Litcius/Paper detail

Triggered Functional Dynamics of AsLOV2 by Time‐Resolved Electron Paramagnetic Resonance at High Magnetic Fields

Shiny Maity, Brad D. Price, C. Blake Wilson, Arnab Mukherjee, Matthieu Starck, David Parker, Maxwell Z. Wilson, Janet E. Lovett, Songi Han, Mark S. Sherwin

2023Angewandte Chemie International Edition19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

We present time-resolved Gd-Gd electron paramagnetic resonance (TiGGER) at 240 GHz for tracking inter-residue distances during a protein's mechanical cycle in the solution state. TiGGER makes use of Gd-sTPATCN spin labels, whose favorable qualities include a spin-7/2 EPR-active center, short linker, narrow intrinsic linewidth, and virtually no anisotropy at high fields (8.6 T) when compared to nitroxide spin labels. Using TiGGER, we determined that upon light activation, the C-terminus and N-terminus of AsLOV2 separate in less than 1 s and relax back to equilibrium with a time constant of approximately 60 s. TiGGER revealed that the light-activated long-range mechanical motion is slowed in the Q513A variant of AsLOV2 and is correlated to the similarly slowed relaxation of the optically excited chromophore as described in recent literature. TiGGER has the potential to valuably complement existing methods for the study of triggered functional dynamics in proteins.

Topics & Concepts

Electron paramagnetic resonanceChromophoreChemistryParamagnetismRelaxation (psychology)Spin labelNuclear magnetic resonanceAnisotropyNitroxide mediated radical polymerizationProtein dynamicsLaser linewidthExcited stateChemical physicsMolecular physicsCondensed matter physicsAtomic physicsMolecular dynamicsPhysicsComputational chemistryPhotochemistryOpticsRadical polymerizationCopolymerSocial psychologyPolymerPsychologyLaserElectron Spin Resonance StudiesPhotosynthetic Processes and MechanismsPhotochemistry and Electron Transfer Studies