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1.
A visual pigment is composed of retinal bound to its apoprotein by a protonated Schiff base linkage. Light isomerizes the chromophore and eventually causes the deprotonation of this Schiff base linkage at the meta II stage of the bleaching cycle. The meta II intermediate of the visual pigment is the active form of the pigment that binds to and activates the G protein transducin, starting the visual cascade. The deprotonation of the Schiff base is mandatory for the formation of meta II intermediate. We studied the proton binding affinity, pKa, of the Schiff base of both octopus rhodopsin and the gecko cone pigment P521 by spectral titration. Several fluorinated retinal analogs have strong electron withdrawing character around the Schiff base region and lower the Schiff base pKa in model compounds. We regenerated octopus and gecko visual pigments with these fluorinated and other retinal analogs. Experiments on these artificial pigments showed that the spectral changes seen upon raising the pH indeed reflected the pKa of the Schiff base and not the denaturation of the pigment or the deprotonation of some other group in the pigment. The Schiff base pKa is 10.4 for octopus rhodopsin and 9.9 for the gecko cone pigment. We also showed that although the removal of Cl- ions causes considerable blue-shift in the gecko cone pigment P521, it affects the Schiff base pKa very little, indicating that the lambda max of visual pigment and its Schiff base pKa are not tightly coupled.  相似文献   

2.
Effects of anion binding on the deprotonation reactions of halorhodopsin   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The retinal Schiff base of halorhodopsin deprotonates with a pKa of 7.4 in 0.5 M Na2SO4 in the dark. In the presence of various anions, such as chloride or nitrate, etc., the pKa is raised by up to 1.5 units. Analysis of the dependency of the pKa on anion concentration favors the model in which the anions do not bind to the positively charged Schiff base nitrogen, but to a site near it, and exert their effect on the pKa by direct (perhaps electrostatic) interaction. Adding nitrate, or one of several other anions, causes also a small blueshift in the visible absorption band of the chromophore. These effects on the pKa and the absorption band define an anion binding site in halorhodopsin, termed Site I. Chloride and bromide apparently bind in addition to another site, which is associated with a small red-shift of the absorption band and changes in the photocycle. This other anion binding site is termed Site II. Illumination of halorhodopsin samples results in the deprotonation of the Schiff base with a much lowered pKa, but at very low rates probably determined by the generation of a deprotonating photointermediate. Binding of Site I anions increases the pKa of deprotonation in the light also. The similarity of the responses of the apparent pKa in the dark and in the light to anion concentration suggests that anion binding to Site I influences deprotonation of the Schiff base similarly in the photointermediate and in the parent halorhodopsin molecule.  相似文献   

3.
B Schobert  J K Lanyi 《Biochemistry》1986,25(14):4163-4167
The influence of different anions on the deprotonation of the retinal Schiff base of halorhodopsin in the dark was investigated. We find that a large number of anions cause a significant increase of the pKa of the Schiff base, an effect attributed to binding to "site I" on the protein. The concentration dependencies of the spectroscopic shifts associated with the changes of the pKa yielded dissociation constants (and thus binding energies) for the anions, which were related to the Stokes radii. The data fit the predictions of electrostatic interaction between the anions and the positive charge associated with site I, if the latter is located within a few angstroms from the surface of the protein. The specificity of site I toward various anions is quantitatively explained by the differences in the change of Born energy upon transfer of the anions from water to the binding site. The changes in the deprotonation energy of the Schiff base upon the binding of anions, delta delta Gdeprot, could be calculated from the delta pKa at infinite anion concentration. Unexpectedly, the delta delta Gdeprot values were remarkably close to the energies of binding to site I. Thus, site I and the Schiff base are strongly electrostatically coupled, either because of close proximity or because of the possibility of allosteric energy transfer between them.  相似文献   

