首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 23 毫秒
1.
The photoreaction of the E194Q mutant of bacteriorhodopsin has been investigated at various pH values by time-resolved step-scan Fourier-transform infrared difference spectroscopy employing the attenuated total reflection technique. The difference spectrum at pH 8.4 is comparable to the N-BR difference spectra of the wild type with the remarkable exception that D85 is deprotonated. Since the retinal configuration is not perturbed by the E194Q mutation, it is concluded that there is no interaction of D85 with retinal during the lifetime of the N state. At pH 6, a consecutive state to the O intermediate is detected in which D212 is transiently protonated. The comparison with wild-type bacteriorhodopsin reveals that protonation of D212 represents an intermediate step during proton transfer from D85 to the proton release group in the final stage of the reaction cycle. The described effects are more pronounced in the E194Q mutant than in the E204Q mutant demonstrating different roles of these two glutamates/glutamic acids at least in the final stages of the catalytic cycle of bacteriorhodopsin.  相似文献   

2.
We have recorded (13)C NMR spectra of [3-(13)C]Ala-labeled wild-type bacteriorhodopsin (bR) and its mutants at Arg(82), Asp(85), Glu(194), and Glu(204) along the extracellular proton transfer chain. The upfield and downfield displacements of the single carbon signals of Ala(196) (in the F-G loop) and Ala(126) (at the extracellular end of helix D), respectively, revealed conformational differences in E194D, E194Q, and E204Q from the wild type. The same kind of conformational change at Ala(126) was noted also in the Y83F mutant, which lacks the van der Waals contact between Tyr(83) and Ala(126) present in the wild type. The absence of a negative charge at Asp(85) in the site-directed mutant D85N induced global conformational changes, as manifested in displacements or suppression of peaks from the transmembrane helices, cytoplasmic loops, etc., as well as the local changes at Ala(126) and Ala(196) seen in the other mutants. Unexpectedly, no conformational change at Ala(126) was observed in R82Q (even though Asp(85) is protonated at pH 6) or in D85N/R82Q. The changes induced in the Ala(126) signal when Asp(85) is uncharged could be interpreted therefore in terms of displacement of the positive charge of Arg(82) toward Tyr(83), where Ala(126) is located. It is possible that disruption of the proton transfer chain after protonation of Asp(85) in the photocycle could cause the same kind of conformational change we detect at Ala(196) and Ala(126). If so, the latter change would be also the result of rearrangement of the side chain of Arg(82).  相似文献   

3.
Bacteriorhodopsin pumps protons across a membrane using the energy of light. The proton pumping is inhibited when the transmembrane proton gradient that the protein generates becomes larger than four pH units. This phenomenon is known as the back-pressure effect. Here, we investigate the structural basis of this effect by predicting the influence of a transmembrane pH gradient on the titration behavior of bacteriorhodopsin. For this purpose we introduce a method that accounts for a pH gradient in protonation probability calculations. The method considers that in a transmembrane protein, which is exposed to two different aqueous phases, each titratable residue is accessible for protons from one side of the membrane depending on its hydrogen-bond pattern. This method is applied to several ground-state structures of bacteriorhodopsin, which residues already present complicated titration behaviors in the absence of a proton gradient. Our calculations show that a pH gradient across the membrane influences in a non-trivial manner the protonation probabilities of six titratable residues which are known to participate in the proton transfer: D85, D96, D115, E194, E204, and the Schiff base. The residues connected to one side of the membrane are influenced by the pH on the other side because of their long-range electrostatic interactions within the protein. In particular, D115 senses the pH at the cytoplasmic side of the membrane and transmits this information to D85 and the Schiff base. We propose that the strong electrostatic interactions found between D85, D115, and the Schiff base as well as the interplay of their respective protonation states under the influence of a transmembrane pH gradient are responsible for the back-pressure effect on bacteriorhodopsin.  相似文献   

