| Literature DB >> 25923520 |
Craig Don Paul1, Daouda A K Traore2, Seth Olsen3, Rodney J Devenish2, Devin W Close4, Toby D M Bell5, Andrew Bradbury4, Matthew C J Wilce2, Mark Prescott2.
Abstract
Phanta is a reversibly photoswitching chromoprotein (ΦF, 0.003), useful for pcFRET, that was isolated from a mutagenesis screen of the bright green fluorescent eCGP123 (ΦF, 0.8). We have investigated the contribution of substitutions at positions His193, Thr69 and Gln62, individually and in combination, to the optical properties of Phanta. Single amino acid substitutions at position 193 resulted in proteins with very low ΦF, indicating the importance of this position in controlling the fluorescence efficiency of the variant proteins. The substitution Thr69Val in Phanta was important for supressing the formation of a protonated chromophore species observed in some His193 substituted variants, whereas the substitution Gln62Met did not significantly contribute to the useful optical properties of Phanta. X-ray crystal structures for Phanta (2.3 Å), eCGP123T69V (2.0 Å) and eCGP123H193Q (2.2 Å) in their non-photoswitched state were determined, revealing the presence of a cis-coplanar chromophore. We conclude that changes in the hydrogen-bonding network supporting the cis-chromophore, and its contacts with the surrounding protein matrix, are responsible for the low fluorescence emission of eCGP123 variants containing a His193 substitution.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25923520 PMCID: PMC4414407 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0123338
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Optical spectra of Phanta and selected variants.
(A) Spectra determined at pH 8.0 are shown for Phanta and variants of eCGP123 containing amino acid substitutions that contribute to Phanta. Absorbance (solid line), fluorescence excitation (dashed line) and fluorescence emission (dotted line) are shown. (B) The absorbance spectra are shown for selected variants at pH 8.0 (solid line), pH 6.0 (dashed line) and pH 3.0 (dotted line). (C) Absorbance spectra determined at pH 8.0 are shown for variants of eCGP123 singly substituted at position 193 or doubly substituted at positions 193 and 69.
Some optical properties of Phanta, eCGP123 and selected variants.
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|
| ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Photoswitching light | |||||||||||
| Protein |
| λmax ex (nm) | λmax em (nm) |
| ε @ λmax (M-1.cm-1) |
| Cyan (ON→OFF) | Violet (OFF→ON) | Cyan (ON→OFF) | Violet (OFF→ON) | Photoswitching contrast ratio |
| eCGP123 | 495 | 495 | 505 | 0.8 | 60,000@ 495 | 6 | 72.5 | 74.7 | 1.0 | 1.0 | 0.275 |
| Phanta | 506 | 506 | 516 | 0.003 | 98,000@ 505 | 4 | 74.8 | 99.4 | 1.6 | 0.82 | 0.252 |
|
| 503 | 505 | 518 | 0.85 | 95,000 | 5.0 | 95 | 77 | 1.7 | 0.6 | 0.05 |
| eCGP123H193Q | 506 (387) | 505 (387/433) | 513 | 0.004 | 26,500@ 506 | 6 | 51.8 | 66.1 | 0.9 | 1.2 | 0.482 |
| eCGP123T69V | 504 | 506 | 516 | 0.32 | 73,000@ 504 | 6 | 91.9 | 92.5 | 9.5 | 1.5 | 0.081 |
| eCGP123Q62M | 493 | 493 | 506 | 0.72 | 66,000@ 493 | - | - | - | - | - | - |
| eCGP123T69V/H193Q | 505 | 506 | 518 | 0.008 | 78,500@ 505 | 4 | 74.0 | 99.9 | 1.7 | 1.1 | 0.26 |
| eCGP123H193T | 505 | 505 | 515 | 0.006 | 62,000@ 505 | INS | 61.4 | 96.7 | 2.8 | 1.9 | 0.386 |