4.
Finite difference solutions of the Poisson-Boltzmann equation are used to calculate the pKa values of the functionally important ionizable groups in bacteriorhodopsin. There are strong charge-charge interactions between the residues in the binding site leading to the possibility of complex titration behavior. Structured water molecules, if they exist in the binding site, can have significant effects on the calculated pKa by strongly stabilizing ionized species. The ionization states of the Schiff base and Asp-85 are found to be strongly coupled. Small environmental changes, which might occur as a consequence of trans-cis isomerization, are capable of causing large shifts in the relative pKa values of these two groups. This provides an explanation for the protonation of Asp-85 and the deprotonation of the Schiff base in the M state of bacteriorhodopsin. The different behavior of Asp-85 and Asp-212 is discussed in this regard.  相似文献   

5.
C Longstaff  R R Rando 《Biochemistry》1987,26(19):6107-6113
Bacteriorhodopsin (bR) in purple membranes was permethylated with formaldehyde and pyridine-borane with the incorporation of approximately 12 methyl groups. This new pigment, PMbR, absorbed light in the dark-adapted state with a lambda max at 558 nm, virtually the same as that of bR. Light adaptation of PMbR produced a lambda max of 564 nm with a slightly elevated epsilon. Similar changes occurred with bR. When incorporated into asolectin vesicles, PMbR was able to pump protons in the light with an efficiency similar to that of bR itself. Bleaching of PMbR exposed its active site lysine residue, which was monomethylated to form active site methylated bR (AMbR) after regeneration with all-trans-retinal. This blue pigment, which is a cyanopsin rather than a rhodopsin, showed an extraordinary red shift, absorbing light with a lambda max of 620 nm in the dark-adapted state. Light adaptation of AMbR resulted in a spectral shift to 616 nm with a decrease in epsilon. This change was completely reversible in the dark. This shift was interpreted to mean that an L-like intermediate was accumulating, as would be expected if deprotonation of the protonated Schiff base could not occur to produce the M intermediate. Furthermore, when incorporated into asolectin vesicles, AMbR proved incapable of pumping protons in the light. It was concluded from these experiments that deprotonation of the Schiff base of bR is obligate for light-induced proton pumping.  相似文献   

6.
Studies of bacteriorhodopsin have indicated that the charge environment of the protonated Schiff base consists of residues Asp-85, Asp-212, and Arg-82. As shown recently (Marti, T., R?sselet, S. J., Otto, H., Heyn, M. P., and Khorana, H. G. (1991) J. Biol. Chem. 266, 18674-18683), in the double mutant Asp-85----Asn/Asp-212----Asn chromophore formation is restored in the presence of salts, suggesting that exogenous anions function as counterions to the protonated Schiff base. To investigate the role of Arg-82 and of the Schiff base in anion binding, we have prepared the triple mutant Arg-82----Gln/Asp-85----Asn/Asp-212----Asn and compared its properties with those of the Asp-85----Asn/Asp-212----Asn double mutant. Regeneration of the chromophore with absorption maximum near 560 nm occurs in the triple mutant in the presence of millimolar salt, whereas in the double mutant molar salt concentrations are required. Spectrometric titrations reveal that the pKa of Schiff base deprotonation is markedly reduced from 11.3 for the wild type to 4.9 for the triple mutant in 1 mM NaCl and to 5.5 for the double mutant in 10 mM NaCl. In both mutants, increasing the chloride concentration promotes protonation of the chromophore and results in a continuous rise of the Schiff base pKa, yielding a value of 8.4 and 7.6, respectively, in 4 M NaCl. The absorption maximum of the two mutants shows a progressive red shift, as the ionic radius of the halide increases in the sequence fluoride, chloride, bromide, and iodide. An identical spectral correlation in the presence of halides is observed for the acid-purple form of bacteriorhodopsin. We conclude, therefore, that upon neutralization of the two counterions Asp-85 and Asp-212 by mutation or by protonation at low pH, exogenous anions substitute as counterions by directly binding to the protonated Schiff base. This interaction may provide the basis for the proposed anion translocation by the acid-purple form of bacteriorhodopsin as well as by the related halorhodopsin.  相似文献   

