January 14, 2016
Feature

Bringing New Light to a Transformative Protein

Combined approach used to investigate photophysics of green fluorescent protein

Led by scientists at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, researchers combined experiment, computation, and theory to discover new insights about green fluorescent proteins, which, when added to viruses and proteins, brings their life and function into view. The research was featured on the December 14 cover of The Journal of Chemical Physics. Reproduced with permission of AIP Publishing.

A substance squeezed from a jellyfish found off the western coast of North America has transformed modern cellular biology. The substance is green fluorescent protein (GFP), which, when added to viruses and proteins, brings their life and function into view. Now, by combining experiment, computation, and theory, scientists at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory and colleagues at Louisiana State University have discovered new insights about GFP's behavior. This in turn can lead to even more ways to exploit this valuable monitor of biological processes.

By adding a few water molecules to the GFP chromophore—the part of the molecule responsible for its color—the scientists simulated crystallographic water molecules in GFPs. When water is added, the excited state that generates fluorescence is more stable. Water apparently shuts the channel to electron emissions, effectively shutting off electron autodetachment competition and allowing fluorescence.

The scientists' findings provide a more accurate understanding of this extremely useful protein. The two water molecules shown on the December 14 cover of The Journal of Chemical Physics make a huge difference in the behavior of the GFP. In turn, this can lead to eventual control and manipulation of processes where GFP is used.

Why It Matters: GFPs (see sidebar) are invaluable as markers for monitoring processes in living cells, such as in cancer research, where GFP-labeled cells model how cancer spreads to organs. Their versatility and value has led to the synthesis of new types of GFPs with different colors and new classes of photoactivatable fluorescent proteins for use in ultra-resolution imaging and optical data storage of raw data images from living cells and tissues.

The photophysics of GFP and its chromophore depends on its local structure and environment. Despite extensive experimental and computational studies, many open questions remain about the key fundamental variables governing this process.

One question is what controls the efficiency of light emission. When GFP absorbs light, only some of the energy is converted into a fluorescent signal, with the rest being lost by a process known as relaxation or deactivation. The fraction of energy emitted as fluorescence versus that lost by relaxation dictates GFP's efficiency. What the PNNL and LSU scientists wanted to know was how the protein's internal environment—in this case, water—affects specific types of relaxation.

"We know the relaxation that competes against the fluorescence is critically dependent on the GFP chromophore's local environments, but we don't fully understand the details of why it happens," said PNNL chemical physicist Dr. Xue-Bin Wang, senior author of the article. "If we get rid of surrounding molecules by using the gas phase, the fluorescence goes away. And in solution, no fluorescence occurs at room temperature. But fluorescence returns at low temperatures. Is it caused by the intrinsic electronic structure properties of the chromophore in the protein? Or is it caused by other molecules in its environment? Our results showed it was the latter."

A Nobel-Worthy System: GFP is centrally important to modern cell biology. Its discovery and development garnered the 2008 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for scientists Osamu Shimomura, Martin Chalfie, and Roger Tsien. Gaining a fundamental molecular understanding of how GFP works can lead to the ability to control, engineer, or manipulate systems for new applications, such as biosensors, or for advanced imaging.

By Raymond Keller, under auspices of Crystal Protein. Licensed under Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons. Enlarge Image.

In the cartoons shown here, the GFP molecules are shown in full (left), and with the side of the surrounding barrel cut away (right) to reveal the chromophore, which is highlighted as a ball-and-stick model. Fluorescence arises when a molecule absorbs certain colors of visible light and then reemits a different, lower energy color.

The interactions of the chromophore with its surroundings will dramatically affect the fluorescent properties of GFP, such as the color or intensity of the fluorescence. Researchers are currently trying to understand the underlying physics of these processes.

By adding water and comparing the computation with experimental results, the scientists could determine that their theory of the molecules' structure was accurate.

Methods: The team combined negative ion photoelectron spectroscopy (NIPES) with theoretical calculations to create a probe to identify the exact conformers of clusters of the p-hydroxybenzylidene-2,3-dimethylimidazolinone anion (HBDI-), a model of the GFP chromophore. They used NWChem, an open-source computational chemistry software package supported by the Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Biological and Environmental Research (BER) and developed at PNNL with unique capabilities regarding excited states and structure characterization, and the supercomputer Cascade, at EMSL.

In a previous study by Wang and collaborators at the Chinese Academy of Sciences, the GFP chromophore itself was studied in the gas phase. In the current study, the scientists took another step farther by adding the water molecules. The notable addition was the use of advanced computer simulation techniques developed in collaboration with LSU.

"In the current paper, the important component was coming up with an accurate theory. In an experiment, when we obtain a signal, we don't ‘see' what is happening. Computer simulations using NWChem and EMSL supercomputing resources, give us the necessary details," said co-author Dr. Karol Kowalski.

"It's a puzzle," said computational scientist Dr. Marat Valiev, one of the co-authors. "You can't interrogate the protein system as a whole to obtain key molecular-level parameters governing photoresponses of GFP. We have to disassemble it piece by piece, examine each piece, and then put it back together, which is best approached through combining experiment and simulation."

What's Next? The scientists showed that the first few water molecules progressively stabilize the excited state of the chromophore. "This could be an important role of water molecules in GFPs that has not yet been fully explored," said Wang.

Acknowledgments

Sponsor: This research was supported by DOE, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, Chemical Sciences, Geosciences, and Biosciences Division. This material is based upon work supported by the U.S. Department of Energy under EPSCoR Grant No. DE-SC0012432 with additional support from the Louisiana Board of Regents (W.A.S.).

User Facility: EMSL

Research Team: Kiran Bhaskarah-Nair and William A Shelton, Louisiana State University; Xue-Bin Wang, Marat Valiev, Karol Kowalski, and Shihu Deng, PNNL.

Research Area: Chemical Sciences

Reference: Bhaskaran-Nair K, M Valiev, S Deng, WA Shelton, JR, K Kowalski, and XB Wang. 2015. "Probing Microhydration Effect on the Electronic Structure of the GFP Chromophore Anion: Photoelectron Spectroscopy and Theoretical Investigations." The Journal of Chemical Physics 143(22):224301. DOI: 10.1063/1.4936252

Related research: Pinning Down Energy Levels that Govern Proteins' Shine

###

About PNNL

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory draws on its distinguishing strengths in chemistry, Earth sciences, biology and data science to advance scientific knowledge and address challenges in sustainable energy and national security. Founded in 1965, PNNL is operated by Battelle for the Department of Energy’s Office of Science, which is the single largest supporter of basic research in the physical sciences in the United States. DOE’s Office of Science is working to address some of the most pressing challenges of our time. For more information, visit https://www.energy.gov/science/. For more information on PNNL, visit PNNL's News Center. Follow us on Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn and Instagram.

Published: January 14, 2016