| eCGP123H193N | 504/391 | 506/376 | 513/410 | 0.008 | 72,000@ 504 | 4 | 67.1 | 88.0 | 1.93 | 1.8 | 0.329 |
| eCGP123H193V | 510 (390) | 510/ (340/420) | 520/ (423/525) | 0.028 | 60,000@ 510 | - | 31.3 | 89.1 | 8.25 | 2.4 | 0.687 |
| eCGP123H193L | 505 (380) | 505/ (340) | 516 (414) | 0.04 | 15,000@ 505 | - | 19.1 | 78.6 | 2.0 | 0.8 | 0.809 |
| eCGP123H193E | 385 | 378 (395) | 415/512 (512) | 0.003 | 21,000@ 385 | - | - | NP | - | - | - |
| eCGP123H193D | 394 | 397/495 | 428/502 | 0.001 | 18,500@ 394 | - | - | NP | - | - | - |
| eCGP123H193M | 385/510 | 380/ (380/507) | 470 (515) | 0.017 | 3,000@ 385 | - | - | - | - | - | - |
| eCGP123H193F | 390 | 377 | 475 | 0.02 | 1,500@ 390 | - | - | - | - | - | - |
| eCGP123T69V/H193V | 504 | 506 | 516 | 0.008 | 51,000@ 504 | 4.5 | 73.1 | 98.2 | 2.5 | 1.9 | 0.269 |
1 Minor absorbing species are indicated in parentheses.
2 ΦF was determined for proteins in the ON state and not exposed to photoswitching light.
3 pKa’s were determined by titrating absorption of the anionic species at λmax abs.
4 Photoswitching depth is defined as the overall % change in the amount of anionic chromophore species (measured at λabs max) on exposure first to cyan (λpeak, 505) and then violet (λpeak, 405) photoswitching light, compared to the starting condition of protein not exposed to photoswitching light and stored in the dark for 24 h.
5 Photoswitching rates are defined as changes in the amount of anionic chromophore species (measured at λabs max) and expressed relative for to rate determined for eCGP123. In all cases R2 values >98% were obtained.
6 Abs/Em/Ex data reproduced from Ando et al. 2004.
7 Defined as the ratio between amount of anionic state species in the OFF state relative to the ON state.
INS—Proteins showed evidence of precipitation between pH 4–6
NP—Protein did not photoswitch when illuminated with violet light.
Phanta, eCGP123T69V and eCGP123H193Q data collection and refinement statistics.
| Protein | Phanta | eCGP123T69V | eCGP123H193Q |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| Space group | P 1 21 1 | P 1 21 1 | P 1 21 1 |
| Unit cell a, b, c (Å) | 69.8, 79.4, 71.0, | 73.0, 81.3, 74.0 | 72.6, 83.4, 74.7 |
| Unit cell α, β, γ (°) | 90.0, 102.4, 90.0 | 90.0, 107.6, 90.0 | 90.0, 102.2, 90.0 |
| Resolution (Å) | 34.63–2.30 (2.4–2.3) | 50.0–2.0 (2.05–2.0) | 50.0–2.2 (2.26–2.2) |
| Number of unique reflections | 33187 (3190) | 55029 (4100) | 43884 (3246) |
| Multiplicity | 3.8 (3.8) | 3.1 (3.0) | 5.4 (5.18) |
| Completeness (%) | 98.5 (94.8) | 98.6 (99.4) | 99.1 (99.95) |
| I/σ | 23.2 (2.6) | 12.16 (1.91) | 12.9 (3.64) |
| Rsym (%) | 4.7 (54.6) | 6.8 (64.8) | 9.1 (49.6) |
|
| |||
|
| 22.99 | 24.37 | 21.04 |
|
| 27.88 | 30.77 | 28.05 |
|
| |||
| Bond lengths | 0.018 | 0.016 | 0.008 |
| Bond angles | 2.471 | 1.710 | 1.05 |
| Ramachandran plot | |||
| Most favoured (%) | 95.5 | 91.3 | 97.4 |
| Additional allowed regions (%) | 4.5 | 8.6 | 2.6 |
| Outliers (%) | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 |
|
| |||
| Average chromophore for OH | 51.16 | 27.91 | 50.16 |
| Average side chain | 67.71 | 38.64 | 60.81 |
a Values in parentheses refer to the highest resolution shell.
b Rfree was calculated with 5% of the diffraction data selected randomly and excluded from refinement.
