic reduction of neutral oxidized FAD was observed (first step is FAD·− radical anion formation by photo-induced electron transfer) [21-26]. In photolyases, fully reduced anionic FADH− is photo-oxidized to neutral flavin semiquinone FADH· by electron release in the photo-induced DNA repair mechanism [17]. In a recent study on the luminescence (fluorescence, phosphorescence and delayed fluorescence) of riboflavin and lumiflavin starch films as hosts had been used (flavins in solid matrix, structural formula of anhydrous glucose starch repeat unit is shown in Chart 1) in order to be able to carry out the measurements with a conventional fluorimeter at room temperature [27]. A fluorescence decrease had been observed during the measurements indicating low fluorescence stability of the samples to light exposure. This observation initiated the light dependence investigations on riboflavin and lumiflavin presented in this paper. We observed photocyclic behavior of riboflavin (RF) and lumiflavin (LF) in starch host. Neutral fully oxidized RF and LF were reversibly photo-reduced to RFH2 and LFH2, respectively. It is thought that thereby starch is reversibly oxidized to oxystarch [28-31]. The absorption and luminescence showed photocyclic behavior since flavin quinone, flavin semiquinone and flavin hydroquinone have different absorption spectra, and flavin semiquinone as well as flavin hydroquinone are non-luminescent. Static quenching [32-35] of the flavin quinone fluorescence occurred (reduction of quantum yield without change of lifetime) by photo-induced electron transfer from starch to appropriate arranged flavin molecules. The photo-excitation caused starch-flavin restructuring towards enhanced static fluorescence quenching. After photo-excitation, in the dark at room temperature re-oxidation of flavin hydroquinone to flavin quinone occurred and static fluorescence quenching decreased. The photo-induced flavin reduction and dark re-oxidation was repeatable (photocycle behavior). The photocyclic behavior of flavin implies a starch oxidation (oxystarch formation [28-31]) during light exposure and back reduction in the dark.

2. Results and Discussion

2.1. Absorption Photocycling

For RF in a starch film the absorption changes due to light exposure at 455 nm (top part, previously unexposed sample) and the absorption behavior after light switch-off in the dark (bottom part) are shown in Figure 1. The excitation intensity was varied with filters, and after certain times of exposure the transmission spectra were measured. The accumulated exposed energy densities, wexp, and the corresponding accumulated times of exposure, texp, are listed in the top part of Figure 1. The RF absorption around 450 nm (first absorption band of fully oxidized RF) and around 371 nm (second absorption band of fully oxidized RF) decreased with exposed excitation energy density (with time of light exposure). A weak absorption band in the range from 515 nm to 660 nm built up which is attributed to the formation of semi-reduced riboflavin RFH·. The increasing absorption around 310 nm and 260 nm with isobestic points at 337.5 nm, 292 nm, 265 nm, and 237 nm is attributed to the formation of fully reduced riboflavin RFH2. Absorption cross-section spectra of flavins in fully oxidized form [36-38], semi-reduced form [39-41], and fully reduced form [42,43] are found in the cited literature. Re-oxidation of RFH· and RFH2 to RF in the dark is clearly seen in the lower part of Figure 1. The re-oxidation is not complete (some permanent reduction occurred). The absorption spectrum of the re-oxidized RF is not fully identical with the initial unexposed RF. The first three absorption maxima changed from 450 nm, 371 nm, and 271 nm to 449 nm, 369 nm, and 268 nm, respectively. The differences indicate local interaction changes between riboflavin and starch in the initial unexposed form and the recovered form.
Figure 1

Absorbance spectra of riboflavin in starch film. The development of absorbance spectra during light exposure at wavelength λexp = 455 nm is shown in the top part. The bottom part shows absorbance spectra recovery after excitation light switch-off.

For LF in a starch film, the absorption changes due to light exposure at 455 nm (previously unexposed sample) and the absorption behavior after light switch-off in the dark are shown in Figure 2. The photo-reduction of LF to LFH2 is seen in the top part. The accumulated exposed energy densities, wexp, and the corresponding accumulated times of exposure, texp, are listed in the figure. The formation of semi-reduced lumiflavin could not be resolved (likely due to faster reduction of LFH· to LFH2). The re-oxidation of LFH2 to LF in the dark is seen in the lower part of Figure 2. The initial absorption spectrum of LF is not fully restored in the re-oxidation process. The positions of the first three absorption maxima of LF changed from 449 nm, 358 nm, and 271 nm to 448 nm, 366 nm and 270 nm due to local interaction changes between lumiflavin and starch in the photo-excitation process.
Figure 2

Absorbance spectra of lumiflavin in starch film. The development of the absorbance spectra during light exposure at λexp = 455 nm is shown in the top part. The bottom part shows the absorbance spectra recovery after excitation light switch-off.

