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1.
Three photolabile precursors of glycine containing a photosensitive 2-nitrobenzyl moiety attached to the amino group have been synthesized. When exposed to ultraviolet radiation between 308 and 350 nm, the compounds photolyze to release glycine, an important inhibitory neurotransmitter in the central nervous system. The identification of glycine as a photolysis product was determined by two different methods: separation of the photolyzed sample by thin-layer chromatography followed by a reaction with ninhydrin, and recognition of derivatized glycine using the Waters pico-tag method in conjunction with high-performance liquid chromatography. The photolysis of these compounds at 22 degrees C has been investigated, and the rate of decay of a transient intermediate in the reaction, which is assumed to reflect product release, has been measured. For N-(alpha-carboxy-2-nitrobenzyl)glycine this decay rate was found to be 940 s-1 at pH 6.8 and 600 s-1 at pH 7.5. Additionally, this compound was found to exhibit biological activity upon photolysis; cultured mouse spinal cord cells containing neuronal glycine receptors were used to detect the glycine liberation. The approach adopted here is useful in demonstrating the utility of photolabile precursors of neurotransmitters that have the protecting group linked to the neurotransmitter through the amino group. The rapid photolysis of such compounds to release free neurotransmitter is valuable in gaining access to chemical kinetic studies of neurotransmitter receptors. Previously, such studies have been limited because the available methods for neurotransmitter delivery did not give a sufficiently high time resolution.  相似文献   

2.
J W Walker  J A McCray  G P Hess 《Biochemistry》1986,25(7):1799-1805
Two compounds have been synthesized that feature a photosensitive o-nitrobenzyl moiety attached directly to the carbamate nitrogen of carbamoylcholine. The well-characterized acetylcholine analogue, carbamoylcholine, was released from these derivatives in response to laser light pulses at wavelengths between 300 and 355 nm. Photolysis products were isolated by high-performance liquid chromatography and identified by chemical and spectroscopic analysis. The yield of carbamoylcholine molecules per photon absorbed was 0.25. A short-lived photochromic intermediate in the photolysis reaction was detected by laser flash photolysis. A single laser flash induced an instantaneous increase in absorbance at 406 nm, followed by a first-order decay to products, with a half-time of 0.07 ms for one of the compounds [N-[1-(2-nitrophenyl)ethyl]carbamoylcholine iodide] in aqueous buffers at pH 7 and 23 degrees C. Decay rates and quantum yields depended on the nature of the substituent on the protecting group. Evidence is presented in support of the conclusion that the transient species is an aci-nitro intermediate that decays directly to carbamoylcholine and therefore determines its rate of release. The photosensitive carbamoylcholine derivatives activated the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor only after photolysis, as determined by 86Rb+ flux measurements with membrane vesicles prepared from Torpedo californica and Electrophorus electricus. Before photolysis, the compounds interacted weakly with the acetylcholine-binding sites as shown by competitive inhibition of acetylcholine-stimulated flux at high concentrations. The compounds did not induce receptor desensitization at a significant rate. The new compounds afford several major advantages over other photoactivatable acetylcholine analogues.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
We report on a photolabile protecting (caging) group that is new for carboxylic acids. Unlike previously used caging groups for carboxylic acids, it can be photolyzed rapidly and efficiently in the visible wavelength region. The caging group 7-N,N-diethyl aminocoumarin (DECM) was used to cage the gamma-carboxyl group of glutamic acid, which is also a neurotransmitter. The caged compound has a major absorption band with a maximum at 390 nm (epsilon(390) = 13651 M(-)(1) cm(-)(1)). Experiments are performed at 400 nm (epsilon(400) = 12232 M(-)(1) cm(-)(1)) and longer wavelengths. DECM-caged glutamate is water soluble and stable at pH 7.4 and 22 degrees C. It photolyzes rapidly in aqueous solution to release glutamic acid within 3 micros with a quantum yield of 0.11 +/- 0.008 in the visible region. In whole-cell current-recording experiments, using HEK-293 cells expressing glutamate receptors and visible light for photolysis, DECM-caged glutamate and its photolytic byproducts were found to be biologically inert. Neurotransmitter receptors that are activated by various carboxyl-group-containing compounds play a central role in signal transmission between approximately 10(12) neurons of the nervous system. Caged neurotransmitters have become an essential tool in transient kinetic investigations of the mechanism of action of neurotransmitter receptors. Previously uncaging the compounds suitable for transient kinetic investigations required ultraviolet light and expensive lasers, and, therefore, special precautions. The availability of caged neurotransmitters suitable for transient kinetic investigations that can be photolyzed by visible light allows the use of simple-to-use, readily available inexpensive light sources, thereby opening up this important field to an increasing number of investigators.  相似文献   

