Publications

2021
A.M. Armon, Bedi, A. , Borin, V. , Schapiro, I. , and Gidron, O. . 2021. Bending Versus Twisting Acenes – A Computational Study. European Journal Of Organic Chemistry, 2021, 39, Pp. 5424 - 5429. https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85117518611&doi=10.1002%2fejoc.202100865&partnerID=40&md5=9e6f97c30382cd93ff149ebe2c2aafb9.
Y. Han, Wang, Z. , Wei, Z. , Schapiro, I. , and Li, J. . 2021. Binding Affinity And Mechanisms Of Sars-Cov-2 Variants. Computational And Structural Biotechnology Journal, 19, Pp. 4184 - 4191. https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85111766326&doi=10.1016%2fj.csbj.2021.07.026&partnerID=40&md5=949850a3591d42dc55fae16912c228b4.
S. Riebe, Adam, S. , Roy, B. , Maisuls, I. , Daniliuc, C.G. , Dubbert, J. , Strassert, C.A. , Schapiro, I. , and Voskuhl, J. . 2021. Bridged Aromatic Oxo- And Thioethers With Intense Emission In Solution And The Solid State. Chemistry - An Asian Journal, 16, 16, Pp. 2307 - 2313. https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85112685629&doi=10.1002%2fasia.202100492&partnerID=40&md5=f8f33df0bcf6421e9ee47424daeeea9f.
M.-A. Mroginski, Adam, S. , Amoyal, G.S. , Barnoy, A. , Bondar, A.-N. , Borin, V.A. , Church, J.R. , Domratcheva, T. , Ensing, B. , Fanelli, F. , Ferré, N. , Filiba, O. , Pedraza-González, L. , González, R. , González-Espinoza, C.E. , Kar, R.K. , Kemmler, L. , Kim, S.S. , Kongsted, J. , Krylov, A.I. , Lahav, Y. , Lazaratos, M. , NasserEddin, Q. , Navizet, I. , Nemukhin, A. , Olivucci, M. , Olsen, J.M.H. , Pérez de Alba Ort{\'ız, A. , Pieri, E. , Rao, A.G. , Rhee, Y.M. , Ricardi, N. , Sen, S. , Solov’yov, I.A. , De Vico, L. , Wesolowski, T.A. , Wiebeler, C. , Yang, X. , and Schapiro, I. . 2021. Frontiers In Multiscale Modeling Of Photoreceptor Proteins. Photochemistry And Photobiology, 97, 2, Pp. 243 - 269. https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85100850859&doi=10.1111%2fphp.13372&partnerID=40&md5=847931448b2107c679cb1c5c97aabb85.
J.F. Bada Juarez, Judge, P.J. , Adam, S. , Axford, D. , Vinals, J. , Birch, J. , Kwan, T.O.C. , Hoi, K.K. , Yen, H.-Y. , Vial, A. , Milhiet, P.-E. , Robinson, C.V. , Schapiro, I. , Moraes, I. , and Watts, A. . 2021. Structures Of The Archaerhodopsin-3 Transporter Reveal That Disordering Of Internal Water Networks Underpins Receptor Sensitization. Nature Communications, 12, 1. https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85099922560&doi=10.1038%2fs41467-020-20596-0&partnerID=40&md5=f37f843a312ca36ac8d57660bc1700cc.
S.G. Sokolovski, Zherebtsov, E.A. , Kar, R.K. , Golonka, D. , Stabel, R. , Chichkov, N.B. , Gorodetsky, A. , Schapiro, I. , Möglich, A. , and Rafailov, E.U.. 2021. Two-Photon Conversion Of A Bacterial Phytochrome. Biophysical Journal, 120, 5, Pp. 964 - 974. https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85101243282&doi=10.1016%2fj.bpj.2021.01.028&partnerID=40&md5=7811a13010f602d500aadc6298874f4b.
