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The Signaling State of Orange Carotenoid Protein
- Source :
- Biophysical journal. 109(3)
- Publication Year :
- 2015
-
Abstract
- Orange carotenoid protein (OCP) is the photoactive protein that is responsible for high light tolerance in cyanobacteria. We studied the kinetics of the OCP photocycle by monitoring changes in its absorption spectrum, intrinsic fluorescence, and fluorescence of the Nile red dye bound to OCP. It was demonstrated that all of these three methods provide the same kinetic parameters of the photocycle, namely, the kinetics of OCP relaxation in darkness was biexponential with a ratio of two components equal to 2:1 independently of temperature. Whereas the changes of the absorption spectrum of OCP characterize the geometry and environment of its chromophore, the intrinsic fluorescence of OCP reveals changes in its tertiary structure, and the fluorescence properties of Nile red indicate the exposure of hydrophobic surface areas of OCP to the solvent following the photocycle. The results of molecular-dynamics studies indicated the presence of two metastable conformations of 3′-hydroxyechinenone, which is consistent with characteristic changes in the Raman spectra. We conclude that rotation of the β-ionylidene ring in the C-terminal domain of OCP could be one of the first conformational rearrangements that occur during photoactivation. The obtained results suggest that the photoactivated form of OCP represents a molten globule-like state that is characterized by increased mobility of tertiary structure elements and solvent accessibility.
- Subjects :
- Absorption spectroscopy
Orange carotenoid protein
Kinetics
Molecular Sequence Data
Nile red
Biophysics
Absorption, Radiation
Chromophore
Molecular Dynamics Simulation
Photochemistry
Cyanobacteria
Fluorescence
Protein tertiary structure
Protein Structure, Tertiary
Solvent
chemistry.chemical_compound
Luminescent Proteins
chemistry
Bacterial Proteins
Amino Acid Sequence
Proteins and Nucleic Acids
Fluorescent Dyes
Protein Binding
Signal Transduction
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15420086
- Volume :
- 109
- Issue :
- 3
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Biophysical journal
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....d73f7918194b9ce290e2d342bcadf6e3