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Two-photon Absorption and Photoionization of a Bacterial Phytochrome

Journal of Molecular Biology, ISSN: 0022-2836, Vol: 436, Issue: 5, Page: 168357
2024
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Reports on Plant Proteins Findings from Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam Provide New Insights (Two-photon Absorption and Photoionization of a Bacterial Phytochrome)

2024 JUN 12 (NewsRx) -- By a News Reporter-Staff News Editor at NewsRx Life Science Daily -- Current study results on Proteins - Plant Proteins

Article Description

Phytochromes constitute a family of photosensory proteins that are utilized by various organisms to regulate several physiological processes. Phytochromes bind a bilin pigment that switches its isomeric state upon absorption of red or far-red photons, resulting in protein conformational changes that are sensed by the organism. Previously, the ultrafast dynamics in bacterial phytochrome was resolved to atomic resolution by time-resolved serial femtosecond X-ray diffraction (TR-SFX), showing extensive changes in its molecular conformation at 1 picosecond delay time. However, the large excitation fluence of mJ/mm 2 used in TR-SFX questions the validity of the observed dynamics. In this work, we present an excitation-dependent ultrafast transient absorption study to test the response of a related bacterial phytochrome to excitation fluence. We observe excitation power-dependent sub-picosecond dynamics, assigned to the population of high-lying excited state S n through resonantly enhanced two-photon absorption, followed by rapid internal conversion to the low-lying S 1 state. Inspection of the long-lived spectrum under high fluence shows that in addition to the primary intermediate Lumi-R, spectroscopic signatures of solvated electrons and ionized chromophore radicals are observed. Supported by numerical modelling, we propose that under excitation fluences of tens of μJ/mm 2 and higher, bacterial phytochrome partly undergoes photoionization from the S n state in competition with internal conversion to the S 1 state in 300 fs. We suggest that the extensive structural changes of related, shorter bacterial phytochrome, lacking the PHY domain, resolved from TR-SFX may have been affected by the ionized species. We propose approaches to minimize the two-photon absorption process by tuning the excitation spectrum away from the S 1 absorption or using phytochromes exhibiting minimized or shifted S 1 absorption.

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