In the top part of Figure 3 the dependence of absorbance at λ = 450 nm as a function of exposed energy density at λexp = 455 nm is shown for RF in starch (solid line connected circles, fresh previously unexposed sample) and LF in starch (dashed line connected triangles, fresh previously unexposed sample). Absorbance ratios A(λ = 450 nm, wexp)/A(λ = 450 nm, wexp = 0) are displayed. The data for RF in starch belong to another film than used in Figure 1 (film exposed in more steps up to higher total exposed energy density, initial absorbance A(λ = 450 nm, 0) = 0.0692). The data for LF in starch belong to the curves presented in Figure 2. The horizontal line at the right hand side indicates the expected final absorbance ratio for the case of complete reduction of RF and LF to RFH2 and LFH2, respectively. The efficiency of photo-reduction was largest at the beginning of sample exposure and leveled off with continued exposure (see logarithmic abscissa).
Figure 3

Top part: Dependence of normalized absorbance at λ = 450 nm versus exposed excitation energy density, wexp, at λexp = 455 nm. Bottom part: Mole-fraction of retained flavin in fully oxidized state, χFl, versus exposed excitation energy density. Inset in bottom part: Exposed energy density dependent quantum yield of photo-reduction, φ, of Fl to FlH2.

The dotted-line connected dots in the top part of Figure 3 belong to a second photo-excitation of RF in starch. The sample was re-exposed after recovering in the dark for a period of 4 month. At the start of second exposure the absorbance had been recovered to about 70% of its original unexposed value. The absorbance ratio at the end of second exposure (wexp = 7 J·cm−2) was approximately the same as at the end of the first exposure. The dash-dotted line connected filled triangles belong to a second photo-excitation of LF in starch. The sample was re-exposed after recovering in the dark for a period of 5 month and 20 days. At the start of second exposure the absorbance had been recovered to about 87% of its original unexposed value. The absorbance ratio at the end of second exposure (wexp = 5.2 J·cm−2) was slightly higher than at the end of the first exposure. In the second excitation process of LF in starch some lumiflavin semiquinone formation was observed (long-wavelength absorption). The lower part of Figure 3 displays the mole-fraction of still oxidized flavin during the first excitation cycle, , where NFl is the length-integrated number density of oxidized flavin, NFl(x) is the number density of oxidized flavin at coordinate x, and ℓ is the film thickness. χFl is related to the absorbance ratio, A(wexp )/A(0), by Equation (1) is obtained from the relations, A(wexp) = {χ (wexp)σ, + [1 − χ (wexp)]σ, }N(0)/ln(10), and A(0) = σ, N (0)/ln(10). χ = 1 − χ is the mole-fraction of fully reduced flavin. λ is the probe wavelength. In the calculations σa,Fl(λ = 450 nm) ≈ 4.7 × 10−17 cm2 [36], and σ, (λ = 450 nm) ≈ 4.18 × 10−18 cm2 [43] was used. The retained mole-fraction of flavin quinone at the end of exposure (wexp ≈ 8 J cm−2) was χRF,end ≈ 0.135 and χLF,end ≈ 0.096. The momentary exposed energy density dependent quantum efficiency of photo-reduction, φ, may be determined by use of the relation [43], where ΔNFl is the length-integrated number density of oxidized flavin which got reduced due to the number density of absorbed photons Δnph,abs. ΔNFl is given by where N (0) is the initial length-integrated number density of oxidized flavin. It may be expressed in terms of initial absorbance, A(0,λ), and flavin quinone absorption cross-section, σa,Fl(λ), at wavelength λ as (Note that ). Δnph,abs is given by A1(λexp) and A2(λexp) are the absorbance values belonging to the exposed energy densities wexp,1 and wexp,2, respectively. hν is the excitation photon energy (h Planck constant, ν = c0/λ excitation frequency, c0 vacuum light velocity). &Tmacr;exp ≈ [T (wexp,1 + T (wexp,2)] / 2 is the mean transmission at the excitation wavelength λexp in the excitation energy density interval of wexp,1 to wexp,2. Using adjacent data points of wexp, χFl, and A, the φ (w) curves were determined for RF and LF which are displayed in the inset of the lower part of Figure 3. The initial quantum yields of photo-reduction were φ (RF/starch, wexp→0) = 0.2 ± 0.03 and φ (LF/starch, wexp→0) = 0.12 ± 0.03. At the end of exposure the quantum yield of photo-reduction lowered to φ ≈ 10−4 for both samples (less and less favorable sites for flavin reduction and starch oxidation, part of Δnph,abs belongs to FlH2 absorption). The absorbance recovery of flavin in starch after light exposure is manifested in Figure 4. In the top part of Figure 4, the circles belonging to RF in starch and the triangles belonging to LF in starch show the absorbance recovery in the dark after the first light exposure. The corresponding points in the bottom part of Figure 4 show the mole-fractions of oxidized RF and oxidized LF. The absorbance (mole-fraction) of RF in starch recovered back to ≈70% (67%) of the initial unexposed value. In the case of LF in starch the back recovery reached ≈86% (85%) of the initial unexposed value.
Figure 4

Top part: Dependence of normalized absorbance, a = A/Aini, at λ = 450 nm versus time trec after end of exposure. Bottom part: Mole-fraction of flavin in fully oxidized state, χFl, versus time after end of first exposure.