4.
The integrated function of the nervous system depends on specific and rapid transmission of signals between its constituent cells. The nicotinic acetylcholine receptor is the best known of a group of membrane-bound proteins responsible for such transmission; for this process to occur, a specific neurotransmitter, in this case acetylcholine, must bind to the receptor, which then forms transmembrane channels through which cations pass. The resulting change in transmembrane voltage determines whether or not a signal is transmitted. The question of how fast this process takes place in any neurotransmitter receptor has remained one of the interesting and most challenging in the field. To answer it, many attempts have been made to evaluate the rate constant for the opening of the acetylcholine receptor channel, but in almost all these studies the rate was measured after the receptor-mediated reaction, which involves the open channel and many intermediate states, had reached a quasi equilibrium. This resulted in a plethora of reported values for the rate constant that differ by a factor of up to 50-fold, even when the measurements were made with the same type of cell. The new approach described here involves the use of single cells of a mammalian cell line (BC3H1), containing muscle-type acetylcholine receptors, and the rapid introduction of neurotransmitter to the cell surface. The rapid delivery was achieved by converting a previously synthesized photolabile precursor of carbamoylcholine to carbamoylcholine, a stable amino-group-containing analogue of acetylcholine, with a single laser pulse and an observed photolysis rate of 7300 s-1.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
Hess GP 《Biophysical chemistry》2003,100(1-3):493-506
New techniques for investigating chemical reactions on cell surfaces in the microsecond-to-millisecond time region are described. Reactions mediated by membrane-bound neurotransmitter receptors that control signal transmission between 1012 cells of the nervous system are taken as an example. Cells with receptors on their plasma membrane are equilibrated with photolabile, biologically inactive precursors of the neurotransmitters. Photolysis of these compounds releases free neurotransmitter that interacts with the receptors, leading to the transient opening of transmembrane receptor-formed channels that are permeant to small inorganic ions. The current thus induced can be measured. The technique can be used to measure the elementary steps of the receptor-mediated reactions. To illustrate the approach it was shown that an understanding of the mechanism of inhibition of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor by the drug cocaine was obtained and led to the first proof that compounds exist that alleviate the inhibition.  相似文献   

6.
C Grewer  G P Hess 《Biochemistry》1999,38(24):7837-7846
The mechanism of inhibition of the muscle nicotinic acetylcholine receptor is of interest because of the many drugs which are known to modify its function. The laser-pulse photolysis technique, using a photolabile, biologically inert ligand (caged carbamoylcholine) for the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor, and BC3H1 cells have been used to investigate the mechanism of inhibition of the receptor by MK-801 [(+)-dizocilpine] in the microsecond-to-millisecond time region. MK-801 is an anticonvulsant and a known inhibitor of the N-methyl-D-aspartate and nicotinic acetylcholine receptors. Both the chemical kinetic and the single-channel current-recording measurements reported here indicate the existence of two inhibition processes, one occurring within 50 ms and the other within about 1 s of equilibration of the receptor with the inhibitor. Unless stated otherwise, here we characterize the receptor inhibition observed when MK-801 is equilibrated with the receptor for only 50 ms. We determined the effect of MK-801 on the concentration of the open receptor-channels and the apparent dissociation constant of the inhibitor from the closed-channel (KI(obs) = 180 microM) and open-channel ( = 950 microM) forms. Within a few milliseconds after inhibitor binding, decreases to about 100 microM, due to an inhibitor-induced isomerization to an inactive receptor form. A mechanism that incorporates the new results is proposed. It includes the formation of an ion-conducting receptor:inhibitor complex with a channel-opening equilibrium constant that is unfavorable compared to the open-channel receptor form in the absence of inhibitor. In the MK-801 concentration range of 0-500 microM, this mechanism accounts for the observed MK-801-induced decrease in the concentration of open channels. At high concentrations of carbamoylcholine, when the receptor is mainly in the open-channel form, the conducting receptor:inhibitor complex isomerizes to a nonconducting state with a rate constant of about 2400 s-1 for the forward reaction and 230 s-1 for the back reaction. It is shown that the proposed new mechanism, based on transient kinetic measurements, also accounts for the results of previous investigations with other inhibitors (procaine, cocaine), which were carried out under both pre-steady-state and equilibrium conditions. A compound that binds to the same regulatory site on the receptor as MK-801 but does not affect the channel-opening equilibrium constant may have considerable use in protecting an organism from the effects of abused drugs.  相似文献   

