Controllable model membranes and new quantitative analyses to interrogate light harvesting proteins

Lead Research Organisation: University of Leeds
Department Name: Physics and Astronomy

Abstract

This proposal will develop new model systems and analysis methods to quantify the biophysical properties of important Light Harvesting (LH) proteins with high spatiotemporal resolution. This will provide insight into the physical basis of photosynthetic processes which are crucial for life on Earth but poorly understood. It will also have wider relevance for the potential use of LH proteins in nanotechnology, photonics and plasmonics. We need to develop a suite of "model membranes" (idealized experimental models of biomembranes) which incorporate LH proteins and offer a balance between complexity, controllability and amenability to tools that can quantify structure and optical properties. We need the ability to manipulate the density of LH proteins within these model membranes. We need to quantify how the organization and optical properties of these LH proteins change in response to important physicochemical stimuli. The proposed project will develop three types of model membranes for studying LH proteins, which progress from mostly synthetic to close-to-natural membranes. These "model membranes" will be manipulated by applying external electric fields to direct the migration of LH proteins within membranes, for the first time. The nanoscale organization and photophysical properties of these LH proteins will be compared in each type of membrane by an advanced microscopy and spectroscopy combined system.

My previous research has demonstrated that the clustering of LH proteins is correlated to energy dissipation (fluorescence quenching) and my expertise with correlative microscopy and spectroscopy tools make me uniquely well-placed for performing quantitative studies of energy transfer processes. In Leeds, we have a new Fluorescence Lifetime Imaging Microscope combined with Atomic Force Microscopy (FLIM+AFM) instrument which will allow unprecedented direct correlation and quantification of optical properties and nanoscale organization (I was co-investigator on the grant acquiring this instrument). This combined microscope is ideal to study LH proteins and gives us a competitive edge. In summary, this project will provide a comparative analysis of the advantages and limitations of new membrane models and, in doing so, quantify the crucial relationship between organization and optical properties of light harvesting proteins. These new models could be applied to bacterial and mammalian membranes of relevance for health and agriculture. Furthermore, knowledge of the important LHCII protein could be relevant for the development of alternative solar nanotechnologies or the production of enhanced crops.

Planned Impact

Who might benefit? Potential economic and societal beneficiaries:
1. New industrial and academic users of our membrane formation methodology and analyses.
2. The scientific microscope technology industry.
3. The alternative solar technology industry.
4. The general public (from increased engagement and understanding and industry).
Beneficiaries #1, #2 and #4 are quite reachable during the 3 year project, whereas #3 is an exciting long-term possibility which will be better defined as we engage with this community.

How might they benefit?:
1. Researchers in academia or industry may use our methodology and benefit from having a more effective method to form and manipulate models of biomembranes and improved analysis routines to gain more quantitative information. For example, once success is demonstrated on naturally-fluorescent LHCII, where its function is easily probed throughout, these approaches could be used to study other membrane systems, i.e., alternative proteins and lipids. The three types of model membrane developed by this research grant (Objectives 1-3) would allow researchers to study the mobility and interactions of other fluorescently-tagged membrane proteins within membranes, manipulating them via electrophoresis, if desired. Use of our analysis routines applying FLIM would allow researchers to quantify protein-protein interactions (e.g. FLIM-based FRET to measure average distances between two proteins). This could lead to future industrial and economic benefit as medically-important membrane proteins are some of the most actively researched.
2. Microscope technology developers and their customers would benefit from the new microscopy sample holder designs (i.e. flow-chambers) which will be developed during this grant which allow combined electrophoresis and microscopy (see section 1.2 in the Case for Support). This could be a new commercialization opportunity. These sample holders would be straightforward to manufacture based on the 3-D CAD specification which would be produced. This would allow other researchers who already have access to AFM or fluorescence microscopes (10,000s globally) the ability to visualize the effect of electric field on their own samples with the use of a simple accessory. For example, this would allow other researchers the ability to easily perform electrophoresis as a separation technique or method to cluster their membrane proteins of interest.
3. The alternative solar technology industry would benefit from the potential that our research could lead to increases in the efficiency of their products. Understanding the biophysics of light harvesting proteins could guide the future exploitation of LH proteins in nanotechnologies, for example, understanding which protein geometries, densities and linkage chemistry promote the effective transfer of energy and/or electrons to conducting solid surfaces. This could assist the field of biophotovoltaics and future development of improved photoeletrochemical devices where LH proteins may be attached to electrodes. Alternatively, an improved understanding of light-harvesting proteins may lead to "bio-inspired" solutions, whereby biological components are not used directly, but instead lead to the construction of new inorganic materials following the design motifs and strategies of the highly efficient biological systems.
4. Adults with an interest in science in the UK and children in local schools will benefit culturally and educationally from our planned public engagement events. We will aim to inspire, increase curiosity and improve understanding of those who attend. The public discourse would be more informed if more members of the public have an increased recognition of the scientific challenges and related environmental issues in solar energy research. This could feed into important debates over sustainability and the economics of alternative energy and challenge conventional wisdom.
 
