A Unified Model for Photophysical and Electro-Optical Properties of Green Fluorescent Proteins

05 July 2019, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Green fluorescent protein (GFPs) have become indispensable imaging and optogenetic tools. Their absorption and emission properties can be optimized for specific applications. Currently, no unified framework exists to comprehensively describe these photophysical properties, namely the absorption maxima, emission maxima, Stokes shifts, vibronic progressions, extinction coefficients, Stark tuning rates, and spontaneous emission rates, especially one that includes the effects of the protein environment. In this work, we study the correlations among these properties from systematically tuned GFP environmental mutants and chromophore variants. Correlation plots reveal monotonic trends, suggesting all these properties are governed by one underlying factor dependent on the chromophore's environment. By treating the anionic GFP chromophore as a mixed-valence compound existing as a superposition of two resonance forms, we argue that this underlying factor is defined as the difference in energy between the two forms, or the driving force, which is tuned by the environment. We then introduce a Marcus-Hush model with the bond length alternation vibrational mode, treating the GFP absorption band as an intervalence charge transfer band. This model explains all the observed strong correlations among photophysical properties; related subtopics are extensively discussed in Supporting Information. Finally, we demonstrate the model's predictive power by utilizing the additivity of the driving force. The model described here elucidates the role of the protein environment in modulating photophysical properties of the chromophore, providing insights and limitations for designing new GFPs with desired phenotypes. We argue this model should also be generally applicable to both biological and non-biological polymethine dyes.

Keywords

green fluorescent protein
color tuning
photophysics
electron transfer
Marcus–Hush theory
bond length alternation
polymethine dyes
Stokes shift
extinction coefficient
Stark tuning rate
electrostatics
resonance theory
mixed-valence complexes
intervalence charge transfer transition
protein environment effects
semi-synthetic method
driving force
protein design
structure-function relationship
potential energy surfaces
point mutations

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