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Two Tryptophans Are Better Than One in Accelerating Electron Flow through a Protein

[Image: see text] We have constructed and structurally characterized a Pseudomonas aeruginosa azurin mutant Re126WWCu(I), where two adjacent tryptophan residues (W124 and W122, indole separation 3.6–4.1 Å) are inserted between the Cu(I) center and a Re photosensitizer coordinated to the imidazole of...

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Autores principales: Takematsu, Kana, Williamson, Heather R, Nikolovski, Pavle, Kaiser, Jens T., Sheng, Yuling, Pospíšil, Petr, Towrie, Michael, Heyda, Jan, Hollas, Daniel, Záliš, Stanislav, Gray, Harry B., Vlček, Antonín, Winkler, Jay R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2019
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6346393/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30693338
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acscentsci.8b00882
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author Takematsu, Kana
Williamson, Heather R
Nikolovski, Pavle
Kaiser, Jens T.
Sheng, Yuling
Pospíšil, Petr
Towrie, Michael
Heyda, Jan
Hollas, Daniel
Záliš, Stanislav
Gray, Harry B.
Vlček, Antonín
Winkler, Jay R.
author_facet Takematsu, Kana
Williamson, Heather R
Nikolovski, Pavle
Kaiser, Jens T.
Sheng, Yuling
Pospíšil, Petr
Towrie, Michael
Heyda, Jan
Hollas, Daniel
Záliš, Stanislav
Gray, Harry B.
Vlček, Antonín
Winkler, Jay R.
author_sort Takematsu, Kana
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] We have constructed and structurally characterized a Pseudomonas aeruginosa azurin mutant Re126WWCu(I), where two adjacent tryptophan residues (W124 and W122, indole separation 3.6–4.1 Å) are inserted between the Cu(I) center and a Re photosensitizer coordinated to the imidazole of H126 (Re(I)(H126)(CO)(3)(4,7-dimethyl-1,10-phenanthroline)(+)). Cu(I) oxidation by the photoexcited Re label (*Re) 22.9 Å away proceeds with a ∼70 ns time constant, similar to that of a single-tryptophan mutant (∼40 ns) with a 19.4 Å Re–Cu distance. Time-resolved spectroscopy (luminescence, visible and IR absorption) revealed two rapid reversible electron transfer steps, W124 → *Re (400–475 ps, K(1) ≅ 3.5–4) and W122 → W124(•+) (7–9 ns, K(2) ≅ 0.55–0.75), followed by a rate-determining (70–90 ns) Cu(I) oxidation by W122(•+) ca. 11 Å away. The photocycle is completed by 120 μs recombination. No photochemical Cu(I) oxidation was observed in Re126FWCu(I), whereas in Re126WFCu(I), the photocycle is restricted to the ReH126W124 unit and Cu(I) remains isolated. QM/MM/MD simulations of Re126WWCu(I) indicate that indole solvation changes through the hopping process and W124 → *Re electron transfer is accompanied by water fluctuations that tighten W124 solvation. Our finding that multistep tunneling (hopping) confers a ∼9000-fold advantage over single-step tunneling in the double-tryptophan protein supports the proposal that hole-hopping through tryptophan/tyrosine chains protects enzymes from oxidative damage.
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spelling pubmed-63463932019-01-28 Two Tryptophans Are Better Than One in Accelerating Electron Flow through a Protein Takematsu, Kana Williamson, Heather R Nikolovski, Pavle Kaiser, Jens T. Sheng, Yuling Pospíšil, Petr Towrie, Michael Heyda, Jan Hollas, Daniel Záliš, Stanislav Gray, Harry B. Vlček, Antonín Winkler, Jay R. ACS Cent Sci [Image: see text] We have constructed and structurally characterized a Pseudomonas aeruginosa azurin mutant Re126WWCu(I), where two adjacent tryptophan residues (W124 and W122, indole separation 3.6–4.1 Å) are inserted between the Cu(I) center and a Re photosensitizer coordinated to the imidazole of H126 (Re(I)(H126)(CO)(3)(4,7-dimethyl-1,10-phenanthroline)(+)). Cu(I) oxidation by the photoexcited Re label (*Re) 22.9 Å away proceeds with a ∼70 ns time constant, similar to that of a single-tryptophan mutant (∼40 ns) with a 19.4 Å Re–Cu distance. Time-resolved spectroscopy (luminescence, visible and IR absorption) revealed two rapid reversible electron transfer steps, W124 → *Re (400–475 ps, K(1) ≅ 3.5–4) and W122 → W124(•+) (7–9 ns, K(2) ≅ 0.55–0.75), followed by a rate-determining (70–90 ns) Cu(I) oxidation by W122(•+) ca. 11 Å away. The photocycle is completed by 120 μs recombination. No photochemical Cu(I) oxidation was observed in Re126FWCu(I), whereas in Re126WFCu(I), the photocycle is restricted to the ReH126W124 unit and Cu(I) remains isolated. QM/MM/MD simulations of Re126WWCu(I) indicate that indole solvation changes through the hopping process and W124 → *Re electron transfer is accompanied by water fluctuations that tighten W124 solvation. Our finding that multistep tunneling (hopping) confers a ∼9000-fold advantage over single-step tunneling in the double-tryptophan protein supports the proposal that hole-hopping through tryptophan/tyrosine chains protects enzymes from oxidative damage. American Chemical Society 2019-01-07 2019-01-23 /pmc/articles/PMC6346393/ /pubmed/30693338 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acscentsci.8b00882 Text en Copyright © 2019 American Chemical Society This is an open access article published under an ACS AuthorChoice License (http://pubs.acs.org/page/policy/authorchoice_termsofuse.html) , which permits copying and redistribution of the article or any adaptations for non-commercial purposes.
spellingShingle Takematsu, Kana
Williamson, Heather R
Nikolovski, Pavle
Kaiser, Jens T.
Sheng, Yuling
Pospíšil, Petr
Towrie, Michael
Heyda, Jan
Hollas, Daniel
Záliš, Stanislav
Gray, Harry B.
Vlček, Antonín
Winkler, Jay R.
Two Tryptophans Are Better Than One in Accelerating Electron Flow through a Protein
title Two Tryptophans Are Better Than One in Accelerating Electron Flow through a Protein
title_full Two Tryptophans Are Better Than One in Accelerating Electron Flow through a Protein
title_fullStr Two Tryptophans Are Better Than One in Accelerating Electron Flow through a Protein
title_full_unstemmed Two Tryptophans Are Better Than One in Accelerating Electron Flow through a Protein
title_short Two Tryptophans Are Better Than One in Accelerating Electron Flow through a Protein
title_sort two tryptophans are better than one in accelerating electron flow through a protein
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6346393/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30693338
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acscentsci.8b00882
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