Mechanism and dynamics of photoswitchable flavoprotein charge-transfer complexes†
Abstract
Because of their diverse uses in biological science and engineering, continued effort has been made to expand the pool of photoswitchable protein systems. A recent study demonstrated that in monomeric sarcosine oxidase (MSOX), photoexcitation of a charge-transfer (CT) complex formed by a flavin cofactor and a nonreactive ligand (e.g., methylthioacetate) induces the ligand to reversibly change conformation, with implications for the development of flavin-dependent fast photochromic proteins. However, the factors that control the underlying switching mechanism and dynamics remain largely unexplored. Herein, combining extensive protein mutagenesis, ultrafast laser spectroscopic measurements and classical and quantum computational approaches, we assess those factors in a range of protein variants, including those of MSOX and another flavoenzyme, N-methyltryptophan oxidase (MTOX), where we find that a similar photoswitching cycle can occur. We demonstrate that (1) the kinetic behaviors of the photoswitching cycle are protein- and ligand-dependent; (2) the photoswitching and backward thermal recovery rates can be tuned by mutation of a specific active-site residue (Met245 and Thr239 in MSOX and MTOX, respectively), with recovery rates spanning over an order of magnitude, and (3) modifications of the protein environment alter the conformational energy landscape of the ligand–flavin complex, consequently regulating the photocycle. Taken together, these findings highlight the versatility of such photoswitchable systems, providing a molecular basis for fine-tuning their photophysical properties.