Protein Information

ID 856
Name protein disulfide isomerase
Synonyms Cellular thyroid hormone binding protein p55; P55; Cellular thyroid hormone binding protein; DSI; ERBA2L; GIT; Glutathione insulin transhydrogenase; P4HB…

Compound Information

ID 106
Name azobenzene
CAS diphenyldiazene

Reference

PubMed Abstract RScore(About this table)
16387780 Loweneck M, Milbradt AG, Root C, Satzger H, Zinth W, Moroder L, Renner C: A conformational two-state peptide model system containing an ultrafast but soft light switch. Biophys J. 2006 Mar 15;90(6):2099-108. Epub 2005 Dec 30.
Combining an azobenzene chromophore with the bis-cysteinyl active-site sequence of the protein disulfide isomerase (PDI) we constructed a simple but promising model for allosteric conformational rearrangements. Paralleling cellular signaling events, an external trigger, here absorption of a photon, leads to a structural change in one part of the molecule, namely the azobenzene-based chromophore. The change in geometry translates to the effector site, in our case the peptide sequence, where it modifies covalent and nonbonded interactions and thus leads to a conformational rearrangement. NMR spectroscopy showed that the trans-azo and cis-azo isomer of the cyclic PDI peptide exhibit different, but well-defined structures when the two cystine residues form a disulfide bridge. Without this intramolecular cross-link conformationally more variable structural ensembles are obtained that again differ for the two isomeric states. Ultrafast UV/Vis spectroscopy confirmed that the rapid isomerization of azobenzene is not significantly slowed down when incorporated into the cyclic peptides, although the amplitudes of ballistic and diffusive pathways are changed. The observation that most of the energy of an absorbed photon is dissipated to the solvent in the first few picoseconds when the actual azo-isomerization takes place is important. The conformational rearrangement is weakly driven due to the absence of appreciable excess energy and can be described as biased diffusion similar to natural processes.
31(0,1,1,1)