7.
The binding and interaction of carbamoylcholine with the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor was investigated using photolytically released carbamoylcholine ('caged' carbamoylcholine). Upon UV flash activation of this photolabile substrate analog, characteristic changes in the IR absorbance spectrum were detected. Apart from difference bands arising from the changes of molecular structure upon photolytical release, spectral features can be attributed to the agonist upon binding to the receptor as well as to conformational changes of the receptor itself. The two photo-labile agonist analogs N-[1-(2-nitrophenyl)ethyl] carbamoylcholine iodide (cage I) and N-(alpha-carboxy-2-nitrobenzyl) carbamoylcholine trifluoroacetate (cage II), with different structures for comparison of the 1680-1540 cm-1 region sensitive for protein conformation, yielded consistent results. A preliminary interpretation in terms of substrate binding and local conformational changes of the receptor upon carbamoylcholine binding is provided, in analogy to the binding of acetylcholine, activation, and subsequent deactivation taking place during signal transduction.  相似文献   

8.
The D-isomer of aspartate is efficiently transported by high-affinity Na(+)/K(+)-dependent glutamate transporters and is an effective ligand of N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) receptors. To facilitate analysis of the regulation of these proteins in their native membranes, we synthesized a photolabile analogue of D-aspartate, 4-methoxy-7-nitroindolinyl-D-aspartate (MNI-D-aspartate). This compound was photolyzed with a quantum efficiency of 0.09 at pH 7.4. Photorelease of d-aspartate in acute hippocampal slices through brief (1 ms) UV laser illumination of MNI-d-aspartate triggered rapidly activating currents in astrocytes that were inhibited by the glutamate transporter antagonist DL-threo-beta-benzyloxyaspartic acid (TBOA), indicating that they resulted from electrogenic uptake of D-aspartate. These transporter currents exhibited a distinct tail component that was approximately 2% of the peak current, which may result from the release of K(+) into the extracellular space during counter transport. MNI-D-aspartate was neither an agonist nor an antagonist of glutamate transporters at concentrations up to 500 muM and was stable in aqueous solution for several days. Glutamate transporter currents were also elicited in Bergmann glial cells and Purkinje neurons of the cerebellum in response to photolysis of MNI-D-aspartate, indicating that this compound can be used for monitoring the occupancy and regulation of glutamate transporters in different brain regions. Photorelease of D-aspartate did not activate alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid (AMPA)/kainate receptors or metabotropic glutamate receptors (mGluRs) in neurons, but resulted in the selective, but transient, activation of NMDA receptors in hippocampal pyramidal neurons; MNI-D-aspartate was not an antagonist of NMDA receptors. These results indicate that MNI-D-aspartate also may be useful for studying the regulation of NMDA receptors at excitatory synapses.  相似文献   

9.
Dicou E 《The FEBS journal》2008,275(9):1960-1975
Peptides function as chemical signals between cells of multicellular organisms via specific receptors on target cells. Many hormones, neuromodulators and growth factors are peptides. Peptide hormones and other biologically active peptides are synthesized as higher molecular weight precursor proteins (pro-hormones), which must undergo post-translational modification to yield the bioactive peptide(s). In many instances, more than one biologically active peptide is generated from one and the same precursor. In most cases, these precursors are biologically inert and their existence is confined to the membrane-enclosed subcellular compartments where processing of the pro-hormones takes place. A class of growth factors that derive from membrane-anchored precursors which themselves are biologically active constitute an exception to this model. The list of the membrane-anchored biologically active precursors has been the subject of specialized reviews. The present review focuses on precursors other than membrane-anchored precursors, which were found to be biologically active and which often display different biological activities, and may mediate their effects via receptors independent from those of their generated peptides.  相似文献   

