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Kort R, Phillips-Jones MK, van Aalten DM, Haker A, Hoffer SM, Hellingwerf KJ, Crielaard W. Sequence, chromophore extraction and 3-D model of the photoactive yellow protein from Rhodobacter sphaeroides. BIOCHIMICA ET BIOPHYSICA ACTA 1998; 1385:1-6. [PMID: 9630474 DOI: 10.1016/s0167-4838(98)00050-8] [Citation(s) in RCA: 37] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.4] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 02/07/2023]
Abstract
The photoactive yellow protein (pyp) gene has been isolated from Rhodobacter sphaeroides by probing with a homologous PCR-product. A sequence analysis shows that this pyp gene encodes a 124 AA protein with 48% identity to the three known PYPs. Downstream from pyp, a number of adjacent open reading frames were identified, including a gene encoding a CoA-ligase homologue (pCL). This latter protein is proposed to be involved in PYP chromophore activation, required for attachment to the apoprotein. We have demonstrated the presence of the chromophoric group, previously identified in PYP from Ectothiorhodospira halophila as trans 4-hydroxy cinnamic acid, in phototrophically cultured R. sphaeroides cells by capillary zone electrophoresis. The basic structure of the chromophore binding pocket in PYP has been conserved, as shown by a 3D model of R. sphaeroides PYP, constructed by homology-based molecular modelling. In addition, this model shows that R. sphaeroides PYP contains a characteristic, positively charged patch.
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Affiliation(s)
- R Kort
- Laboratory for Microbiology, EC Slater Institute, University of Amsterdam, Nieuwe Achtergracht 127, 1018 WS Amsterdam, Netherlands
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Kroon AR, Hoff WD, Fennema HP, Gijzen J, Koomen GJ, Verhoeven JW, Crielaard W, Hellingwerf KJ. Spectral tuning, fluorescence, and photoactivity in hybrids of photoactive yellow protein, reconstituted with native or modified chromophores. J Biol Chem 1996; 271:31949-56. [PMID: 8943241 DOI: 10.1074/jbc.271.50.31949] [Citation(s) in RCA: 90] [Impact Index Per Article: 3.2] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 02/03/2023] Open
Abstract
Photoactive yellow proteins (PYPs) constitute a new class of eubacterial photoreceptors, containing a deprotonated thiol ester-linked 4-hydroxycinnamic acid chromophore. Interactions with the protein dramatically change the (photo)chemical properties of this cofactor. Here we describe the reconstitution of apoPYP with anhydrides of various chromophore analogues. The resulting hybrid PYPs, their acid-denatured states, and corresponding model compounds were characterized with respect to their absorption spectrum, pK for chromophore deprotonation, fluorescence quantum yield, and Stokes shift. Three factors contributing to the tuning of the absorption of the hybrid PYPs were quantified: (i) thiol ester bond formation, (ii) chromophore deprotonation, and (iii) specific chromophore-protein interactions. Analogues lacking the 4-hydroxy substituent lack both contributions (chromophore deprotonation and specific chromophore-protein interactions), confirming the importance of this substituent in optical tuning of PYP. Hydroxy and methoxy substituents in the 3- and/or 5-position do not disrupt strong interactions with the protein but increase their pK for protonation and the fluorescence quantum yield. Both deprotonation and binding to apoPYP strongly decrease the Stokes shift of chromophore fluorescence. Therefore, coupling of the chromophore to the apoprotein not only reduces the energy gap between its ground and excited state but also the extent of reorganization between these two states. Two of the PYP hybrids show photoactivity comparable with native PYP, although with retarded recovery of the initial state.