4.
Replacement of the Arg residue at position 82 in bacteriorhodopsin by Gln or Ala was previously shown to slow the rate of proton release and raise the pK of Asp 85, indicating that R82 is involved both in the proton release reaction and in stabilizing the purple form of the chromophore. We now find that guanidinium chloride lowers the pK of D85, as monitored by the shift of the 587-nm absorbance maximum to 570 nm (blue to purple transition) and increased yield of photointermediate M. The absorbance shift follows a simple binding curve, with an apparent dissociation constant of 20 mM. When membrane surface charge is taken into account, an intrinsic dissociation constant of 0.3 M fits the data over a range of 0.2-1.0 M cation concentration (Na+ plus guanidinium) and pH 5.4-6.7. A chloride counterion is not involved in the observed spectral changes, as chloride up to 0.2 M has little effect on the R82Q chromophore at pH 6, whereas guanidinium sulfate has a similar effect to guanidinium chloride. Furthermore, guanidinium does not affect the chromophore of the double mutant R82Q/D85N. Taken together, these observations suggest that guanidinium binds to a specific site near D85 and restores the purple chromophore. Surprisingly, guanidinium does not restore rapid proton release in the photocycle of R82Q. This result suggests either that guanidinium dissociates during the pump cycle or that it binds with a different hydrogen-bonding geometry than the Arg side chain of the wild type.  相似文献   

5.
The surface potential of purple membranes and the release of protons during the bacteriorhodopsin photocycle have been studied with the covalently linked pH indicator dye, fluorescein. The titration of acidic lipids appears to cause the surface potential to be pH-dependent and causes other deviations from ideal behavior. If these anomalies are neglected, the appearance of protons can be followed by measuring the absorption change of fluorescein bound to various residues at the extracellular surface. Contrary to widely held assumption, the activation enthalpies of kinetic components, deuterium isotope effects in the time constants, and the consequences of the D85E, F208R, and D212N mutations demonstrate a lack of direct correlation between proton transfer from the buried retinal Schiff base to D85 and proton release at the surface. Depending on conditions and residue replacements, the proton release can occur at any time between the protonation of D85 and the recovery of the initial state. We conclude that once D85 is protonated the proton release at the extracellular protein surface is essentially independent of the chromophore reactions that follow. This finding is consistent with the recently suggested version of the alternating access mechanism of bacteriorhodopsin, in which the change of the accessibility of the Schiff base is to and away from D85 rather than to and away from the extracellular membrane surface.  相似文献   

6.
In wild-type bacteriorhodopsin light-induced proton release occurs before uptake at neutral pH. In contrast, in mutants in which R82 is replaced by a neutral residue (as in R82A and R82Q), only a small fraction of the protons is released before proton uptake at neutral pH; the major fraction is released after uptake. In R82Q the relative amounts of the two types of proton release, "early" (preceding proton uptake) and "late" (following proton uptake), are pH dependent. The main conclusions are that 1) R82 is not the normal light-driven proton release group; early proton release can be observed in the R82Q mutant at higher pH values, suggesting that the proton release group has not been eliminated. 2) R82 affects the pKa of the proton release group both in the unphotolyzed state of the pigment and during the photocycle. In the wild type (in 150 mM salt) the pKa of this group decreases from approximately 9.5 in the unphotolyzed pigment to approximately 5.8 in the M intermediate, leading to early proton release at neutral pH. In the R82 mutants the respective values of pKa of the proton release group in the unphotolyzed pigment and in M are approximately 8 and 7.5 in R82Q (in 1 M salt) and approximately 8 and 6.5 in R82K (in 150 mM KCl). Thus in R82Q the pKa of the proton release group does not decrease enough in the photocycle to allow early proton release from this group at neutral pH. 3) Early proton release in R82Q can be detected as a photocurrent signal that is kinetically distinct from those photocurrents that are due to proton movements from the Schiff base to D85 during M formation and from D96 to the Schiff base during the M-->N transition. 4) In R82Q, at neutral pH, proton uptake from the medium occurs during the formation of O. The proton is released during the O-->bacteriorhodopsin transition, probably from D85 because the normal proton release group cannot deprotonate at this pH. 5) The time constant of early proton release is increased from 85 microseconds in the wild type to 1 ms in R82Q (in 150 mM salt). This can be directly attributed to the increase in the pKa of the proton release group and also explains the uncoupling of proton release from M formation. 6) In the E204Q mutant only late proton release is observed at both neutral and alkaline pH, consistent with the idea that E204 is the proton release group. The proton release is concurrent with the O-->bacteriorhodopsin transition, as in R82Q at neutral pH.  相似文献   