10.
The synthesis of photolabile tyrosine derivatives protected on the phenolic oxygen by the α-carboxy-6-nitroveratryl (αCNV) protecting group is described. The compounds undergo rapid photolysis at wavelengths longer than 300 nm to liberate the corresponding phenol in excellent yield (quantum yield for the deprotection of tyrosine = 0.19). Further protection of caged tyrosine is possible, yielding N-Fmoc protected derivatives suitable for direct incorporation of caged tyrosine in solid-phase peptide synthesis.  相似文献   

11.
The synthesis and characterization of a new photolabile precursor of glycine (caged glycine) is described. The alpha-carboxyl group of glycine is covalently coupled to the alpha-carboxy-2-nitrobenzyl (alphaCNB) protecting group. Photolysis of the caged glycine with UV light produces free glycine. At 308 nm, the compound photolyzes with a quantum yield of 0.38. The absorption spectrum and the pH dependence of a transient absorption produced after laser-flash illumination are typical for aci-nitro intermediates of alphaCNB-protected compounds. The time constant for the major component of the aci-nitro intermediate decay ( approximately 84% of the total aci-nitro absorbance) was determined to be 7 micros at physiological pH. A minor component ( approximately 16%) decays with a rate constant of 170 micros. The compound does not activate or inhibit the alpha(1)-homomeric glycine receptor transiently expressed in HEK293 cells. After photolysis with a 10 ns pulse of 325 nm laser light, the glycine released from the caged compound activates glycine-mediated whole-cell currents in the same cells. The rise of these currents can be measured in a time-resolved fashion and occurs on a millisecond to sub-millisecond time scale. It can be described with a single-exponential function over >85% of the total current. The rate constant of the current rise is about 2 orders of magnitude slower than the rate constant of caged glycine photolysis. Thermal hydrolysis of the alphaCNB-caged glycine takes place with a half-life of 15.6 h at physiological pH. The new caged glycine is the first in a series of photoprotected glycine derivatives that has the required properties for use with chemical kinetic methods for investigation of glycine-activated cell surface receptors. Photolysis is rapid and efficient with respect to the receptor reactions to be studied; hydrolysis in aqueous solution is sufficiently slow, and the compound is biologically inert. It will, therefore, be a useful tool for investigation of the processes leading to channel opening of glycine receptor channels and the effects of mutations of the glycine receptor and of inhibitors on these processes.  相似文献   

12.
The synthesis and characterization of a new photolabile precursor of glycine (coumarin-caged glycine) are reported. The new compound is suitable for rapid chemical kinetic investigations of the membrane-bound neurotransmitter receptor activated by glycine. Unlike previously used caging groups for glycine, this precursor can be photolyzed rapidly and efficiently in the visible wavelength region. This allows the use of a relatively inexpensive light source. The alpha-carboxyl group of glycine was covalently coupled to the 7-(diethylamino)coumarin (DECM) caging group. The caged compound has a major absorption band with a maximum at 390 nm (epsilon390 = 13,900 M-1 cm-1). Photolysis was performed at wavelengths of >or=400 nm (epsilon400 = 12,400 M-1 cm-1). Under physiological conditions, DECM-caged glycine is water soluble and stable. In the visible wavelength region, it photolyzes rapidly to release glycine with a half-life of approximately 2.5 micrometers and a quantum yield of 0.12 +/- 0.01. The experimental results demonstrated that neither DECM-caged glycine nor its byproduct inhibits or activates human alpha1 glycine receptors expressed on the surface of HEK 293 cells.  相似文献   