The absorption recovery and the flavin re-oxidation fit reasonably well to bi-exponential functions according to as is seen by the solid and dashed curves in Figure 4. a(λ,0) = A(λ, t = 0) / A (λ) is the absorbance ratio at wavelength λ and time trec = 0 after end of exposure. χFl(0) is the mole-fraction of retained oxidized flavin at end of exposure. τrec,f is the time constant of fast absorption recovery, and τrec,s is the time constant of slow absorption recovery. The coefficients of fast recovery, κa,f and κχ,f, and the coefficients of slow recovery, κa,s and κχ,s, are related by Equation (1). The fraction of photo-reduced flavins which retained permanently reduced is: κ , = 1 − κ, − κ, . The obtained parameters for RF in starch are χRF(0) = 0.135, κχ,f(RF) = 0.077, τrec,f(RF) = 3.3 h, κχ,s(RF) = 0.50, τrec,s(RF) = 229 h, and κχ,per(RF) = 0.423. The obtained parameters for LF in starch are χLF(0) = 0.096, κχ,f(LF)= 0.11, τrec,f(LF) = 2.85 h, κχ,s(LF) = 0.72, τrec,s(LF) = 325 h, and κχ,per(LF) = 0.17. The absorbance recovery of RF in starch after the second cycle of light exposure is shown by the dotted-line connected dots in the top part of Figure 4. The fast absorbance recovery component is more pronounced than after the first excitation, and the final absorbance is lower than reached in the first recovery. The same behavior was found for LF in starch as is shown by the dash-dotted line connected filled triangles in the top part of Figure 4. The second last filled triangle, and the second last dot were measured at relatively high relative humidity of ϕrh ≈ 0.66 (for preceding few days the ambient relative humidity varied between 50% and 69%). The last filled triangle and the last dot were measured after storing the samples for four days in a desiccator (ϕrh < 0.1) and relative humidity during measurement of ϕrh ≈ 0.45.

2.2. Fluorescence Photocycling

2.2.1. Fluorescence Spectra and Fluorescence Quantum Yields

The evolution of spectrally corrected fluorescence spectra of previously unexposed RF and LF in starch due to light exposure and dark recovery is shown in Figure 5 (light exposure at λexp = 455 nm, excitation wavelength for fluorescence detection λF,exc = 450 nm). The left figures belong to RF in starch and the right figures belong to LF in starch. The top parts show the light exposure situation, and the bottom parts show the situation of fluorescence recovery in the dark. The depicted fluorescence spectra are normalized to the initial fluorescence signal height at the wavelength of maximum fluorescence emission, i.e., SF(λ)/SF,ini(λF,max) is displayed (λF,max(RF) = 523 nm, λF,max(LF)= 525 nm). The shape of the fluorescence spectra is approximately independent of exposed light energy density and time of recovery. The fluorescence signal height decreased with light exposure starting already at very low light exposure. The fluorescence emission recovered after light exposure even beyond the original fluorescence signal height (see below).
Figure 5

Fluorescence spectra of RF in starch (left part) and LF in starch (right part) belonging different exposed energy densities at λexc = 455 nm (top part) and different times of recovery after light switch-off.

The dependence of the fluorescence efficiency on the exposed light energy density is shown in Figure 6. The solid line connected circles belong to RF in starch film, and the dashed line connected triangles belong to LF in starch film of the first excitation cycle. The top part of Figure 6 shows the decrease of the total (spectral integrated) fluorescence signal, ∑ = ∫ S (λ)dλ, with exposed energy density wexp. The curves are normalized to the total initial fluorescence signal, ∑ , = ∫ S, (λ)dλ, (unexposed samples). Comparing the total fluorescence signal decrease with the absorbance decrease shown in Figure 3 one sees that the fluorescence emission decreased already at low exposed energy densities (wexp < 10−3 J·cm−2) where the absorbance decrease was still negligible. For higher exposed energy densities (wexp > 10−3 J·cm−2) the total fluorescence signal decreased in accordance with the reduction of flavin quinone to flavin hydroquinone (see Figure 3). It should be noticed that flavin semiquinone and flavin hydroquinone are non-fluorescent [2,39].
Figure 6

Top part: Dependence of normalized fluorescence emission of RF and LF in starch versus exposed energy density, wexp. Bottom part: Component specific fluorescence quantum yield, φ, (left ordinate) and fraction of normal emitting flavin quinone, χn, (right ordinate) wexp. Inset in top part: Quantum yield of photo-induced fluorescence quenching center formation, φ, versus wexp for first excitation cycle. Inset in bottom part: Flavin quinone specific fluorescence quantum yield, φ, versus corresponding absorbance, A, for first excitation cycle.

