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Photoswitching mechanism of a fluorescent protein revealed by time-resolved crystallography and transient absorption spectroscopy.

Joyce WoodhouseGabriela Nass KovacsNicolas CoquelleLucas Martinez UriarteVirgile AdamThomas R M BarendsMartin ByrdinEugenio De La MoraR Bruce DoakMikolaj FeliksMartin J FieldFranck FieschiVirginia GuillonStefan JakobsYasumasa JotiPauline MacheboeufKoji MotomuraKarol NassShigeki OwadaChristopher M RoomeCyril RuckebuschGiorgio SchiròRobert L ShoemanMichel ThepautTadashi TogashiKensuke TonoMakina YabashiMarco CammarataLutz FoucarDominique BourgeoisMichel SliwaJacques-Philippe ColletierIlme SchlichtingMartin Weik
Published in: Nature communications (2020)
Reversibly switchable fluorescent proteins (RSFPs) serve as markers in advanced fluorescence imaging. Photoswitching from a non-fluorescent off-state to a fluorescent on-state involves trans-to-cis chromophore isomerization and proton transfer. Whereas excited-state events on the ps timescale have been structurally characterized, conformational changes on slower timescales remain elusive. Here we describe the off-to-on photoswitching mechanism in the RSFP rsEGFP2 by using a combination of time-resolved serial crystallography at an X-ray free-electron laser and ns-resolved pump-probe UV-visible spectroscopy. Ten ns after photoexcitation, the crystal structure features a chromophore that isomerized from trans to cis but the surrounding pocket features conformational differences compared to the final on-state. Spectroscopy identifies the chromophore in this ground-state photo-intermediate as being protonated. Deprotonation then occurs on the μs timescale and correlates with a conformational change of the conserved neighbouring histidine. Together with a previous excited-state study, our data allow establishing a detailed mechanism of off-to-on photoswitching in rsEGFP2.
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