7.
T Iwasa 《Biochemistry》1992,31(4):1190-1195
Halorhodopsin (HR), the light-driven chloride pump of Halobacterium halobium, was bleached with hydroxylamine and regenerated with all-trans-retinal under several different conditions. The largest recovery of the pigment was found with apoprotein obtained from detergent-free HR [HR(BB)]. To compare the chloride-pumping mechanism of HR with that of bacteriorhodopsin (BR; the light-driven proton pump of the same bacteria), HR pigment analogues were reconstituted with the bleached HR (BB) and retinal analogues. The corresponding BR pigment analogues have previously been shown to have little or no proton-pumping activity, except for retinal2 (3,4-dehydroretinal). Pigment analogues with 13-demethylretinal or retinal2 showed an "opsin shift" similar to that of the all-trans-retinal pigment of both HR and BR. Opsin shifts of the pigments of 9-12-phenylretinal and 3,7-dimethyl-2,4,6,8-decatetraenal and haloopsin are slightly different from those of the corresponding BR pigment analogues, presumably reflecting differences of the chromophoric structures in HR and BR. In addition to the spectral properties, the effect of chloride ion on deprotonation of the Schiff base was measured. These pigment analogues showed the "chloride effect" (a shift of the pK value for deprotonation of the Schiff base), but a smaller one than that seen in HR. For a measurement of the chloride-pumping activity, each retinal analogue was added to a culture of L07 cells (BOP-, HOP+, Ret-), and the activity was measured with the cell suspension. Only cultures with retinal or retinal2 showed chloride-pumping activity, as is true for proton pumping by BR. This suggests that a similar retinal-protein interaction is necessary for both ion pumps.  相似文献   

8.
Wavelength regulation in iodopsin, a cone pigment.   总被引:3,自引:2,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
The opsin shift, the difference in wavenumber between the absorption peak of a visual pigment and the protonated Schiff base of the chromophore, represents the influence of the opsin binding site on the chromophore. The opsin shift for the chicken cone pigment iodopsin is much larger than that for rhodopsin. To understand the origin of this opsin shift and the mechanism of wavelength regulation in iodopsin, a series of synthetic 9-cis and 11-cis dehydro- and dihydro-retinals was used to regenerate iodopsin-based pigments. The opsin shifts of these pigments are quite similar to those found in bacteriorhodopsin-based artificial pigments. On the basis of these studies, a tentative model of wavelength regulation in iodopsin is proposed.  相似文献   

9.
K R Babu  A Dukkipati  R R Birge  B E Knox 《Biochemistry》2001,40(46):13760-13766
Short-wavelength visual pigments (SWS1) have lambda(max) values that range from the ultraviolet to the blue. Like all visual pigments, this class has an 11-cis-retinal chromophore attached through a Schiff base linkage to a lysine residue of opsin apoprotein. We have characterized a series of site-specific mutants at a conserved acidic residue in transmembrane helix 3 in the Xenopus short-wavelength sensitive cone opsin (VCOP, lambda(max) approximately 427 nm). We report the identification of D108 as the counterion to the protonated retinylidene Schiff base. This residue regulates the pK(a) of the Schiff base and, neutralizing this charge, converts the violet sensitive pigment into one that absorbs maximally in the ultraviolet region. Changes to this position cause the pigment to exhibit two chromophore absorbance bands, a major band with a lambda(max) of approximately 352-372 nm and a minor, broad shoulder centered around 480 nm. The behavior of these two absorbance bands suggests that these represent unprotonated and protonated Schiff base forms of the pigment. The D108A mutant does not activate bovine rod transducin in the dark but has a significantly prolonged lifetime of the active MetaII state. The data suggest that in short-wavelength sensitive cone visual pigments, the counterion is necessary for the characteristic rapid production and decay of the active MetaII state.  相似文献   

