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Dive into the research topics where Agnieszka A. Gil is active.

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Featured researches published by Agnieszka A. Gil.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Proteins in Action: Femtosecond to Millisecond Structural Dynamics of a Photoactive Flavoprotein

Richard Brust; András Lukács; Allison Haigney; Kiri Addison; Agnieszka A. Gil; Michael Towrie; Ian P. Clark; Gregory M. Greetham; Peter J. Tonge; Stephen R. Meech

Living systems are fundamentally dependent on the ability of proteins to respond to external stimuli. The mechanism, the underlying structural dynamics, and the time scales for regulation of this response are central questions in biochemistry. Here we probe the structural dynamics of the BLUF domain found in several photoactive flavoproteins, which is responsible for light activated functions as diverse as phototaxis and gene regulation. Measurements have been made over 10 decades of time (from 100 fs to 1 ms) using transient vibrational spectroscopy. Chromophore (flavin ring) localized dynamics occur on the pico- to nanosecond time scale, while subsequent protein structural reorganization is observed over microseconds. Multiple time scales are observed for the dynamics associated with different vibrations of the protein, suggesting an underlying hierarchical relaxation pathway. Structural evolution in residues directly H-bonded to the chromophore takes place more slowly than changes in more remote residues. However, a point mutation which suppresses biological function is shown to ‘short circuit’ this structural relaxation pathway, suppressing the changes which occur further away from the chromophore while accelerating dynamics close to it.


Angewandte Chemie | 2015

Complete Proton Transfer Cycle in GFP and Its T203V and S205V Mutants

Sergey P. Laptenok; András Lukács; Agnieszka A. Gil; Richard Brust; Igor V. Sazanovich; Gregory M. Greetham; Peter J. Tonge; Stephen R. Meech

Proton transfer is critical in many important biochemical reactions. The unique three-step excited-state proton transfer in avGFP allows observations of protein proton transport in real-time. In this work we exploit femtosecond to microsecond transient IR spectroscopy to record, in D2O, the complete proton transfer photocycle of avGFP, and two mutants (T203V and S205V) which modify the structure of the proton wire. Striking differences and similarities are observed among the three mutants yielding novel information on proton transfer mechanism, rates, isotope effects, H-bond strength and proton wire stability. These data provide a detailed picture of the dynamics of long-range proton transfer in a protein against which calculations may be compared.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

BLUF domain function does not require a metastable radical intermediate state.

András Lukács; Richard Brust; Allison Haigney; Sergey P. Laptenok; Kiri Addison; Agnieszka A. Gil; Michael Towrie; Gregory M. Greetham; Peter J. Tonge; Stephen R. Meech

BLUF (blue light using flavin) domain proteins are an important family of blue light-sensing proteins which control a wide variety of functions in cells. The primary light-activated step in the BLUF domain is not yet established. A number of experimental and theoretical studies points to a role for photoinduced electron transfer (PET) between a highly conserved tyrosine and the flavin chromophore to form a radical intermediate state. Here we investigate the role of PET in three different BLUF proteins, using ultrafast broadband transient infrared spectroscopy. We characterize and identify infrared active marker modes for excited and ground state species and use them to record photochemical dynamics in the proteins. We also generate mutants which unambiguously show PET and, through isotope labeling of the protein and the chromophore, are able to assign modes characteristic of both flavin and protein radical states. We find that these radical intermediates are not observed in two of the three BLUF domains studied, casting doubt on the importance of the formation of a population of radical intermediates in the BLUF photocycle. Further, unnatural amino acid mutagenesis is used to replace the conserved tyrosine with fluorotyrosines, thus modifying the driving force for the proposed electron transfer reaction; the rate changes observed are also not consistent with a PET mechanism. Thus, while intermediates of PET reactions can be observed in BLUF proteins they are not correlated with photoactivity, suggesting that radical intermediates are not central to their operation. Alternative nonradical pathways including a keto–enol tautomerization induced by electronic excitation of the flavin ring are considered.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2014

Ultrafast Structural Dynamics of BlsA, a Photoreceptor from the Pathogenic Bacterium Acinetobacter baumannii

Richard Brust; Allison Haigney; András Lukács; Agnieszka A. Gil; Shahrier Hossain; Kiri Addison; Cheng-Tsung Lai; Michael Towrie; Gregory M. Greetham; Ian P. Clark; Boris Illarionov; Adelbert Bacher; Ryu-Ryun Kim; Markus Fischer; Carlos Simmerling; Stephen R. Meech; Peter J. Tonge

Acinetobacter baumannii is an important human pathogen that can form biofilms and persist under harsh environmental conditions. Biofilm formation and virulence are modulated by blue light, which is thought to be regulated by a BLUF protein, BlsA. To understand the molecular mechanism of light sensing, we have used steady-state and ultrafast vibrational spectroscopy to compare the photoactivation mechanism of BlsA to the BLUF photosensor AppA from Rhodobacter sphaeroides. Although similar photocycles are observed, vibrational data together with homology modeling identify significant differences in the β5 strand in BlsA caused by photoactivation, which are proposed to be directly linked to downstream signaling.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016