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Affiliation(s)
- A R Kroon
- Laboratory for Microbiology, E. C. Slater Institute, BioCentrum Amsterdam, Nieuwe Achtergracht 127, 1018 WS, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
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Van Brederode ME, Hoff WD, Van Stokkum IH, Groot ML, Hellingwerf KJ. Protein folding thermodynamics applied to the photocycle of the photoactive yellow protein. Biophys J 1996; 71:365-80. [PMID: 8804619 PMCID: PMC1233487 DOI: 10.1016/s0006-3495(96)79234-2] [Citation(s) in RCA: 93] [Impact Index Per Article: 3.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 02/02/2023] Open
Abstract
Two complementary aspects of the thermodynamics of the photoactive yellow protein (PYP), a new type of photoreceptor that has been isolated from Ectothiorhodospira halophila, have been investigated. First, the thermal denaturation of PYP at pH 3.4 has been examined by global analysis of the temperature-induced changes in the UV-VIS absorbance spectrum of this chromophoric protein. Subsequently, a thermodynamic model for protein (un)folding processes, incorporating heat capacity changes, has been applied to these data. The second aspect of PYP that has been studied is the temperature dependence of its photocycle kinetics, which have been reported to display an unexplained deviation from normal Arrhenius behavior. We have extended these measurements in two solvents with different hydrophobicities and have analyzed the number of rate constants needed to describe these data. Here we show that the resulting temperature dependence of the rate constants can be quantitatively explained by the application of a thermodynamic model which assumes that heat capacity changes are associated with the two transitions in the photocycle of PYP. This result is the first example of an enzyme catalytic cycle being described by a thermodynamic model including heat capacity changes. It is proposed that a strong link exists between the processes occurring during the photocycle of PYP and protein (un)folding processes. This permits a thermodynamic analysis of the light-induced, physiologically relevant, conformational changes occurring in this photoreceptor protein.
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Affiliation(s)
- M E Van Brederode
- Department of Microbiology, E. C. Slater Institute, BioCentrum, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands
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Kort R, Hoff WD, Van West M, Kroon AR, Hoffer SM, Vlieg KH, Crielaand W, Van Beeumen JJ, Hellingwerf KJ. The xanthopsins: a new family of eubacterial blue-light photoreceptors. EMBO J 1996; 15:3209-18. [PMID: 8670821 PMCID: PMC451869] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 02/01/2023] Open
Abstract
Photoactive yellow protein (PYP) is a photoreceptor that has been isolated from three halophilic phototrophic purple bacteria. The PYP from Ectothiorhodospira halophila BN9626 is the only member for which the sequence has been reported at the DNA level. Here we describe the cloning and sequencing of the genes encoding the PYPs from E.halophila SL-1 (type strain) and Rhodospirillum salexigens. The latter protein contains, like the E.halophila PYP, the chromophore trans p-coumaric acid, as we show here with high performance capillary zone electrophoresis. Additionally, we present evidence for the presence of a gene encoding a PYP homolog in Rhodobacter sphaeroides, the first genetically well-characterized bacterium in which this photoreceptor has been identified. An ORF downstream of the pyp gene from E.halophila encodes an enzyme, which is proposed to be involved in the biosynthesis of the chromophore of PYP. The pyp gene from E.halophila was used for heterologous overexpression in both Escherichia coli and R.sphaeroides, aimed at the development of a holoPYP overexpression system (an intact PYP, containing the p-coumaric acid chromophore and displaying the 446 nm absorbance band). In both organisms the protein could be detected immunologically, but its yellow color was not observed. Molecular genetic construction of a histidine-tagged version of PYP led to its 2500-fold overproduction in E.coli and simplified purification of the heterologously produced apoprotein. HoloPYP could be reconstituted by the addition of p-coumaric anhydride to the histidine-tagged apoPYP (PYP lacking its chromophore). We propose to call the family of photoactive yellow proteins the xanthopsins, in analogy with the rhodopsins.
