Ultrafast dynamics of phytochrome from the cyanobacterium synechocystis, reconstituted with phycocyanobilin and phycoerythrobilin

Biophys J. 2002 Feb;82(2):1004-16. doi: 10.1016/S0006-3495(02)75460-X.

Abstract

Femtosecond time-resolved transient absorption spectroscopy was employed to characterize for the first time the primary photoisomerization dynamics of a bacterial phytochrome system in the two thermally stable states of the photocycle. The 85-kDa phytochrome Cph1 from the cyanobacterium Synechocystis PCC 6803 expressed in Escherichia coli was reconstituted with phycocyanobilin (Cph1-PCB) and phycoerythrobilin (Cph1-PEB). The red-light-absorbing form Pr of Cph1-PCB shows an approximately 150 fs relaxation in the S(1) state after photoexcitation at 650 nm. The subsequent Z-E isomerization between rings C and D of the linear tetrapyrrole-chromophore is best described by a distribution of rate constants with the first moment at (16 ps)(-1). Excitation at 615 nm leads to a slightly broadened distribution. The reverse E-Z isomerization, starting from the far-red-absorbing form Pfr, is characterized by two shorter time constants of 0.54 and 3.2 ps. In the case of Cph1-PEB, double-bond isomerization does not take place, and the excited-state lifetime extends into the nanosecond regime. Besides a stimulated emission rise time between 40 and 150 fs, no fast relaxation processes are observed. This suggests that the chromophore-protein interaction along rings A, B, and C does not contribute much to the picosecond dynamics observed in Cph1-PCB but rather the region around ring D near the isomerizing C(15) [double bond] C(16) double bond. The primary reaction dynamics of Cph1-PCB at ambient temperature is found to exhibit very similar features as those described for plant type A phytochrome, i.e., a relatively slow Pr, and a fast Pfr, photoreaction. This suggests that the initial reactions were established already before evolution of plant phytochromes began.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Biophysical Phenomena
  • Biophysics
  • Carbon / chemistry
  • Cyanobacteria / chemistry*
  • Cysteine / chemistry
  • Escherichia coli / metabolism
  • Kinetics
  • Light
  • Models, Chemical
  • Models, Statistical
  • Phycobilins
  • Phycocyanin / chemistry*
  • Phycoerythrin / chemistry*
  • Phytochrome / chemistry*
  • Plants / metabolism
  • Protein Conformation
  • Pyrroles / chemistry*
  • Spectrophotometry
  • Tetrapyrroles
  • Time Factors

Substances

  • Phycobilins
  • Pyrroles
  • Tetrapyrroles
  • Phycocyanin
  • Phycoerythrin
  • Phytochrome
  • phycoerythrobilin
  • phycocyanobilin
  • Carbon
  • Cysteine