13.
K R Gee  L Niu  K Schaper  V Jayaraman  G P Hess 《Biochemistry》1999,38(10):3140-3147
The amino acid L-glutamate is a major neurotransmitter at excitatory synapses within the central nervous system. Neuronal responses to glutamate are mediated by at least three receptor types, one of which is the NMDA subtype, named for its specific ligand N-methyl-D-aspartic acid. Neurotransmitter receptors are transmembrane proteins that can form ion channels upon binding a specific ligand and are involved in many physiological activities of the brain and in some neurological disorders. Elucidating the mechanisms of the formation of transmembrane receptor-channels and of receptor regulation and inhibition is necessary for understanding nervous system function and for designing potential therapeutic agents. This has been hampered by the lack of rapid reaction techniques suitable for investigating protein-mediated reactions on cell surfaces. Recently a laser-pulse photolysis technique was developed to study the chemical reactions of channel-forming receptor proteins in the microsecond-to-millisecond time region. To apply the technique to NMDA1 receptors a photolabile NMDA precursor (beta-DNB NMDA) was synthesized. In this precursor the side chain carboxylate was protected as a photosensitive 2,2'-dinitrobenzhydryl ester. Photolysis with 308 nm laser light generated free NMDA with a time constant of 4.2 +/- 0.1 microseconds at pH 7 and a photolysis quantum yield of 0.18 +/- 0.05. In rat hippocampal neurons the beta-DNB NMDA (250 microM) neither activated endogenously expressed receptors nor potentiated or inhibited the NMDA response. Equilibration of hippocampal neurons in the whole-cell current recording mode with 250 microM caged precursor followed by a pulse of 333 nm laser light resulted in a rapid current rise with a rate constant of 100 s-1 due to opening of NMDA-activated receptor-channels. The caged NMDA precursor described here now makes it possible to investigate the mechanism of NMDA receptors in the micro- to millisecond time region.  相似文献   

14.
N Matsubara  G P Hess 《Biochemistry》1992,31(24):5477-5487
The mammalian nicotinic acetylcholine receptor in PC12 cells has many properties characteristic of the neuronal receptors involved in key chemical reactions that are responsible for signal transmission between cells of the nervous system. This report describes initial investigations of the mechanism of this receptor using a rapid chemical kinetic technique with a time resolution of 20 ms, which represents a 250-fold improvement over the best time resolution (5 s) employed in previous studies. Carbamoylcholine, a stable analogue of the neurotransmitter acetylcholine, was the activating ligand used, and the concentration of open transmembrane receptor-channels in PC12 cells was measured by recording whole-cell currents at pH 7.4, 21-23 degrees C, and a transmembrane voltage of -60 mV. Two receptor forms that account for 80% and 20% of the receptor-controlled current were detected; the main receptor form, accounting for 80% of the whole-cell current, desensitized completely before the first measurements had been made in previous studies. Only the main receptor form has been investigated so far using the new method. The constants of a mechanism that accounts for the concentration of the open transmembrane receptor-channel over a 100-fold range of carbamoylcholine concentration were evaluated: the dissociation constant of the site controlling channel opening (K1 = 2.0 mM), the channel-opening equilibrium constant (phi -1 = 5.0), and the dissociation constant of an inhibitory site to which carbamoylcholine binds (KR = 6.5 mM). These evaluated constants allow one to calculate Po, the conditional probability that at a given concentration of carbamoylcholine the receptor-channel is open. Po was also determined in the presence of 2 mM carbamoylcholine by an independent method, the single-channel current-recording technique, and the agreement between the Po values obtained in two independent ways is within experimental error. This result indicates that the time resolution of the chemical kinetic technique employed was sufficient to evaluate the constants pertaining to the active state of the receptor, which forms a transmembrane channel, before its conversion to desensitized receptor forms with different properties. Previous kinetic measurements with a time resolution of 5 s showed that many compounds, such as anesthetic-like molecules, nerve growth factor, and substance P, modify the function of the neuronal receptor in PC12 cells or react specifically with the neuronal but not with the muscle receptor, for example, some toxins.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
Nociceptive neurons in the peripheral nervous system detect noxious stimuli and report the information to the central nervous system. Most nociceptive neurons express the vanilloid receptor, TRPV1, a nonselective cation channel gated by vanilloid ligands such as capsaicin, the pungent essence of chili peppers. Here, we report the synthesis and biological application of two caged vanilloids: biologically inert precursors that, when photolyzed, release bioactive vanilloid ligands. The two caged vanilloids, Nb-VNA and Nv-VNA, are photoreleased with quantum efficiency of 0.13 and 0.041, respectively. Under flash photolysis conditions, photorelease of Nb-VNA and Nv-VNA is 95% complete in approximately 40 micros and approximately 125 micros, respectively. Through 1-photon excitation with ultraviolet light (360 nm), or 2-photon excitation with red light (720 nm), the caged vanilloids can be photoreleased in situ to activate TRPV1 receptors on nociceptive neurons. The consequent increase in intracellular free Ca(2+) concentration ([Ca(2+)](i)) can be visualized by laser-scanning confocal imaging of neurons loaded with the fluorescent Ca(2+) indicator, fluo-3. Stimulation results from TRPV1 receptor activation, because the response is blocked by capsazepine, a selective TRPV1 antagonist. In Ca(2+)-free extracellular medium, photoreleased vanilloid can still elevate [Ca(2+)](i), which suggests that TRPV1 receptors also reside on endomembranes in neurons and can mediate Ca(2+) release from intracellular stores. Notably, whole-cell voltage clamp measurements showed that flash photorelease of vanilloid can activate TRPV1 channels in <4 ms at 22 degrees C. In combination with 1- or 2-photon excitation, caged vanilloids are a powerful tool for probing morphologically distinct structures of nociceptive sensory neurons with high spatial and temporal precision.  相似文献   

