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Untersuchung der Konformation und Dynamik von RNA mit Hilfe fluoreszierender Farbstoffmoleküle
(2010)
Die vorliegende Arbeit beschäftigt sich mit der Untersuchung der konformationellen und elektronischen Eigenschaften sowie der Dynamik verschiedener RNA-Systeme. Zur Durchführung dieser Experimente wurde zusätzlich zu bereits vorhandenen statischen und zeitaufgelösten Absorptionsspektrometern im Rahmen dieser Arbeit eine Apparatur zur Messung von Fluoreszenzlebensdauern entwickelt, die durch die integrative Verwendung zweier verschiedener, etablierter Technologien (TCSPC und Aufkonvertierung) über einen weiten Zeitbereich von 9 Größenordnungen (100 fs - 0,1 ms) operiert. Mit diesem Aufbau konnten neben den RNA-Studien wichtige Beiträge zum Verständnis der Isomerisierung eines Retinalproteins, des Transportprozess des Membrantransportproteins TbSMR und der im Infraroten liegenden Fluoreszenz des Radikalkations von Astaxanthin gewonnen werden. Der Schwerpunkt der vorliegenden Arbeit liegt auf der Untersuchung verschiedener RNA-Systeme: So werden die optischen Eigenschaften einer 1-Ethinylpyren-modifzierten RNA-Adeninbase allein und in RNA-Strängen eingebunden untersucht. Statische Fluoreszenzmessungen zeigen einen ausgeprägten Ladungstransfercharakter des Chromophors und eine generell große Wechselwirkung zwischen Ethinylpyren und Adenin, die in einer substanziellen Änderung der optischen Eigenschaften des Pyrens resultiert. Die Untersuchung der schnellen Photodynamik von Pyrenadenin zeigt zudem eine Verringerung der Lebensdauer von Pyren um etwa 2 Größenordnungen. Pyrenadenin zeigt sowohl Fluoreszenz eines neutralen (100-200 ps), als auch eines energetisch tiefer liegenden Ladungstransferzustands (1-2 ns). Die Formationszeit des Ladungstransferzustandes fällt mit steigender Polarität des Lösemittels. Eingebunden in Modell-RNA-Stränge ist Fluoreszenzquantenausbeute des Chromophors ein deutlicher Indikator für seine Interkalation. Nur in der stabileren Umgebung von GC-Basenpaaren ist das Pyren in der Lage, sich dauerhaft innerhalb des Duplex aufzuhalten, während in einer flexibleren AU-Umgebung eine Position außerhalb des RNA-Duplex präferiert wird. Transiente Absorptionsmessungen zeigen, dass die Photophysik des in RNA eingebundenen Pyrenadenins nur kleine Variationen im Vergleich zur Photophysik des Labels allein aufweist. Die deutliche Abnahme der Quantenausbeute des interkalierten Chromophors geht hauptsächlich auf Kosten der langlebigeren Ladungstransferfluoreszenz, so dass interkaliertes Pyren insgesamt schneller in den Grundzustand zurückkehrt als nicht interkaliertes. Mit Hilfe eines doppelt modifizierten Duplex, bei dem sich jeweils ein Farbstoff an einem der beiden Stränge befindet, kann nachgewiesen werden, dass aufgrund von Exzimerwechselwirkungen eine Verschiebung des Fluoreszenzmaximums von 35 nm auftritt. Kurzzeitspektroskopische Messungen zeigen Signale, die als Superposition von Monomeren und Exzimeren interpretiert werden können, wobei die Lebensdauer des letzteren mit 18,5 ns die der Monomerkomponente um ein Vielfaches übertrifft. Ein weiterer Teil dieser Arbeit beschäftigt sich mit einer Studie zur Bindung des fluoreszenten Liganden Tetrazyklin an das Tetrazyklin bindende Aptamer. Hier wird auf Basis verschiedener Mutanten mit Hilfe des TCSPC eine Analyse der Stabilität der Bindetasche sowie mit der Stopped-Flow-Methode eine Beobachtung des Bindungsprozesses durchgeführt. Insgesamt folgt die Bindung des Tetrazyklins an das Aptamer einer zweistufigen Kinetik, deren zweiter Schritt irreversibel ist. Die Bindung läuft, verglichen mit anderen Aptameren, sehr schnell ab. Während die Mutationen von A13 und A50,die direkte Kontakte zum Substrat bilden, nur einen leichten Einfluss auf beide Bindungsschritte ausüben, führt eine Mutation der für die Präformation verantwortlichen Base A9 zu einer Verlangsamung des Bindungsprozesses um mehr als einen