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1.
T. Gillbro 《BBA》1978,504(1):175-186
The reaction cycle of light adapted bacteriorhodopsin (BR) in aqueous purple membrane suspensions was studied by laser flash photolysis at different temperatures (2–49°C) and pH values (3–10). The activation energy for several reaction steps was determined at pH 7.6. The kinetics of O-bacteriorhodopsin (one of the last intermediates in the cycle) were analyzed in some detail and it was found that the simple consecutive reaction scheme M-BR → O-BR → BR may explain the kinetics of O-bacteriorhodopsin as measured at 680 nm. Since the pH change in neutral aqueous suspensions of purple membrane follows a similar kinetics as O-bacteriorhodopsin it is suggested that protons are released during the reaction M-BR → O-BR and taken up again during the reaction O-BR → BR.Another long-lived intermediate, which absorbs to a greater extent than bacteriorhodopsin at 570 nm and less than bacteriorhodopsin at 420 nm, was identified with the strongly fluorescing species, pseudo- or P-bacteriorhodopsin. The decay of P-bacteriorhodopsin in bacteriorhodopsin had an activation energy of only approx. 1.2 kcal/mol, which suggests that the last step of the photocycle is a relaxation around a single bond.At pH 9–10, the simple first-order kinetics of all the intermediates were changed into a kinetics consisting of two first-order decays. This change of kinetics was accompanied by a drastic decrease in the rotational diffusion relaxation time.To explain the results obtained in this work and those of others, a model involving proton uptake and release by the Schiff base nitrogen combined with an isomerization reaction is finally proposed.  相似文献   

2.
The abrupt onset of large scale nonproton ion release by photo-excited purple membrane suspensions has been observed near neutral pH using transient conductivity measurements. At pH 7 and low ionic strength, the conductivity transients due to proton and nonproton ions are of comparable magnitude but of opposite sign: fast proton release and ion uptake, followed by slow proton uptake and ion release. By increasing either the pH or the NaCl concentration, the amplitude of the conductivity transient increases sharply and the signal is then dominated by nonproton ion release. These results can be understood in terms of light-induced changes in the population of counterions condensed at the purple membrane surface caused by changes in the surface charge density. The critical charge density required for condensation to occur is evidently achieved near neutral pH by ionizing dissociable groups on the membrane by either titration (increasing the pH) or shifting their pKs (increasing the ionic strength).  相似文献   

3.
The reaction cycle of bacteriorhodopsin in the purple membrane isolated from Halobacterium halobium has been studied by optical absorption spectroscopy using low-temperature and flash kinetic techniques. After absorption of light, bacteriohodopsin passes through at least five distinct intermediates. The temperature and pH dependence of the absorbance changes suggests that branch points and/or reversible steps exist in this cycle. Flash spectroscopy in the presence of a pH-indicating dye shows that the transient release of a proton accompanies the photoreaction cycle. The proton release occurs from the exterior and the uptake is on the cytoplasmic side of the membrane, as required by the function of bacteriorhodopsin as a light-driven proton pump. Proton translocating steps connecting release and uptake are indicated by deuterium isotope effects on the kinetics of the cycle. The rapid decay of a light-induced linear dichroism shows that a chromophore orientation change occurs during the reaction cycle.  相似文献   

4.
We have used flash spectroscopy and pH indicator dyes to measure the kinetics and stoichiometry of light-induced proton release and uptake by purple membrane in aqueous suspension, in cell envelope vesicles and in lipid vesicles. The preferential orientation of bacteriorhodopsin in opposite directions in the envelope and lipid vesicles allows us to show that uptake of protons occurs on the cytoplasmic side of the purple membrane and release on the exterior side.

In suspensions of isolated purple membrane, approximately one proton per cycling bacteriorhodopsin molecule appears transiently in the aqueous phase with a half-rise time of 0.8 ms and a half-decay time of 5.4 ms at 21 °C.

In cell envelope preparations which consist of vesicles with a preferential orientation of purple membrane, as in whole cells, and which pump protons out, the acidification of the medium has a half-rise time of less than 1.0 ms, which partially relaxes in approx. 10 ms and fully relaxes after many seconds.

Phospholipid vesicles, which contain bacteriorhodopsin preferentially oriented in the opposite direction and pump protons in, show an alkalinization of the medium with a time constant of approximately 10 ms, preceded by a much smaller and faster acidification. The alkalinization relaxes over many seconds.