In the lower part of Figure 6 the component specific fluorescence quantum yield, φ, [44] of riboflavin quinone and lumiflavin quinone in starch film versus exposed energy density (first excitation cycle) is plotted. The curves were obtained by normalizing the total fluorescence signals of the top part of Figure 6 to the absorbed fluorescence excitation light by flavin quinone and adjusting to the fluorescence quantum yield before light exposure. The fluorescence quantum yields before light exposure have been determined recently [27]. Their values are φ(RF/starch) = 0.37 and φ (LF/starch) = 0.36. The decrease of fluorescence quantum yield with light exposure indicates increased fluorescence quenching of flavin quinone in the course of exposure (photo-induced quenching center formation by starch—flavin restructuring). At the end of exposure the total fluorescence signal was stronger decreased than the absorbance or the fraction of retaining flavin quinone because the flavin quinone specific fluorescence quantum yield decreased with wexp. The quantum efficiency, φ, of flavin-starch quenching center formation at low exposed energy density (wexp < 10−2 J·cm−2) may be estimated from the decrease of fluorescence efficiency with absorbed excitation light. It is where ΔN is the length-integrated number density increment of formed quenching centers, and Δnph,abs is the corresponding number density of absorbed photons. At wexp, ΔN may be expressed by the amount of Fl component specific fluorescence quantum yield decrease Δφ according to The corresponding number density of absorbed photons at wexp is The calculated curves of φ versus wexp for RF and LF in starch are shown in the inset of the upper part of Figure 6. The quantum efficiency of flavin-starch quenching-center formation starts from φ ≈ 10 at low exposed energy density (wexp ≤ 10−5 J cm−2) and decreases to φ ≈ 0.01 at wexp ≈ 0.01 J cm−2. This result shows that initially one flavin molecule excitation caused a starch—flavin structure optimization (starch restructuring) which changed about 10 normal fluorescing flavin molecules, Fln, in inert starch environment to non-fluorescent flavin molecules, Flqc, in fluorescence quenching active starch environment (flavin–glucose quenching center formation). The total number density of flavin quinones is N = N + N. The quantum efficiency of flavin-starch quenching center formation decreased with increasing exposed energy density showing that the starch polymer rearrangement was getting more and more difficult. For wexp > 10−2 J·cm−2 N(wexp)/N(wexp) became rather constant and even decreased over a certain energy density range for RF in starch where φ increased with wexp. The oxidized flavin specific fluorescence quantum yield φ versus sample absorbance A(450 nm) is shown in the inset of the bottom part of Figure 6 for RF in starch (circles) and for LF in starch (triangles). The absorbance data belong to Figure 3. The decrease of fluorescence quantum yield without change of absorbance at the right side (beginning of light exposure) is clearly seen. The dotted line connected dots in the top part of Figure 6 show the fluorescence behavior of RF in starch recovered in the dark at room temperature over a period of 4 month and re-exposed in a second cycle. The dash-dotted line connected filled triangles in the top part of Figure 6 show the fluorescence behavior of LF in starch recovered in the dark at room temperature over a period of 5 month and 20 days. For both RF and LF in starch the fluorescence quenching behavior was similar in the second excitation process as in the first excitation process. The fluorescence recovery of RF and LF in starch film after light switch-off in the dark is shown in Figure 7. Circles and triangles belong to RF and LF after the first excitation process, respectively. In the top part the recovery of the total (spectral integrated) fluorescence signal (normalized to the initial total fluorescence signal), ∑F/∑F,ini, is depicted. The fluorescence recovery fits reasonably well to bi-exponential functions (solid curve for RF, dashed curve for LF) with the same recovery times, τrec,f and τrec,s, as found for the absorbance recovery (Equation (3)). The total fluorescence signal of RF in starch recovered to approximately 1.05 times the initial fluorescence signal while the RF molecules re-oxidized only to a final fraction value of χRF,∞ ≈ 0.67. The total fluorescence signal of LF in starch recovered to approximately 1.45 times the initial fluorescence signal while the LF molecules re-oxidized to a final fraction value of χLF,∞ ≈ 0.85. This behavior indicates that the fluorescence quantum yield of the re-oxidized flavin is higher than the fluorescence quantum yield of the initial flavin.
Figure 7

Top part: Dependence of normalized fluorescence emission versus time after end of exposure. Bottom part: Component specific fluorescence quantum yield of flavin quinone (left ordinate), and fraction of normal fluorescing flavin quinone (right ordinate) versus time after end of exposure.

The fluorescence recovery of RF in starch after a second cycle of light exposure is shown by the dotted-line connected dots in the top part of Figure 7. The situation of fluorescence recovery of LF in starch after second cycle of exposure is shown by the dash-dotted line connected filled triangles in the top part of Figure 7. In both cases the initial fast recovery after second light switch-off is more pronounced than after the first excitation. For RF in starch the final fluorescence recovery after the second excitation is lower than after the first excitation as is the absorbance recovery (dots in Figure 4). For LF in starch the final fluorescence recovery after the second exposure is about the same as after the first excitation. The second last filled triangle and the second last dot were measured at relatively high relative humidity of ϕrh ≈ 0.66 whereby the humidity in the laboratory was in the range between 50% and 69% for a few days. The last filled triangle and the last dot were measured after storing the samples for four days in a desiccator (ϕrh < 0.1) before measuring (relative humidity in laboratory during measurement was ϕrh ≈ 0.45). The dependence of the component specific fluorescence quantum yield, φ, of flavin quinone on the dark time after first light exposure is depicted in the lower part of Figure 7. For both, RF and LF in starch, the fluorescence quantum yield at the end of light exposure was φ(0) ≈ 0.21, and it increased to φ(∞) ≈ 0.60. The initial fluorescence quantum yields were φ = 0.37 and φ = 0.36 [27]. The increase of fluorescence quantum yield after recovery beyond the initial values indicates that already before light exposure flavin—starch quenching centers were present which lowered the initial light emission. Obviously, the thermal sample recovery in the dark period did not create remarkably flavin-starch quenching centers along with the flavin re-oxidation. Assuming that no flavin-starch quenching centers were left after saturating light exposure and complete recovery, the fraction of initially present flavin-strach quenching centers is estimated to be χ ≈ (φ − φ)/φ giving χqc,ini(RF) ≈ 0.38 and χqc,ini(LF) ≈ 0.4. The fraction of flavin-starch quenching centers at the end of first light exposure is similarly estimated to be χqc,end ≈ (φ − φ)/φ giving χqc,end ≈ 0.65 for both RF quinone and LF quinone (φ ≈ 0.21 in both cases). The fraction of normal emitting flavin quinone molecules is χ = 1 − χ ≈ φ/φ. The curves in the lower part of Figure 6 with the right ordinate give the dependence of χn versus exposed energy density. The curves in the lower part of Figure 7 with the right ordinate give the development of χn with recovery time after light switch-off.