2020
Shifra Lansky, Salama, Rachel , Shulami, Smadar , Lavid, Noa , Sen, Saumik , Schapiro, Igor , Shoham, Yuval , and Shoham, Gil . 2020. Carbohydrate-Binding Capability And Functional Conformational Changes Of Abne, An Arabino-Oligosaccharide Binding Protein. http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022283620301078. Abstract
ABC importers are membrane proteins responsible for the transport of nutrients into the cells of prokaryotes. Although the structures of ABC importers vary, all contain four conserved domains: two nucleotide-binding domains (NBDs), which bind and hydrolyze ATP, and two transmembrane domains (TMDs), which help translocate the substrate. ABC importers are also dependent on an additional protein component, a high-affinity substrate-binding protein (SBP) that specifically binds the target ligand for delivery to the appropriate ABC transporter. AbnE is a SBP belonging to the ABC importer for arabino-oligosaccharides in the Gram-positive thermophilic bacterium Geobacillus stearothermophilus. Using isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC), purified AbnE was shown to bind medium-sized arabino-oligosaccharides, in the range of arabino-triose (A3) to arabino-octaose (A8), all with Kd values in the nanomolar range. We describe herein the 3D structure of AbnE in its closed conformation in complex with a wide range of arabino-oligosaccharide substrates (A2-A8). These structures provide the basis for the detailed structural analysis of the AbnE-sugar complexes, and together with complementary quantum chemical calculations, site-specific mutagenesis, and isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) experiments, provide detailed insights into the AbnE-substrate interactions involved. Small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) experiments and normal mode analysis (NMA) are used to study the conformational changes of AbnE, and these data, taken together, suggest clues regarding its binding mode to the full ABC importer.
Giovanni Battocchio, González, Ronald , Rao, Aditya G. , Schapiro, Igor , and Mroginski, Maria Andrea . 2020. Dynamic Properties Of The Photosensory Domain Of Deinococcus Radiodurans Bacteriophytochrome. The Journal Of Physical Chemistry Bthe Journal Of Physical Chemistry B, 124, 9, Pp. 1740 - 1750. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcb.0c00612. Abstract
Phytochromes are biological photoreceptors found in all kingdoms of life. Numerous physicochemical and spectroscopic studies of phytochromes have been carried out for many decades, both experimentally and computationally, with the main focus on the photoconversion mechanism involving a tetrapyrrole chromophore. In this computational work, we concentrate on the long-scale dynamic motion of the photosensory domain of Deinococcus radiodurans by means of classical all-atom molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. Conventional and accelerated MD methods in combination with two different force fields, CHARMM27 and AMBER ff14SB, are tested in long atomistic simulations to confront the dynamics of monomer and dimer forms. These calculations highlight dissimilar equilibrium conformations in aqueous solutions and, in turn, different large-scale dynamic behaviors of the monomer form vs the dimer form. While the phytochrome in a monomer form tends to close the cavity entailed between the GAF and PHY domains, the opposite trend is predicted for the phytochrome dimer, which opens up as a consequence of the formation of strong salt bridges between the PHY domains of two molecules in water.Phytochromes are biological photoreceptors found in all kingdoms of life. Numerous physicochemical and spectroscopic studies of phytochromes have been carried out for many decades, both experimentally and computationally, with the main focus on the photoconversion mechanism involving a tetrapyrrole chromophore. In this computational work, we concentrate on the long-scale dynamic motion of the photosensory domain of Deinococcus radiodurans by means of classical all-atom molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. Conventional and accelerated MD methods in combination with two different force fields, CHARMM27 and AMBER ff14SB, are tested in long atomistic simulations to confront the dynamics of monomer and dimer forms. These calculations highlight dissimilar equilibrium conformations in aqueous solutions and, in turn, different large-scale dynamic behaviors of the monomer form vs the dimer form. While the phytochrome in a monomer form tends to close the cavity entailed between the GAF and PHY domains, the opposite trend is predicted for the phytochrome dimer, which opens up as a consequence of the formation of strong salt bridges between the PHY domains of two molecules in water.
