Abstract

The denaturation of globular proteins by high pressure is frequently associated with the release of internal voids and/or the exposure of the hydrophobic protein interior to a polar aqueous solvent. Similar evidence with respect to membrane proteins is not available. Here, we investigate the impact of hydrostatic pressures reaching 12 kbar on light-harvesting 2 integral membrane complexes of purple photosynthetic bacteria using two types of innate chromophores in separate strategic locations: bacteriochlorophyll-a in the hydrophobic interior and tryptophan at both protein-solvent interfacial gateways to internal voids. The complexes from mutant Rhodobacter sphaeroides with low resilience against pressure were considered in parallel with the naturally robust complexes of Thermochromatium tepidum. In the former case, a firm correlation was established between the abrupt blue shift of the bacteriochlorophyll-a exciton absorption, a known indicator of the breakage of tertiary structure pigment-protein hydrogen bonds, and the quenching of tryptophan fluorescence, a supposed result of further protein solvation. No such effects were observed in the reference complex. While these data may be naively taken as supporting evidence of the governing role of hydration, the analysis of atomistic model structures of the complexes confirmed the critical part of the structure in the pressure-induced denaturation of the membrane proteins studied.

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