A profound understanding of protein structure and mechanism requires dedicated experimental and theoretical tools to elucidate electrostatic and hydrogen bonding interactions in proteins. In this work, we employed an approach to disentangle noncovalent and hydrogen-bonding electric field changes during the reaction cascade of a multidomain protein, i.e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe recently discovered Neorhodopsin (NeoR) exhibits absorption and emission maxima in the near-infrared spectral region, which together with the high fluorescence quantum yield makes it an attractive retinal protein for optogenetic applications. The unique optical properties can be rationalized by a theoretical model that predicts a high charge transfer character in the electronic ground state (S) which is otherwise typical of the excited state S in canonical retinal proteins. The present study sets out to assess the electronic structure of the NeoR chromophore by resonance Raman (RR) spectroscopy since frequencies and relative intensities of RR bands are controlled by the ground and excited state's properties.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDissecting the intricate networks of covalent and non-covalent interactions that stabilize complex protein structures is notoriously difficult and requires subtle atomic-level exchanges to precisely affect local chemical functionality. The function of the Orange Carotenoid Protein (OCP), a light-driven photoswitch involved in cyanobacterial photoprotection, depends strongly on two H-bonds between the 4-ketolated xanthophyll cofactor and two highly conserved residues in the C-terminal domain (Trp288 and Tyr201). By orthogonal translation, we replaced Trp288 in OCP with 3-benzothienyl--alanine (BTA), thereby exchanging the imino nitrogen for a sulphur atom.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhytochromes, found in plants, fungi, and bacteria, exploit light as a source of information to control physiological processes photoswitching between two states of different physiological activity, a red-absorbing Pr and a far-red-absorbing Pfr state. Depending on the relative stability in the dark, bacterial phytochromes are divided into prototypical and bathy phytochromes, where the stable state is Pr and Pfr, respectively. In this work we studied representatives of these groups (prototypical Agp1 and bathy Agp2 from ) together with the bathy-like phytochrome BphP from by resonance Raman and IR difference spectroscopy.
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