Petr Skopintsev, Ehrenberg, David , Weinert, Tobias , James, Daniel , Kar, Rajiv K. , Johnson, Philip J. M. , Ozerov, Dmitry , Furrer, Antonia , Martiel, Isabelle , Dworkowski, Florian , Nass, Karol , Knopp, Gregor , Cirelli, Claudio , Arrell, Christopher , Gashi, Dardan , Mous, Sandra , Wranik, Maximilian , Gruhl, Thomas , Kekilli, Demet , Brünle, Steffen , Deupi, Xavier , Schertler, Gebhard F. X. , Benoit, Roger M. , Panneels, Valerie , Nogly, Przemyslaw , Schapiro, Igor , Milne, Christopher , Heberle, Joachim , and Standfuss, Jörg . 2020. Femtosecond-To-Millisecond Structural Changes In A Light-Driven Sodium Pump. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-020-2307-8. Abstract
Light-driven sodium pumps actively transport small cations across cellular membranes1. These pumps are used by microorganisms to convert light into membrane potential and have become useful optogenetic tools with applications in neuroscience. Although the resting state structures of the prototypical sodium pump Krokinobacter eikastus rhodopsin 2 (KR2) have been solved2,3, it is unclear how structural alterations over time allow sodium to be translocated against a concentration gradient. Here, using the Swiss X-ray Free Electron Laser4, we have collected serial crystallographic data at ten pump–probe delays from femtoseconds to milliseconds. High-resolution structural snapshots throughout the KR2 photocycle show how retinal isomerization is completed on the femtosecond timescale and changes the local structure of the binding pocket in the early nanoseconds. Subsequent rearrangements and deprotonation of the retinal Schiff base open an electrostatic gate in microseconds. Structural and spectroscopic data, in combination with quantum chemical calculations, indicate that a sodium ion binds transiently close to the retinal within one millisecond. In the last structural intermediate, at 20 milliseconds after activation, we identified a potential second sodium-binding site close to the extracellular exit. These results provide direct molecular insight into the dynamics of active cation transport across biological membranes.
Chavdar Slavov, Fischer, Tobias , Barnoy, Avishai , Shin, Heewhan , Rao, Aditya G. , Wiebeler, Christian , Zeng, Xiaoli , Sun, Yafang , Xu, Qianzhao , Gutt, Alexander , Zhao, Kai-Hong , Gärtner, Wolfgang , Yang, Xiaojing , Schapiro, Igor , and Wachtveitl, Josef . 2020. The Interplay Between Chromophore And Protein Determines The Extended Excited State Dynamics In A Single-Domain Phytochrome. Proceedings Of The National Academy Of Sciences, Pp. 201921706. http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2020/06/25/1921706117.abstract. Abstract
Bilin-binding photoreceptors are light-signaling proteins that mediate various processes from photomorphogenesis, phototaxis, chromatic acclimation, to photosynthesis. They are also promising tunable optical agents for use in optogenetics and superresolution microscopy. Using an integrated approach of crystallography, spectroscopy, and QM/MM calculations, this work examines the ultrafast dynamics of a photoactive single-domain phytochrome. Our work reveals in detail the critical role of the protein environment in defining the excited state lifetime and thereby the quantum efficiency of the bilin photoisomerization. This insight provides design principles for engineering of bilin-based photoreceptors for biotechnological and medical applications.Phytochromes are a diverse family of bilin-binding photoreceptors that regulate a wide range of physiological processes. Their photochemical properties make them attractive for applications in optogenetics and superresolution microscopy. Phytochromes undergo reversible photoconversion triggered by the Z ⇄ E photoisomerization about the double bond in the bilin chromophore. However, it is not fully understood at the molecular level how the protein framework facilitates the complex photoisomerization dynamics. We have studied a single-domain bilin-binding photoreceptor All2699g1 (Nostoc sp. PCC 7120) that exhibits photoconversion between the red light-absorbing (Pr) and far red-absorbing (Pfr) states just like canonical phytochromes. We present the crystal structure and examine the photoisomerization mechanism of the Pr form as well as the formation of the primary photoproduct Lumi-R using time-resolved spectroscopy and hybrid quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics simulations. We show that the unusually long excited state lifetime (broad lifetime distribution centered at \~300 picoseconds) is due to the interactions between the isomerizing pyrrole ring D and an adjacent conserved Tyr142. The decay kinetics shows a strongly distributed character which is imposed by the nonexponential protein dynamics. Our findings offer a mechanistic insight into how the quantum efficiency of the bilin photoisomerization is tuned by the protein environment, thereby providing a structural framework for engineering bilin-based optical agents for imaging and optogenetics applications.