7.
High-resolution X-ray crystallographic studies of bacteriorhodopsin have tremendously advanced our understanding of this light-driven ion pump during the last 2 years, and emphasized the crucial role of discrete internal water molecules in the pump cycle. In the extracellular region an extensive three-dimensional hydrogen-bonded network of protein residues and seven water molecules leads from the buried retinal Schiff base via water 402 and the initial proton acceptor Asp85 to the membrane surface. Near Lys216 where the retinal binds, transmembrane helix G contains a pi-bulge that causes a non-proline kink. The bulge is stabilized by hydrogen bonding of the main chain carbonyl groups of Ala215 and Lys216 with two buried water molecules located in the otherwise very hydrophobic region between the Schiff base and the proton donor Asp96 in the cytoplasmic region. The M intermediate trapped in the D96N mutant corresponds to a late M state in the transport cycle, after protonation of Asp85 and release of a proton to the extracellular membrane surface, but before reprotonation of the deprotonated retinal Schiff base. The M intermediate from the E204Q mutant corresponds to an earlier M, as in this mutant the Schiff base deprotonates without proton release. The structures of these two M states reveal progressive displacements of the retinal, main chain and side chains induced by photoisomerization of the retinal to 13-cis,15-anti, and an extensive rearrangement of the three-dimensional network of hydrogen-bonded residues and bound water that accounts for the changed pK(a)s of the Schiff base, Asp85, the proton release group and Asp96. The structure for the M state from E204Q suggests, moreover, that relaxation of the steric conflicts of the distorted 13-cis,15-anti retinal plays a critical role in the reprotonation of the Schiff base by Asp96. Two additional waters now connect Asp96 to the carbonyl of residue 216, in what appears to be the beginning of a hydrogen-bonded chain that would later extend to the retinal Schiff base. Based on the ground state and M intermediate structures, models of the molecular events in the early part of the photocycle are presented, including a novel model which proposes that bacteriorhodopsin pumps hydroxide (OH(-)) ions from the extracellular to the cytoplasmic side.  相似文献   

8.
Structural features on the extracellular side of the D85S mutant of bacteriorhodopsin (bR) suggest that wild-type bR could be a hydroxyl-ion pump. A position between the protonated Schiff base and residue 85 serves as an anion-binding site in the mutant protein, and hydroxyl ions should have access to this site during the O-intermediate of the wild-type bR photocycle. The guanidinium group of R82 is proposed (1) to serve as a shuttle that eliminates the Born energy penalty for entry of an anion into this binding pocket, and conversely, (2) to block the exit of a proton or a related proton carrier.  相似文献   

9.
Shibata M  Kandori H 《Biochemistry》2005,44(20):7406-7413
In a light-driven proton pump protein, bacteriorhodopsin (BR), three water molecules participate in a pentagonal cluster that stabilizes an electric quadrupole buried inside the protein. Previously, low-temperature Fourier-transform infrared (FTIR) difference spectra between BR and the K photointermediate in D(2)O revealed six O-D stretches of water in BR at 2690, 2636, 2599, 2323, 2292, and 2171 cm(-)(1), while five water bands were observed at 2684, 2675, 2662, 2359, and 2265 cm(-)(1) for the K intermediate. The frequencies are widely distributed over the possible range of stretching vibrations of water, and water molecules at <2400 cm(-)(1) were suggested to hydrate negative charges because of their extremely strong hydrogen bonds. In this paper, we aimed to reveal the origin of these water bands in the K minus BR spectra by use of various mutant proteins. The water bands were not affected by the mutations at the cytoplasmic side, such as T46V, D96N, and D115N, implying that the water molecules in the cytoplasmic domain do not change their hydrogen bonds in the BR to K transition. In contrast, significant modifications of the water bands were observed for the mutations in the Schiff base region and at the extracellular side, such as R82Q, D85N, T89A, Y185F, D212N, R82Q/D212N, and E204Q. From these results, we concluded that the six O-D stretches of BR originate from three water molecules, water401, -402, and -406, involved in the pentagonal cluster. Two stretching modes of each water molecule are highly separate (300-470 cm(-)(1) for O-D stretches and 500-770 cm(-)(1) for O-H stretches), which is consistent with the previous QM/MM calculation. The small amplitudes of vibrational coupling are presumably due to strong association of the waters to negative charges of Asp85 and Asp212. Among various mutant proteins, only D85N and D212N lack strongly hydrogen-bonded water molecules (<2400 cm(-)(1)) and proton pumpimg activity. We thus infer that the presence of a strong hydrogen bond of water is a prerequisite for proton pumping in BR. Internal water molecules in such a specific environment are discussed in terms of functional importance for rhodopsins.  相似文献   

