Publications by authors named "Patrik Callis"

Article Synopsis
  • Genetically encoded red and far-red fluorescent proteins (RFPs) are valuable for deep tissue imaging but struggle with low quantum yields, limiting their effectiveness.
  • The study explores two mechanisms for nonradiative relaxation that affect RFP efficiency: the energy gap law and twisted intramolecular charge transfer influenced by local electric fields.
  • A novel spectroscopic method was developed to measure these local electric fields, revealing that in several RFPs, stronger fields correlate with increased nonradiative relaxation rates, which could inform the design of better fluorescent proteins.
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Time-resolved fluorescence emission and resonance-enhanced second harmonic generation (SHG) spectra were collected from 4-dimethylaminobenzonitrile (DMABN) adsorbed to the aqueous-silica interface in order to identify how strongly associating solvent-substrate interactions change DMABN's photoisomerization properties. In bulk polar solution, DMABN forms an excited twisted intramolecular charge-transfer (TICT) state that emits with a distinctive, solvatochromic fluorescent signature. At the silica-aqueous interface, the TICT fluorescence disappears, similar to DMABN's behavior in nonpolar environments.

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Fluorescent DNA base analogs and intrinsic fluorophores are gaining importance for multiphoton microscopy and imaging, however, their quantitative nonlinear excitation properties have been poorly documented. Here we present the two-photon absorption (2PA) spectra of 2-aminopurine (2AP), 7-methyl guanosine (7MG), isoxanthopterin (IXP), 6-methyl isoxanthopterin (6MI), as well as L-tryptophan (L-trp) and 3-methylindole (3MI) in aqueous solution and some organic solvents measured in the wavelength range 550 - 810 nm using femtosecond two-photon excited fluorescence (2PEF) and nonlinear transmission (NLT) methods. The peak 2PA cross section values range from 0.

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We use TD-DFT to calculate the one-photon absorption (1PA) and two-photon absorption (2PA) properties of C153 and Prodan in toluene and DMSO, and benchmark different methods relative to accurate experimental data available from the literature on these particular systems. As the first step, we modify the range-separated TD-DFT to provide the best prediction for the peak 1PA wavelength, and then apply the optimized functionals to achieve quantitative predictions of the corresponding two-photon absorption cross section, σ, with an accuracy ∼10-20% in C153 and ∼20-30% in Prodan. To elucidate the origin of residual discrepancies between the theory and experimental observations, we invoked the two essential states model for σ, which allows us to verify not only the transition wavelength and the σ value, but also to quantitatively benchmark the calculation of key molecular parameters such as the transition dipole moment and the change of the permanent dipole moment.

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Time dependent fluorescence Stokes (emission wavelength) shifts (TDFSS) from tryptophan (Trp) following sub-picosecond excitation are increasingly used to investigate protein dynamics, most recently enabling active research interest into water dynamics near the surface of proteins. Unlike many fluorescence probes, both the efficiency and the wavelength of Trp fluorescence in proteins are highly sensitive to microenvironment, and Stokes shifts can be dominated by the well-known heterogeneous nature of protein structure, leading to what we call pseudo-TDFSS: shifts that arise from differential decay rates of subpopulations. Here we emphasize a novel, general method that obviates pseudo-TDFSS by replacing Trp by 5-fluorotryptophan (5Ftrp), a fluorescent analogue with higher ionization potential and greatly suppressed electron-transfer quenching.

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The protein-water interface is a critical determinant of protein structure and function, yet the precise nature of dynamics in this complex system remains elusive. Tryptophan fluorescence has become the probe of choice for such dynamics on the picosecond time scale (especially via fluorescence "upconversion"). In the absence of ultrafast ("quasi-static") quenching from nearby groups, the TDFSS (time-dependent fluorescence Stokes shift) for exposed Trp directly reports on dipolar relaxation near the interface (both water and polypeptide).

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Principles behind quenching of tryptophan (Trp) fluorescence are updated and extended in light of recent 100-ns and 1-μs molecular dynamics (MD) trajectories augmented with quantum mechanical (QM) calculations that consider electrostatic contributions to wavelength shifts and quenching. Four studies are summarized, including (1) new insight into the single exponential decay of NATA, (2) a study revealing how unsuspected rotamer transitions affect quenching of Trp when used as a probe of protein folding, (3) advances in understanding the origin of nonexponential decay from 100-ns simulations on 19 Trps in 16 proteins, and (4) the correlation of wavelength with lifetime for decay-associated spectra (DAS). Each study strongly reinforces the concept that-for Trp-electron transfer-based quenching is controlled much more by environment electrostatic factors affecting the charge transfer (CT) state energy than by distance dependence of electronic coupling.

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The steady state fluorescence spectral maximum (λmax) for tryptophan 140 of Staphylococcal nuclease remains virtually unchanged when nearby charged groups are removed by mutation, even though large electrostatic effects on λmax might be expected. To help understand the underlying mechanism of this curious result, we have modeled λmax with three sets of 50-ns molecular dynamics simulations in explicit water, equilibrated with excited state and with ground state charges. Semiempirical quantum mechanics and independent electrostatic analysis for the wild-type protein and four charge-altering mutants were performed on the chromophore using the coordinates from the simulations.

