Purple Fibrils: A New Type of Protein Chromophore.
Tatiana Quiñones-RuizManuel F Rosario-AlomarKarina Ruiz-EstevesMaruda ShanmugasundaramVladimir GrigoryantsCharles ScholesJuan López-GarrigaIgor K LednevPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2017)
A purple color is formed during the fibrillation of lysozyme, a well-studied protein lacking a prosthetic group. The application of Raman spectroscopy, electron paramagnetic resonance and UV-vis absorption spectroscopy indicates the formation of a sulfur∴π-bonded radical cation due to the methionine-phenylalanine interaction, which is consistent with a small molecule model reported in the literature. A purple chromophore with characteristic 550 nm absorption is formed due to a specific orientation of the sulfur-centered radical cation and a phenyl ring stabilized by the fibril framework. A specific fibril conformation and the resulting formation of the chromophore are controlled reversibly by varying the pH. This is the first known example of a side chain self-assembled chromophore formed due to protein aggregation.