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Query: EC:4.1.99.3 (PRE)
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Cryptochromes are blue light-activated photoreceptors found in multiple organisms with significant similarity to photolyases, a class of light-dependent DNA repair enzymes. Unlike photolyases, cryptochromes do not repair DNA and instead mediate blue light-dependent developmental, growth, and/or circadian responses by an as yet unknown mechanism of action. It has recently been shown that Arabidopsis cryptochrome-1 retains photolyase-like photoreduction of its flavin cofactor FAD by intraprotein electron transfer from tryptophan and tyrosine residues. Here we demonstrate that substitution of two conserved tryptophans that are constituents of the flavin-reducing electron transfer chain in Escherichia coli photolyase impairs light-induced electron transfer in the Arabidopsis cryptochrome-1 photoreceptor in vitro. Furthermore, we show that these substitutions result in marked reduction of light-activated autophosphorylation of cryptochrome-1 in vitro and of its photoreceptor function in vivo, consistent with biological relevance of the electron transfer reaction. These data support the possibility that light-induced flavin reduction via the tryptophan chain is the primary step in the signaling pathway of plant cryptochrome.
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PMID:Light-induced electron transfer in Arabidopsis cryptochrome-1 correlates with in vivo function. 1577 75

Three covalently linked tryptophan-thymine oxetane compounds used as a model of the (6-4) photolyase-substrate complex have been prepared. Under 290 nm light, efficient splitting of the thymine oxetane with aromatic carbonyl compounds gives the thymine monomer and the corresponding carbonyl compounds by the covalently linked tryptophan via an intramolecular electron transfer, and exhibits a strong solvent dependence: the quantum yield (Phi) is ca. 0.1 in dioxane, and near 0.3 in water. Electron transfer from the excited tryptophan residue to the oxetane unit is the origin of fluorescence quenching of the tryptophan residue, and is more efficient in strong polar solvents. The splitting efficiency of the oxetane radical anion within the tryptophan.+-oxetane.- species is also solvent-dependent, ranging from ca. 0.2 in dioxane to near 0.35 in water. Thus, the back electron transfer reaction in the charge-separated species would be suppressed in water, but is still a main factor causing low splitting efficiencies in the tryptophan-oxetane systems. In contrast to the tryptophan-oxetane system, fast nonradiation processes are the main causes of low efficiency in the flavin-oxetane system. Hence, nonradiative processes of the excited FADH-, rather than electron transfer to oxetane, may be an important factor for the low repair efficiency of (6-4) photolyase.
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PMID:Model studies of the (6-4) photoproduct photoreactivation: efficient photosensitized splitting of thymine oxetane units by covalently linked tryptophan in high polarity solvents. 1639 71

Photoreduction of the semi-reduced flavin adenine dinucleotide cofactor FADH* in DNA photolyase from Escherichia coli into FADH- involves three tryptophan (W) residues that form a closely spaced electron-transfer chain FADH*-W382-W359-W306. To investigate this process, we have constructed a mutant photolyase in which W359 is replaced by phenylalanine (F). Monitoring its photoproducts by femtosecond spectroscopy, the excited-state FADH* was found to decay in approximately 30 ps, similar as in wild type (WT) photolyase. In contrast to WT, however, in W359F mutant photolyase the ground-state FADH* fully recovered virtually concomitantly with the decay of its excited state and, despite the presence of the primary electron donor W382, no measurable flavin reduction was observed at any time. Thus, W359F photolyase appears to behave like many other flavoproteins, where flavin excited states are quenched by very short-lived oxidation of aromatic residues. Our analysis indicates that both charge recombination of the primary charge separation state FADH-W382*+ and (in WT) electron transfer from W359 to W382*+ occur with time constants <4 ps, considerably faster than the initial W382-->FADH* electron-transfer step. Our results provide a first experimental indication that electron transfer between aromatic residues can take place on the time scale of approximately 10(-12) s.
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PMID:Role of the middle residue in the triple tryptophan electron transfer chain of DNA photolyase: ultrafast spectroscopy of a Trp-->Phe mutant. 1689 6

