Abstract

The photo-excitation of flavin mononucleotide (FMN) in the wild-type light, oxygen and voltage sensitive (LOV) domains of the blue-light photoreceptors phototropin causes the formation of an intermediate flavin-C(4a)-cysteinyl adduct. The adduct formation due to picosecond laser pulse exaction (wavelength 400 nm) is studied on wild-type LOV1 and LOV2 domains of the phototropin phot from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. The efficiency of adduct formation is probed by detection of the fluorescence signals caused by time-separated picosecond excitation pulses since FMN is fluorescent and the formed adduct is non-fluorescent. Quantum yields of adduct formation of ϕ Ad ≈ 0.06 are determined for excitation with intense single-pulses of energy densities, w L, comparable to or larger than the saturation energy density, w sat , S 0 , of ground-state population depletion. Under repetitive picosecond pulse excitation conditions the efficiency of adduct formation rises with decreasing picosecond pulse energy density and approaches for w L < 0.001 w sat , S 0 the continuous blue-light exposure quantum yields of adduct formation in the range from ϕ Ad = 0.5–0.9. Picosecond laser pulse induced energy deposition in the LOV domains causing protein conformational changes is discussed as main origin of the intensity dependent reduction of the efficiency of adduct-formation.

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