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Control of protein activity by photoinduced spin polarized charge reorganization.

Shirsendu GhoshKoyel Banerjee-GhoshDorit LevyDavid ScheererInbal RivenJieun ShinHarry B GrayRon NaamanGilad Haran
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2022)
Considerable electric fields are present within living cells, and the role of bioelectricity has been well established at the organismal level. Yet much remains to be learned about electric-field effects on protein function. Here, we use phototriggered charge injection from a site-specifically attached ruthenium photosensitizer to directly demonstrate the effect of dynamic charge redistribution within a protein. We find that binding of an antibody to phosphoglycerate kinase (PGK) is increased twofold under illumination. Remarkably, illumination is found to suppress the enzymatic activity of PGK by a factor as large as three. These responses are sensitive to the photosensitizer position on the protein. Surprisingly, left (but not right) circularly polarized light elicits these responses, indicating that the electrons involved in the observed dynamics are spin polarized, due to spin filtration by protein chiral structures. Our results directly establish the contribution of electrical polarization as an allosteric signal within proteins. Future experiments with phototriggered charge injection will allow delineation of charge rearrangement pathways within proteins and will further depict their effects on protein function.
Keyphrases
  • protein protein
  • binding protein
  • living cells
  • amino acid
  • photodynamic therapy
  • single molecule
  • fluorescent probe
  • nitric oxide
  • dna binding
  • electron transfer