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Near UV-Visible electronic absorption originating from charged amino acids in a monomeric protein

Electronic absorption spectra of proteins are primarily characterized over the ultraviolet region (185–320 nm) of the electromagnetic spectrum. While recent studies on peptide aggregates have revealed absorption beyond 350 nm, monomeric proteins lacking aromatic amino acids, disulphide bonds, and ac...

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Autores principales: Prasad, Saumya, Mandal, Imon, Singh, Shubham, Paul, Ashim, Mandal, Bhubaneswar, Venkatramani, Ravindra, Swaminathan, Rajaram
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Royal Society of Chemistry 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5609530/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28970921
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c7sc00880e
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author Prasad, Saumya
Mandal, Imon
Singh, Shubham
Paul, Ashim
Mandal, Bhubaneswar
Venkatramani, Ravindra
Swaminathan, Rajaram
author_facet Prasad, Saumya
Mandal, Imon
Singh, Shubham
Paul, Ashim
Mandal, Bhubaneswar
Venkatramani, Ravindra
Swaminathan, Rajaram
author_sort Prasad, Saumya
collection PubMed
description Electronic absorption spectra of proteins are primarily characterized over the ultraviolet region (185–320 nm) of the electromagnetic spectrum. While recent studies on peptide aggregates have revealed absorption beyond 350 nm, monomeric proteins lacking aromatic amino acids, disulphide bonds, and active site prosthetic groups are expected to remain optically silent beyond 250 nm. Here, in a joint theoretical and experimental investigation, we report the distinctive UV-Vis absorption spectrum between 250 nm [ε = 7338 M(–1) cm(–1)] and 800 nm [ε = 501 M(–1) cm(–1)] in a synthetic 67 residue protein (α(3)C), in monomeric form, devoid of aromatic amino acids. Systematic control studies with high concentration non-aromatic amino acid solutions revealed significant absorption beyond 250 nm for charged amino acids which constitute over 50% of the sequence composition in α(3)C. Classical atomistic molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of α(3)C reveal dynamic interactions between multiple charged sidechains of Lys and Glu residues present in α(3)C. Time-dependent density functional theory calculations on charged amino acid residues sampled from the MD trajectories of α(3)C reveal that the distinctive absorption features of α(3)C may arise from two different types of charge transfer (CT) transitions involving spatially proximal Lys/Glu amino acids. Specifically, we show that the charged amino (NH(3)(+))/carboxylate (COO(–)) groups of Lys/Glu sidechains act as electronic charge acceptors/donors for photoinduced electron transfer either from/to the polypeptide backbone or to each other. Further, the sensitivity of the CT spectra to close/far/intermediate range of encounters between sidechains of Lys/Glu owing to the three dimensional protein fold can create the long tail in the α(3)C absorption profile between 300 and 800 nm. Finally, we experimentally demonstrate the sensitivity of α(3)C absorption spectrum to temperature and pH-induced changes in protein structure. Taken together, our investigation significantly expands the pool of spectroscopically active biomolecular chromophores and adds an optical 250–800 nm spectral window, which we term ProCharTS (Protein Charge Transfer Spectra), for label free probes of biomolecular structure and dynamics.
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spelling pubmed-56095302017-10-02 Near UV-Visible electronic absorption originating from charged amino acids in a monomeric protein Prasad, Saumya Mandal, Imon Singh, Shubham Paul, Ashim Mandal, Bhubaneswar Venkatramani, Ravindra Swaminathan, Rajaram Chem Sci Chemistry Electronic absorption spectra of proteins are primarily characterized over the ultraviolet region (185–320 nm) of the electromagnetic spectrum. While recent studies on peptide aggregates have revealed absorption beyond 350 nm, monomeric proteins lacking aromatic amino acids, disulphide bonds, and active site prosthetic groups are expected to remain optically silent beyond 250 nm. Here, in a joint theoretical and experimental investigation, we report the distinctive UV-Vis absorption spectrum between 250 nm [ε = 7338 M(–1) cm(–1)] and 800 nm [ε = 501 M(–1) cm(–1)] in a synthetic 67 residue protein (α(3)C), in monomeric form, devoid of aromatic amino acids. Systematic control studies with high concentration non-aromatic amino acid solutions revealed significant absorption beyond 250 nm for charged amino acids which constitute over 50% of the sequence composition in α(3)C. Classical atomistic molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of α(3)C reveal dynamic interactions between multiple charged sidechains of Lys and Glu residues present in α(3)C. Time-dependent density functional theory calculations on charged amino acid residues sampled from the MD trajectories of α(3)C reveal that the distinctive absorption features of α(3)C may arise from two different types of charge transfer (CT) transitions involving spatially proximal Lys/Glu amino acids. Specifically, we show that the charged amino (NH(3)(+))/carboxylate (COO(–)) groups of Lys/Glu sidechains act as electronic charge acceptors/donors for photoinduced electron transfer either from/to the polypeptide backbone or to each other. Further, the sensitivity of the CT spectra to close/far/intermediate range of encounters between sidechains of Lys/Glu owing to the three dimensional protein fold can create the long tail in the α(3)C absorption profile between 300 and 800 nm. Finally, we experimentally demonstrate the sensitivity of α(3)C absorption spectrum to temperature and pH-induced changes in protein structure. Taken together, our investigation significantly expands the pool of spectroscopically active biomolecular chromophores and adds an optical 250–800 nm spectral window, which we term ProCharTS (Protein Charge Transfer Spectra), for label free probes of biomolecular structure and dynamics. Royal Society of Chemistry 2017-08-01 2017-05-19 /pmc/articles/PMC5609530/ /pubmed/28970921 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c7sc00880e Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2017 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This article is freely available. This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported Licence (CC BY 3.0)
spellingShingle Chemistry
Prasad, Saumya
Mandal, Imon
Singh, Shubham
Paul, Ashim
Mandal, Bhubaneswar
Venkatramani, Ravindra
Swaminathan, Rajaram
Near UV-Visible electronic absorption originating from charged amino acids in a monomeric protein
title Near UV-Visible electronic absorption originating from charged amino acids in a monomeric protein
title_full Near UV-Visible electronic absorption originating from charged amino acids in a monomeric protein
title_fullStr Near UV-Visible electronic absorption originating from charged amino acids in a monomeric protein
title_full_unstemmed Near UV-Visible electronic absorption originating from charged amino acids in a monomeric protein
title_short Near UV-Visible electronic absorption originating from charged amino acids in a monomeric protein
title_sort near uv-visible electronic absorption originating from charged amino acids in a monomeric protein
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5609530/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28970921
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c7sc00880e
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