2.2.2. Fluorescence Lifetimes

The fluorescence lifetimes of RF in starch film were measured before light exposure, during light exposure, and after dark recovery (first excitation cycle) with a mode-locked laser system and a micro-channel-plate photomultiplier (MCP) oscilloscope system (time resolution tres ≈ 500 ps). The fluorescence signals fitted well to a single exponential decay. The fluorescence lifetime did not change with exposed light energy density and did not change during dark recovery. The measured 1/e-lifetime was τF,RF = 4.32 ± 0.03 ns. For LF in starch the fluorescence lifetime was measured before light exposure and after dark recovery (first excitation cycle). In both cases the same fluorescence lifetime of τF,LF = 4.57 ± 0.07 ns was measured. Additionally, the time-resolved fluorescence of LF in starch film was measured before light exposure and after dark recovery with the mode-locked laser system and an ultrafast streak-camera (time resolution tres ≈ 10 ps). For the unexposed sample the rise of the fluorescence signal was steeper than for the sample after complete dark recovery (4 month of dark recovery). This finding indicates the presence of an unresolved fast decaying fluorescence component for the unexposed sample. A convolution analysis [36] using S (t) = ∫ g (t′)S,δ (t − t′)dt′ with Gaussian response function g(t) =π −1/2 exp(−t2/t2) gave a single exponential fluorescence decay for the dark recovered sample according to S,δ (t) = S,0θ (t) exp(−t /τ,) where τF, is the fluorescence lifetime determined by the MCP measurements (τF,n = τF = 4.57 ns). θ(t) is the Heaviside step-function (θ(t)= 0 for t < 0 and θ(t) = 1 for for t ≥ 0). For the unexposed LF sample the measured traces fitted well to bi-exponential fluorescence decay according to S ,δ (t) = S ,0θ(t)[χ exp( −t /τ,) + χ exp(−t /τ ,)] with χn = 0.6, τF, = 4.57 ns, χ = 1 − χ = 0.4, and τF,qc = 1.5 ± 0.5 ps. The experimental situation of fluorescence quantum yield decrease and constant fluorescence lifetime with exposed energy density at moderate time resolution is typical for static fluorescence quenching with increasing quenching complex concentration χqc where the short fluorescence lifetime τF,qc of the emitter-quencher-complexes cannot be resolved [32-35]. The streak-camera traces convolution analysis revealed a fluorescence lifetime of the flavin-starch quenching centers of τF,qc = 1.5 ± 0.5 ps. The static fluorescence quenching observed here has some similarity with static fluorescence of FAD in neutral aqueous solution (see [2,37,45,46] and references therein) where for part of the FAD molecules the isoalloxazine moiety and the adenine moiety are un-stacked (normal fluorescing) and for the other part of the FAD molecules the isoalloxazine moiety and the adenine moiety are stacked (very weakly fluorescent due to efficient electron transfer between isoalloxaine and adenine and subsequent charge recombination).

2.3. Delayed Luminescence Studies

In the photo-reduction studies on RF and LF in starch films also the delayed luminescence DL (phosphorescence P and delayed fluorescence DF) behavior was investigated. Delayed luminescence spectra and signal decay traces were measured. RF in starch and LF in starch behaved similar. Below in Figures 8–10 only results are shown for RF in starch obtained for the first excitation—recovery cycle. The delayed luminescence behavior of the samples before light exposure was reported in [27].
Figure 8

Delayed luminescence spectra of riboflavin in starch film (first excitation cycle). Top part: Dependence on exposed light energy density at λexp = 455 nm. Bottom part: Dependence on storage time in the dark after light exposure. Curve belonging to trec = 2655 h: sample was measured at ϕrh ≈ 0.66 after a few humid days ( varied between 0.50 and 0.69). Curve belonging to trec = 2744 h: sample was measured after 4 days stored in a desiccator.

Figure 10

Delayed luminescence signal decay of RF in starch before and after first sample exposure (parameters of Figures 1, 8 and 9 apply).

