Abstract

Escherichia coli DNA photolyase, which photorepairs cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers, contains two chromophore cofactors, 1,5-dihydroflavin adenine dinucleotide (FADH2) and 5,10-methenyltetrahydrofolate (MTHF). Previous work has shown that MTHF is the primary photoreceptor which transfers energy to the FADH2 cofactor; the FADH2 singlet excited state then repairs the photodimer by electron transfer. In this study, we have determined the rate constants for these photophysical processes by time-resolved fluorescence and absorption spectroscopy. From time-resolved fluorescence, we find that energy transfer from MTHF to FADH2 and FADH degrees occurs at rates of 4.6 x 10(9) and 3.0 x 10(10) s-1, respectively, and electron transfer from FADH2 to a pyrimidine dimer occurs at a rate of 5.5 x 10(9) s-1. Using Förster theory for long-range energy transfer and assuming K2 = 2/3, the interchromophore distances were estimated to be 22 A in the case of the MTHF-FADH2 pair and 21 A for the MTHF-FADH degrees pair. Picosecond absorption spectroscopy identified an MTHF single state which decays to yield the first excited singlet state of FADH2. The lifetimes of MTHF and FADH2 singlets and the rates of interchromophore energy transfer, as well as the rate of electron transfer from FADH2 to DNA measured by time-resolved fluorescence, were in excellent agreement with the values obtained by picosecond laser flash photolysis. Similarly, fluorescence or absorption lifetime studies of the folate-depleted enzyme with and without photodimer suggest that FADH2, in its singlet excited state, transfers an electron to the dimer with 89% efficiency. The distance between FADH2 and the photodimer was calculated to be ca. 14 A.

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