10.
Of the four classes of vertebrate cone visual pigments, the shortwave-sensitive SWS1 class shows the shortest lambda(max) values with peaks in different species in either the violet (390-435 nm) or ultraviolet (around 365 nm) regions of the spectrum. Phylogenetic evidence indicates that the ancestral pigment was probably UV-sensitive (UVS) and that the shifts between violet and UV have occurred many times during evolution. This is supported by the different mechanisms for these shifts in different species. All visual pigments possess a chromophore linked via a Schiff base to a Lys residue in opsin protein. In violet-sensitive (VS) pigments, the Schiff base is protonated whereas in UVS pigments, it is almost certainly unprotonated. The generation of VS from ancestral UVS pigments most likely involved amino acid substitutions in the opsin protein that serve to stabilise protonation. The key residues in the opsin protein for this are at sites 86 and 90 that are adjacent to the Schiff base and the counterion at Glu113. In this review, the different molecular mechanisms for the UV or violet shifts are presented and discussed in the context of the structural model of bovine rhodopsin.  相似文献   

11.
The consequences of replacing Asp-85 with glutamate in bacteriorhodopsin, as expressed in Halobacterium sp. GRB, were investigated. Similarly to the in vitro mutated and in Escherichia coli expressed protein, the chromophore was found to exist as a mixture of blue (absorption maximum 615 nm) and red (532 nm) forms, depending on the pH. However, we found two widely separated pKa values (about 5.4 and 10.4 without added salt), arguing for two blue and two red forms in separate equilibria. Both blue and red forms of the protein are in the two-dimensional crystalline state. A single pKa, such as in the E. coli expressed protein, was observed only after solubilization with detergent. The photocycle of the blue forms was determined at pH 4.0 with 610 nm photoexcitation, and that of the red forms at pH 10.5 and with 520 nm photoexcitation, in the time-range of 100 ns to 1 s. The blue forms produced no M, but a K- and an L-like intermediate, whose spectra and kinetics resembled those of blue wild-type bacteriorhodopsin below pH 3. The red forms produced a K-like intermediate, as well as M and N. Only the red forms transported protons. Specific perturbation of the neighborhood of the Schiff base by the replacement of Asp-85 with glutamate was suggested by (1) the shift and splitting of the pKa for what is presumably the protonation of residue 85, (2) a 36 nm blue-shift in the absorption of the all-trans red chromophore and a 25 nm red-shift of the 13-cis N chromophore, as compared to wild-type bacteriorhodopsin and its N intermediate, and (3) significant acceleration of the deprotonation of the Schiff base at pH 7, but not of its reprotonation and the following steps in the photocycle.  相似文献   

12.
B W Vought  A Dukkipatti  M Max  B E Knox  R R Birge 《Biochemistry》1999,38(35):11287-11297
Two short-wavelength cone opsins, frog (Xenopus laevis) violet and mouse UV, were expressed in mammalian COS1 cells, purified in delipidated form, and studied using cryogenic UV-vis spectrophotometry. At room temperature, the X. laevis violet opsin has an absorption maximum at 426 nm when generated with 11-cis-retinal and an absorption maximum of 415 nm when generated with 9-cis-retinal. The frog short-wavelength opsin has two different batho intermediates, one stable at 30 K (lambda(max) approximately 446 nm) and the other at 70 K (lambda(max) approximately 475 nm). Chloride ions do not affect the absorption maximum of the violet opsin. At room temperature, mouse UV opsin has an absorption maximum of 357 nm, while at 70 K, the pigment exhibits a bathochromic shift to 403 nm with distinct vibronic structure and a strong secondary vibronic band at 380 nm. We have observed linear relationships when analyzing the energy difference between the initial and bathochromic intermediates and the normalized difference spectra of the batho-shifted intermediates of rod and cone opsins. We conclude that the binding sites of these pigments change from red to green to violet via systematic shifts in the position of the primary counterion relative to the protonated Schiff base. The mouse UV cone opsin does not fit this trend, and we conclude that wavelength selection in this pigment must operate via a different molecular mechanism. We discuss the possibility that the mouse UV chromophore is initially unprotonated.  相似文献   