The initial fast acidification in the lipid vesicles and the fast relaxation in the envelope vesicles are accounted for by the misoriented fractions of bacteriorhodopsin. The time constants of the main effects, acidification in the envelopes and alkalinization in the lipid vesicles correlate with the time constants for the release and uptake of protons in the isolated purple membrane, and therefore show that these must occur on the outer and inner surface respectively. The slow relaxation processes in the time range of several seconds must be attributed to the passive back diffusion of protons through the vesicle membrane.  相似文献   


5.
The difference in the surface charge distribution between light-adapted and dark-adapted purple membranes was investigated with electric dichroism measurements from approximately pH 5 to pH 11. Purple membrane sheets in solution are oriented in a weak electric field by their permanent dipole moment, which is due to the charge distribution of the membrane surfaces and/or within the membrane. The degree of orientation of purple membrane sheets was obtained from the measurement of “electrical anisotropy” of retinal chromophore in the membranes. At about pH 7, there was no difference in the “electric anisotropy” between light- and dark-adapted purple membranes. At about pH 9, the electric anisotropy of dark-adapted purple membrane was larger than that of light-adapted purple membrane. But at around pH 6 the difference was opposite. Linear dichroism experiments did not show any change of retinal tilt angle with respect to the membrane normal between the two forms from approximately pH 5 to pH 10. This result indicates that the changes in the “electric anisotropy” are not due to the change of retinal tilt angle, but due to the change in the permanent dipole moment of the membrane. To estimate the change in surface charges from the permanent dipole moment, we investigated the difference of the permanent dipole moment between the native purple membrane and papain-treated purple membrane in which negative charges in the cytoplasmic-terminal part are removed. This estimation suggests that this light-dark difference at around pH 9 can be accounted for by a change of ~0.5 electric charge per bacteriorhodopsin (bR) molecule at either of the two surfaces of the membrane. We also found from pH electrode measurements that at about pH 8 or 9 light adaptation was accompanied by an uptake of ~0.1 protons per bR. A possible movement of protons during light-dark adaptation is discussed. The direction of the permanent dipole moment does not change with papain treatment. The permanent dipole moment in papain-treated purple membrane is estimated to be 27 ±2 debye/bR.  相似文献   

6.
Bacteriorhodopsin, a light-driven proton pump found in the purple membrane of Halobacterium salinarum, exhibits purple at neutral pH but its color is sensitive to pH. Here, structures are reported for an acid blue form and an alkaline purple form of wild-type bacteriorhodopsin. When the P622 crystal prepared at pH 5.2 was acidified with sulfuric acid, its color turned to blue with a pKa of 3.5 and a Hill coefficient of 2. Diffraction data at pH 2-5 indicated that the purple-to-blue transition accompanies a large structural change in the proton release channel; i.e. the extracellular half of helix C moves towards helix G, narrowing the proton release channel and expelling a water molecule from a micro-cavity in the vicinity of the retinal Schiff base. In this respect, the acid-induced structural change resembles the structural change observed upon formation of the M intermediate. But, the acid blue form contains a sulfate ion in a site(s) near Arg82 that is created by re-orientations of the carboxyl groups of Glu194 and Glu204, residues comprising the proton release complex. This result suggests that proton uptake by the proton release complex evokes the anion binding, which in turn induces protonation of Asp85, a key residue regulating the absorption spectrum of the chromophore. Interestingly, a pronounced structural change in the proton release complex was also observed at high pH; i.e. re-orientation of Glu194 towards Tyr83 was found to take place at around pH 10. This alkaline transition is suggested to be accompanied by proton release from the proton release complex and responsible for rapid formation of the M intermediate at high pH.  相似文献   

7.
Measuring the light-density (fluence) dependence of proton release from flash excited bacteriorhodopsin with two independent methods we found that the lifetime of proton release increases and the proton pumping activity, defined as a number of protons per number of photocycle, decreases with increasing fluence. An interpretation of these results, based on bending of purple membrane and electrical interaction among the proton release groups of bacteriorhodopsin trimer, is presented.  相似文献   

8.
Proton release by flash excitations was measured with right-side-out vesicles prepared from Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides by lysozyme-EDTA treatment followed by hypotonic treatment. Absorbance change at 586 nm in the presence of bromcresol purple was measured to monitor the pH change. In the presence of horse heart cytochrome c, which catalyzes the electron transfer from the cytochrome b-c1 complex to the primary electron donor, the single-turnover flash elicited release of about two protons per primary electron donor, which was rereduced rapidly by the added cytochrome c. The halftime of the proton release was about 70 ms at pH 6.3 and at a redox potential of about 150 mV. The rate was considerably lower than that of the electron transfer from the cytochrome b-c1 complex to cytochrome c. However, multiple flashes with intervals of 60 ms caused release of the same amount of protons as that by flashes with longer intervals. This indicated that the proton release itself was rapid, but delocalization was slower. Antimycin A inhibited the proton release, and myxothiazol almost completely abolished it.  相似文献   