Faktor 20 durch eine immens gesteigerten Rückreaktionsrate des ersten Bindungsschritts. Hieraus lässt sich schließen, dass bei fehlender Präformation des Aptamers nur wenige Tetrazyklinmoleküle ein für vollständige Bindung geeignetes Aptamer vorfinden. Die Bindung an A13 und A50 geschieht bereits im ersten Schritt des Bindungsprozesses. Ferner konnte anhand von Lebensdauermessungen gezeigt werden, dass nach dem Wildtyp die Mutante A9G die stabilste Bindetasche aufwies. Das Fehlen eines direkten Kontaktes wirkt sich deutlich stärker aus. Insbesondere führt die Abwesenheit der Fixierung des Gegenions durch A50 zu der instabilsten Bindetasche. Wie in dieser Arbeit gezeigt wird, ist die zeitaufgelöste optische Spektroskopie insbesondere in Verbindung mit fluoreszierenden Molekülen ein ausgezeichnetes Mittel zur Beobachtung von Struktur und Dynamik von RNA. Die Empfindlichkeit von Fluoreszenz auf die Veränderung der Umgebung des Chromophors erlaubt es, Konformationsdynamik und elektronische Konfigurationen in Echtzeit zu beobachten.
To gain a better understanding of complex mechanisms in biological systems, simultaneous control over multiple processes is key. To this purpose selective photouncaging has been developed. Photo-uncaging is an experimental scheme in which a molecule of interest has been inactivated synthetically and is activated by light. Usually a bond is cleaved and a leaving group is set free. The molecule which inactivates the molecule of interest and sets the leaving group free is called (photo-)cage. In a selective photo-uncaging scheme a number of leaving groups can be released independently, usually by irradiation with light of different wavelengths. This approach is, however, seriously limited in its applicability due to the properties of the involved cages and irradiation schemes. A major drawback is the usually quite broad UV-Vis absorption of the cages. This makes a selective activation by light difficult and limits the maximal number of independent cages severely.
Therefore, the aim of this thesis is to introduce the Vibrationally Promoted Electronic Resonance (VIPER) 2D-IR pulse sequence in a alternative selective uncaging scheme.
The VIPER 2D-IR pulse sequence is a spectroscopic tool which allows to generate 2D-IR signals whose lifetime are independent of the vibrational relaxation lifetime. It has been first used to monitor chemical exchange. It consists of a narrowband infared pump pulse, a subsequent UV-Vis pump pulse and a broadband infrared probe pulse. The UV-Vis pump pulse is off-resonant with regard to the UV-Vis absorption band. Electronic excitation becomes only possible, if the infrared pump pulse modulates the UV-Vis transition of the IR-excited molecule. This modulation brings the UV-Vis transition in resonance with the UV-Vis pump pulse. Thereby, only the molecules which were pre-excited with the infrared pulse can be excited into the electronically excited state. A computational prediction of the modulation was carried out by Jan von Cosel in the Burghardt group.
The narrowband infrared pump pulse can be used to selectively excite a subensemble of molecules in a mixture into an electronically excited state even if the UV-Vis spectra of all molecules are virtually identical. For this the sub-ensemble needs to exhibit an identifiable infrared spectrum. Combined with the introduction of isotope labels, which lead to changes in the infrared absorption spectra, the larger selectivity in the infrared region can be exploited for an alternative selective uncaging approach. In VIPER uncaging the infrared pump pulse selects the species and the subsequent UV-Vis pulse provides the energy needed for electronic excitation upon which the photo cleavage can occur.
After an introduction of the principle idea of uncaging and VIPER spectroscopy, the concept of VIPER uncaging is introduced and its limits and requirements are discussed. Some examples for possible VIPER cages are reviewed.
