Tracking the Electron Transfer Cascade in European Robin Cryptochrome 4 Mutants
Daniel Timmer, Daniel C. L\"unemann, Anitta R. Thomas, Anders, Frederiksen, Jingjing Xu, Rabea Bart\"olke, Jessica Schmidt, Antonietta De, Sio, Ilia A. Solovyov, Henrik Mouritsen, Christoph Lienau

TL;DR
This study investigates the electron transfer process in European robin cryptochrome 4 mutants using ultrafast spectroscopy, revealing distinct transfer steps and insights into radical pair formation relevant for bird magnetoreception.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed comparison of electron transfer dynamics in cryptochrome 4 mutants, elucidating the role of individual tryptophan residues in the transfer chain.
Findings
Each tryptophan residue contributes a distinct relaxation component.
Mutants with phenylalanine show altered radical pair concentrations.
Results align with Marcus-Hopfield theory, offering microscopic insights.
Abstract
The primary step in the elusive ability of migratory birds to sense weak Earth-strength magnetic fields is supposedly the light-induced formation of a long-lived, magnetically sensitive radical pair inside a cryptochrome flavoprotein located in the retina of these birds. Blue light absorption by a flavin chromophore triggers a series of sequential electron transfer steps across a tetradic tryptophan chain towards the flavin acceptor. The recent ability to express cryptochrome 4 from the night-migratory European robin (Erithacus rubecula), ErCry4, and to replace the tryptophan residues individually by a redox-inactive phenylalanine offers the prospect of exploring the role of each of the tryptophan residues in the electron transfer chain. Here, we compare ultrafast transient absorption spectroscopy of wild type ErCry4 and four of its mutants having phenylalanine residues in different…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPlant and animal studies · Insect and Pesticide Research