In Figure 8 spectrally corrected delayed luminescence spectra are shown for RF in starch (same sample as used for Figure 1, fluorimeter gate opening 200 μs after sample excitation with 2 μs pulses, gate width 5 ms). The top part shows spectra belonging to light exposure at λexp = 455 nm with different exposed energy densities, and the bottom part shows spectra belonging to different times of recovery in the dark. The spectra are normalized to the initial luminescence signal at 650 nm, i.e., SDL(λ)/SDL,ini(650 nm) is presented. The emission band peaking around 650 nm belongs to phosphorescence, and the emission band peaking around 530 nm belongs to delayed fluorescence (for details see [27]). The spectral shapes retain approximately unchanged during light exposure and during recovery in the dark. The luminescence signal heights decreased with light exposure and increased after light switch-off in the dark. The curve belonging to for trec = 2655 h was measured at ϕrh = 0.66 after a few days of high humidity in the range of 50% to 69% in the laboratory. The strong reduction of delayed luminescence at high relative humidity is clearly seen. Above ϕ = 50% the starch films begin to become slightly permeable to oxygen [47] and the water vapor permeability increases [48] with softening of the films. The phosphorescence is thought to be decreased because of flavin triplet deactivation by adjacent molecular oxygen according to [49,50] 3Fln* + 3O2 →1 Fln + 1O2*. The curve belonging to trec = 2740 h was measured at ϕrh = 0.45 after storing the sample for four days in a desiccator (ϕrh < 0.1). The delayed luminescence spectrum recovered nearly to the initial spectrum. The delayed fluorescence peak became similar high as the phosphorescence peak (some enhancement of delayed fluorescence). The development of the delayed luminescence at λpr = 530 nm (dominant delayed fluorescence, line connected circles) and at λpr = 645 nm (dominant phosphorescence, dashed line connected triangles) versus exposed energy density at λexp = 455 nm and versus recovery time in the dark is shown in Figure 9 for RF in starch film (data taken from Figure 8). The curves are normalized to the initial delayed luminescence signal heights at the same probe wavelengths. For comparison the normalized absorbance dependence A(450 nm)/Aini(450 nm) on exposed energy density and on time after exposure is included (dotted line connected diamonds). The delayed luminescence signal followed the exposure dependence and the recovery dependence of the fluorescence signal. For the second last data points in the bottom part of Figure 9 the luminescence signal was small because of the high relative humidity situation. After storing the sample in a desiccator (last data points in the bottom part of Figure 9) the delayed luminescence signal approached the initial delayed luminescence signal while the absorbance recovered only to about 65%. The final low-humidity flavin quinone specific delayed luminescence quantum yield, φ, reached higher values than the initial unexposed sample. This behavior is the same as was found for the fluorescence. Both the fluorescence and the low-humidity delayed luminescence efficiency is proportional to the mole fraction of normal fluorescing flavin quinone χn.
Figure 9

Dependence of normalized delayed fluorescence (SDF/SDF,ini) at λpr = 530 nm, phosphorescence (SP/SP,ini) at 645 nm, and absorbance (A/Aini) at 450 nm of riboflavin in starch versus exposed energy density at 455 nm (top part) and versus recovery time after end of exposure (bottom part).

In Figure 10 the time-resolved luminescence signal decay for RF in starch before light exposure and for certain times after first exposure is shown (same sample used as for Figures 1, 8 and 9). The curves are determined by the mole-fraction χn of normal fluorescing flavin quinone and the dissolved molecular oxygen dependent delayed luminescence lifetime shortening. The curve measured at trec = 2655 h under high relative humidity conditions shows a strong phosphorescence lifetime shortening. For the other curves the temporal decay curves have a similar shape. The curve measured at trec = 2740 h under low relative humidity conditions gave slightly higher luminescence signal than the initial unexposed sample. The data analysis of unexposed RF and LF in starch films was carried out in [27] assuming the presence of only normal fluorescing flavins Fln. The presence of flavins Flqc in quenching centers changes the radiative S1-state lifetime (Equation (2) in [27]) to τ, =τ,/φ, (φ ≈ 0.60). The inclusion of the static fluorescence quenching causes the correction of a few parameters for RF in starch and LF in starch to: τ, (RF) = 7.2 ns, σ̄, (RF) = 1.34 × 10−17 cm2, σa,max(RF) = 7.2 × 10−17 cm2, τF(LF) = 4.57 ns (new measurement because of some degradation of previous sample), τ, (LF) = 7.6 ns, σ̄, (LF) = 1.28 × 10−17 cm2, σa,max(LF) = 6.85 × 10−17 cm2, φ(LF) = 0.38, kISC(LF) = 8.32 × 107 s−1, and k (LF) = 1.13 s−1.

2.4. Discussion of Reduction—Oxidation Photocycle Dynamics

The flavin behavior in starch may be described by a two-component system consisting of normal fluorescing flavins Fln and flavins Flqc forming flavin-glucose fluorescence quenching centers. The proposed photocyclic dynamics and inter-conversion of Fln and Flqc is illustrated in Figure 11.
Figure 11

Top part: Scheme of normal flavin (Fln) excitation leading to flavin-starch quenching center formation (Flqc) due to starch restructuring. Bottom part: Flqc excitation causing flavin semiquinone FlH· formation by electron and proton transfer; photo-excitation of FlH· causing flavin hydroquinone FlH2 formation by electron and proton transfer; and thermal FlH2 re-oxidation with starch restructuring to normal fluorescing flavin quinone Fln. The photo-excitation dynamics of Flqc is illustrated in the lower part of Figure 11.