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Affiliation(s)
- R Kort
- Department of Microbiology, E.C. Slater Institute, BioCentrum, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands
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Thiemann B, Imhoff JF. Occurrence and purification of the photoactive yellow protein of Ectothiorhodospira halophila (PYP) and of immunologically related proteins of Rhodospirillum salexigens and Chromatium salexigens and intracellular localization of PYP. BIOCHIMICA ET BIOPHYSICA ACTA 1995; 1253:181-8. [PMID: 8519800 DOI: 10.1016/0167-4838(95)00160-9] [Citation(s) in RCA: 5] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.2] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/31/2023]
Abstract
The photoactive yellow protein of Ectothiohodospira halophila (PYP) was purified to homogeneity by an advanced method and applied as an affinity ligand for the isolation of an anti-PYP IgG fraction which was used for immunoscreening. The distribution of proteins immunologically related to PYP was investigated in protein fractions of 51 strains from 38 species of non-halophilic and halophilic phototrophic and chemotrophic eubacteria and archaeobacteria. Strong immunoreactive bands indicating the presence of authentic PYP on Western blots (apparent mass 17.8 kDa) was only found in the strains of E. halophila. Additionally, two soluble proteins of Chromatium salexigens and Rhodospirillum salexigens (apparent molecular masses 16.4 and 19 kDa, respectively) cross-reacted to approx. 6% and 4%. Analyses of cell fractions of E. halophila revealed that PYP is a cytoplasmic protein.
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Affiliation(s)
- B Thiemann
- Institut für Mikrobiologie und Biotechnologie der Rheinischen Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität, Bonn, Germany
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Abstract
While the biochemical basis of photosynthesis by bacteriochlorophyll-based reaction centres in purple phototrophic Eubacteria and retinal-based bacteriorhodopsin in the Archaebacterium Halobacterium salinarium has been elucidated in great detail, much less is known about photosensory signal transduction; this is especially the case for Eubacteria. Recent findings on two different photosensory proteins in two different Eubacteria, which both show clear resemblances to the rhodopsins, will be presented. The photoactive yellow protein (PYP) from the purple phototrophic organism Ectothiorhodospira halophila probably functions as the photoreceptor for a new type of negative phototaxis response and has been studied in some detail with respect to its structural and photochemical characteristics. On basis of crystallographic an photochemical data it has been proposed that PYP contains retinal as a chromophore. However, we have unambiguously demonstrated that the PYP chromophore is different from retinal, in spite of the fact that PYP's photochemical properties show striking similarities with the rhodopsins. The cyanobacterium Calothrix sp. displays complementary chromatic adaptation, a process in which the pigment composition of the phycobilisomes is adjusted to the spectral characteristics of the incident light. In orange light the blueish chromophore phycocyanin is present, in green light the reddish phycoerythrin is synthesized. On the basis of the action spectrum of this adaptation process, we hypothesized that a rhodopsin is the photosensor in this process. In line with this, we found that nicotine, an inhibitor of the biosynthesis of beta-carotene (which is the precursor of retinal), abolishes chromatic adaptation. Direct proof of the involvement of a photosensory rhodopsin was obtained in experiments in which the chromatic adaptation response was restored by the addition of retinal to the cultures. The two photosensory proteins mentioned above represent the first examples of eubacterial photoreceptors that can be studied at a molecular level. Our current knowledge on these two proteins and their status as retinal proteins will be reviewed.