A coumarin molecule (7-diethylamino coumarin) which can release an azide group was chosen as a first test molecule for VIPER uncaging. Its isotopomers were characterized to determine suitable spectroscopic markers for successful uncaging and to find fitting experimental conditions. The chosen coumarin cage has an UV-Vis absorption band at approximately 380 nm and a steep flank on the high wavelength side of the band. The quantum yield for the azide compound is between 10-20 % depending on the solvent’s water content. The release was found to be on a picosecond timescale which is among the fastest known photo reactions, but the photo reaction mechanism has proven to be not straightforward. For the VIPER experiment on the mixture two isotopomers were chosen with a 13C atom at different positions. In one species a ring mode of the coumarin is changed by the 13C atom. In the other isotopomer the carbonyl stretching mode is influenced. The change in the ring mode region allows to select one species or the other with the infrared pre-excitation. Because of experimental difficulties only isotopomers with the same leaving group could be used. The successful selective electronic excitation of the individual isotopomers in a mixture was monitored by probing the carbonyl region.
As a second VIPER cage, para-hydroxyphenacyl (pHP) was chosen. A thiocyanate group was selected as leaving group. pHP cages have their electronic transition in the UV, with a maximum absorption at 290 nm. The shape of the spectrum is suitable and the quantum yield is very high, with values in the literature of up to 90 %. Also the photo reaction is well studied and the expected byproducts are well characterized. The chosen isotopologues were characterized spectroscopically. The resulting data on the photo reaction were in agreement with the mechanism proposed in the literature. The mixture for the VIPER experiment consisted of two isotopologues, where for one species all the C atoms in the ring were labelled and for the other the C-atom in the thiocyanate leaving group was labelled. Here the release of the different leaving groups, labelled and unlabelled thiocyanate, could be monitored selectively. This shows that it is possible to selectively release a molecule in a mixture of caged molecules by applying the VIPER pulse sequence.
The samples were synthesized by Matiss Reinfelds from the Heckel group and the VIPER experiments were done together with Carsten Neumann and with support
of the Bredenbeck group.
The leaving groups were chosen because of their infrared absorption which allowed to directly monitor the successful cleavage by spectroscopy. This was needed for the proof-of-concept experiment and to allow direct optimization of the experimental parameters but is not necessarily a requirement for VIPER uncaging.
Concerning the selectivity of the VIPER uncaging, the approach is at the moment mainly limited by the infrared pulse energy. The selective VIPER excitation is competing with unselective excitation directly by just the UV-Vis pulse. A more intense infrared pump pulse would increase only the selective VIPER excitation and thereby improve the contrast to the unspecific background.
To address this issue, the first steps towards an alternative infrared light generation are undertaken. In this alternative approach the infrared light for preexcitation is directly generated by difference frequency generation of the laser output, i.e. the high energy 800 nm fundamental, and the output of a non-collinear optical parametric amplifier (NOPA). To achieve a narrowband pump pulse the pulses are chirped before mixing. In the scope of this thesis a NOPA has been installed and the mixing has been tested with available test crystal medium. While infrared wavelength region and power were not in the aspired range with this alternative crystal the feasibility of mixing between a NOPA output and the fundamental could be shown.
Other possibilities to increase the contrast to the unspecific background excitation by the UV-Vis pump pulse are discussed. For most applications of selective VIPER uncaging the detection by fs-laser spectroscopy will not be needed and could be replaced by other methods e.g. chromatography. This will allow the experimental parameters of the VIPER pulse sequence to be changed in a way which reduces unspecific excitation i.e. reducing the UV-Vis-pump energy and result in much better contrast.
In conclusion, the experimental data in this thesis shows the VIPER pulse sequence to be applicable to selective uncaging schemes and indicates measures to arrive at the specificity necessary for uncaging applications. This thesis was focused on uncaging photo reactions with isotopomers and isotopologues, but other types of photo reactions could in principle be controlled in the same way. It should be possible to address different isomers in mixtures or different ground states of proteins selectively. The discussed experiments are a significant step towards control over photo reactions in mixtures.
