| Literature DB >> 30905045 |
Szilvia Krekic1, Dávid Nagy2, Stefka G Taneva3, László Fábián2, László Zimányi2, András Dér2.
Abstract
In this paper, the photocycle of the dried photoactive yellow protein film has been investigated in different humidity environments, in order to characterize its nonlinear optical properties for possible integrated optical applications. The light-induced spectral changes of the protein films were monitored by an optical multichannel analyser set-up, while the accompanying refractive index changes were measured with the optical waveguide lightmode spectroscopy method. To determine the number and kinetics of spectral intermediates in the photocycle, the absorption kinetic data were analysed by singular value decomposition and multiexponential fitting methods, whose results were used in a subsequent step of fitting a photocycle model to the data. The absorption signals of the films were found to be in strong correlation with the measured light-induced refractive index changes, whose size and kinetics imply that photoactive yellow protein may be a good alternative for utilization as an active nonlinear optical material in future integrated optical applications.Entities:
Keywords: Biophotonics; Integrated optics; Kinetic absorption spectroscopy; Optical waveguide lightmode spectroscopy; Photoactive yellow protein
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30905045 PMCID: PMC6647221 DOI: 10.1007/s00249-019-01353-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Biophys J ISSN: 0175-7571 Impact factor: 1.733
Fig. 1The two significant spectral eigenvectors aU1: blue, U2: red; and the two significant kinetic eigenvectors bV1: blue symbols, V2: red symbols from the SVD analysis. Lines in b show the result of the multiexponential fit to the kinetic eigenvectors
Fig. 2Consecutive exponential amplitude spectra (B-spectra) of the multiexponential fit: blue, first component corresponding to the first (fastest) time-dependent exponential (rate coefficient k1), red (k2), yellow (k3), purple (k4), green (k5)
Fig. 3The photocycle scheme. pR and pB intermediates are red- and blue-shifted, respectively, relative to the initial pG states. Trans and cis refer to the isomerization state of the p-coumaric acid chromophore of PYP, and O and OH refer to the deprotonated and protonated states of the chromophore, respectively
Fig. 4The intermediate spectra obtained from the global spectrotemporal model fit (a) and the time-dependent relative concentrations of the intermediates (b). In b, thin lines show the kinetics of the consecutive individual intermediates and thick lines the total time evolution of the spectrally similar intermediates
Molecular rate coefficients obtained from the global spectrotemporal fit of the photocycle scheme (Fig. 3) to the present data (rehydrated) and to the 0.66 M NaCl, pH 8.2 data (Khoroshyy et al. 2013) (aqueous)
| Transition | Rate coefficient (s−1) | |
|---|---|---|
| Rehydrated | Aqueous | |
| pR1 to pR2 |
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| Reverse |
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| pR2 to pB1 |
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| Reverse |
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| pB1 to pB2 |
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| Reverse |
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| pB2 to pG1 | 16 | 2.9 |
| Reverse | 7.9 | 0.19 |
| pG1 to pG | 2.9 | 0.21 |
Fig. 5The measured OWLS data at 75% RH (a) and 85% RH (b). The data indicated are measured at the right side of the incoupling peak
Fig. 6Exponential fit on the data measured in 85% RH environment on a 500-µs (a), 50-ms (b) and 2-second (c) timescale