Events in proton pumping by bacteriorhodopsin. |
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Authors: | G W Rayfield |
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Abstract: | The short-circuit photoresponse of a bacteriorhodopsin-based photoactive membrane is studied. The membrane is formed by first coating a Teflon membrane with lipid and then fusing bacteriorhodopsin vesicles to it. An incandescent light source was used to obtain the rise time of the photocurrent in response to a step-function illumination. A fast response, less than 1 ms, characterizes the initial rise and decay of the photocurrent. The trailing edge of the rise and trailing edge of the decay each exhibit different time constants both greater than 1 ms. These slower components show a sensitivity to membrane charging, the presence of diethylether in the bathing solution, and the presence of a charged cation complex in the lipid region. The photoresponse is not analyzed by means of the usual equivalent electrical circuit, but rather in terms of image charges in the conducting electrolyte bathing the membrane. Further experiments using a pulsed laser (pulse width less than 1 microseconds) resolve at least three time constants in the photoresponse: 0.057 ms, 1.06 ms, and 13 ms. Three distinct charge displacements (4.4, 7.5, and 33.1 A) are derived from the data, each corresponding to one of the above time constants. |
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