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1.
Structural changes are central to the mechanism of light-driven proton transport by bacteriorhodopsin, a seven-helix membrane protein. The main intermediate formed upon light absorption is M, which occurs between the proton release and uptake steps of the photocycle. To investigate the structure of the M intermediate, we have carried out electron diffraction studies with two-dimensional crystals of wild-type bacteriorhodopsin and the Asp96-->Gly mutant. The M intermediate was trapped by rapidly freezing the crystals in liquid ethane following illumination with a xenon flash lamp at 5 and 25 degrees C. Here, we present 3.5 A resolution Fourier projection maps of the differences between the M intermediate and the ground state of bacteriorhodopsin. The most prominent structural changes are observed in the vicinity of helices F and G and are localized to the cytoplasmic half of the membrane.  相似文献   

2.
J Heberle  D Oesterhelt    N A Dencher 《The EMBO journal》1993,12(10):3721-3727
Surface bound pH indicators were applied to study the proton transfer reactions in the mutant Asp85-->Glu of bacteriorhodopsin in the native membrane. The amino acid replacement induces a drastic acceleration of the overall rise of the M intermediate. Instead of following this acceleration, proton ejection to the extracellular membrane surface is not only two orders of magnitude slower than M formation, it is also delayed as compared with the wild-type. This demonstrates that Asp85 not only accepts the proton released by the Schiff's base but also regulates very efficiently proton transfer within the proton release chain. Furthermore, Asp85 might be the primary but is not the only proton acceptor/donor group in the release pathway. The Asp85-->Glu substitution also affects the proton reuptake reaction at the cytoplasmic side, although Asp85 is located in the proton release pathway. Proton uptake is slower in the mutant than in the wild-type and occurs during the lifetime of the O intermediate. This demonstrates a feed-back mechanism between Asp85 and the proton uptake pathway in bacteriorhodopsin.  相似文献   

3.
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   

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.
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   

6.
Tunable laser resonance Raman spectroscopy has been applied to probe (in vivo) the role of rhodopsin in transducing light energy into the chemical necessary to generate a neural response. These in vivo experiments have suggested that the Schiff base linkage through which retinal is attached to opsin in rhodopsin is protonated. Furthermore, it appears that light eventually stimulates the deprotonation of the Schiff base linkage between the Meta I and Meta II steps in the intermediate sequence which is the result of light interacting with rhodopsin. Our data suggest that this deprotonation of the Schiff base occurs on the same time scale as overall proton release and uptake by the rhodopsin molecule. It is interesting to note that this series of protonations and deprotonations also occurs within the same time scale as the neural response generation in vertebrates and the generation of a proton gradient by bacteriorhodopsin, which is used by the bacterium, Halobacterium halobium, for ATP synthesis. If these data are analyzed within the context of the in vivo resonance Raman experiments (which seem to indicate that proton release is stimulated in the disc membrane during transduction) then there is a strong suggestion that the proton will assume an important role in any working hypothesis of visual transduction. In essence it appears that protons along with ATP and calcium ions must all be essential elements in the transduction process.  相似文献   

7.
Iodophenyl and anthryl retinal analogues have been synthesized. Thetrans-isomers have been isolated and purified by high pressure liquid chromatography. The purified isomers have been further characterized by nuclear magnetic resonance and ultraviolet-visible spectroscopy. Incubation of these retinal analogues with apoprotein (bacterioopsin), isolated from the purple membrane ofHalobacterium halobium gave new bacteriorhodopsin analogues. These analogues have been investigated for their absorption properties and stability. The iodophenyl analogue has been found to bind to bacterioopsin rapidly. The pigment obtained from this analogue showed a dramatically altered opsin shift of 1343 cm-1. The anthryl analogue based bacteriorhodopsin, however, showed an opsin shift of 3849 cm-1. It has been found that bacteriorhodopsin is quite unrestrictive in the ionone ring site. The apoprotein seems to prefer chromophores that have the ring portion co-planar with the polyene side chain. The purple membrane has also been modified by treatment with fluorescamine, a surface active reagent specific for amino groups. Reaction under controlled stoichiometric conditions resulted in the formation of a modified pigment. The new pigment showed a band at 390 nm—indicative of fluorescamine reaction with amino group (s) of apoprotein-besides retaining its original absorption band at 560 nm. Analysis of the fluorescamine modified bacteriorhodopsin resulted in the identification of lysine 129 as the modified amino acid residue. Fluorescamine-modified-bacteriorhodopsin suspension did not release protons under photolytic conditions. However, proteoliposomes of fluorescamine-modified-bacteriorhodopsin were found to show proton uptake, though at a reduced rate. Presented at the 3rd National Symposium on Bioorganic Chemistry, 1987, Hyderabad.  相似文献   