DNA photolyases (EC 4.1.99.3) are enzymes that catalyze photoreversion of cis,syn-thymine photodimer (T[c,s]T), which is one of major photolesion products in DNA, by utilizing UV light. In this work, we have designed and synthesized Zn2+ -1,4,7,10-tetraazacyclododecane complexes bearing a lumiflavin and L: -tryptophan (ZnL3) or L: -phenylalanine (ZnL4) as artificial DNA photolyases. We have found that (ZnL3)red, whose flavin unit was reduced in situ by Na2S2O4, accelerates the photoreversion of T[c,s]T utilizing near-UV light in aqueous solution at pH 7.6 and 11. Interestingly, more efficient photoreversion of T[c,s]T was achieved by UV irradiation of an oxidized form of ZnL3 [(ZnL3)ox] in the presence of an excess amount of Et3N at pH 11. UV-vis and fluorescence measurements and action spectra showed that an oxidized form of flavin of (ZnL3)ox was photoreduced by Et3N into its reduced form (ZnL3)red, which promoted the photoreduction of T[c,s]T. Comparison of the photochemical properties of ZnL3 with those of ZnL4 suggested that a tryptophan unit in ZnL3 contributed to the stabilities of the flavin through intramolecular photoinduced electron transfer.
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PMID:Efficient cycloreversion of cis,syn-thymine photodimer by a Zn2+ -1,4,7,10-tetraazacyclododecane complex bearing a lumiflavin and tryptophan by chemical reduction and photoreduction of a lumiflavin unit. 1694 31

cis-syn Cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers, major UV-induced DNA lesions, are efficiently repaired by DNA photolyases. The key step of the repair reaction is a light-driven electron transfer from the FADH(-) cofactor to the dimer; the resulting radical anion splits spontaneously. Whether the splitting reaction requires considerable activation energy is still under dispute. Recent reports show that the splitting reaction of a dimer radical anion has a significant activation barrier (0.45 eV), and so photolyases have to provide considerable energy. However, these results contradict observations that cis-syn dimer radical anions split into monomers at -196 degrees C, and that the full process of DNA photoreactivation was fast (1.5-2 ns). To investigate the activation energies of dimer radical anions, three model compounds 1-3 were prepared. These include a covalently linked cyclobutane thymine dimer and a tryptophan residue (1) or a flavin unit (3), and the covalently linked uracil dimer and tryptophan (2). Their properties of photosensitised splitting of the dimer units by tryptophan or flavin unit were investigated over a large temperature range, -196 to 70 degrees C. The activation energies were obtained from the temperature dependency of splitting reactions for 1 and 2, 1.9 kJ mol(-1) and 0.9 kJ mol(-1) for the thymine and uracil dimer radical anions, respectively. These values are much lower than that obtained for E. coli photolyase (0.45 eV), and are surmountable at -196 degrees C. The activation energies provide support for previous observations that repair efficiencies for uracil dimers are higher than thymine dimers, both in enzymatic and model systems. The mechanisms of highly efficient enzymatic DNA repair are discussed.
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PMID:Do photolyases need to provide considerable activation energy for the splitting of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer radical anions? 1756 58

DNA photolyases repair UV-induced cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers in DNA by photoinduced electron transfer. The redox-active cofactor is FAD in its doubly reduced state FADH-. Typically, during enzyme purification, the flavin is oxidized to its singly reduced semiquinone state FADH degrees . The catalytically potent state FADH- can be reestablished by so-called photoactivation. Upon photoexcitation, the FADH degrees is reduced by an intrinsic amino acid, the tryptophan W306 in Escherichia coli photolyase, which is 15 A distant. Initially, it has been believed that the electron passes directly from W306 to excited FADH degrees , in line with a report that replacement of W306 with redox-inactive phenylalanine (W306F mutant) suppressed the electron transfer to the flavin [Li, Y. F., et al. (1991) Biochemistry 30, 6322-6329]. Later it was realized that two more tryptophans (W382 and W359) are located between the flavin and W306; they may mediate the electron transfer from W306 to the flavin either by the superexchange mechanism (where they would enhance the electronic coupling between the flavin and W306 without being oxidized at any time) or as real redox intermediates in a three-step electron hopping process (FADH degrees * <-- W382 <-- W359 <-- W306). Here we reinvestigate the W306F mutant photolyase by transient absorption spectroscopy. We demonstrate that electron transfer does occur upon excitation of FADH degrees and leads to the formation of FADH- and a deprotonated tryptophanyl radical, most likely W359 degrees. These photoproducts are formed in less than 10 ns and recombine to the dark state in approximately 1 micros. These results support the electron hopping mechanism.
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PMID:Observation of an intermediate tryptophanyl radical in W306F mutant DNA photolyase from Escherichia coli supports electron hopping along the triple tryptophan chain. 1769 63