9.
In the photocycle of bacteriorhodopsin (bR) from Halobacterium salinarum mutant L93A, the O-intermediate accumulates and the cycling time is increased approximately 200 times. Nevertheless, under continuous illumination, the protein pumps protons at near wild-type rates. We excited the mutant L93A in purple membrane with single or triple laser flashes and quasicontinuous illumination, (i.e., light for a few seconds) and recorded proton release and uptake, electric signals, and absorbance changes. We found long-living, correlated, kinetic components in all three measurements, which-with exception of the absorbance changes-had not been seen in earlier investigations. At room temperature, the O-intermediate decays to bR in two transitions with rate constants of 350 and 1800 ms. Proton uptake from the cytoplasmic surface continues with similar kinetics until the bR state is reestablished. An analysis of the data from quasicontinuous illumination and multiple flash excitation led to the conclusion that acceleration of the photocycle in continuous light is due to excitation of the N-component in the fast N<-->O equilibrium, which is established at the beginning of the severe cycle slowdown. This conclusion was confirmed by an action spectrum.  相似文献   

10.
The dependence of the bacteriorhodopsin (bR) photocycle on the intensity of the exciting flash was investigated in purple membranes. The dependence was most pronounced at slightly alkaline pH values. A comparison study of the kinetics of the photocycle and proton uptake at different intensities of the flash suggested that there exist two parallel photocycles in purple membranes at a high intensity of the flash. The photocycle of excited bR in a trimer with the two other bR molecules nonexcited is characterized by an almost irreversible M --> N transition. Excitation of two or three bR in a trimer induces the N --> M back reaction and accelerates the N --> bR transition. Based on the qualitative similarity of the pH dependencies of the photocycles of solubilized bR and excited dimers and trimers we proposed that the interaction of nonexcited bR in trimers alters the photocycle of the excited monomer as compared to solubilized bR and the changes in the photocycles in excited dimers and trimers are the result of decoupling of this interaction.  相似文献   

11.
The kinetics of proton release on ligation of menhaden hemoglobin was studied by flash photolysis over a range of pH. In contrast to all previous kinetic work with human hemoglobin, a nonlinear relationship between proton release and CO binding was found. Proton uptake was also observed in the course of O2 replacement by CO at low pH. It follows that at least part of the proton release is associated with quaternary rather than tertiary conformational changes i.e. this result is consistent with a two-state model in which L is a function of pH.  相似文献   

12.
The amplitudes of the conductivity transients in photoexcited purple membranes were studied as a function of the energy of the actinic flash to determine the optical cross section of the process giving rise to the conductivity transient. Heating of the solution by the absorbed light causes an additional conductivity change and serves as an internal actinometer; the experiment directly yields the ratio of the cross section of ion release/uptake to that for light absorption. In effect, this counts the number of bacteriorhodopsin (bR) molecules involved in the conductivity transient per photon absorbed. At pH 7 in 0.4-0.5 M NaCl, where the conductivity signals are dominated by nonproton ions, the ratio is between 3 and 4, i.e., excitation of any one of several chromophores generates the same ion release signal. The simplest interpretation is that at pH 7 cooperative conformational changes cause a transient change in the surface charge distribution near all the affected bR molecules, resulting in the transient release of numerous counterions. As a comparison, at pH 4 where the signals are due to protons alone, the cross section data indicate that only a single bR molecule is involved in the proton movements. In this case, the results also show that the sum of the primary forward and reverse quantum yields (for the reactions: bR----K) is 0.88 +/- 0.09.  相似文献   

13.
Li Q  Sun Q  Zhao W  Wang H  Xu D 《Biochimica et biophysica acta》2000,1466(1-2):260-266
A strain of extremely salt-loving halobacteria Halobacterium species xz515 from a salt lake in Tibet was isolated. SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis shows that there is only one protein on claret membrane, which is the same membrane fraction as purple membrane from Halobacterium salinarum, with a molecular weight close to bacteriorhodopsin (br). The purified retinal containing protein from xz515 has an absorption peak at around 550 nm. These facts indicate that it is a br-like protein. The partial sequence determination [H. Wang et al., Chin. Sci. Bull., 45 (2000)] shows that this br-like protein belongs to the archaerhodopsin family. The measurements of light-induced medium pH change in intact cells and cell envelope vesicles of xz515 suggest that this type of archaerhodopsin has a proton pumping function. However, the study about the dynamics of pumped protons across the membrane reveal that the proton release and proton uptake is in reverse order compared to br. The probable reason, attributing to regulating the rate of proton release is discussed.  相似文献   