8.
The pH dependencies of the rate constants in the photocycles of recombinant D96N and D115N/D96N bacteriorhodopsins were determined from time-resolved difference spectra between 70 ns and 420 ms after photoexcitation. The results were consistent with the model suggested earlier for proteins containing D96N substitution: BR hv----K----L----M1----M2----BR. Only the M2----M1 back-reaction was pH-dependent: its rate increased with increasing [H+] between pH 5 and 8. We conclude from quantitative analysis of this pH dependency that its reverse, the M1----M2 reaction, is linked to the release of a proton from a group with a pKa = 5.8. This suggests a model for wild-type bacteriorhodopsin in which at pH greater than 5.8 the transported proton is released on the extracellular side from this as yet unknown group and on the 100-microseconds time scale, but at pH less than 5.8, the proton release occurs from another residue and later in the photocycle most likely directly from D85 during the O----BR reaction. We postulate, on the other hand, that proton uptake on the cytoplasmic side will be by D96 and during the N----O reaction regardless of pH. The proton kinetics as measured with indicator dyes confirmed the unique prediction of this model: at pH greater than 6, proton release preceded proton uptake, but at pH less than 6, the release was delayed until after the uptake. The results indicated further that the overall M1----M2 reaction includes a second kinetic step in addition to proton release; this is probably the earlier postulated extracellular-to-cytoplasmic reorientation switch in the proton pump.  相似文献   

9.
Methylation of the nonactive site lysines of bacteriorhodopsin to form permethylated bacteriorhodopsin does not interfere with the formation of the short wavelength intermediate M412 or light-induced proton release/uptake. The absorption spectrum is similar to that of the native bacteriorhodopsin. However, additional monomethylation of the active site lysine of bacteriorhodopsin causes a red shift of the absorption maximum from 568 nm in light-adapted bacteriorhodopsin [BR] to 630 nm. The photochemistry of active-site methylated BR does not proceed beyond the L-photointermediate. In particular, the photointermediate corresponding to M412 does not form, and there is no proton pumping. Moreover, there is no tyrosine deprotonation. Thus, the formation of an M-type photointermediate is required for proton pumping by BR.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
The quadruple bacteriorhodopsin (BR) mutant E9Q+E74Q+E194Q+E204Q shows a lambda(max) of about 500 nm in water at neutral pH and a great influence of pH and salts on the visible absorption spectrum. Accessibility to the Schiff base is strongly increased, as detected by the rapid bleaching effect of hydroxylamine in the dark as well as in light. Both the proton release kinetics and the photocycle are altered, as indicated by a delayed proton release after proton uptake and changed M kinetics. Moreover, affinity of the color-controlling cation(s) is found to be decreased. We suggest that the four Glu side chains are essential elements of the extracellular structure of BR.  相似文献   