13.
Proteorhodopsin, a retinal protein of marine proteobacteria similar to bacteriorhodopsin of the archaea, is a light-driven proton pump. Absorption of a light quantum initiates a reaction cycle (turnover time of ca. 50 ms), which includes photoisomerization of the retinal from the all-trans to the 13-cis form and transient deprotonation of the retinal Schiff base, followed by recovery of the initial state. We report here that in addition to this fast cyclic conversion, illumination at high pH results in accumulation of a long-lived photoproduct absorbing at 362 nm. This photoconversion is much more efficient in the D227N mutant in which the anionic Asp227, which together with Asp97 constitutes the Schiff base counterion, is replaced with a neutral residue. Upon illumination at pH 8.5, most of the D227N pigment is converted to the 362 nm species, with a quantum efficiency of ca. 0.2. The pK(a) for this transition in the wild type is 9.6, but decreased to 7.5 after mutation of Asp227. The short wavelength of the absorption maximum of the photoproduct indicates that it has a deprotonated Schiff base. In the dark, this photoproduct is converted back to the initial pigment with a time constant of 30 min (in D227N, at pH 8.5), but it can be reconverted more rapidly by illumination with near-UV light. Experiments with "locked" retinal analogues which selectively exclude rotation around either the C9=C10, C11=C12, or C13=C14 bond show that formation of the 362 nm species involves isomerization around the C13=C14 bond. In agreement with this, retinal extraction indicates that the 362 nm photoproduct is 13-cis whereas the initial state is predominantly all-trans. A rapid shift of the pH from 8.5 to 4 greatly accelerates thermal reconversion of the 362 nm species to the initial pigment, suggesting that its recovery involving the thermal isomerization of the chromophore is controlled by ionizable residues, primarily the Schiff base and Asp97. The transformation to the long-lived 362 nm photoproduct is apparently a side reaction of the photocycle, a response to high pH, caused by alteration of the normal reprotonation and reisomerization pathway of the Schiff base.  相似文献   

14.
Porphobilinogen synthase (PBGS) catalyzes the asymmetric condensation of two molecules of 5-aminolevulinic acid (ALA). Despite the 280,000-dalton size of PBGS, much can be learned about the reaction mechanism through 13C and 15N NMR. To our knowledge, these studies represent the largest protein complex for which individual nuclei have been characterized by 13C or 15N NMR. Here we extend our 13C NMR studies to PBGS complexes with [3,3-2H2,3-13C]ALA and report 15N NMR studies of [15N]ALA bound to PBGS. As in our previous 13C NMR studies, observation of enzyme-bound 15N-labeled species was facilitated by deuteration at nitrogens that are attached to slowly exchanging hydrogens. For holo-PBGS at neutral pH, the NMR spectra reflect the structure of the enzyme-bound product porphobilinogen (PBG), whose chemical shifts are uniformly consistent with deprotonation of the amino group whose solution pKa is 11. Despite this local environment, the protons of the amino group are in rapid exchange with solvent (kexchange greater than 10(2) s-1). For methyl methanethiosulfonate (MMTS) modified PBGS, the NMR spectra reflect the chemistry of an enzyme-bound Schiff base intermediate that is formed between C4 of ALA and an active-site lysine. The 13C chemical shift of [3,3-2H2,3-13C]ALA confirms that the Schiff base is an imine of E stereochemistry. By comparison to model imines formed between [15N]ALA and hydrazine or hydroxylamine, the 15N chemical shift of the enzyme-bound Schiff base suggests that the free amino group is an environment resembling partial deprotonation; again the protons are in rapid exchange with solvent. Deprotonation of the amino group would facilitate formation of a Schiff base between the amino group of the enzyme-bound Schiff base and C4 of the second ALA substrate. This is the first evidence supporting carbon-nitrogen bond formation as the initial site of interaction between the two substrate molecules.  相似文献   