Fig 2Phanta structure.
(A) A schematic ribbon representation of an isolated protomer of Phanta (grey) showing two views (one rotated through 90°) of the 11-stranded β-can motif typical of GFP-like proteins and the central α-helix with the chromophore (orange) represented in stick format. (B) Orthogonal views of the final 2Fo-Fc electron density superposed onto the structure for each of the four protomers of Phanta, and protomer A of eCGP123T69V and eCGP123H193Q.
Fig 3The chromophore environment of Phanta, eCGP123T69V, eCGP123H193Q and eCGP123.
Stereoviews are shown comparing the chromophore environments and hydrogen bond networks for (A) Phanta; (B) eCGP123T69V; (C) eCGP123H193Q and (D) eCGP123. Numbered waters are shown as red spheres.
Fig 4Alterations to the network of interactions that contribute to a scaffold around the chromophore of Phanta, eCGP123T69V and eCGP123H193Q and eCGP123.
The network of interactions involving the chromophore and selected side chains differ between the non-fluorescent proteins (A) Phanta and (C) eCGP123H193Q, and the highly fluorescent proteins (B) eCGP123T69V and (D) eCGP123. Numbered waters are shown as red spheres.
Fluorescence lifetime measurements of Phanta, eCGP123H193Q and eCGP123T69V and eCGP123.
| Protein Variant | Fluorescence lifetime (ps) |
|---|---|
| Phanta | 22 (99.1%) |
| 170 (0.8%) | |
| 1,670 (0.1%) | |
| eCGP123H193Q | 13 (90%) |
| 110 (5.7%) | |
| 1,002 (1.5%) | |
| 2,940 (2.5%) | |
| eCGP123T69V | 1,330 (30.1%) |
| 2,620 (69.9%) | |
| eCGP123 | 4,200 (100%) |
* χ2 values of 1.16, 1.05, 1.00 and 1.23 were obtained for fitting of data for Phanta, eCGP123H193Q, eCGP123T69V and eCGP123, respectively. Proportion of each lifetime is indicated in parentheses. Excitation was provided using a 10 nm band pass filter centred on 488 nm.
Fig 5Decay via twisted internal charge-transfer states of the chromophore with mechanism for coupling to proton transfer.
A schematic depiction of the hypothetical photoswitching mechanism. The mechanism is a variation of the photoswtiching mechanism for negative-mode reversibly photo switchable fluorescent proteins suggested by Olsen Lamothe & Martínez [62]. The key point is that there are two twisted intramolecular charge-transfer channels available to the anionic chromophore, whose ground state is a quantum superposition of states with distinct bond alternation. The excited state is the anti-phase combination of the same two bonding states. The two channels correspond to the two bonds on the bridge. The neutral chromophore only has one TICT channel, corresponding to the I bond, reflecting the definite bond alternation of its ground state. The neutral excited state has opposing bond alternation and charge localisation, relative to its ground state. If the anionic chromophore accesses the imidazolinone TICT channel, then its excited state becomes photo basic relative to the optically excited state, increasing the probability that it will accept a proton. Acceptance of a proton by the anion TICT state in the imidazolinone channel deactivates the excited state, yielding a neutral chromophore population in its ground state. If the anion accesses the phenoxy TICT channel in its excited state, electron density is pushed off the phenoxy, making it more photo acidic than the optically prepared excited state, and preventing proton uptake. Deactivation of the anionic excited state can still occur through the conical intersections that exist in the phenoxy TICT channel, yielding an anionic ground state. If the combined rate of access of the phenoxy and imidazolinoxy channels is much larger than the rate of fluorescence, then the "ON" state is non-fluorescent, as observed in Phanta. The kinetics of photoswitching will depend on the precise shape of the electronic state surfaces and on the friction experienced by the chromophore during its excited-state dynamics. The coupling between TICT state channels and protonation state can be understood using an adaptation of a two-state electron transfer model [74].