Key steps of protein function, in particular backbone conformational changes and proton transfer reactions, often take place in the microsecond to millisecond time scale. These dynamical processes can be studied by time-resolved step-scan Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy, in particular for proteins whose function is triggered by light.
Monitoring the dynamics of protonation and protein backbone conformation changes during the function of a protein is an essential step towards understanding its mechanism. Protonation and conformational changes affect the vibration pattern of amino acid side chains and of the peptide bond, respectively, both of which can be probed by infrared (IR) difference spectroscopy. For proteins whose function can be repetitively and reproducibly triggered by light, it is possible to obtain infrared difference spectra with (sub)microsecond resolution over a broad spectral range using the step-scan Fourier transform infrared technique. With ~102-103 repetitions of the photoreaction, the minimum number to complete a scan at reasonable spectral resolution and bandwidth, the noise level in the absorption difference spectra can be as low as ~10–4, sufficient to follow the kinetics of protonation changes from a single amino acid. Lower noise levels can be accomplished by more data averaging and/or mathematical processing. The amount of protein required for optimal results is between 5-100 µg, depending on the sampling technique used. Regarding additional requirements, the protein needs to be first concentrated in a low ionic strength buffer and then dried to form a film. The protein film is hydrated prior to the experiment, either with little droplets of water or under controlled atmospheric humidity. The attained hydration level (g of water / g of protein) is gauged from an IR absorption spectrum. To showcase the technique, we studied the photocycle of the light-driven proton-pump bacteriorhodopsin in its native purple membrane environment, and of the light-gated ion channel channelrhodopsin-2 solubilized in detergent.
To fully elucidate how proteins perform their function, it is required to measure them as they work, i.e. along a reaction path that often involves a series of intermediates and extends several orders of time. Key steps of protein function often take place in the microsecond to millisecond time range1, in particular backbone conformational changes and proton transfers reactions in membrane proteins. X-ray crystallography, arguably the pillar of structural biology, provides static (time-averaged) electron densities from well-diffracting protein crystals, notoriously difficult to grow with membrane proteins2. A 3D atomic model can be built based on electron densities, although rarely including the location of hydrogen atoms. Remarkable progress in time-resolved X-ray crystallography, relying either on Laue diffraction3 or on femtosecond X-ray pulses4, adds the time dimension to the high structural information inherent to X-ray crystallography5. But setting aside technical and analytical challenges, the crystal lattice can impair backbone conformational changes and alter protein dynamics, an unavoidable shortcoming of methods based on protein crystals5. Consequently, dynamical aspects of proteins are still best covered by optical methods, as pioneered by flash photolysis6,7, although with the general drawback of limited structural insight.
Fourier transformed infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR) combines the temporal resolution of optical spectroscopies with a valuable sensitivity to protein structure, the last feature exploited in innumerable static structural and functional investigations on membrane proteins8-11. In particular, FT-IR difference spectroscopy has proven to be an ideal tool to study tiny spectral changes as a protein transits from one metastable state to another12-19.
Studies on protein dynamics, other than at the single molecule level20,21, require a triggering process for synchronization. A reaction is conveniently initiated fast and not invasively using light as trigger, as done in the study of proteins with cyclic photoreactions. A major challenge associated with time-resolved studies is the attainment of sufficient time resolution while maintaining good spectral resolution and appropriate signal-to-noise ratio. Also essential is to cover a sufficiently broad spectral and temporal range. Time-resolved step-scan FT-IR spectroscopy excels in all of these aspects22, with published examples covering spectral ranges as wide as 3,900-850 cm-1 and dynamics extending ~9 orders of time, with up to 3.5 cm-1 spectral and 30 nsec temporal resolution23-28.
Fourier-transform IR spectrometers show reduced noise and improved photometric accuracy over dispersive ones29. However, in the normal rapid-scan recording mode FT-IR spectrometers suffer from a time-resolution limited to ≥5-10 msec as a consequence of the minimum time the mobile mirror of the interferometer requires to complete a scan. With the step-scan technique, in contrast, the time dependence of the dynamic event is decoupled from the scan duration of the interferometer. Briefly, the mobile mirror moves in discrete steps rather than continuously scanning to complete a scan. At each of these steps the (mobile) mirror is held fixed and a transient is recorded. Thus, the time-resolution is limited by the rise time of the mercury-cadmium-telluride (MCT) detector, which is typically in the range of 10-100 nsec. In practice, the large dynamic range of the interferogram (containing an intense signal in the centerburst and small signals in the wings), requires for proper digitalization an analog/digital converter (ADC) with as many as 16-24 bits, leading to sampling rates not higher than ~200 kHz (5 µsec)30. Nanosecond time-resolution can be accomplished by measuring only the changes in the interferogram, for which a 8-12 bit ADC is sufficient23,31-33. Technical aspects30,34,35 and applications36-38 of time-resolved step-scan have been discussed in detail elsewhere.
The purpose of the current contribution is to provide a protocol describing the practicalities of time-resolved step-scan FT-IR spectroscopy on photosensitive membrane proteins. Here, the performance of the technique is shown for two sampling methods: transmission and attenuated total reflection (ATR). The use of ATR allows working in the presence of excess water, which not only ensures full hydration conditions for the protein but also allows acute control of the sample pH and ionic strength49,50. Step-scan experiments are illustrated on two selected systems: bacteriorhodopsin and channelrhodopsin-2.
The light-driven proton pump bacteriorhodopsin (bR) has been the subject of numerous biophysical studies for over forty years39,40, making it the best-understood membrane protein so far. Among the numerous techniques applied to the study of bR functionality FT-IR spectroscopy has arguably exerted one of the largest impacts. Namely, FT-IR spectroscopy has been key to resolve the groups involved in proton transfer across the membrane as accounted elsewhere13,41,51.