15.
Tsutsui K  Imai H  Shichida Y 《Biochemistry》2008,47(41):10829-10833
Protonation of the retinal Schiff base chromophore is responsible for the absorption of visible light and is stabilized by the counterion residue E113 in vertebrate visual pigments. However, this residue is also conserved in vertebrate UV-absorbing visual pigments (UV pigments) which have an unprotonated Schiff base chromophore. To elucidate the role played by this residue in the photoisomerization of the unprotonated chromophore in UV pigments, we measured the quantum yield of the E113Q mutant of the mouse UV cone pigment (mouse UV). The quantum yield of the mutant was much lower than that of the wild type, indicating that E113 is required for the efficient photoisomerization of the unprotonated chromophore in mouse UV. Introduction of the E113Q mutation into the chicken violet cone pigment (chicken violet), which has a protonated chromophore, caused deprotonation of the chromophore and a reduction in the quantum yield. On the other hand, the S90C mutation in chicken violet, which deprotonated the chromophore with E113 remaining intact, did not significantly affect the quantum yield. These results suggest that E113 facilitates photoisomerization in both UV-absorbing and visible light-absorbing visual pigments and provide a possible explanation for the complete conservation of E113 among vertebrate UV pigments.  相似文献   

16.
By comparing the shift of the absorption maxima when a visual pigment is converted to its lumirhodopsin photointermediate for two classes of pigments, we can infer whether or not the pigment's beta-ionone ring has left its binding site. We compare this shift for the long-wavelength sensitive visual pigment of chicken iodopsin (lambdamax = 571 nm), which has polar residues in the ring binding site that interact with the ring, with that for three pigments, which do not. We conclude that by the time the Lumi product of the pigment is formed, the ring has moved away from the ring binding site.  相似文献   

17.
The retinylidene Schiff base counterion in bacteriorhodopsin   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
Previous studies of bacteriorhodopsin have indicated interactions between Asp-85, Asp-212, Arg-82, and the retinylidene Schiff base. The counterion environment of the Schiff base has now been further investigated by using single and double mutants of the above amino acids. Chromophore regeneration from bacterioopsin proceeds to a normal extent in the presence of a single aspartate or glutamate residue at position 85 or 212, whereas replacement of both charged amino acids in the mutant Asp-85----Asn/Asp-212----Asn abolishes the binding of retinal. This indicates that a carboxylate group at either residue 85 or 212 is required as counterion for formation and for stabilization of the protonated Schiff base. Measurements of the pKa of the Schiff base reveal reductions of greater than 3.5 units for neutral single mutants of Asp-85 but only decreases of less than 1.2 units for corresponding substitutions of Asp-212, relative to the wild type. Substitutions of Asp-85 show large red shifts in the absorption spectrum that are partially reversible upon addition of anions, whereas mutants of Asp-212 display minor red shifts or blue shifts. We conclude, therefore, that Asp-85 is the retinylidene Schiff base counterion in wild-type bacteriorhodopsin. In the mutant Asp-85----Asn/Asp-212----Asn formation of a protonated Schiff base chromophore is restored in the presence of salts. The spectral properties of the double mutant are similar to those of the acid-purple form of bacteriorhodopsin. Upon addition of salts the folded structure of wild-type and mutant proteins can be stabilized at low pH in lipid/detergent micelles. The data indicate that exogenous anions serve as surrogate counterions to the protonated Schiff base, when the intrinsic counterions have been neutralized by mutation or by protonation.  相似文献   