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Affiliation(s)
- W D Hoff
- Department of Microbiology, E.C. Slater Institute, BioCentrum, University of Amsterdam, Nieuwe Achtergracht 127, 1018 WS Amsterdam, Netherlands
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van Brederode ME, Gensch T, Hoff WD, Hellingwerf KJ, Braslavsky SE. Photoinduced volume change and energy storage associated with the early transformations of the photoactive yellow protein from Ectothiorhodospira halophila. Biophys J 1995; 68:1101-9. [PMID: 7756529 PMCID: PMC1281832 DOI: 10.1016/s0006-3495(95)80284-5] [Citation(s) in RCA: 90] [Impact Index Per Article: 3.1] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/27/2023] Open
Abstract
The photocycle of the photoactive yellow protein (PYP) isolated from Ectothiorhodospira halophila was analyzed by flash photolysis with absorption detection at low excitation photon densities and by temperature-dependent laser-induced optoacoustic spectroscopy (LIOAS). The quantum yield for the bleaching recovery of PYP, assumed to be identical to that for the phototransformation of PYP (pG), to the red-shifted intermediate, pR, was phi R = 0.35 +/- 0.05, much lower than the value of 0.64 reported in the literature. With this value and the LIOAS data, an energy content for pR of 120 kJ/mol was obtained, approximately 50% lower than for excited pG. Concomitant with the photochemical process, a volume contraction of 14 ml/photoconverted mol was observed, comparable with the contraction (11 ml/mol) determined for the bacteriorhodopsin monomer. The contraction in both cases is interpreted to arise from a protein reorganization around a phototransformed chromophore with a dipole moment different from that of the initial state. The deviations from linearity of the LIOAS data at photon densities > 0.3 photons per molecule are explained by absorption by pG and pR during the laser pulse duration (i.e., a four-level system, pG, pR, and their respective excited states). The data can be fitted either by a simple saturation process or by a photochromic equilibrium between pG and pR, similar to that established between the parent chromoprotein and the first intermediate(s) in other biological photoreceptors. This nonlinearity has important consequences for the interpretation of the data obtained from in vitro studies with powerful lasers.
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Affiliation(s)
- M E van Brederode
- Department of Microbiology, E. C. Slater Institute, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands
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Salamon Z, Meyer TE, Tollin G. Photobleaching of the photoactive yellow protein from Ectothiorhodospira halophila promotes binding to lipid bilayers: evidence from surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy. Biophys J 1995; 68:648-54. [PMID: 7696516 PMCID: PMC1281728 DOI: 10.1016/s0006-3495(95)80225-0] [Citation(s) in RCA: 22] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.8] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/26/2023] Open
Abstract
The photoactive yellow protein (PYP) from the phototrophic bacterium Ectothiorhodospira halophila is a small, soluble protein that undergoes reversible photobleaching upon blue light irradiation and may function to mediate the negative phototactic response. Based on previous studies of the effects of solvent viscosity and of aliphatic alcohols on PYP photokinetics, we proposed that photobleaching is concomitant with a protein conformational change that exposes a hydrophobic region on the protein surface. In the present investigation, we have used surface plasmon resonance (SPR) spectroscopy to characterize the binding of PYP to lipid bilayers deposited on a thin silver film. SPR spectra demonstrate that the net negatively charged PYP molecule can bind in a saturable manner to electrically neutral, net positively, and net negatively charged bilayers. Illumination with either blue or white light of a PYP solution, which is in contact with the bilayer, at concentrations below saturation results in an increase in the extent of binding, consistent with exposure of a high affinity hydrophobic surface in the photobleached state, a property that may contribute to its biological function. A value for the thickness of the bound PYP layer (23 A), obtained from theoretical fits to the SPR spectra, is consistent with the structure of the protein determined by x-ray crystallography and indicates that the molecule binds with its long axis parallel to the membrane surface.
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Affiliation(s)
- Z Salamon
- Department of Biochemistry, University of Arizona, Tucson 85721
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Hellingwerf KJ, Crielaard W, Hoff WD, Matthijs HC, Mur LR, van Rotterdam BJ. Photobiology of bacteria. Antonie Van Leeuwenhoek 1994; 65:331-47. [PMID: 7832590 DOI: 10.1007/bf00872217] [Citation(s) in RCA: 10] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/27/2023]
Abstract
The field of photobiology is concerned with the interactions between light and living matter. For Bacteria this interaction serves three recognisable physiological functions: provision of energy, protection against excess radiation and signalling (for motility and gene expression). The chemical structure of the primary light-absorbing components in biology (the chromophores of photoactive proteins) is surprisingly simple: tetrapyrroles, polyenes and derivatised aromats are the most abundant ones. The same is true for the photochemistry that is catalysed by these chromophores: this is limited to light-induced exciton- or electron-transfer and photoisomerization. The apoproteins surrounding the chromophores provide them with the required specificity to function in various aspects of photosynthesis, photorepair, photoprotection and photosignalling. Particularly in photosynthesis several of these processes have been resolved in great detail, for others at best only a physiological description can be given. In this contribution we discuss selected examples from various parts of the field of photobiology of Bacteria. Most examples have been taken from the purple bacteria and the cyanobacteria, with special emphasis on recently characterised signalling photoreceptors in Ectothiorhodospira halophila and in Fremyella diplosiphon.
