7 research outputs found

    The Role of the Photon Counting Loss Effect in Time-Resolved Measurements of Fluorescence Anisotropy

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    Determining the rate of rotation of molecules from their fluorescence anisotropy decay curves is a powerful method for studying molecular systems in biological applications. The single photon count detection systems used for this have a nonlinear dependence of the photon counting rate on the fluorescence intensity flux (photon counting loss effect), which can lead to a number of artifacts. Using metal complexes of phthalocyanines as a test sample, we have shown that such a nonlinearity can cause distortions in the determination of the fluorescence anisotropy lifetime and the asymptotic fluorescence anisotropy. We also assessed the dependence of the described phenomena on temperature and estimated the manifestations of the photon counting loss effect in the case of photobleaching of the fluorophores

    Anti-stokes fluorescence of phycobilisome and its complex with the orange carotenoid protein

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    Phycobilisomes (PBSs) are giant water-soluble light-harvesting complexes of cyanobacteria and red algae, consisting of hundreds of phycobiliproteins precisely organized to deliver the energy of absorbed light to chlorophyll chromophores of the photosynthetic electron-transport chain. Quenching the excess of excitation energy is necessary for the photoprotection of photosynthetic apparatus. In cyanobacteria, quenching of PBS excitation is provided by the Orange Carotenoid Protein (OCP), which is activated under high light conditions. In this work, we describe parameters of anti-Stokes fluorescence of cyanobacterial PBSs in quenched and unquenched states. We compare the fluorescence readout from entire phycobilisomes and their fragments. The obtained results revealed the heterogeneity of conformations of chromophores in isolated phycobiliproteins, while such heterogeneity was not observed in the entire PBS. Under excitation by low-energy quanta, we did not detect a significant uphill energy transfer from the core to the peripheral rods of PBS, while the one from the terminal emitters to the bulk allophycocyanin chromophores is highly probable. We show that this direction of energy migration does not eliminate fluorescence quenching in the complex with OCP. Thus, long-wave excitation provides new insights into the pathways of energy conversion in the phycobilisome

    Structural framework for the understanding spectroscopic and functional signatures of the cyanobacterial Orange Carotenoid Protein families

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    The Orange Carotenoid Protein (OCP) is a unique photoreceptor crucial for cyanobacterial photoprotection. Best studied Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 OCP belongs to the large OCP1 family. Downregulated by the Fluorescence Recovery Protein (FRP) in low-light, high-light-activated OCP1 binds to the phycobilisomes and performs non -photochemical quenching. Recently discovered families OCP2 and OCP3 remain structurally and functionally underexplored, and no systematic comparative studies have ever been conducted. Here we present two first crystal structures of OCP2 from morphoecophysiologically different cyanobacteria and provide their comprehensive structural, spectroscopic and functional comparison with OCP1, the recently described OCP3 and all-OCP ancestor. Structures enable correlation of spectroscopic signatures with the effective number of hydrogen and discovered here chalcogen bonds anchoring the ketocarotenoid in OCP, as well as with the rotation of the echinenone's beta-ionone ring in the CTD. Structural data also helped rationalize the observed differences in OCP/ FRP and OCP/phycobilisome functional interactions. These data are expected to foster OCP research and applications in optogenetics, targeted carotenoid delivery and cyanobacterial biomass engineering

    Protein-Mediated Carotenoid Delivery Suppresses the Photoinducible Oxidation of Lipofuscin in Retinal Pigment Epithelial Cells

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    Lipofuscin of retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) cells is a complex heterogeneous system of chromophores which accumulates as granules during the cell’s lifespan. Lipofuscin serves as a source of various cytotoxic effects linked with oxidative stress. Several age-related eye diseases such as macular degeneration of the retina, as well as some severe inherited eye pathologies, are accompanied by a significant increase in lipofuscin granule concentration. The accumulation of carotenoids in the RPE could provide an effective antioxidant protection against lipofuscin cytotoxic manifestations. Given the highly lipophilic nature of carotenoids, their targeted delivery to the vulnerable tissues can potentially be assisted by special proteins. In this study, we demonstrate how protein-mediated delivery of zeaxanthin using water-soluble Bombyx mori carotenoid-binding protein (BmCBP-ZEA) suppresses the photoinducible oxidative stress in RPE cells caused by irradiation of lipofuscin with intense white light. We implemented fluorescence lifetime imaging of the RPE cell culture ARPE-19 fed with lipofuscin granules and then irradiated by white light with and without the addition of BmCBP-ZEA. We demonstrate that after irradiation the mean fluorescence lifetime of lipofuscin significantly increases, while the presence of BmCBP-ZEA at 200 nM concentration suppresses the increase in the average lifetime of lipofuscin fluorescence, indicating an approx. 35% inhibition of the oxidative stress. This phenomenon serves as indirect yet important evidence of the efficiency of the protein-mediated carotenoid delivery into pigment epithelium cells

    Anti-Stokes fluorescence excitation reveals conformational mobility of the C-phycocyanin chromophores

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    The structural organization of natural pigment-protein complexes provides a specific environment for the chromophore groups. Yet, proteins are inherently dynamic and conformationally mobile. In this work, we demonstrate the heterogeneity of chromophores of C-phycocyanin (C-PC) from Arthrospira platensis. Part of the population of trimeric C-PC is subject to spontaneous disturbances of protein-protein interactions resulting in increased conformational mobility of the chromophores. Upon fluorescence excitation in the visible range, the spectral signatures of these poorly populated states are masked by bulk chromophore states, but the former could be clearly discriminated when the fluorescence is excited by near-infrared quanta. Such selective excitation of conformationally mobile C-PC chromophores is due to the structure of their S-1 level, which is characterized by a significantly broadened spectral line. We demonstrate that the anti-Stokes C-PC fluorescence is the result of single-photon absorption. By combining spectral and structural methods, we characterize four distinct states of C-PC chromophores emitting at 620, 650, 665, and 720 nm and assigned the fast component in the anti-Stokes fluorescence decay kinetics in the range of 690-750 nm to the chromophores with increased conformational mobility. Our data suggest that the spectral and temporal characteristics of the anti-Stokes fluorescence can be used to study protein dynamics and develop methods to visualize local environment parameters such as temperature. (C) 2022 Author(s)
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