The small photoreceptor Photoactive Yellow Protein (PYP) enters a reversible photocycle after excitation with blue light. The intermediate states are formed on timescales ranging from femtoseconds to seconds including chromophore isomerization and protonation as well as large structural rearrangements. To obtain local dynamic information the vibrational label thiocyanate (SCN) can be inserted site-specifically at any desired position in the protein by cysteine mutation and cyanylation. The label's CN stretch vibration is highly sensitive to polarity, hydrogen bonding interactions and electric fields and is spectrally well separated from the overlapping protein absorptions. During the course of this thesis it was impressively demonstrated that the successful incorporation of the SCN label at selected positions in PYP provides a powerful tool to study structure changes and dynamics during the photocycle and enhance the local information that are obtained by infrared (IR) spectroscopic methods. Hence the SCN-labeled protein mutants were studied under equilibrium (steady-state) and non-equilibrium conditions.
Examination of the SCN absorption by FTIR spectroscopy showed the influence of various local environments on the label for different locations in the dark state. The response of the label under illumination with blue light reveals information about structural changes in the signaling state. Additional information for both states were obtained by the vibrational lifetime of the CN vibration measured via ultrafast IR-pump-IR-probe experiments. This observable is particularly sensitive for solvent exposure of the label. Time-resolved IR spectroscopy proved to be an excellent method to follow the protein dynamics throughout most part of the photocycle on a hundreds of femtoseconds to milliseconds timescale. By close inspection of protein and chromophore dynamics in wildtype-PYP over nine decades in time, new insights into the changes leading to the proposed photocycle intermediates were obtained. The investigation of the SCN label allowed to follow the different transient structure changes with high local resolution. Depending on its position within the protein the response of the label provided additional information on the photocycle transitions.
The insights that are obtained by the different observables in the steady-state and by the reaction of the SCN label to formation of the different intermediate states during the photocycle contribute to an improved understanding of local, light-induced structure changes in the photoreceptor PYP. This comprehensive study demonstrated the potential provided by the application of SCN as IR label for investigation of protein dynamics.
Proteine sind die Maschinen der Zellen. Um die Funktionalität von zahlreichen zellulären Prozessen zu gewährleisten, müssen Kommunikationssignale innerhalb von Proteinen weitergeleitet werden. Die Weiterleitung einer Störung an einem Ort im Protein zu einer entfernten Stelle, an welcher sie strukturelle und/oder dynamische Änderungen auslöst, wird Allosterie genannt. Zunächst wurde Allosterie hauptsächlich mit großräumigen Konformationsänderungen in Verbindung gebracht, aber später entwickelte sich ein dynamischerer Blickwinkel auf Allosterie in Abwesenheit dieser großräumigen Konformationsänderungen. Die Idee eines allosterischen Pfades bestehend aus konservierten und energetisch gekoppelten Aminosäuren, welche die Signalweiterleitung zwischen entfernten Stellen im Protein vermitteln, entstand. Diese allosterischen Pfade wurden durch zahlreiche theoretische Studien in Zusammenhang mit Pfaden effizienten anisotropen Energieflusses gebracht. Der Energiefluss entlang dieser Netzwerke verknüpft allosterische Signalübertragung mit Schwingungsenergietransfer (VET - vibrational energy transfer). Die Großzahl der Forschungsarbeiten über dynamische Allosterie basiert auf theoretischen Methoden, weil nur wenige geeignete experimentelle Verfahren existieren. Um diesen essentiellen biologischen Prozess der Informationsübertragung besser verstehen zu können, ist die Entwicklung neuer und leistungsstarker experimenteller Instrumente und Techniken daher dringend erforderlich. Die vorliegende Dissertation setzt sich dies zum Ziel.