Anastasia Kraskov, Nguyen, Anh Duc , Goerling, Jan , Buhrke, David , Velazquez Escobar, Francisco , Fernandez Lopez, Maria , Michael, Norbert , Sauthof, Luisa , Schmidt, Andrea , Piwowarski, Patrick , Yang, Yang , Stensitzki, Till , Adam, Suliman , Bartl, Franz , Schapiro, Igor , Heyne, Karsten , Siebert, Friedrich , Scheerer, Patrick , Mroginski, Maria Andrea , and Hildebrandt, Peter . 2020. Intramolecular Proton Transfer Controls Protein Structural Changes In Phytochrome. Biochemistrybiochemistry, 59, 9, Pp. 1023-1037. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.biochem.0c00053. Abstract
Phytochromes are biological photoswitches that interconvert between two parent states (Pr and Pfr). The transformation is initiated by photoisomerization of the tetrapyrrole chromophore, followed by a sequence of chromophore and protein structural changes. In the last step, a phytochrome-specific peptide segment (tongue) undergoes a secondary structure change, which in prokaryotic phytochromes is associated with the (de)activation of the output module. The focus of this work is the Pfr-to-Pr photoconversion of the bathy bacteriophytochrome Agp2 in which Pfr is the thermodynamically stable state. Using spectroscopic techniques, we studied the structural and functional consequences of substituting Arg211, Tyr165, His278, and Phe192 close to the biliverdin (BV) chromophore. In Pfr, substitutions of these residues do not affect the BV structure. The characteristic Pfr properties of bathy phytochromes, including the protonated propionic side chain of ring C (propC) of BV, are preserved. However, replacing Arg211 or Tyr165 blocks the photoconversion in the Meta-F state, prior to the secondary structure transition of the tongue and without deprotonation of propC. The Meta-F state of these variants displays low photochemical activity, but electronic excitation causes ultrafast alterations of the hydrogen bond network surrounding the chromophore. In all variants studied here, thermal back conversion from the photoproducts to Pfr is decelerated but substitution of His278 or Phe192 is not critical for the Pfr-to-Pr photoconversion. These variants do not impair deprotonation of propC or the α-helix/β-sheet transformation of the tongue during the Meta-F-to-Pr decay. Thus, we conclude that propC deprotonation is essential for restructuring of the tongue.Phytochromes are biological photoswitches that interconvert between two parent states (Pr and Pfr). The transformation is initiated by photoisomerization of the tetrapyrrole chromophore, followed by a sequence of chromophore and protein structural changes. In the last step, a phytochrome-specific peptide segment (tongue) undergoes a secondary structure change, which in prokaryotic phytochromes is associated with the (de)activation of the output module. The focus of this work is the Pfr-to-Pr photoconversion of the bathy bacteriophytochrome Agp2 in which Pfr is the thermodynamically stable state. Using spectroscopic techniques, we studied the structural and functional consequences of substituting Arg211, Tyr165, His278, and Phe192 close to the biliverdin (BV) chromophore. In Pfr, substitutions of these residues do not affect the BV structure. The characteristic Pfr properties of bathy phytochromes, including the protonated propionic side chain of ring C (propC) of BV, are preserved. However, replacing Arg211 or Tyr165 blocks the photoconversion in the Meta-F state, prior to the secondary structure transition of the tongue and without deprotonation of propC. The Meta-F state of these variants displays low photochemical activity, but electronic excitation causes ultrafast alterations of the hydrogen bond network surrounding the chromophore. In all variants studied here, thermal back conversion from the photoproducts to Pfr is decelerated but substitution of His278 or Phe192 is not critical for the Pfr-to-Pr photoconversion. These variants do not impair deprotonation of propC or the α-helix/β-sheet transformation of the tongue during the Meta-F-to-Pr decay. Thus, we conclude that propC deprotonation is essential for restructuring of the tongue.
Francesco Aquilante, Autschbach, Jochen , Baiardi, Alberto , Battaglia, Stefano , Borin, Veniamin A. , Chibotaru, Liviu F. , Conti, Irene , De Vico, Luca , Delcey, Mickaël , Fdez. Galván, Ignacio , Ferré, Nicolas , Freitag, Leon , Garavelli, Marco , Gong, Xuejun , Knecht, Stefan , Larsson, Ernst D. , Lindh, Roland , Lundberg, Marcus , Malmqvist, Per Åke , Nenov, Artur , Norell, Jesper , Odelius, Michael , Olivucci, Massimo , Pedersen, Thomas B. , Pedraza-González, Laura , Phung, Quan M. , Pierloot, Kristine , Reiher, Markus , Schapiro, Igor , Segarra-Mart{\'ı, Javier , Segatta, Francesco , Seijo, Luis , Sen, Saumik , Sergentu, Dumitru-Claudiu , Stein, Christopher J. , Ungur, Liviu , Vacher, Morgane , Valentini, Alessio , and Veryazov, Valera . 2020. Modern Quantum Chemistry With [Open]Molcas. The Journal Of Chemical Physics, 152, 21, Pp. 214117. doi:10.1063/5.0004835.

Pages