14.
Photoreactions of bacteriorhodopsin at acid pH.   总被引:6,自引:3,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
It has been known that bacteriorhodopsin, the retinal protein in purple membrane which functions as a light-driven proton pump, undergoes reversible spectroscopic changes at acid pH. The absorption spectra of various bacteriorhodopsin species were estimated from measured spectra of the mixtures that form at low pH, in the presence of sulfate and chloride. The dependency of these on pH and the concentration of Cl- fit a model in which progressive protonation of purple membrane produces "blue membrane", which will bind, with increasing affinity as the pH is lowered, chloride ions to produce "acid purple membrane." Transient spectroscopy with a multichannel analyzer identified the intermediates of the photocycles of these altered pigments, and described their kinetics. Blue membrane produced red-shifted KL-like and L-like products, but no other photointermediates, consistent with earlier suggestions. Unlike others, however, we found that acid purple membrane exhibited a very different photocycle: its first detected intermediate was not like KL in that it was much more red-shifted, and the only other intermediate detectable resembled the O species of the bacteriorhodopsin photocycle. An M-like intermediate, with a deprotonated Schiff base, was not found in either of these photocycles. There are remarkable similarities between the photoreactions of the acid forms of bacteriorhodopsin and the chloride transport system halorhodopsin, where the Schiff base deprotonation seems to be prevented by lack of suitable aspartate residues, rather than by low pH.  相似文献   

15.
Buckhout TJ 《Plant physiology》1994,106(3):991-998
The kinetics behavior of the H+-sucrose (Suc) symporter was investigated in plasma membrane vesicles from sugar beet (Beta vulgaris L.) leaves by analyzing the effect of external and internal pH (pHo and pHi, respectively) on Suc uptake. The apparent Km for Suc uptake increased 18-fold as the pHo increased from 5.5 to 7.5. Over this same pHo range, the apparent Vmax for Suc uptake remained constant. The effects of pHi in the presence or absence of internal Suc were exclusively restricted to changes in Vmax. Thus, proton concentration on the inside of the membrane vesicles ([H+]i) behaved as a noncompetitive inhibitor of Suc uptake. The Km for the proton concentration on the outside of the membrane vesicles was estimated to be pH 6.3, which would indicate that at physiological apoplastic pH Suc transport might be sensitive to changes in pHo. On the other hand, the [H+]i for half-maximal inhibition of Suc uptake was approximately pH 5.4, making regulation of Suc transport through changes in [H+]i unlikely. These results were interpreted in the framework of the kinetics models for co-transport systems developed by D. Sanders, U.-P. Hansen, D. Gradmann, and C. L. Slayman (J Membr Biol [1984] 77: 123-152). Based on their analysis, the behavior of the Suc symporter with respect to the [H+]i is interpreted as an ordered binding mechanism by which the binding of Suc on the apoplastic side of the membrane and its release on the symplastic side precedes that of H+ (i.e. a first-on, first-off model).  相似文献   

16.
The photoreduction of ubiquinone in the electron acceptor complex (QIQII) of photosynthetic reaction centers from Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides, R26, was studied in a series of short, saturating flashes. The specific involvement of H+ in the reduction was revealed by the pH dependence of the electron transfer events and by net H+ binding during the formation of ubiquinol, which requires two turnovers of the photochemical act. On the first flash QII receives an electron via QI to form a stable ubisemiquinone anion (QII-); the second flash generates QI-. At low pH the two semiquinones rapidly disproportionate with the uptake of 2 H+, to produce QIIH2. This yields out-of-phase binary oscillations for the formation of anionic semiquinone and for H+ uptake. Above pH 6 there is a progressive increase in H+ binding on the first flash and an equivalent decrease in binding on the second flash until, at about pH 9.5, the extent of H+ binding is the same on all flashes. The semiquinone oscillations, however, are undiminished up to pH 9. It is suggested that a non-chromophoric, acid-base group undergoes a pK shift in response to the appearance of the anionic semiquinone and that this group is the site of protonation on the first flash. The acid-base group, which may be in the reaction center protein, appears to be subsequently involved in the protonation events leading to fully reduced ubiquinol. The other proton in the two electron reduction of ubiquinone is always taken up on the second flash and is bound directly to QII-. At pH values above 8.0, it is rate limiting for the disproportionation and the kinetics, which are diffusion controlled, are properly responsive to the prevailing pH. Below pH 8, however, a further step in the reaction mechanism was shown to be rate limiting for both H+ binding electron transfer following the second flash.  相似文献   