VET in Proteinen ist aufgrund der Proteingeometrie inhärent anisotrop. Alle globulären Proteine besitzen Kanäle effizienten Energieflusses, von denen vermutet wird, dass sie wichtig für Proteinfunktionen, wie die schnelle Ableitung von überschüssiger Wärme, Ligandenbindung und allosterische Signalweiterleitung, sind. VET kann mit zeitaufgelöster Infrarot (IR) Spektroskopie untersucht werden, bei welcher ein Femtosekunden Anregepuls eines Lasers Schwingungsenergie in ein molekulares System an einer bestimmten Stelle injiziert und ein, nach einem veränderbarem Zeitintervall folgender, IR Abfragepuls die Ausbreitung dieser Schwingungsenergie detektiert. Ein protein-kompatibler und universell einsetzbarer Chromophor, der die Energie eines sichtbaren Photons in Schwingungsenergie konvertiert, wird als Heizelement benötigt um langreichweitige VET Pfade in Proteinen kartieren zu können. Der Azulen (Azu) Chromophor eignet sich dafür, weil er nach Photoanregung des ersten elektronischen Zustandes durch ultraschnelle interne Konversion fast die gesamte injizierte Energie innerhalb von einer Picosekunde in Schwingungsenergie umwandelt. Eingebettet in die nicht-kanonische Aminosäure (ncAA - non-canonical amino acid) ß-(1-Azulenyl)-L-Alanine (AzAla), kann der Azu Rest in Proteine eingebaut werden. Die Ankunft der injizierten Schwingungsenergie an einer bestimmten Stelle im Protein kann mithilfe eines IR Sensors detektiert werden. Die Kombination aus Azu als VET Heizelement und Azidohomoalanine (Aha) als VET Sensor mit transienter IR (TRIR) Spektroskopie wurde schon erfolgreich an kleinen Peptiden in der Dissertation von H. M. Müller-Werkmeister getestet, die der vorliegenden Dissertation in den Laboren der Bredenbeck Gruppe vorausging.
Die Schwingungsfrequenz chemischer Bindungen ist hochempfindlich auf selbst kleine Änderungen der Konformation und Dynamik in der unmittelbaren Umgebung und kann mit IR Spektroskopie gemessen werden, z. B. mit Fourier Transform IR (FTIR) Spektroskopie. IR Spektroskopie bietet eine außergewöhnlich gute Zeitauflösung, die es ermöglicht, dynamische Prozesse in Molekülen auf einer Zeitskala von wenigen Picosekunden zu beobachten, wie z. B. die ultraschnelle Weiterleitung von Schwingungsenergie. Mit zweidimensionaler (2D)-IR Spektroskopie können die Relaxation von schwingungsangeregten Zuständen und strukturelle Fluktuationen um die schwingende Bindung untersucht werden. Allerdings geht die herausragende Zeitauflösung mit limitierter spektraler Auflösung einher. In größeren Molekülen mit zahlreichen Bindungen überlagern sich die Schwingungsbanden und die Ortsauflösung geht verloren. Um diese Limitierung zu überwinden, können IR Marker benutzt werden, chemische Gruppen, die in einer spektral durchsichtigen Region des Protein/Wasser Spektrums (1800 bis 2500 cm-1) absorbieren. Als ncAA können sie kotranslational in Proteine an einer gewünschten Stelle eingebaut werden und so ortsspezifische Informationen aus dem Proteininneren liefern. Aufgrund ihrer geringen Größe, eines relativ großen Extinktionskoeffizientens (350-400 M-1cm-1) und einer hohen Empfindlichkeit auf Änderungen in der lokalen Umgebung sind organische Azide (N3) wie zum Beispiel Aha besonders geeignete IR Marker. Aha kann als Methionin Analogon ins Protein eingebaut werden.
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Detailed knowledge of reaction mechanisms is key to understanding chemical, biological, and biophysical processes. For many reasons, it is desirable to comprehend how a reaction proceeds and what influences the reaction rate and its products.
In biophysics, reaction mechanisms provide insight into enzyme and protein function, the reason why they are so efficient, and what determines their reaction rates. They also reveal the relationship between the function of a protein and its structure and dynamics.
In chemistry, reaction mechanisms are able to explain side products, solvent effects, and the stereochemistry of a product. They are also the basis for potentially optimizing reactions with respect to yield, enhancing the stereoselectivity, or for modifying reactions in order to obtain other related products.
A key step to investigate reaction mechanisms is the identification and characterization of intermediates, which may be reactive, short-lived, and therefore only weakly populated. Nowadays, the structures of those can in most cases only be hypothesized based on products, side products, and isolable intermediates, because intermediates with a life time of less than a few microseconds are not accessible with the commonly used techniques for structure determination such as X-ray crystallography and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy.