Description Understanding the role of carotenoids in bacterial light-harvesting proteins
Amount £464,980 (GBP)
Funding ID BB/W004593/1 
Organisation Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC) 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 08/2022 
End 01/2025
 
Title Dataset for the study of "Model Lipid Membranes Assembled from Natural Plant Thylakoids into 2D Microarray Patterns as a Platform to Assess the Organization and Photophysics of Light-Harvesting Proteins" 
Description This dataset shows the raw data, analysed data and documentation related to figures and tables from the study "Model Lipid Membranes Assembled from Natural Plant Thylakoids into 2D Microarray Patterns as a Platform to Assess the Organization and Photophysics of Light-Harvesting Proteins". This includes: absorbance and fluorescence spectra; images from Fluorescence Lifetime Imaging Microscopy (FLIM); images from Atomic Force Microscopy measurements; epifluorescence measurements; analysis of fluorescence data (FLIM); other graphical analyses; tabulated numerical data. 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2021 
Provided To Others? Yes  
Impact Publication in the journal Small that makes use of this data (DOI - 10.1002/smll.202006608) 
URL http://archive.researchdata.leeds.ac.uk/824/
 
Title Dataset for the study of Enhancing the spectral range of plant and bacterial Light-Harvesting pigment-protein complexes with various synthetic chromophores incorporated into lipid vesicles 
Description The Light-Harvesting (LH) pigment-protein complexes found in photosynthetic organisms have the role of absorbing solar energy with high efficiency and transferring it to reaction centre complexes. LH complexes contain a suite of pigments that each absorb light at specific wavelengths, however, the natural combinations of pigments within any one protein complex do not cover the full range of solar radiation. Here, we provide an in-depth comparison of the relative effectiveness of five different organic "dye" molecules (Texas Red, ATTO, Cy7, Dil, DiR) for enhancing the absorption range of two different LH membrane protein complexes (the major LHCII from plants and LH2 from purple phototrophic bacteria). Proteoliposomes were self-assembled from defined mixtures of lipids, proteins and dye molecules and their optical properties were quantified by absorption and fluorescence spectroscopy. Both lipid-linked dyes and alternative lipophilic dyes were found to be effective excitation energy donors to LH protein complexes, without the need for direct chemical or generic modification of the proteins. The Förster theory parameters (e.g., spectral overlap) were compared between each donor-acceptor combination and found to be good predictors of an effective dye-protein combination. At the highest dye-to-protein ratios tested (over 20:1), the effective absorption strength integrated over the full spectral range was increased to ~180% of its natural level for both LH complexes. Lipophilic dyes could be inserted into pre-formed membranes although their effectiveness was found to depend upon favourable physicochemical interactions. Finally, we demonstrated that these dyes can also be effective at increasing the spectral range of surface-supported models of photosynthetic membranes, using fluorescence microscopy. The results of this work provide insight into the utility of self-assembled lipid membranes and the great flexibility of LH complexes for interacting with different dyes. 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2022 
Provided To Others? Yes  
Impact This dataset allows others ti use our spectrscopy and micsropy data for future projects. 
URL https://archive.researchdata.leeds.ac.uk/1043/
 