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Rapid photobleaching of fluorescent proteins can limit their use in imaging applications. The underlying kinetics is multi-exponential and strongly depends on the local chromophore environment. The first, reversible, step may be attributed to a rotation around one of the two exocyclic C-C bonds bridging phenol and imidazolinone groups in the chromophore.

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Protein folding kinetics is commonly monitored by changes in tryptophan (Trp) fluorescence intensity. Considerable recent discussion has centered on whether the fluorescence of the single Trp in the much-studied, fast-folding villin headpiece C-terminal domain (HP35) accurately reflects folding kinetics, given the general view that quenching is by a histidine cation (His(+)) one turn away in an α-helix (helix III) that forms early in the folding process, according to published MD simulations. To help answer this question, we ran 1.

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Tryptophan (Trp) fluorescence is potentially a powerful probe for studying the conformational ensembles of proteins in solution, as it is highly sensitive to the local electrostatic environment of the indole side chain. However, interpretation of the wavelength-dependent complex fluorescence decays of proteins has been stymied by controversy about two plausible origins of the typical multiple fluorescence lifetimes: multiple ground-state populations or excited-state relaxation. The latter naturally predicts the commonly observed wavelength-lifetime correlation between decay components, which associates short lifetimes with blue-shifted emission spectra and long lifetimes with red-shifted spectra.

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Use of fluorescence in biology and biochemistry for imaging and characterizing equilibrium and dynamic processes is growing exponentially. Much progress has been made in the last few years on the microscopic understanding of the underlying principles of what controls the wavelength and quenching of fluorescence in biopolymers, both of which are central to the utility of fluorescent probes. This chapter is concerned with the quantitative microscopic understanding and prediction of the fluorescence wavelength and/or intensity of a fluorescent probe molecule attached to a biopolymer as revealed by hybrid quantum and classical mechanical computation procedures.

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The eye lens Crystallin proteins are subject to UV irradiation throughout life, and the photochemistry of damage proceeds through the excited state; thus, their tryptophan (Trp) fluorescence lifetimes are physiologically important properties. The time-resolved fluorescence spectra of single Trps in human gammaD- and gammaS-Crystallins have been measured with both an upconversion spectrophotofluorometer on the 300 fs to 100 ps time scale, and a time correlated single photon counting apparatus on the 100 ps to 10 ns time scale, respectively. Three Trps in each wild type protein were replaced by phenylalanine, leading to single-Trp mutants: W68-only and W156-only of HgammaD- and W72-only and W162-only of HgammaS-Crystallin.

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Proteins exposed to UV radiation are subject to irreversible photodamage through covalent modification of tryptophans (Trps) and other UV-absorbing amino acids. Crystallins, the major protein components of the vertebrate eye lens that maintain lens transparency, are exposed to ambient UV radiation throughout life. The duplicated beta-sheet Greek key domains of beta- and gamma-crystallins in humans and all other vertebrates each have two conserved buried Trps.

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We report quantum mechanical-molecular mechanical (QM-MM) predictions of fluorescence quantum yields for 20 tryptophans in 17 proteins, whose yields span the range from 0.01 to 0.3, using ab initio computed coupling matrix elements for photoinduced electron transfer from the 1La excited indole ring to a local backbone amide.

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Quenching of the fluorescence of buried tryptophans (Trps) is an important reporter of protein conformation. Human gammaD-crystallin (HgammaD-Crys) is a very stable eye lens protein that must remain soluble and folded throughout the human lifetime. Aggregation of non-native or covalently damaged HgammaD-Crys is associated with the prevalent eye disease mature-onset cataract.

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The wavelength of maximum emission of tryptophan depends on the local electrostatic environment of the indole chromophore. The time-resolved emission spectra of seven rigid cyclic hexapeptides containing a single tryptophan residue were measured. The emission maxima of the three decay-associated spectra for the seven peptides ranged from 341 to 359 nm, suggesting that different tryptophan rotamers have different emission maxima even in the case of solvent-exposed tryptophans.

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The complete time-resolved fluorescence of tryptophan in the proteins monellin and IIA(Glc) has been investigated, using both an upconversion spectrophotofluorometer with 150 fs time resolution and a time-correlated single photon counting apparatus on the 100 ps to 20 ns time scale. In monellin, the fluorescence decay displays multiexponential character with decay times of 1.2 and 16 ps, and 0.

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This work reports an explanation for the unusual monoexponential fluorescence decay of 5-fluorotryptophan (5FTrp) in single-Trp mutant proteins [Broos, J.; Maddalena, F.; Hesp, B.

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The formation of all major intermediates in the reaction catalyzed by the citrate synthase from Thermoplasma acidophilum is accompanied by changes in tryptophan fluorescence. The largest change is the strong quenching observed on formation of the binary complex with substrate, oxaloacetate (OAA). The four tryptophan residues present in the enzyme have been changed to nonfluorescent ones in various combinations without major perturbations in protein stability, enzyme mechanism, or other physical properties.

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Rhodopsin is the best-understood member of the large G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) superfamily. The G-protein amplification cascade is triggered by poorly understood light-induced conformational changes in rhodopsin that are homologous to changes caused by agonists in other GPCRs. We have applied the "antibody imprint" method to light-activated rhodopsin in native membranes by using nine monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) against aqueous faces of rhodopsin.

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