10.
Structural changes in the proton pumping cycle of wild-type bacteriorhodopsin were investigated by using a 3D crystal (space group P622)prepared by the membrane fusion method. Protein-protein contacts in the crystal elongate the lifetime of the M intermediate by a factor of approximately 100,allowing high levels of the M intermediate to accumulate under continuous illumination. When the M intermediate generated at room temperature was exposed to a low flux of X-rays (approximately 10(14) photons/mm2), this yellow intermediate was converted into a blue species having an absorption maximum at 650 nm. This color change is suggested to accompany a configuration change in the retinal-Lys216 chain. The true conformational change associated with formation of the M intermediate was analyzed by taking the X-radiation-induced structural change into account. Our result indicates that, upon formation of the M intermediate, helix G move stowards the extra-cellular side by, on average, 0.5 angstroms. This movement is coupled with several reactions occurring at distal sites in the protein: (1) reorientation of the side-chain of Leu93 contacting the C13 methyl group of retinal, which is accompanied by detachment of a water molecule from the Schiff base; (2) a significant distortion in the F-G loop, triggering destruction of a hydrogen bonding interaction between a pair of glutamate groups (Glu194 and Glu204); (3) formation of a salt bridge between the carboxylate group of Glu204 and the guanidinium ion of Arg82, which is accompanied by a large distortion in the extra-cellular half of helix C; (4)noticeable movements of the AB loop and the cytoplasmic end of helix B. But, no appreciable change is induced in the peptide backbone of helices A,D, E and F. These structural changes are discussed from the viewpoint of translocation of water molecules.  相似文献   

11.
The effects of glycyl-glycine and bis-trispropane buffers on the light-excited electric signals due to proton motion in the molecule were studied for the bacteriorhodopsin (bR) mutants D38R, D96N, E204Q, R227Q, D85N, D85T, R82Q/D85N, and D85N/D96N in purple membranes and for delipidated purple membrane containing the wild-type bR. The results show additional charge motion caused by the buffers in all cases. Arrhenius parameters calculated from the temperature dependence of the difference signals (with buffer minus without buffer) are similar to the parameters found for the wild-type bR in the case of these buffers: the values of the activation enthalpies are mostly in the range 25-50 kJ/mol; all the activation entropies are negative. The results are evaluated with the cluster hypothesis outlined previously.  相似文献   

12.
Song Y  Mao J  Gunner MR 《Biochemistry》2003,42(33):9875-9888
Residue ionization states were calculated in nine crystal structures of bacteriorhodopsin trapped in bR, early M, and late M states by multiconformation continuum electrostatics. This combines continuum electrostatics and molecular mechanics, deriving equilibrium distributions of ionization states and polar residue and water positions. The three central cluster groups [retinal Schiff base (SB), Asp 85 and Asp 212] are ionized in bR structures while a proton has transferred from SB(+) to Asp 85(-) in late M structures matching experimental results. The proton shift in M is due to weaker SB(+)-ionized acid and more favorable SB(0)-ionized acid interactions following retinal isomerization. The proton release cluster (Glu 194 and Glu 204) binds one proton in bR, which is lost to water by pH 8 in late M. In bR the half-ionized state is stabilized by charge-dipole interactions while full ionization is disallowed by charge-charge repulsion between the closely spaced acids. In M the acids move apart, permitting full ionization. Arg 82 movement connects the proton shifts in the central and proton release clusters. Changes in total charge of the two clusters are coupled by direct long-range interactions. Separate calculations consider continuum or explicit water in internal cavities. The explicit waters and nearby polar residues can reorient to stabilize different charge distributions. Proton release to the low-pH, extracellular side of the protein occurs in these calculations where residue ionization remains at equilibrium with the medium. Thus, the key changes distinguishing the intermediates are indeed trapped in the structures.  相似文献   

13.
Light absorbed by bacteriorhodopsin (bR) leads to a proton being released at the extracellular surface of the purple membrane. Structural studies as well as studies of mutants of bR indicate that several groups form a pathway for proton transfer from the Schiff base to the extracellular surface. These groups include D85, R82, E204, E194, and water molecules. Other residues may be important in tuning the initial state pK(a) values of these groups and in mediating light-induced changes of the pK(a) values. A potentially important residue is R134: it is located close to E194 and might interact electrostatically to affect the pK(a) of E194 and light-induced proton release. In this study we investigated effects of the substitution of R134 with a histidine on light-induced proton release and on the photocycle transitions associated with proton transfer. By measuring the light-induced absorption changes versus pH, we found that the R134H mutation results in an increase in the pK(a) of the proton release group in both the M (0.6 pK unit) and O (0.7 pK unit) intermediate states. This indicates the importance of R134 in tuning the pK(a) of the group that, at neutral and high pH, releases the proton upon M formation (fast proton release) and that, at low pH, releases the proton simultaneously with O decay (slow proton release). The higher pK(a) of the proton release group found in R134H correlates with the slowing of the rate of the O --> bR transition at low pH and probably is the cause of this slowing. The pH dependence of the fraction of the O intermediate is altered in R134H compared to the WT but is similar to that in the E194D mutant: a very small amount of O is present at neutral pH, but the fraction of O increases greatly upon decreasing the pH. These results provide further support for the hypothesis that the O --> bR transition is controlled by the rate of deprotonation of the proton release group. These data also provide further evidence for the importance of the R134-E194 interaction in modulating proton release from D85 after light has led to its being protonated.  相似文献   