The formation of flavin-starch fluorescence quenching centers Flqc by photo-excitation of normal fluorescing flavin quinone Fln is illustrated in the top part of Figure 11. Photo-excitation of Fln leads to radiative relaxation, internal conversion, intersystem-crossing, back-intersystem-crossing (delayed fluorescence), radiative triplet-singlet relaxation (phosphorescence), and non-radiative triplet relaxation to the singlet ground-state. The energy released by non-radiative decay and excited-state charge distribution differences compared to the ground-state are thought to cause starch re-conformation to flavin-glucose fluorescence quenching center formation (Flqc) on the time range of phosphorescence decay (10 ms time scale). It should be noted that in the prepared flavin doped starch samples there were already fluorescence quenching centers present before light exposure. The photo-excitation of Flqc is thought to cause a reductive electron transfer [35,51] from properly arranged glucose G(OH)2 to flavin Fl according to whereby flavin quinone radical anion Fl·− and glucose radical cation G(OH)2·+ is formed. The electron transfer quenches the fluorescence (time constant of electron transfer is τF,qc ≈ 1.5 ps). Fl·− dominantly relaxes back to Flqc by charge recombination. Part of Fl·− converts to neutral flavin semiquinone FlH· by proton transfer (quantum efficiency ≥ φ) according to The incident light excites FlH· to FlH·* and causes subsequent electron transfer to flavin semiquinone radical anion according to A second proton transfer from the single oxidized glucose radical cation to the flavin semiqinone radical anion leads to flavin hydroquinone and oxy-glucose (oxystarch) according to The total quantum efficiency of FlH2 formation is φ. In the dark there occurs thermal flavin hydroquinone re-oxidation to flavin quinone by oxystarch reduction to normal starch and a starch restructuring. The flavin reduction from Fl to FlH2 is visualized in Scheme 1. The corresponding partial starch oxidation to oxystarch where glucose repeat units are oxidized to oxy-glucose repeat units is illustrated in Scheme 2. Information on photochemical degradation of starch to oxystarch (di-aldehyde formation) is found in [28-31].
Scheme 1

Reduction of fully oxidized flavin to fully reduced flavin via semi-reduced flavin in two electron and proton transfer steps.

Scheme 2

Oxidation of a glucose repeat unit of starch to a di-aldehyde glucose repeat unit of oxystarch in two steps of electron and proton transfer.

The starch oxidation to oxystarch during light exposure and the oxystarch reduction to starch after light switch-off is concluded form the fact that the flavin reduction and subsequent re-oxidation is repeatable. For LF in starch no photo-induced intra-molecular reduction is possible, the oxidation of starch is necessary for the process to occur. Re-oxidation of LFH2 to LF might be caused by oxygen [52] dissolved in starch and penetrating into starch, but without oxystarch back-reduction to starch a repetition of cyclic photo-reduction and re-oxidation would not be possible. For RF in starch photo-induced intra-molecular reduction is possible by hydrogen abstraction from the ribityl part [5]. This process is thought to take place additionally to the starch oxidation since the quantum efficiency of photo-reduction is higher for RF in starch than for LF in starch, and the RFH2 back re-oxidation in the dark is less complete than for LFH2 (no back reduction of the oxidized ribityl part is indicated). In the starch film forming process by solution heating [27] the samples get partly degassed (oxygen solubility in solution decreases with rising temperature). Starch films in dry air (ϕ < 50%) are air impermeable (see results in [47,48] for free standing starch films of 20 μm thickness, our estimated film thickness is ≈ 36 μm). Photo-excitation studies on lumiflavin doped polystyrene films which are air permeable [53,54] did not show flavin photo-reduction (own unpublished results).

2.5. Comparison with Photocycling of Natural Flavin based Blue-Light Photoreceptors

The found artificial photocycle behavior of photo-induced reduction and dark re-oxidation of flavins in starch films resembles the photocycle behavior of natural flavin-based blue-light photoreceptors. In LOV domains of phototropin charge-transfer reactions between photo-excited singlet and triplet states of FMN and the protein (cystein residue) are involved in the meta-stable FMN-C4a-cysteinyl adduct formation [18,55]. The FMN-C4a-cysteinyl adduct recovers thermally back to FMN and cystein residue typically on a minute timescale [12-15,18,55]. In BLUF proteins [14,16,19,56] and BLUF domain containing photo-activated enzymes [20,57,58] photo-excitation of FAD or FMN causes tyrosine to flavin quinone electron transfer forming FAD·− or FMN·− with protein-flavin hydrogen-bond reorganization during the sub-nanosecond Fl·− charge-recombination lifetime giving the signaling state (light-adapted state) for effector domain activation [14,19,20,57,59]. In light adapted BLUF domains flavin reduction to flavin semiquinone FlH· and anionic flavin hydroquinone FlH− may take place with partial re-oxidation after light switch-off [20,57,59]. In the dark a hydrogen-bond back arrangement to the original situation takes place on a second to minute timescale [14,16,19,20,56-59]. In cryptochromes the primary receptor state—signaling state photocycle is given by photo-induced Tyr or Trp electron transfer to FAD forming FAD·− which is stabilized over a time range of seconds by positive charge separation along a Trp triade [17,24,25,60]. FAD·− may further reduce to FADH· and FADH− [25,60,61]. The reduced FAD may partially re-oxidize in the dark on a minute to hour time scale [25,61].