16.
The effect of compounds that activate sodium channels on the number of muscarinic acetylcholine receptors in neuroblastoma NIE 115 cells has been investigated. The cells were used in electrically unexcitable ("control" cells) and excitable ("differentiated" cells) states. Although receptor assays using a single concentration of the radioligand [3H]scopolamine methyl chloride indicated a loss of receptors after a 6-h incubation of cells with veratrine, no true loss of receptors was seen with any of the compounds tested (veratridine, veratrine, aconitine) when full saturation analyses were performed in either control or differentiated cells. The apparent receptor loss seen with veratrine was due to a muscarinic receptor-active component of veratrine (not veratridine) occluded by the cells and released into the binding assays upon cell breakage. Veratridine and aconitine have a very low affinity for muscarinic acetylcholine receptors, and the binding of carbamoylcholine to the receptors is unaffected by tetrodotoxin, so that there is no evidence in this system for interaction between muscarinic receptors and sodium channels.  相似文献   

17.
Quantum yields (φ) for the aerobic photolysis of 5′-deoxyadenosylcobalamin (dAB12), methylcobalamin (MeB12), propylcobalamin (PrB12), and ethylcobalamin (EtB12) were determined as a function of the irradiation wavelength. φ Determinations were made for both the base-on and base-off forms of each compound (except base-off dAB12) at incident wavelengths from 250 nm to 570 nm. As a rule, the φs were high (0.1–0.5) and they varied significantly with respect to the irradiation wavelength. In general, each alkylcobalamin at pH 7.0 displayed a quantum yield spectrum distinct from its base-off form at pH 1.0. Across most of the spectrum, the φs of the base-off form were appreciably smaller than the base-on φs of the same compound. An exception to this generality was MeB12 for which the φs at pH 1.0 were about the same as, or slightly greater above 450 nm than those at pH 7.0. At pH 7.0 and in the visible region the trend of the φs was dAB12 < MeB12 < PrB12 < EtB12. Under neutral conditions each compound showed a broad quantum yield peak in the 450–470 nm region.From the quantum yield and absorption spectra, photolysis spectra were calculated for 5.0 × 10?5m solutions of each compound. The light-action spectra accurately give the relative rates/μ Einstein that these solutions photolyze at each wavelength. Thus, for example, MeB12 photolyzed faster at pH 7.0 versus pH 1.0 in 510 nm light, but it photolyzed slower at pH 7.0 versus pH 1.0 in 450 nm light. Solutions of each compound photolyzed faster in the ultraviolet region as opposed to the visible (e.g., 310 nm versus 510 nm).Our findings show that the previously reported photolysis rates estimated by others with tungsten lamps provide no valid information about the intrinsic photolability of various alkyl-cobalt bonds. This also applies to the relative white-light photolysis rates reported for the base-on versus the base-off form of MeB12. All such relative rates are artifacts which represent only the extent of overlap between the true action spectrum and the light emission spectrum of an incandescent lamp.  相似文献   