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Affiliation(s)
- K J Hellingwerf
- Department of Microbiology, Amsterdam Research Institute of Substances in the Environment, The Netherlands
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Hoff WD, Düx P, Hård K, Devreese B, Nugteren-Roodzant IM, Crielaard W, Boelens R, Kaptein R, van Beeumen J, Hellingwerf KJ. Thiol ester-linked p-coumaric acid as a new photoactive prosthetic group in a protein with rhodopsin-like photochemistry. Biochemistry 1994; 33:13959-62. [PMID: 7947803 DOI: 10.1021/bi00251a001] [Citation(s) in RCA: 211] [Impact Index Per Article: 7.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/28/2023]
Abstract
A number of Eubacteria contain a photoactive yellow protein which has a photosensory function in negative phototaxis. It has been proposed that the cofactor responsible for the intense yellow color of this protein is retinal [McRee, D. E., et al. (1989) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 86, 6533-6537]. This would make it the first eubacterial rhodopsin. Here we report the chemical structure of this chromophoric group to be p-coumaric acid, which is covalently bound to a unique cysteine in the apoprotein via a thiol ester bond, and thus not retinal. This makes PYP the first example of a protein containing p-coumaric acid, a metabolite previously found only in plants, as a prosthetic group and establishes the photoactive yellow proteins as a new type of photochemically active receptor molecule.
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Affiliation(s)
- W D Hoff
- Department of Microbiology, E. C. Slater Institute, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands
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Hoff WD, van Stokkum IH, van Ramesdonk HJ, van Brederode ME, Brouwer AM, Fitch JC, Meyer TE, van Grondelle R, Hellingwerf KJ. Measurement and global analysis of the absorbance changes in the photocycle of the photoactive yellow protein from Ectothiorhodospira halophila. Biophys J 1994; 67:1691-705. [PMID: 7819501 PMCID: PMC1225531 DOI: 10.1016/s0006-3495(94)80643-5] [Citation(s) in RCA: 181] [Impact Index Per Article: 6.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/27/2023] Open
Abstract
The photocycle of the photoactive yellow protein (PYP) from Ectothiorhodospira halophila was examined by time-resolved difference absorption spectroscopy in the wavelength range of 300-600 nm. Both time-gated spectra and single wavelength traces were measured. Global analysis of the data established that in the time domain between 5 ns and 2 s only two intermediates are involved in the room temperature photocycle of PYP, as has been proposed before (Meyer T.E., E. Yakali, M. A. Cusanovich, and G. Tollin. 1987. Biochemistry. 26:418-423; Meyer, T. E., G. Tollin, T. P. Causgrove, P. Cheng, and R. E. Blankenship. 1991. Biophys. J. 59:988-991). The first, red-shifted intermediate decays biexponentially (60% with tau = 0.25 ms and 40% with tau = 1.2 ms) to a blue-shifted intermediate. The last step of the photocycle is the biexponential (93% with tau = 0.15 s and 7% with tau = 2.0 s) recovery to the ground state of the protein. Reconstruction of the absolute spectra of these photointermediates yielded absorbance maxima of about 465 and 355 nm for the red- and blue-shifted intermediate with an epsilon max at about 50% and 40% relative to the epsilon max of the ground state. The quantitative analysis of the photocycle in PYP described here paves the way to a detailed biophysical analysis of the processes occurring in this photoreceptor molecule.
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Affiliation(s)
- W D Hoff
- Department of Microbiology, E.C. Slater Institute, BioCentrum Amsterdam, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands
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