18.
In order to improve the existing models of retinal-protein Schiff bases, a water-soluble polylysine-retinaldehyde imine has been synthesized and its stability assessed under a variety of conditions through changes in the visible absorption spectrum. The compound absorbs at 342 nm and consists of a 90-kDa poly-L-lysine containing a retinal Schiff base in about 2% of the lysyl epsilon-amino ends. Retinal is mostly in the all-trans form; under no conditions is more than 15% of the 13-cis isomer detected. The absorption maximum exhibits a pH-dependent reversible shift to 402 nm, with an apparent pKa approximately 3.4. In the presence of the anionic surfactant sodium dodecyl sulfate, this pKa is shifted to approximately 8.9, probably because of electric neutralization of lysyl epsilon-amino groups. Other detergents (cetyltrimethylammonium bromide, Triton X-100) do not modify the Schiff base pKa, but rather promote its hydrolysis; in this case detergents act in the same way as certain solvent mixtures, by providing an amphiphillic environment to the imine that in turn stabilizes the products of hydrolysis. Our results suggest that once the surfactant reaches the Schiff base, preferential partition of retinal into detergent micelles is the main factor facilitating imine bond breakdown. The response of our synthetic Schiff base to changes in pH or solvent polarity point together to an important role of the supporting polypeptide in providing a suitable environment to the chromophore.  相似文献   

19.
The 11-cis-retinal binding site of rhodopsin is of great interest because it is buried in the membrane but yet must provide an environment for charged amino acids. In addition, the active-site lysine residue must be able to engage in rapid Schiff base formation with 11-cis-retinal at neutral and lower pH values. This requires that this lysine be unprotonated. We have begun to study the environment of the active-site lysine using a reporter group adducted to it. Non-active-site permethylated opsin was reacted with 5-nitrosalicylaldehyde, and the resulting Schiff base was permanently fixed by borohydride reduction. The stoichiometry of incorporation was one. This chromophoric and pH-sensitive reporter group affords information on the active-site environment of rhodopsin by determining the ionization constants of its ionizable groups at different pH values. The pH titration of the modified protein showed a single pKa = 7.8 +/- 0.19 ascribable to the ionization of the phenol. The ionization of the modified lysine residue was not observed at all pH values studied. These studies are interpreted to mean that a negatively charged amino acid is propinquous to the active-site lysine residue and that this latter residue does not have an unusually low pKa.  相似文献   

20.
Glutamic acid at position 113 in bovine rhodopsin ionizes to form the counterion to the protonated Schiff base (PSB), which links the 11-cis-retinylidene chromophore to opsin. Photoactivation of rhodopsin requires both Schiff base deprotonation and neutralization of Glu-113. To better understand the role of electrostatic interactions in receptor photoactivation, absorbance difference spectra were collected at time delays from 30 ns to 690 ms after photolysis of rhodopsin mutant E113Q solubilized in dodecyl maltoside at different pH values at 20 degrees C. The PSB form (pH 5. 5, lambda(max) = 496 nm) and the unprotonated Schiff base form (pH 8. 2, lambda(max) = 384 nm) of E113Q rhodopsin were excited using 477 nm or 355 nm light, respectively. Early photointermediates of both forms of E113Q were qualitatively similar to those of wild-type rhodopsin. In particular, early photoproducts with spectral shifts to longer wavelengths analogous to wild-type bathorhodopsin were seen. In the case of the basic form of E113Q, the absorption maximum of this intermediate was at 408 nm. These results suggest that steric interaction between the retinylidene chromophore and opsin, rather than charge separation, plays the dominant role in energy storage in bathorhodopsin. After lumirhodopsin, instead of deprotonating to form metarhodopsin I(380) on the submillisecond time scale as is the case for wild type, the acidic form of E113Q produced metarhodopsin I(480), which decayed very slowly (exponential lifetime = 12 ms). These results show that Glu-113 must be present for efficient deprotonation of the Schiff base and rapid visual transduction in vertebrate visual pigments.  相似文献   

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