Title Dataset for the study of Ultrafast energy transfer between lipid-linked chromophores and plant Light-Harvesting Complex II 
Description This dataset shows the raw data, analysed data and documentation related to figures and tables from the study "Ultrafast energy transfer between lipid-linked chromophores and plant Light-Harvesting Complex II". This includes: absorbance and fluorescence spectra; molecular dynamics images and associated files; calculations of excitation energy transfer; other graphical analyses; tabulated numerical data. 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2021 
Provided To Others? Yes  
Impact Publication in the journal PCCP (DOI - 10.1039/D1CP01628H). 
URL https://archive.researchdata.leeds.ac.uk/885/
 
Description Collaboration between Morigaki group in Kobe and Adams-Evans groups in Leeds 
Organisation Kobe University
Country Japan 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Securing funding from Royal Society with collaborator Dr Kenichi Morigaki (Univ Kobe) - IEC\R3\183029 - International Exchanges 2018 Cost Share (Japan). Performing research to characterize samples sent from Japan to Leeds: optical spectroscopy and microscopy, atomic force microscopy. Generating new and improved samples in Leeds. Transfer of knowledge and expertise to Kobe. Hosted our collaborators in Leeds for one research visit of and undertaken one research visit to Japan. More planned.
Collaborator Contribution Collaborator is Dr Kenichi Morigaki (Univ Kobe). Jointly securing funding from Royal Society - IEC\R3\183029 - International Exchanges 2018 Cost Share (Japan). Preparing samples in Kobe to send to Leeds. Transfer of knowledge and expertise to Leeds. Reciprocal visits.
Impact Completion of one study that was published in 2021: "Model Lipid Membranes Assembled from Natural Plant Thylakoids into 2D Microarray Patterns as a Platform to Assess the Organization and Photophysics of Light-Harvesting Proteins" (DOI - 10.1002/smll.202006608). Multi-disciplinary between chemistry, biology and physics.
Start Year 2019
 
Description Collaboration between Schlau-Cohen group in MIT and Adams group in Leeds 
Organisation Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Country United States 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Preparation and analysis of biological samples and shipping these to our collaborators at MIT. Data analysis and discussions. Securing seed funding from our University for travel for our initial visit to Boston.
Collaborator Contribution Performing ultrafast spectroscopy experiments on samples generated in Leeds. Data analysis and discussions.
Impact Completion of one study that was published in 2021: "Ultrafast energy transfer between lipid-linked chromophores and plant light-harvesting complex II" (DOI - 10.1039/D1CP01628H). Multi-disciplinary between chemistry, biology and physics.
Start Year 2019
 
Description Be Curious 2022 (Leeds) 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Regional
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact The University of Leeds opened its doors to the general public for a day of free, fun activities desgned to be suitable for all the family. Our group ran 1 of 35 stalls at this event called "Solar-powered racing cars: taking inspiration from plants and physics". Our activity was an interactive exhibit where children and adults used small solar-powered cars to race against each other on a track. They were able to use a torch to shine light at a solar panel to actiate the wheels of the model car! We explained about the basics of sunlight and tried to enthuse our audience about some of the solar-energy research that is done at University of Leeds. Over the course of the day we engaged with many hundred of parents and their children and young adults - estimated as 200 people. The entire event reached approx. 1200 people. This event was coordinated by the brilliant Public Engagement Team at Unviersity of Leeds - special thanks to Dr Alexa Ruppertsberg, Shauni Sanderson and Andy Guy.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
URL https://youtu.be/C1rbgBfg7-g