Transient absorption spectroscopy is a powerful tool for studying biological electron-transfer chains, provided that their members give rise to distinct changes of their absorption spectra. There are, however, chains that contain identical molecules, so that electron transfer between them does not change net absorption. An example is the chain flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD)-W382-W359-W306 in DNA photolyase from E. coli. Upon absorption of a photon, the excited state of FADH* (neutral FAD radical) abstracts an electron from the tryptophan residue W382 in approximately 30 ps (monitored by transient absorption). The cation radical W382*+ is presumably reduced by W359 and W359*+ by W306. The latter two reactions could not be monitored directly so far because the absorption changes of the partners compensate in each step. To overcome this difficulty, we used linearly polarized flashes for excitation of FADH*, thus inducing a preferential axis in the a priori unoriented sample (photoselection). Because W359 and W306 are very differently oriented within the protein, detection with polarized light should allow us to distinguish them. To demonstrate this, W306 was mutated to redox-inert phenylalanine. We show that the resulting anisotropy spectrum of the initial absorption changes (measured at 10 ns time resolution) is in line with W359 being oxidized. The corresponding spectrum in wildtype photolyase is clearly different and identifies W306 as the oxidized species. These findings set an upper limit of 10 ns for electron transfer from W306 to W359*+ in wildtype DNA photolyase, consistent with previous, more indirect evidence [Aubert, C.; Vos, M. H.; Mathis, P.; Eker, A. P. M.; Brettel, K. Nature 2000, 405, 586-590].
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PMID:Polarized transient absorption to resolve electron transfer between tryptophans in DNA photolyase. 1847 Oct 9

We report here our systematic studies of the dynamics of four redox states of the flavin cofactor in both photolyases and insect type 1 cryptochromes. With femtosecond resolution, we observed ultrafast photoreduction of oxidized state flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) in subpicosecond and of neutral radical semiquinone (FADH(*)) in tens of picoseconds through intraprotein electron transfer mainly with a neighboring conserved tryptophan triad. Such ultrafast dynamics make these forms of flavin unlikely to be the functional states of the photolyase/cryptochrome family. In contrast, we find that upon excitation the anionic semiquinone (FAD(*-)) and hydroquinone (FADH(-)) have longer lifetimes that are compatible with high-efficiency intermolecular electron transfer reactions. In photolyases, the excited active state (FADH(-)*) has a long (nanosecond) lifetime optimal for DNA-repair function. In insect type 1 cryptochromes known to be blue-light photoreceptors the excited active form (FAD(*-)*) has complex deactivation dynamics on the time scale from a few to hundreds of picoseconds, which is believed to occur through conical intersection(s) with a flexible bending motion to modulate the functional channel. These unique properties of anionic flavins suggest a universal mechanism of electron transfer for the initial functional steps of the photolyase/cryptochrome blue-light photoreceptor family.
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PMID:Ultrafast dynamics and anionic active states of the flavin cofactor in cryptochrome and photolyase. 1850 Aug 2

One of the two principal hypotheses put forward to explain the primary magnetoreception event underlying the magnetic compass sense of migratory birds is based on a magnetically sensitive chemical reaction. It has been proposed that a spin-correlated radical pair is produced photochemically in a cryptochrome and that the rates and yields of the subsequent chemical reactions depend on the orientation of the protein in the Earth's magnetic field. The suitability of cryptochrome for this purpose has been argued, in part, by analogy with DNA photolyase, although no effects of applied magnetic fields have yet been reported for any member of the cryptochrome/photolyase family. Here, we demonstrate a magnetic-field effect on the photochemical yield of a flavin-tryptophan radical pair in Escherichia coli photolyase. This result provides a proof of principle that photolyases, and most likely by extension also cryptochromes, have the fundamental properties needed to form the basis of a magnetic compass.
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PMID:Magnetic-field effect on the photoactivation reaction of Escherichia coli DNA photolyase. 1879 43

DNA photolyase is a photoactive flavoprotein that contains three tryptophan residues between the FAD cofactor and the protein surface, the solvent-exposed Trp being located 14.8 A from the flavin. Photoreduction of the neutral radical FADH. form to the catalytically active FADH- form occurs via electron transfer through this chain. The first step in this chain takes 30 ps, the second less than 4 ps. Using a combination of site-directed mutagenesis and femtosecond polarization spectroscopy to discriminate the spectroscopically indistinguishable Trp residues, we show that the third step occurs in less than 30 ps. This implies that the first photoreduction step is rate limiting and that the Trp chain effectively acts as molecular "wire" ensuring rapid and directed long-range charge translocation across the protein. This finding is important for the functioning of the large class of cryptochrome blue-light receptors, where the Trp chain is conserved. In DNA photolyase we make use of the natural photoactivation of the process, but more generally chains of aromatic amino acids may allow very fast long-range electron transfer also in nonphotoactive proteins.
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PMID:Electron hopping through the 15 A triple tryptophan molecular wire in DNA photolyase occurs within 30 ps. 1885 Jul 8


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