In this thesis, two-dimensional infrared (2D-IR) spectroscopy is shown to be a powerful complement to the existing techniques for structure determination in solution. 2D-IR spectroscopy uses a femtosecond laser setup to investigate interactions between vibrations - analogous to 2D-NMR, which investigates the interactions between spins. Its ultrafast time resolution makes 2D-IR spectroscopy particularly well suited for the two topics investigated in this thesis: Structure Determination of Reactive Intermediates and Conformational Dynamics of Proteins.
Structure Determination of Reactive Intermediates: The focus of this thesis is using polarization-dependent 2D-IR (P2D-IR) spectroscopy for structure determination of N-crotonyloxazolidinone (referred to as 1), a small organic compound with a chiral oxazolidinone, known as Evans auxiliary, and its reactive complexes with the Lewis acids SnCl4 and Mg(ClO4)2. Chiral oxazolidinones in combination with Lewis acids have frequently been used in stereoselective synthesis for over 30 years. Nevertheless, the detailed mechanisms are in many cases xvi ABSTRACT still mere hypotheses and have not yet been experimentally proven. By accurately measuring the angles between the transition dipole moments in the molecules using an optimized P2D-IR setup and comparing the results to DFT calculations, the conformation of 1 and the conformation and coordination of the main complexes with SnCl4 and Mg(ClO4)2 are unequivocally identified and analyzed in depth. Structural details, such as a slight twist in the solution structure of 1, are detected using P2D-IR spectroscopy; these cannot be inferred from NMR spectroscopy or DFT calculations. In addition to the main Lewis acid complexes, complexes in low concentration are detected and tentatively assigned to different conformations and complexation geometries. The knowledge of those structures is essential for rationalizing the observed stereoselectivities. Additionally, a method is introduced that enables structure determination of molecules in complex mixtures and even in the presence of molecules with similar spectral properties and in high concentration. This work sets the stage for future studies of other substrate-catalyst complexes and reaction intermediates for which the structure determination has not been possible to date.
Conformational Dynamics of Proteins: Exchange 2D-IR spectroscopy allows the investigation of fast dynamics without disturbing the equilibrium of the exchanging species. It is therefore well suited to investigate fast dynamics of proteins and to reveal the speed limit of those. The temperature dependence of the conformational dynamics between the myoglobin substates A1 and A3 in equilibrium is analyzed. The various substates of myoglobin can be detected with FTIR spectroscopy, if carbon monoxide is bound to the heme. From previous studies it is known that the exchange rates at room temperature are in the picosecond time range, well suited to be investigated by 2D-IR spectroscopy. In the temperature range between 0 °C and 40 °C only a weak temperature dependence of the exchange rate in the myoglobin mutant L29I is observed in the present study. The exchange rate approximately doubles from 15 ns-1 at 0 °C to 31 ns-1 at 40 °C. It turned out that the conformational dynamics correlates linearly with the solvent viscosity, which itself is temperature dependent. Comparing our results to measurements at cryogenic temperatures, the linear relation between exchange time constant for this process and the viscosity is shown for the temperature range between -100 °C and 40 °C (corresponding to a viscosity change of 14 orders of magnitude). Thus, it is proven that the dynamics of the conformational switching are mainly determined by solvent dynamics, i.e., the protein dynamics are slaved to the solvent dynamics. This is the first time slaving is observed for such fast processes (in the picosecond time range). The observation implies a long-range structural rearrangement between the myoglobin substates A1 and A3. In addition, the exchange for other mutants and wild type myoglobin is analyzed qualitatively and found to agree with the conclusions drawn from L29I myoglobin.
Electron tomography was used to investigate membrane proteins in a variety of contexts. A high-angle tilt holder, suitable for electron tomography was designed, constructed and characterised. 2D crystals of membrane proteins, NhaA and YidC, were examined as a resolution test, and a method established for determining planarity of crystals. A model for specific gold binding to NhaA crystals was also presented. ATP synthase, a membrane protein complex in mitochondria, were imaged in a frozen hydrated state. They were found to form ribbons of dimers at highly curved regions of the membrane. Dimers from bovine heart and rat liver were excised from the tomographic volumes and averaged. Based on the location of the dimers in the mitochondrion, a model was established whereby ATP synthase, a molecular motor driven by the proton motive force, benefits from the high curvature that it induces in the membrane. Whole yeast mitochondria, imaged by electron cryo-tomography, also contained long ribbons of dimeric ATP synthase. Multiple copies of an unknown membrane protein complex were visualised by electron cryo-tomography, excised and averaged. A general method for the identification of unknown proteins was presented to deal with this inevitable issue, as native tissues and organelles are imaged, and the structures of complexes determined in situ.