14.
In order to understand how isomerization of the retinal drives unidirectional transmembrane ion transport in bacteriorhodopsin, we determined the atomic structures of the BR state and M photointermediate of the E204Q mutant, to 1.7 and 1.8 A resolution, respectively. Comparison of this M, in which proton release to the extracellular surface is blocked, with the previously determined M in the D96N mutant indicates that the changes in the extracellular region are initiated by changes in the electrostatic interactions of the retinal Schiff base with Asp85 and Asp212, but those on the cytoplasmic side originate from steric conflict of the 13-methyl retinal group with Trp182 and distortion of the pi-bulge of helix G. The structural changes suggest that protonation of Asp85 initiates a cascade of atomic displacements in the extracellular region that cause release of a proton to the surface. The progressive relaxation of the strained 13-cis retinal chain with deprotonated Schiff base, in turn, initiates atomic displacements in the cytoplasmic region that cause the intercalation of a hydrogen-bonded water molecule between Thr46 and Asp96. This accounts for the lowering of the pK(a) of Asp96, which then reprotonates the Schiff base via a newly formed chain of water molecules that is extending toward the Schiff base.  相似文献   

15.
Photoinduced changes in absorption of the deprotonated M-form in the mutant bacteriorhodopsin without primary proton acceptor Asp-85 were studied and additional evidence in support of the complete transmembrane proton transfer in photocycle was obtained. Measurements of the absorption spectrum were carried out at various pH, temperature, and humidity. The direction of proton transfer was the same as in the normal photocycle of the wild-type bacteriorhodopsin: from the internal to the external side of the membrane. The effect on this process of a terminal acceptor Glu-204 was shown.  相似文献   

16.
Single and multiple mutants of extracellular Glu side chains of bacteriorhodopsin were analyzed by acid and calcium titration, differential scanning calorimetry, and thermal difference spectrophotometry. Acid titration spectra show that the second group protonating with Asp(85) is revealed in E204Q in the absence of Cl(-) but is not observed in the triple mutant E9Q/E194Q/E204Q or in the quadruple mutant E9Q/E74Q/E194Q/E204Q. The results point to Glu(9) as the second group protonating cooperatively with Asp(85). Comparison of the apparent pK(a) of Asp(85) protonation in water and in the deionized forms and results of calcium titration suggest that cation-binding sites are of low affinity in the multiple Glu mutants. Like for deionized wild type bacteriorhodopsin, differential scanning calorimetry reveals a lack of the pretransition in the multiple mutants, whereas in E9Q it appears at lower temperature and with lower cooperativity. Additionally, at neutral pH the band at 630 nm arising from cation release upon temperature increase is absent for the multiple mutants. Based on these results, we propose the presence of two cation-binding sites in the extracellular region of bacteriorhodopsin having as ligands Glu(9), Glu(194), Glu(204), and water molecules.  相似文献   

17.
According to earlier reports, residue 85 in the bacteriorhodopsin mutants D85E and Y185F deprotonates with two apparent pKa values. Additionally, in Y185F, Asp-85 becomes significantly more protonated during light adaptation. We provide a new explanation for these findings. It is based on the scheme that links the protonation state of residue 85 to the protonation state of residue 204 (S.P. Balashov, E.S. Imasheva, R. Govindjee, and T.G. Ebrey. 1996. Biophys. J. 70:473-481; H.T. Richter, L.S. Brown, R. Needleman, and J.K. Lanyi. 1996. Biochemistry. 35:4054-4062) and justified by the observation that the biphasic titration curves of D85E and Y185F are converted to monophasic when the E204Q residue change is introduced as a second mutation. Accordingly, the D85E and Y 185F mutations are not the cause of the biphasic titration, as that is a property of the wild-type protein. By perturbing the extracellular region of the protein, the mutations increase the pKa of residue 85. This increases the amplitude of the second titration component and makes the biphasic character of the curves more obvious. Likewise, a small rise in the pKa of Asp-85 when the retinal isomerizes from 13-cis, 15-syn to all-trans accounts for the changed titration behavior of Y185F after light adaptation. This mechanism simplifies and unites the interpretation of what had appeared to be complex and unrelated phenomena.  相似文献   