12.
Evidence is presented for long range interactions between the extracellular and cytoplasmic parts of the heptahelical membrane protein bacteriorhodopsin in the mutant R82A and its second site revertant R82A/G231C. (i) In the double mutants R82A/G72C and R82A/A160C, with the cysteine mutation on the extracellular or cytoplasmic surface, respectively, the photocycle is the same as in the single mutant R82A with an accelerated deprotonation of the Schiff base and a reversed order of proton release and uptake. Proton release and uptake kinetics were measured directly at either surface by using the unique cysteine residue as attachment site for the pH indicator fluorescein. Whereas in wild type proton uptake on the cytoplasmic surface occurs during the M-decay (tau approximately 8 ms), in R82A it occurs already during the first phase of the M-rise (tau < 1 microseconds). (ii) The introduction of a second mutation at the cytoplasmic surface in position 231 (helix G) restores wild type ground state absorption properties, kinetics of photocycle and of proton release, and uptake in the mutant R82A/G231C. In addition, kinetic H/D isotope effects provide evidence that the proton release mechanism in R82A/G231C and in wild type is similar. These results suggest the existence of long range interactions between the cytoplasmic and extracellular surface domains of bacteriorhodopsin mediated by salt bridges and hydrogen-bonded networks between helices C (Arg-82) and G (Asp-212 and Gly-231). Such long range interactions are expected to be of functional significance for activation and signal transduction in heptahelical G-protein-coupled receptors.  相似文献   

13.
Photoelectric properties of bacteriorhodopsin incorporated into a bimolecular lipid membrane were investigated with special regard to the mechanism of photoelectric field generation. It was shown that besides its proton pump and electric generator functions bacteriorhodopsin works as a possible molecular regulator of the light-induced membrane potential. When a bimolecular lipid membrane containing bacteriorhodopsin is continuously illuminated in its main visible absorption band, and afterwards by superimposed blue light matching the absorption band of the long-living photobleached bacteriorhodopsin (M412) as well, the latter either enhances or decreases the steady-state photoresponse, depending upon the intensity of the green light. Thus, the additional blue-light illumination tends to cause the resultant photoelectric membrane potential to become stabilized. Two alternative schemes are tentatively proposed for the photochemical cycle of bacteriorhodopsin whereby blue light can control photovoltage generation. A kinetic model of the proton pump and the regulation of the photoelectric membrane potential is presented. This model fits all the experimental findings, even quantitatively. From the model some kinetic and physical parameters of this light-driven pump could be determined.  相似文献   

14.
P R Maycox  T Deckwerth    R Jahn 《The EMBO journal》1990,9(5):1465-1469
Active accumulation of neurotransmitters by synaptic vesicles is an essential component of the synaptic transmission cycle. Isolated vesicles show energy-dependent uptake of several transmitters by processes which are apparently mediated by a proton electrochemical potential across the vesicle membrane. Although this energy gradient is probably generated by a proton ATPase, the functional separation of ATP cleavage and transmitter uptake activity has only been shown clearly for monoamine transport. We report here that the light-driven proton pump, bacteriorhodopsin, can replace the endogenous proton ATPase in proteoliposomes reconstituted from vesicular detergent extracts. The system shows light-dependent uptake of glutamate with properties very similar to those observed in intact vesicles, e.g. chloride dependence or stimulation by NH4+. Our experiments show that the proton pump and the glutamate transporter are separate entities and provide a powerful tool for further characterization of the glutamate carrier.  相似文献   

15.
The bacteriorhodopsin protein (bR) in the cell membrane of Halobacterium halobium is a light driven proton pump. Many details are known about its structure and the molecular mechanism of proton translocation. The events may be characterized by: (1) the changes in light absorption after photon excitation (the photocycle); (2) the charge motion cycle inside the protein: the steps taken by the proton during translocation; (3) the retinal cycle. changes in isomerization and protonation; and (4) the opsin cycle: alterations of protonation of different amino acids in the apoprotein. From a review of existing data a more or less concise picture of the parallelism of the above four cycles emerges, which may be valuable as a model for understanding other types of molecular pumps.  相似文献   

16.
Ming M  Wang Y  Wu J  Ma D  Li Q  Ding J 《FEBS letters》2006,580(28-29):6749-6753
We report that Triton X-100 can alter the temporal sequence of the light-induced proton uptake and release of archaerhodopsin 4 (AR4), a proton pumping protein in a species of Halobacteria from a Tibetan salt lake. Under physiological conditions, AR4 isolated from the bacterium exhibits a reversed temporal order of proton release and uptake compared to what is observed for bacteriorhodopsin (BR). However, in the presence of Triton X-100 early proton release was observed in AR4 at neutral pH by us. Further, this temporal order for light-driven proton release and uptake for AR4 was found to be recovered after the removal of Triton X-100 by Biobeads. This phenomenon of detergent-induced alteration of the order of proton release and uptake has not yet been reported in any other retinal-containing membrane protein such as BR. Our findings indicate that the function of AR4 is influenced by its self-assembled state, and meanwhile imply some subtle protein-lipid interactions or protein-protein interactions in adjusting the proton pumping behavior of AR4.  相似文献   