2.6. Comparison with Dye Reduction and Re-Oxidation by Agents

The photo-induced formation of reversible dye radicals in the triplet state by application of reducing agents in aerobic liquid solutions was reported to be a frequently occurring phenomenon [62]. It was observed in rhodamine, oxazine, thiazine, and cyanine dyes in the presence of reducing agents like β-mercaptoethylamine or glutathione [62]. Photo-excitation caused dye reduction (radical formation) in the triplet state, and the speed of re-oxidation in the dark was determined by the dissolved oxygen content. The photo-induced formation of reversible dye radicals plays a crucial role in live-cell super-resolution imaging fluorescence microscopy [62,63]. Flavin photo-reduction in liquid solutions containing reducing agents and oxygen dependent re-oxidation was investigated in [6,7,43,64]. In the flavin doped solid starch films studied here, the starch host acts as reducing agent for photo-excited flavin. The thereby generated oxystarch acts as oxidizing agent for reduced flavin in its ground-state. In the case of riboflavin in starch hydrogen abstraction from the ribityl chain [5,43,65-68] is thought to contribute to the isoalloxazine core reduction and is thought to be responsible for the incomplete re-oxidation in the dark. Dissolved oxygen is generally responsible for reduced flavin re-oxidation [2-7]. Starch films at low relative humidity (ϕrh < 0.5) are impermeable to oxygen and the retained oxygen in starch is immobile. Therefore flavin re-oxidation by oxygen in starch under dry ambient conditions is thought to be of minor importance.

3. Experimental Section

Riboflavin (molar mass MRF = 376.36 g·mol−1), lumiflavin (MLF = 256.3 g·mol−1), and starch (from potatoes, treated with glycerol at 190 °C according to Zulkowsky [69], repeat unit: C6O5H10, molar mass of repeat unit 162 g·mol−1, mass density ρST ≈ 1.55 g·cm−3) were purchased from Sigma-Aldrich and used as delivered. The solvent water was de-ionized in a Millipore water purifier and used in this form. The starch films were prepared from flavin-water and starch-water solutions on fused silica plates (25 mm diameter, 3 mm thickness). The thickness of the starch films was approximately 36 μm. The flavin concentration in the starch films was roughly 8 × 10−3 mol·dm−3. Details of sample preparation are reported in [27]. All measurements were carried out at room temperature (20 °C–23 °C) under ambient conditions and the samples were stored in the dark at room temperature under ambient conditions. Except stated different, the ambient relative humidity was low in the range between 20% and 50%. For the photo-reduction of flavin doped starch films the samples were excited at 455 nm with a LED light source (LEDC1 from Thorlabs). The excitation light intensity was varied with optical neutral density filters (from Schott). The excitation intensity was measured with a power meter (Model PD 300-UV-SH photodiode detector head with NOVA power monitor from Ophir). The absorption spectra were measured with a spectrophotometer (Cary 50 from Varian). The fluorescence spectra, delayed luminescence spectra, and delayed luminescence lifetimes were measured with a fluorimeter (Cary Eclipse from Varian). Experimental details are found in [27]. Fluorescence lifetimes of the samples were measured using a mode-locked titanium-sapphire laser oscillator amplifier system (Hurricane from Spectra-Physics) for sample excitation (second harmonic pulses of 3 ps duration, wavelength 400 nm, and energy ≈ 100 μJ). For fluorescence detection in most cases a micro-channel-plate photomultiplier (type R1564U-01 from Hamamatsu) was used in connection with a fast digital oscilloscope (LeCroy 9362) giving a time resolution of tres ≈ 500 ps. The fluorescence emission in front-face collection arrangement was directed to the detector via a broadband interference filter (transmission range 500 nm–600 nm) and a magic angle polarizer (excitation light was vertically polarized, the polarizer in the detection path was oriented at an angle of 54.7° to the vertical). For higher fluorescence signal time resolution (tres ≈ 10 ps) a streak camera (type C1587 temporal disperser with M1952 high-speed streak unit from Hamamatsu) was used [70].

4. Conclusions

Photo-excitation of the flavins riboflavin and lumiflavin in solid starch films caused repeatable reversible reduction (photo-induced conversion of oxidized flavin to fully reduced flavin via semi-reduced flavin and partial bi-exponential re-oxidation in the dark). The flavin doped starch films may be considered as artificial flavin based blue-light photoreceptors since they exhibit a similar flavin reduction—re-oxidation photocycle dynamics as the natural biological blue-light photoreceptors (LOV domains, BLUF proteins, cryptochromes). The role of the amino acid residues Cys, Tyr and Trp in the proteins of natural flavin-based blue-light photoreceptors is taken over in the artificial flavin doped starch films by the reducing action of the glucose repeat units of starch on photo-excited flavins and by the oxidizing action of di-aldehyde groups in the formed oxystarch on ground-state flavin in the reduced form. A quantitative analysis of the photo-reduction dynamics of riboflavin and lumiflavin in starch was carried out determining the excitation energy density dependent quantum efficiency of flavin-starch photo-reduction center formation, φ, and the excitation energy density dependent quantum yield of flavin hydroquinone formation, φ. Similar photo-reduction and re-oxidation behavior is expected for FMN and FAD in starch.
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