18.
Deuterium kinetic isotope effects (KIE) were measured, and proton inventory plots were constructed, for the rates of reactions in the photocycles of wild-type bacteriorhodopsin and several site-specific mutants. Consistent with earlier reports from many groups, very large KIEs were observed for the third (and largest) rise component for the M state and for the decay of the O state, processes both linked to proton transfers in the extracellular region. The proton inventory plots (ratio of reaction rates in mixtures of H(2)O and D(2)O to that in H(2)O vs mole fraction of D(2)O) were approximately linear for the first and second M rise components and for M decay, as well as for O decay, indicating that the rates of these reactions are limited by simple proton transfer. Uniquely, the third rise component of M (and in the D96N mutant also a fourth rise component) exhibited a strongly curved proton inventory plot, suggesting that its rate, which largely accounts for the rate of deprotonation of the retinal Schiff base, depends on a complex multiproton process. This curvature is observed also in the E194Q, E204Q, and Y57F mutants but not in the R82A mutant. From these findings, and from the locations of bound water in the extracellular region in the crystal structure of the protein [Luecke, Schobert, Richter, Cartailler, and Lanyi (1999) J. Mol. Biol. 291, 899-911], we suspect that the effects of deuterium substitution on the formation of the M state originate from cooperative rearrangements of the extensively hydrogen-bonded water molecules 401, 402, and 406 near Asp-85 and Arg-82.  相似文献   

19.
In the bacteriorhodopsin-containing proteoliposomes, a laser flash is found to induce formation of a bathointermediate decaying in several seconds, the difference spectrum being similar to the purple-blue transition. Different pH buffers do not affect the intermediate, whereas an uncoupler, gramicidin A, and lipophilic ions accelerate decay of the intermediate or inhibit its formation. In the liposomes containing E204Q bacteriorhodopsin mutant, formation of the intermediate is suppressed. In the wild-type bacteriorhodopsin liposomes, the bathointermediate formation is pH-independent within the pH 5-7 range. The efficiency of the long-lived O intermediate formation increases at a low pH. In the wild-type as well as in the E204Q mutant purple membrane, the O intermediate decay is slowed down at slightly higher pH values than that of the purple-blue transition. It is suggested that the membrane potential affects the equilibrium between the bacteriorhodopsin ground state (Glu-204 is protonated and Asp-85 is deprotonated) and the O intermediate (Asp-85 is protonated and Glu-204 is deprotonated), stabilizing the latter by changing the relative affinity of Asp-85 and Glu-204 to H(+). At a low pH, protonation of a proton-releasing group (possibly Glu-194) in the bacteriorhodopsin ground state seems to prevent deprotonation of the Glu-204 during the photocycle. Thus, all protonatable residues of the outward proton pathway should be protonated in the O intermediate. Under such conditions, membrane potential stabilization of the O intermediate in the liposomes can be attributed to the direct effect of the potential on the pK value of Asp-85.  相似文献   

20.
Electrostatic calculations of pK(a-values) are reported along a 400 ps molecular dynamics trajectory of bacteriorhodopsin. The sensitivity of calculated pK(a) values to a number of structural factors and factors related to the modelling of the electrostatics are also studied. The results are very sensitive to the choice of internal dielectric constant of the protein (in the interval 2-4). Moreover it is important to include internal water molecules and to average over a long enough portion ( approximately 100 ps) of an equilibrium molecular dynamics trajectory. The internal waters are necessary to get an ion-counter ion complex with the Schiff base and Arg 82 protonated and the aspartic groups (85 and 212) deprotonated. The fluctuations along the MD-trajectory do not change the protonation state of internal residues at neutral pH. However, at other pH values the averaging along a trajectory maybe crucial to get correct protonation states. A relationship is found between the arginine group 82, the aspartic group 85 and the glutamate group 204. Glu 204 is protonated in the ground state but the pK(a) value decreases towards deprotonation when the chromophore isomerizes into the cis state.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号