Mechanism of the AppABLUF Photocycle Probed by Site-Specific Incorporation of Fluorotyrosine Residues: Effect of the Y21 pKa on the Forward and Reverse Ground-State Reactions

Agnieszka A. Gil; Allison Haigney; Sergey P. Laptenok; Richard Brust; András Lukács; James N. Iuliano; Jessica Jeng; Eduard H. Melief; Rui-Kun Zhao; EunBin Yoon; Ian P. Clark; Michael Towrie; Gregory M. Greetham; Annabelle Ng; James J. Truglio; Jarrod B. French; Stephen R. Meech; Peter J. Tonge

The transcriptional antirepressor AppA is a blue light using flavin (BLUF) photoreceptor that releases the transcriptional repressor PpsR upon photoexcitation. Light activation of AppA involves changes in a hydrogen-bonding network that surrounds the flavin chromophore on the nanosecond time scale, while the dark state of AppA is then recovered in a light-independent reaction with a dramatically longer half-life of 15 min. Residue Y21, a component of the hydrogen-bonding network, is known to be essential for photoactivity. Here, we directly explore the effect of the Y21 pKa on dark state recovery by replacing Y21 with fluorotyrosine analogues that increase the acidity of Y21 by 3.5 pH units. Ultrafast transient infrared measurements confirm that the structure of AppA is unperturbed by fluorotyrosine substitution, and that there is a small (3-fold) change in the photokinetics of the forward reaction over the fluorotyrosine series. However, reduction of 3.5 pH units in the pKa of Y21 increases the rate of dark state recovery by 4000-fold with a Brønsted coefficient of ∼ 1, indicating that the Y21 proton is completely transferred in the transition state leading from light to dark adapted AppA. A large solvent isotope effect of ∼ 6-8 is also observed on the rate of dark state recovery. These data establish that the acidity of Y21 is a crucial factor for stabilizing the light activated form of the protein, and have been used to propose a model for dark state recovery that will ultimately prove useful for tuning the properties of BLUF photosensors for optogenetic applications.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2017

Femtosecond to Millisecond Dynamics of Light Induced Allostery in the Avena sativa LOV Domain

Agnieszka A. Gil; Sergey P. Laptenok; Jarrod B. French; James N. Iuliano; András Lukács; Christopher R. Hall; Igor V. Sazanovich; Gregory M. Greetham; Adelbert Bacher; Boris Illarionov; Markus Fischer; Peter J. Tonge; Stephen R. Meech

The rational engineering of photosensor proteins underpins the field of optogenetics, in which light is used for spatiotemporal control of cell signaling. Optogenetic elements function by converting electronic excitation of an embedded chromophore into structural changes on the microseconds to seconds time scale, which then modulate the activity of output domains responsible for biological signaling. Using time-resolved vibrational spectroscopy coupled with isotope labeling, we have mapped the structural evolution of the LOV2 domain of the flavin binding phototropin Avena sativa (AsLOV2) over 10 decades of time, reporting structural dynamics between 100 fs and 1 ms after optical excitation. The transient vibrational spectra contain contributions from both the flavin chromophore and the surrounding protein matrix. These contributions are resolved and assigned through the study of four different isotopically labeled samples. High signal-to-noise data permit the detailed analysis of kinetics associated with the light activated structural evolution. A pathway for the photocycle consistent with the data is proposed. The earliest events occur in the flavin binding pocket, where a subpicosecond perturbation of the protein matrix occurs. In this perturbed environment, the previously characterized reaction between triplet state isoalloxazine and an adjacent cysteine leads to formation of the adduct state; this step is shown to exhibit dispersive kinetics. This reaction promotes coupling of the optical excitation to successive time-dependent structural changes, initially in the β-sheet and then α-helix regions of the AsLOV2 domain, which ultimately gives rise to Jα-helix unfolding, yielding the signaling state. This model is tested through point mutagenesis, elucidating in particular the key mediating role played by Q513.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017

Photoactivation of the BLUF Protein PixD Probed by the Site-Specific Incorporation of Fluorotyrosine Residues

Agnieszka A. Gil; Sergey P. Laptenok; James N. Iuliano; András Lukács; Anil Verma; Christopher R. Hall; Grace E. Yoon; Richard Brust; Gregory M. Greetham; Michael Towrie; Jarrod B. French; Stephen R. Meech; Peter J. Tonge