Channelrhodopsin (ChR) is the first light-gated ion channel found in nature42,43. Light excitation of ChR leads to the transient opening of an ion channel. Its discovery settled the way for the development of optogenetics, where molecular processes are controlled by light44,45. ChR belongs, as bR, to the family of microbial rhodopsins but in contrast to bR, much less is known about its functional mechanism52. ChR2 combines its function as an ion channel with proton-pumping activity46,47. Recently, we applied time-resolved step-scan FT-IR spectroscopy to resolve intra-protein proton transfer reactions and the dynamics of protein backbone conformation changes in ChR2 48.
One of the first aspects that needs consideration when performing time-resolved step-scan FT-IR experiments on a protein is the preparation of a sample in a suitable form for IR spectroscopy. The IR absorption from substances other than the protein of interest needs to be reduced, especially that from water. The most common approach is to evaporate the bulk water of the sample to form a film. The film can be rehydrated either by adding some droplets of an aqueous solution or by exposing the film to an atmosphere of controlled humidity. We have shown how in both cases it is possible to estimate the hydration level obtained by means of IR absorption spectroscopy (see Figure 3 and Figure 5). Although the obtained hydration levels might appear low compared to those in solution, they are actually close to those found in living cells70, making the study of hydrated films of proteins functionally relevant. Besides water, it is also important to know and to control the amount of lipid or detergent in the sample. Both should be kept low enough to have a reduced spectroscopic impact in the IR absorption, but high enough to preserve the integrity and functionality of the protein of interest.
Time-resolved step-scan spectroscopy is only straightforwardly applicable to proteins showing reversible reactions that can be triggered reproducibly by light (but see progress in coupling step-scan with rapid buffer exchange)71. In step-scan the reaction needs to be reproducible for at least ~500x, the minimum number to complete an interferogram covering the 1,800-850 cm-1 region at 8 cm-1 resolution. In practice, however, additional data averaging is generally required to push the noise level down. For 200 co-additions/mirror position (105 repetitions of the reaction) a 6.25 μsec resolution absorbance difference spectrum can display a noise standard deviation between 2 x 10-5 and 2 x 10-4 for an ATR and between 5 x 10-6 and 3 x 10-5 for a transmission experiment (Figure 15). Thanks to its higher photon throughput, transmission allows for ~7 lower noise levels than ATR, a key aspect for successfully studying samples giving weak absorption changes such as ChR2. On the other hand, ATR requires 5 to 25 times less sample than a transmission experiment.
The application of time-resolved step-scan FT-IR spectroscopy is problematic for proteins displaying slow photocycles: recording an interferogram by step-scan can become unpractical long. Some solutions have been presented for dealing with such cases72,73, often based on using multiple exchangeable samples to speed up measurements at the cost of increased protein consumption and experimental complexity27,74. In some instances it is possible to circumvent this problem by exciting the sample before the photocycle is strictly completed. For ChR2, with a photocycle requiring after photo-excitation 60 sec for 99% recovery, the recovery at 4 sec is already of 80%48. With an excitation efficiency of 10% per laser pulse, 98% of ChR2 molecules are in the dark state 4 sec after photo-excitation, making possible to perform experiments at a laser repetition rate to 0.25 Hz.
Data processing is a final technical aspect required to attain the best possible results. Logarithmic averaging reduces noise and, also important, reduces the size of the data without distortions, a feature essential for posterior data analysis using singular value decomposition or global fitting. Logarithmic averaging is, however, not very successful in averaging out fluctuations in the time-traces caused by oscillations in the mobile mirror and other 1/f noise sources during the measurements (Figure 9). These fluctuations in the baseline can exceed the noise in the millisecond range and corrupt the quality of the data. Singular value decomposition takes advantage of the redundancy of the data to reduce the noise, and with some modifications57 it can reduce as well fluctuations in the baseline.
Finally, the harder and most time-consuming part of a time-resolved step-scan FT-IR experiment corresponds to the assignment of bands and to the spectral and kinetic interpretation of the data. For bacteriorhodopsin many of the bands appearing in the IR difference spectra have been assigned or interpreted thanks to the accumulated work of many researcher groups over decades. For a much less studied protein, such as channelrhodopsin-2, the above presented time-resolved IR experiments need to be accompanied by parallel experiments on site-directed mutants and combined with information from complementary techniques to reach a mechanistic interpretation48.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
This work was supported by grants from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft to J.H. (FOR-1279, SFB-1078, B3). We thank Tom Resler and Björk Süss for helpful comments.
Name of Material/ Equipment | Company | Catalog Number | Comments/Description |
FT-IR spectrometer | Bruker | Vertex 80v | Equipped with photovoltaic-MCT detector, an external global, and an oil-free pump. Firmware 2.3. |
BaF2 windows | korth Kristalle | ||
diamond ATR accesory | Smiths detection | Nine-reflection DuraDisk | |
thermostatic bath | Julabo | F25 | |
vibration decoupled table | OPTA | ||
Pulsed Nd:YAG laser with a second harmonic generator | Continuum electro-Optics | Minilite | |
Optical parametric oscillator (OPO) | OPTA | BBO-355-VIS/IR S/N 1009 | |
Digital delay/pulse generator | Stanford Research Systems | DG535 | |
Pulsed Nd:YAG laser with a third harmonic generator | Spectra-Physics | Quanta-Ray | |
Various optical mirrors and lenses | ThorLabs | ||
OPUS 7.0 | Bruker | Software to control Vertex 80v spectrometer | |
Matlab run time | Mathworks | Used to run home-made executable programs to preprocess the data |