The photophysical properties of synthetic compounds derived from the imidazolidinone chromophore of the green fluorescent protein were determined. Various electron-withdrawing or electron-donating substituents were introduced to mimic the effect of the chromophore surroundings in the protein. The absorption and emission spectra as well as the fluorescence quantum yields in dioxane and glycerol were shown to be highly dependent on the electronic properties of the substituents. We propose a kinetic scheme that takes into account the temperature-dependent twisting of the excited molecule. If the activation energy is low, the molecule most often undergoes an excited-state intramolecular twisting that leads it to the ground state through an avoided crossing between the S(1) and S(0) energy surfaces. For a high activation energy, the torsional motion within the compounds is limited and the ground-state recovery will occur preferentially by fluorescence emission. The excellent correlation between the fluorescence quantum yields and the calculated activation energies to torsion points to the above-mentioned avoided crossing as the main nonradiative deactivation channel in these compounds. Finally, our results are discussed with regard to the chromophore in green fluorescent protein and some of its mutants.
Calcium (Ca2+) is a ubiquitous second messenger which promotes cell responses through transient changes in intracellular concentrations. The prominent role of Ca2+ in cell physiology is mediated by a whole set of proteins constituting a Ca2+-signalling toolkit involved in Ca2+-signal generation, deciphering and arrest. The different Ca2+-signalosomes deliver Ca2+-signals with spatial and temporal dynamics to control the function of specific cell types. Among the intracellular proteins involved in Ca2+-signal deciphering, calmodulin (CaM) plays a pivotal role in controlling Ca2+-homeostasis and downstream Ca2+-based signalling events. Due to its ubiquitous expression in eukaryotic cells and the variety of proteins it interacts with, CaM is central in Ca2+-signalling networks. For these reasons, it is expected that disrupting or modifying CaM interactions with its target proteins will affect Ca2+-homeostasis and cellular responses. The resulting calcium response will vary depending on which interactions between CaM and target proteins are altered by the molecules and on the specific Ca2+-toolkit expressed in a given cell, even in the resting state. In the present paper, the effect of six classical CaM interactors (W5, W7, W12, W13, bifonazole and calmidazolium) was studied on Ca2+-signalling in tumor initiating cells isolated from human glioblastoma (TG1) and tobacco cells (BY-2) using the fluorescent Ca2+-sensitive Indo-1 dye and aequorin, respectively. Various Ca2+-fingerprints were obtained depending both on the CaM interactor used and the cell type investigated. These data demonstrate that interaction between the antagonists and CaM results in a differential inhibition of CaM-dependent proteins involved in Ca2+-signal regulation. In addition, the distinct Ca2+-fingerprints in tobacco and human tumor initiating glioblastoma cells induced by a given CaM interactor highlight the specificity of the Ca2+-signalosome in eukaryotic cells.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.