17.
Electric field induced pH changes of purple membrane suspensions were investigated in the pH range from 4.1 to 7.6 by measuring the absorbance change of pH indicators. In connection with the photocycle and proton pump ability, three different states of bacteriorhodopsin were used: (1) the native purple bacteriorhodopsin (magnesium and calcium ions are bound, the M intermediate exists in the photocycle and protons are pumped), (2) the cation-depleted blue bacteriorhodopsin (no M intermediate), and (3) the regenerated purple bacteriorhodopsin which is produced either by raising the pH or by adding magnesium ions (the M intermediate exists). In the native purple bacteriorhodopsin there are, at least, two types of proton binding sites: one releases protons and the other takes up protons in the presence of the electric field. On the other hand, blue bacteriorhodopsin and the regenerated purple bacteriorhodopsin (pH increase) show neither proton release nor proton uptake. When magnesium ions are added to the suspensions; the field-induced pH change is observed again. Thus, the stability of proton binding depends strongly on the state of bacteriorhodopsin and differences in proton binding are likely to be related to differences in proton pump activity. Furthermore, it is suggested that the appearance of the M intermediate and proton pumping are not necessarily related.  相似文献   

18.
Kovaleva EG  Plapp BV 《Biochemistry》2005,44(38):12797-12808
Binding of NAD+ to wild-type horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase is strongly pH-dependent and is limited by a unimolecular step, which may be related to a conformational change of the enzyme-NAD+ complex. Deprotonation during binding of NAD+ and inhibitors that trap the enzyme-NAD+ complex was examined by transient kinetics with pH indicators, and formation of complexes was monitored by absorbance and protein fluorescence. Reactions with pyrazole and trifluoroethanol had biphasic proton release, whereas reaction with caprate showed proton release followed by proton uptake. Proton release (200-550 s(-1)) is a common step that precedes binding of all inhibitors. At all pH values studied, the rate constants for proton release or uptake matched those for formation of ternary complexes, and the most significant quenching of protein fluorescence (or perturbation of adenine absorbance at 280 nm) was observed for enzyme species involved in deprotonation steps. Kinetic simulations of the combined transient data for the multiple signals indicate that all inhibitors bind faster and tighter to the unprotonated enzyme-NAD+ complex, which has a pK of about 7.3. The results suggest that rate-limiting deprotonation of the enzyme-NAD+ complex is coupled to the conformational change and controls the formation of ternary complexes.  相似文献   

19.
为了提高细菌视紫红质(BR)的可组装怀,使之使用于生物传感器等生物器件,利用生物素对紫膜进行修饰,使之可以被亲和素识别,从而可以定向的固定于固体支撑物表面。实验结果表明:生物素可以修饰紫膜表面的赖氨酸,修饰的程序依修饰的时间不同而有所不同,但即使被修饰24小时的紫膜,其表面的赖氨酸仍然没有被完全修饰。同时,生物素的修饰不会影响紫膜的结构和功能,但是不同的结合位点对M412的衰减会产生不同的影响。这  相似文献   

20.
Purple membrane was reacted with 1-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl)carbodiimide at pH 4.5 and 8.0. At pH 4.5, the reaction yields cross-linked bacteriorhodopsin. The cross-linking is inhibited by pretreatment of the membrane with papain, or by the presence of carbohydrazide or glycine ethyl ester in the reaction mixture. The product of the pH 8.0 reaction is not cross-linked, but it displays altered properties. Two measures of photochemical activity (light-induced change in proton binding (delta h) and decay of photointermediate M) show changes indicative of slowed proton uptake. The delta h is increased by ethyl dimethylaminopropylcarbodiimide. This increase is unaffected by pretreatment of the membrane with papain, and it is not reversed by NH2OH. However, the reaction is inhibited by millimolar concentrations of CaCl2. The altered delta h is not apparent in detergent-solubilized membranes. Ethyl dimethylaminopropylcarbodiimide does not appear to cause a large alteration in the membrane surface charge, as measured by Ca2+ binding. We conclude that (1) at acid pH, ethyl dimethylaminopropylcarbodiimide can be used for cross-linking or for attachment of specific probes to the C-terminal region of bacteriorhodopsin, and hence to the cytoplasmic side of the purple membrane, and (2) at alkaline pH, ethyl dimethylaminopropylcarbodiimide reacts at a diffent type of site and appears to inhibit the proton pump.  相似文献   

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