17.
P. Ormos  Zs. Dancsházy  B. Karvaly 《BBA》1978,503(2):304-315
Photoelectric properties of bacteriorhodopsin incorporated into a bimolecular lipid membrane were investigated with special regard to the mechanism of photoelectric field generation. It was shown that besides its proton pump and electric generator functions bacteriorhodopsin works as a possible molecular regulator of the light-induced membrane potential. When a bimolecular lipid membrane containing bacteriorhodopsin is continuously illuminated in its main visible absorption band, and afterwards by superimposed blue light matching the absorption band of the long-living photobleached bacteriorhodopsin (M412) as well, the latter either enhances or decreases the steady-state photoresponse, depending upon the intensity of the green light. Thus, the additional blue-light illumination tends to cause the resultant photoelectric membrane potential to become stabilized. Two alternative schemes are tentatively proposed for the photochemical cycle of bacteriorhodopsin whereby blue light can control photovoltage generation. A kinetic model of the proton pump and the regulation of the photoelectric membrane potential is presented. This model fits all the experimental findings, even quantitatively. From the model some kinetic and physical parameters of this light-driven pump could be determined.  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
The actinic light effect on the bacteriorhodopsin (BR) photocycle kinetics led to the assumption of a cooperative interaction between the photocycling BR molecules. In this paper we report the results of the actinic light effect and pH on the proton release and uptake kinetics. An electrical method is applied to detect proton release and uptake during the photocycle [E. Papp, G. Fricsovszky, J. Photochem. Photobiol. B: Biol. 5 (1990) 321]. The BR photocycle kinetics was also studied by absorption kinetics measurements at 410 nm and the data were analyzed by the local analysis of the M state kinetics [E. Papp, V.H. Ha, Biophys. Chem. 57 (1996) 155]. While at high pH and ionic strength, we found a similar behavior as reported earlier, at low ionic strength the light effect proved to be more complex. The main conclusions are the following: Though the number of BR excited to the photocycle (fraction cycling, fc) goes to saturation with increasing laser pulse energy, the absorbed energy by BR increases linearly with pulse energy. From the local analysis we conclude that the light effect changes the kinetics much earlier, already at the L intermediate state decay. The transient electric signal, caused by proton release and uptake, can be decomposed into two components similarly to the absorption kinetic data of the M intermediate state. The actinic light energy affects mainly the ratio of the two components and the proton movements inside BR while pH has an effect on the kinetics of the proton release and uptake groups at the membrane surface.  相似文献   

20.
It was recently found that NOP-1, a membrane protein of Neurospora crassa, shows homology to haloarchaeal rhodopsins and binds retinal after heterologous expression in Pichia pastoris. We report on spectroscopic properties of the Neurospora rhodopsin (NR). The photocycle was studied with flash photolysis and time-resolved Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy in the pH range 5-8. Proton release and uptake during the photocycle were monitored with the pH-sensitive dye, pyranine. Kinetic and spectral analysis revealed six distinct states in the NR photocycle, and we describe their spectral properties and pH-dependent kinetics in the visible and infrared ranges. The phenotypes of the mutant NR proteins, D131E and E142Q, in which the homologues of the key carboxylic acids of the light-driven proton pump bacteriorhodopsin, Asp-85 and Asp-96, were replaced, show that Glu-142 is not involved in reprotonation of the Schiff base but Asp-131 may be. This implies that, if the NR photocycle is associated with proton transport, it has a low efficiency, similar to that of haloarchaeal sensory rhodopsin II. Fourier-transform Raman spectroscopy revealed unexpected differences between NR and bacteriorhodopsin in the configuration of the retinal chromophore, which may contribute to the less effective reprotonation switch of NR.  相似文献   

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