In this study photophysical characteristics of LOV-based fluorescent proteins which are essential for analytic methods as well as imaging approaches have been comparatively analyzed in detail.
Light, oxygen, voltage (LOV) based fluorescent proteins (FPs) represent a promising alternative to fluorescent reporters of the green fluorescent protein family. For certain applications like multicolor imaging or the design of FRET-based biosensors, the generation of spectrally shifted LOV-based FPs would be required. In a recent theoretical study ( Khrenova J. Phys. Chem. B 2015 , 119 ( 16 ), pp 5176 - 5183 ), the photophysical properties of a variant of the LOV-based fluorescent protein iLOV were predicted using quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics (QM/MM) approaches. The variant contained a lysine residue at the position of a highly conserved glutamine residue (Q489K), which directly interacts with the O4 and N5 atom of the flavin mononucleotide (FMN) chromophore. On the basis of QM/MM calculations, iLOV-Q489K was suggested to possess substantially red-shifted absorption and fluorescence-emission maxima with respect to parental iLOV. Here, we describe the experimental characterization of this variant, which, surprisingly contrary to the theoretical prediction, shows blue-shifted absorption and fluorescence-emission maxima. Using molecular dynamics (MD) simulations and QM/MM calculations, the molecular basis for the contradictory theoretical and experimental results is presented. Essentially, our computational analysis suggests that, in the Q489K variant, two possible side-chain conformers exist: (i) a least populated conformer K489in forming a hydrogen bond with the O4 atom of FMN chromophore and (ii) a most populated conformer K489out with the side-chain amino group flipped away from the FMN chromophore forming a new hydrogen bond with the backbone oxygen of G487. QM/MM calculated spectra of the K489out conformer are blue-shifted compared to the calculated spectra of parental iLOV, which is in accordance with experimental data. This suggests that the change in the conformation of K489 from K498in to K489out accounts for the change in the direction of the spectral shift from red to blue, thus reconciling theory and experiment.
Flavin-binding fluorescent proteins (FbFPs) are a class of fluorescent reporters that have been increasingly used as reporters in the study of cellular structures and dynamics. Flavin's intrinsic high singlet oxygen ((1)O2) quantum yield (ΦΔ = 0.51) provides a basis for the development of new FbFP mutants capable of photosensitising (1)O2 for mechanistic and therapeutic applications, as recently exemplified by the FbFP miniSOG. In the present work we report an investigation on the (1)O2 photoproduction by Pp2FbFP L30M, a novel derivative of Pseudomonas putida Pp2FbFP. Direct detection of (1)O2 through its phosphorescence at 1275 nm yielded the value ΦΔ = 0.09 ± 0.01, which is the highest (1)O2 quantum yield reported to date for any FP and is approximately 3-fold higher than the ΦΔ for miniSOG. Unlike miniSOG, transient absorption measurements revealed the existence of two independent triplet states each with a different ability to sensitise (1)O2.
Flavin-binding fluorescent proteins (FPs) are genetically encoded in vivo reporters, which are derived from microbial and plant LOV photoreceptors. In this study, we comparatively analyzed ROS formation and light-driven antimicrobial efficacy of eleven LOV-based FPs. In particular, we determined singlet oxygen (1O2) quantum yields and superoxide photosensitization activities via spectroscopic assays and performed cell toxicity experiments in E. coli. Besides miniSOG and SOPP, which have been engineered to generate 1O2, all of the other tested flavoproteins were able to produce singlet oxygen and/or hydrogen peroxide but exhibited remarkable differences in ROS selectivity and yield. Accordingly, most LOV-FPs are potent photosensitizers, which can be used for light-controlled killing of bacteria. Furthermore, the two variants Pp2FbFP and DsFbFP M49I, exhibiting preferential photosensitization of singlet oxygen or singlet oxygen and superoxide, respectively, were shown to be new tools for studying specific ROS-induced cell signaling processes. The tested LOV-FPs thus further expand the toolbox of optogenetic sensitizers usable for a broad spectrum of microbiological and biomedical applications.
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