The flavin chromophore in blue-light-using FAD (BLUF) photoreceptors is surrounded by a hydrogen bond network that senses and responds to changes in the electronic structure of the flavin on the ultrafast time scale. The hydrogen bond network includes a strictly conserved Tyr residue, and previously we explored the role of this residue, Y21, in the photoactivation mechanism of the BLUF protein AppABLUF by the introduction of fluorotyrosine (F-Tyr) analogues that modulated the pKa and reduction potential of Y21 by 3.5 pH units and 200 mV, respectively. Although little impact on the forward (dark- to light-adapted form) photoreaction was observed, the change in Y21 pKa led to a 4000-fold increase in the rate of dark-state recovery. In the present work we have extended these studies to the BLUF protein PixD, where, in contrast to AppABLUF, modulation in the Tyr (Y8) pKa has a profound impact on the forward photoreaction. In particular, a decrease in Y8 pKa by 2 or more pH units prevents formation of a stable light state, consistent with a photoactivation mechanism that involves proton transfer or proton-coupled electron transfer from Y8 to the electronically excited FAD. Conversely, the effect of pKa on the rate of dark recovery is markedly reduced in PixD. These observations highlight very significant differences between the photocycles of PixD and AppABLUF, despite their sharing highly conserved FAD binding architectures.


Nature Chemistry | 2018

Infrared spectroscopy reveals multi-step multi-timescale photoactivation in the photoconvertible protein archetype dronpa.

Sergey P. Laptenok; Agnieszka A. Gil; Christopher R. Hall; András Lukács; James N. Iuliano; Garth A. Jones; Gregory M. Greetham; Paul M. Donaldson; Atsushi Miyawaki; Peter J. Tonge; Stephen R. Meech

AbstractPhotochromic fluorescent proteins play key roles in super-resolution microscopy and optogenetics. The light-driven structural changes that modulate the fluorescence involve both trans-to-cis isomerization and proton transfer. The mechanism, timescale and relative contribution of chromophore and protein dynamics are currently not well understood. Here, the mechanism of off-to-on-state switching in dronpa is studied using femtosecond-to-millisecond time-resolved infrared spectroscopy and isotope labelling. Chromophore and protein dynamics are shown to occur on multiple timescales, from picoseconds to hundreds of microseconds. Following excitation of the trans chromophore, a ground-state primary product is formed within picoseconds. Surprisingly, the characteristic vibrational spectrum of the neutral cis isomer appears only after several tens of nanoseconds. Further fluctuations in protein structure around the neutral cis chromophore are required to form a new intermediate, which promotes the final proton-transfer reaction. These data illustrate the interplay between chromophore dynamics and the protein environment underlying fluorescent protein photochromism.Understanding the mechanism of photoconversion in fluorescent proteins is essential to optimizing applications in imaging and optogenetics. It has now been demonstrated that photoconversion in the photoswitchable protein dronpa follows a multi-step mechanism, with both chromophore and protein structural dynamics occurring on multiple timescales from picoseconds to hundreds of microseconds.


Biochemistry | 2018

Variation in LOV Photoreceptor Activation Dynamics Probed by Time Resolved Infrared Spectroscopy

James N. Iuliano; Agnieszka A. Gil; Sergey P. Laptenok; Christopher R. Hall; Jinnette Tolentino Collado; András Lukács; Safaa A. Hag Ahmed; Jenna Abyad; Taraneh Daryaee; Gregory M. Greetham; Igor V. Sazanovich; Boris Illarionov; Adelbert Bacher; Markus Fischer; Michael Towrie; Jarrod B. French; Stephen R. Meech; Peter J. Tonge

The light, oxygen, voltage (LOV) domain proteins are blue light photoreceptors that utilize a noncovalently bound flavin mononucleotide (FMN) cofactor as the chromophore. The modular nature of these proteins has led to their wide adoption in the emerging fields of optogenetics and optobiology, where the LOV domain has been fused to a variety of output domains leading to novel light-controlled applications. In this work, we extend our studies of the subpicosecond to several hundred microsecond transient infrared spectroscopy of the isolated LOV domain AsLOV2 to three full-length photoreceptors in which the LOV domain is fused to an output domain: the LOV-STAS protein, YtvA, the LOV-HTH transcription factor, EL222, and the LOV-histidine kinase, LovK. Despite differences in tertiary structure, the overall pathway leading to cysteine adduct formation from the FMN triplet state is highly conserved, although there are slight variations in rate. However, significant differences are observed in the vibrational spectra and kinetics after adduct formation, which are directly linked to the specific output function of the LOV domain. While the rate of adduct formation varies by only 3.6-fold among the proteins, the subsequent large-scale structural changes in the full-length LOV photoreceptors occur over the micro- to submillisecond time scales and vary by orders of magnitude depending on the different output function of each LOV domain.


Faraday Discussions | 2015

Electron transfer quenching in light adapted and mutant forms of the AppA BLUF domain

Sergey P. Laptenok; András Lukács; Richard Brust; Allison Haigney; Agnieszka A. Gil; Michael Towrie; Gregory M. Greetham; Peter J. Tonge; Stephen R. Meech

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Gregory M. Greetham

Rutherford Appleton Laboratory

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András Lukács

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Michael Towrie

Rutherford Appleton Laboratory

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