Radical-Triggered Reaction Mechanism of the Green-to-Red Photoconversion of EosFP

J Phys Chem B. 2020 Sep 10;124(36):7765-7778. doi: 10.1021/acs.jpcb.0c04587. Epub 2020 Sep 1.

Abstract

Reaction intermediates in the green-to-red photoconversion of the photochromic fluorescent protein EosFP have been observed using high-intensity continuous blue illumination. An intermediate was identified through light-induced accumulation that continues to convert the green form in subsequent darkness, putatively containing a tyrosyl radical, albeit with anomalously shifted features in both the electronic and FTIR spectra. Lowering the pH to 5.5 significantly delays the decay of this tyrosyl intermediate, which is accompanied by Stark-shifted features in the electronic spectra of reactants and products. Vibrational mode assignments for the high-frequency and fingerprint FTIR spectral regions of the reaction intermediates support a proposed sequence of events where the newly formed Cα═Cβ ethylenic bond precedes modifications on the His-62 imidazole ring and confirms a C═O(NH2) product group on Phe-61. We propose a reaction mechanism that involves tyrosyl generation via singlet excited-state-mediated oxidation which subsequently triggers the covalent reactions by oxidation of the green chromophore.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't