Experiments on Vibrational Energy Transfer (VET) in proteins contribute to our understanding of fundamental biological processes such as allostery, dissipation of excess energy, and possibly enzymatic catalysis. While these processes have been studied for a long time, many questions remain unanswered. The aim of this work was to expand the application of existing spectroscopic techniques to investigate VET, seeking tailored solutions for the diversity of proteins and amino acid environments. Additionally, new target proteins were to be established to broaden the spectrum of VET experiments towards the role of VET and low-frequency protein modes (LFMs).
To test their suitability as VET sensors, the non-canonical amino acids (ncAAs) Azidoalanine (N3Ala), azido-L-Homoalanine (Aha), p-azido-Phenylalanine (N3Phe), p-cyano-Phenylalanine (CNPhe), and 4-cyano-Tryptophan (CNTrp) were coupled to the VET donor β-(1-azulenyl)-L-Alanine (AzAla) in dipeptides. Their spectral properties were compared using FTIR and VET spectra in H2O, dimethyl sulfoxide, and tetrahydrofuran.
The solvent strongly influences the measured VET signals, which can be explained by the direct interaction of the solvent with the dipeptides. Additionally, the peak time within the subgroups of azide and nitrile sensors increased with the size of the side chain, indicating the dependence between peak time and the distance between VET donor and sensor. When incorporated into a protein, solvent interactions are less dominant. Therefore, Aha, N3Phe, and CNPhe were additionally incorporated at two different positions in the PDZ protein domain and investigated. Due to Fermi resonances, signals from azide sensors are challenging to predict, unlike those of the nitrile sensors.
Overall, the experiments showed that nitrile groups can serve well as VET sensors, as their lower extinction coefficient is compensated for by a narrower bandwidth. This expands the number of potential target proteins, and sensor incorporation can be less disruptive at various protein locations.
Since the VET donor AzAla can inject the energy of a photon into a protein as vibrational energy at a specific location, it can also be used for the targeted excitation of LFMs. If these modes are involved in an enzymatic reaction, a direct influence on activity is expected. This hypothesis has long existed but has not been definitively verified. Some studies have found evidence for the involvement of LFMs in formate dehydrogenase (FDH) catalysis. Therefore, FDH was chosen for the investigation of LFMs in enzymes. This specific system additionally allows the use of a natural VET sensor: it forms a stable complex with NAD+ and N3-, an excellent IR marker. Thus, it provided the opportunity to test low-molecular-weight non-covalent ligands as VET sensors.
After ensuring sufficient AzAla supply through the internal establishment of an enzymatic synthesis, AzAla could be incorporated at various positions in FDH. Despite spectral overlap between free and bound N3-, the latter could be identified by its narrower FWHM. For some variants, no binding could be observed. Circular dichroism spectra showed that these variants structurally deviate slightly from other variants and the wild type (WT). VET could be observed over 22 Å from two regions of the protein to the N3- bound in the active center, at protein concentrations of below 2 mM. Unbound N3- did not generate signals, allowing it to be added in excess ensuring the saturation of the protein in VET experiments.
The activity of FDH WT and four AzAla mutants was investigated under substrate saturation without and with AzAla excitation. In these experiments, a slight reduction in activity under illumination was observed, even for the WT, who is not expected to interact with the excitation light. So far, a difference in sample temperature cannot be excluded as the cause for this decline.
The presented experiments with FDH illustrate the potential of low-molecular-weight ligands as VET sensors, with N3- being particularly attractive due to its simple structure (preventing Fermi resonances) and its high extinction coefficient. Its use can add many metalloproteins as potential targets for VET experiments and allows investigation without a VET sensor ncAA. Additionally, initial experiments were conducted to measure light-dependent FDH activity. By specifically exciting protein LFMs, this project could contribute in the future to answering longstanding questions about the extraordinary catalytic efficiency of enzymes.