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Direct evidence for a deprotonated lysine serving as a H-bond "acceptor" in a photoreceptor protein.

Takayuki NagaeMitsuhiro TakedaTomoyasu NojiKeisuke SaitoHiroshi AoyamaYohei MiyanoiriYutaka ItoMasatsune KainoshoYuu HiroseHiroshi IshikitaMasaki Mishima
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2024)
Deprotonation or suppression of the p K a of the amino group of a lysine sidechain is a widely recognized phenomenon whereby the sidechain amino group transiently can act as a nucleophile at the active site of enzymatic reactions. However, a deprotonated lysine and its molecular interactions have not been directly experimentally detected. Here, we demonstrate a deprotonated lysine stably serving as an "acceptor" in a H-bond between the photosensor protein RcaE and its chromophore. Signal splitting and trans-H-bond J coupling observed by NMR spectroscopy provide direct evidence that Lys261 is deprotonated and serves as a H-bond acceptor for the chromophore NH group. Quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical calculations also indicate that this H-bond exists stably. Interestingly, the sidechain amino group of the lysine can act as both donor and acceptor. The remarkable shift in the H-bond characteristics arises from a decrease in solvation, triggered by photoisomerization. Our results provide insights into the dual role of this lysine. This mechanism has broad implications for other biological reactions in which lysine plays a role.
Keyphrases
  • amino acid
  • molecular dynamics
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