Abstract
Recently steady-state and picosecond time-resolved absorption and fluorescence spectroscopy on the Green Fluorescent Protein (GFP) have been interpreted by a mechanism where the key process is an excited state deprotonation of the chromophore (M. Chattoraij, B.A. King, G.U. Bublitz and S.G. Boxer, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 93 (1996) 8362–8367). Such a conclusion was borne out by the mirror image of the picosecond decay of the protonated species RH ∗ in the blue and the concomitant picosecond rise of the green fluorescence of the deprotonated fluorophore R −∗ as well as the significant slowing of both kinetic features upon deuteration. We report similar experiments confirming this mechanism. The results of ultrafast spectroscopy on wild-type GFP together with two important mutants combined with the recent crystal structures are shown to shed more light on the interplay between absorption and emission phenomena in GFP. Beyond some differences with previous results pertaining, for instance, to the assignment of vibronic progressions in absorption spectra and the temperature dependence of excited state deprotonation, several new features have been identified. These concern the deprotonated ground state R − in equilibrium as well as the excited state RH ∗. In particular, we have studied the distributed fluorescence kinetics in the time and frequency domain, excited state absorption features observed in femtosecond time-resolution, and the dependence of excited state proton transfer kinetics on the aggregational state of the protein.
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