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Red Light in Chemiluminescence and Yellow-Green Light in Bioluminescence:  Color-Tuning Mechanism of Firefly, <i>Photinus pyralis</i>, Studied by the Symmetry-Adapted Cluster−Configuration Interaction Method

137

Citations

37

References

2007

Year

Abstract

The yellow-green luminescence from firefly luciferase has long been understood to be the emission from enol-oxyluciferin. However, a recent experiment showed that an oxyluciferin constrained to the keto form produced a yellow-green emission in luciferase (Branchini, B. R.; Murtiashaw, M. H.; Magyar, R. A.; Portier, N. C.; Ruggiero, M. C.; Stroh, J. G. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2002, 124, 2112-2113). The present quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical and symmetry-adapted cluster-configuration interaction (SAC-CI) theoretical study supports the keto-form to be the yellow-green bioluminescence state in luciferase. We give the theoretically optimized structure of the excited state of oxyluciferin within luciferase, which gives luminescence calculated by the SAC-CI method that is close to the experimental value. Coulombic interactions with neighboring residues, in particular Arg218 and the phosphate group of AMP, play important roles in the color-tuning mechanism. Transformation to the enol form is energetically unfavorable in the luciferase environment. The twisted intramolecular charge-transfer (TICT) state is meta stable and would be easily relaxed to the co-planer structure. Further analyses were performed to verify the spectral-tuning mechanism based on the protonation state and the resonance structure of oxyluciferin.

References

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