Light activation of Orange Carotenoid Protein reveals bicycle-pedal single-bond isomerization
Abstract
Orange Carotenoid protein (OCP) is the only known photoreceptor which uses carotenoid for its activation. It is found exclusively in cyanobacteria, where it functions to control light-harvesting of the photosynthetic machinery. However, the photochemical reactions and structural dynamics of this unique photosensing process are not yet resolved. We present time-resolved crystal structures at second-to-minute delays under bright illumination, capturing the early photoproduct and structures of the subsequent reaction intermediates. The first stable photoproduct shows concerted isomerization of C9’-C8’ and C7’-C6’ single bonds in the bicycle-pedal (BP) manner and structural changes in the N-terminal domain with minute timescale kinetics. These are followed by a thermally-driven recovery of the BP isomer to the dark state carotenoid configuration. Structural changes propagate to the C-terminal domain, resulting, at later time, in the H-bond rupture of the carotenoid keto group with protein residues. The isomerization and its transient nature are confirmed in OCP crystals and solution by FTIR and UV/Vis spectroscopy. This study reveals the single bond isomerization of the carotenoid in the BP manner and subsequent thermal structural reactions as the basis of OCP photoreception. Understanding and potentially controlling the OCP dynamics offers the prospect of novel applications in biomass engineering as well as in optogenetics and bioimaging.
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