18.
J V Staros  J R Knowles 《Biochemistry》1978,17(16):3321-3325
A dipeptide containing a nitrene precursor, glycyl-4-azido-2-nitro-L-phenylalanine, has been synthesized. This compound is a photoaffinity inhibitor of dipeptide transport in E. coli. In the dark, the dipeptide is a reversible inhibitor of glycylglycine uptake by live E. coli W cells. The 14C-labeled compound is a substrate for the transport system, with a Km of 7 micrometer and V max of 5 x 10(3) molecules cell-1 s-1 (compare 9 micrometer and 1 x 10(4) molecules cell-1 s-1, respectively, for the transport of glycylglycine under the same conditions). When intact E. coli cells are photolyzed at approximately 350 nm in the presence of the photolabile dipeptide, their ability to transport either glycylglycine or unphotolyzed glycyl-4-azido-2-nitro-L-phenylalanine is irreversibly inhibited, but their ability to transport arginine is unaffected. The presence of glycylglycine in the medium during photolysis protects the cells against the light-dependent inactivation of dipeptide transport.  相似文献   

19.
1-(2-Nitrophenyl)ethyl esters of D-myo-inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (InsP3) have been synthesized and shown to have suitable properties for use as photolabile precursors of InsP3. Synthesis was accomplished by treatment of InsP3 with 1-(2-nitrophenyl)diazoethane in a CHCl3/water mixture. This resulted in esterification of each of the three phosphate residues in InsP3, the 1-phosphate being more reactive than the 4- or 5-phosphate. Singly esterified P-1, P-4, and P-5 esters, termed P-1, P-4, and P-5 caged InsP3, were isolated from the reaction mixture by anion-exchange HPLC and characterized by 500-MHz 1H NMR spectroscopy. Each of these caged InsP3 esters exists as a pair of diastereoisomers and was identified by examining the effects of pH and nitrophenyl ring current shielding on the chemical shifts of nonexchangeable inositol protons. 1H NMR spectra of InsP3 were analyzed for comparison. On photolysis the compounds released InsP3 with rate constants of 175 (P-1), 225 (P-4), and 280 s-1 (P-5) as determined by monitoring the aci-nitro decay reaction at pH 7.1, 0.2 M ionic strength, 21 degrees C. Quantum yields determined by steady-state near-UV photolysis were 0.65 +/- 0.08 for each compound. P-4 and P-5 caged InsP3 were the most promising biologically inactive InsP3 precursors since at concentrations up to 50 microM they did not release Ca2+ from smooth muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) and were not metabolized by vascular smooth muscle InsP3 5-phosphatase or bovine brain InsP3 3-kinase.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
Here we report the synthesis and photochemical and biological characterization of a new photolabile precursor of D-aspartic acid, alpha-carboxynitrobenzyl-caged D-aspartate (alpha-CNB-caged D-aspartate), and its application for studying the molecular mechanism of the neuronal excitatory amino acid carrier 1 (EAAC1). Investigation of the photochemical properties of alpha-CNB-caged D-aspartate by transient absorption spectroscopy of the aci-nitro intermediate revealed that it photolyzes with a quantum yield of 0. 19 at pH 7.0. The major component of the aci-nitro intermediate (77% of the total absorbance) decays with a time constant of 26 s. This decay is slowed by only a factor of 2 when increasing the pH to 10. A minor component (21%) decays with a time constant of 410 s and is pH insensitive. The compound was tested with respect to its biological activity with the glutamate transporter EAAC1 expressed in HEK293 cells. Whole-cell current recordings from these cells in the presence and absence of alpha-CNB-caged D-aspartate demonstrated that the compound neither activates nor inhibits EAAC1. Upon photolysis, D-aspartate-mediated whole-cell currents were generated. In contrast to laser-pulse photolysis experiments with alpha-CNB-caged L-glutamate, only a minor and much slower transient current component was observed. These results indicate that the substrate translocation step, which is not rate-limiting for the overall turnover of the transporter with L-glutamate, becomes rate-limiting when D-aspartate is translocated. The results demonstrate that the new caged D-aspartate derivative is a useful tool for the investigation of the molecular mechanism of glutamate transporters and probably other aspartate translocating systems using rapid chemical kinetic techniques.  相似文献   

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