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1.
The Asp-85 residue, located in the vicinity of the retinal chromophore, plays a key role in the function of bacteriorhodopsin (bR) as a light-driven proton pump. In the unphotolyzed pigment the protonation of Asp-85 is responsible for the transition from the purple form (lambda(max) = 570 nm) to the blue form (lambda(max) = 605 nm) of bR. This transition can also be induced by deionization (cation removal). It was previously proposed that the cations bind to the bR surface and raise the surface pH, or bind to a specific site in the protein, probably in the retinal vicinity. We have reexamined these possibilities by evaluating the interaction between Mn(2+) and a nitroxyl radical probe covalently bound to several mutants in which protein residues were substituted by cystein. We have found that Mn(2+), which binds to the highest-affinity binding site, significantly affects the EPR spectrum of a spin label attached to residue 74C. Therefore, it is concluded that the highest-affinity binding site is located in the extracellular side of the protein and its distance from the spin label at 74C is estimated to be approximately 9.8 +/- 0.7 A. At least part of the three to four low-affinity cation binding sites are located in the cytoplasmic side, because Mn(2+) bound to these binding sites affects spin labels attached to residues 103C and 163C located in the cytoplasmic side of the protein. The results indicate specific binding sites for the color-controlling cations, and suggest that the binding sites involve negatively charged lipids located on the exterior of the bR trimer structure.  相似文献   

2.
The mechanism by which bacteriorhodopsin is activated following light absorption is not completely clear. We have detected protein conformational alterations following light absorption by retinal-based chromophores in the bacteriorhodopsin binding site by monitoring the rate of reduction-oxidation reactions of covalently attached spin labels, using EPR spectroscopy. It was found that the reduction reaction with hydroxylamine is light-catalyzed in the A103C-labeled pigment but not in E74C or M163C. The reaction is light-catalyzed even when isomerization of the C(13)=C(14) bond of the retinal chromophore is prevented. The reverse oxidation reaction with molecular oxygen is effective only in apomembrane derived from the mutant A103C. This reaction is light-accelerated following light absorption of the retinal oxime, which occupies the binding site. The light-induced acceleration is evident also in "locked" bacteriorhodopsin in which isomerization around the C(13)=C(14) bond is prevented. It is evident that the chromophore-protein covalent bond is not a prerequisite for protein response. In contrast to the case of the retinal oxime, a reduced C=N bond A103C-labeled pigment did not exhibit acceleration of the oxidation reaction following light absorption. Acceleration was observed, however, following substitution of the polyene by groups that modify the excited state charge delocalization. It is suggested that protein conformational alterations are induced by charge redistribution along the retinal polyene following light absorption.  相似文献   

3.
Human color vision is mediated by the red, green, and blue cone visual pigments. Cone opsins are G-protein-coupled receptors consisting of an opsin apoprotein covalently linked to the 11-cis-retinal chromophore. All visual pigments share a common evolutionary origin, and red and green cone opsins exhibit a higher homology, whereas blue cone opsin shows more resemblance to the dim light receptor rhodopsin. Here we show that chromophore regeneration in photoactivated blue cone opsin exhibits intermediate transient conformations and a secondary retinoid binding event with slower binding kinetics. We also detected a fine-tuning of the conformational change in the photoactivated blue cone opsin binding site that alters the retinal isomer binding specificity. Furthermore, the molecular models of active and inactive blue cone opsins show specific molecular interactions in the retinal binding site that are not present in other opsins. These findings highlight the differential conformational versatility of human cone opsin pigments in the chromophore regeneration process, particularly compared to rhodopsin, and point to relevant functional, unexpected roles other than spectral tuning for the cone visual pigments.  相似文献   

4.
To test structural and mechanistic proposals about bacteriorhodopsin, a series of analogues with single amino acid substitutions has been studied. Mutants in the proposed helix F of bacteriorhodopsin were chosen for investigation because of the probable interaction of this part of the protein with the retinal chromophore. Seven mutants of the bacteriorhodopsin gene were constructed by site-directed mutagenesis, and the gene products were expressed in Escherichia coli. The resulting mutant proteins were purified and assayed for their ability to interact with retinal in phospholipid/detergent micelles to form a bacteriorhodopsin-like chromophore. Four mutants, Ser-183----Ala, Tyr-185----Phe, Ser-193----Ala, and Glu-194----Gln, bound retinal to give pigments with absorption maxima approximately the same as the wild type. Three mutant opsins bound retinal to give chromophores that were blue-shifted relative to the wild type. Two Trp----Phe substitutions at positions 182 and 189 gave absorption maxima of 480 and 524 nm, respectively, and the mutant Pro-186----Leu gave a pigment with an absorption maximum of 470 nm. However, none of the amino acid substitutions eliminated the ability of the mutant bacteriorhodopsin to pump protons in response to illumination.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
Anabaena sensory rhodopsin is a seven transmembrane protein that uses all-trans/13-cis retinal as a chromophore. About 22 residues in the retinal-binding pocket of microbial rhodopsins are conserved and important to control the quality of absorbing light and the function of ion transport or sensory transduction. The absorption maximum is 550 nm in the presence of all-trans retinal at dark. Here, we mutated Pro206 to Glu or Asp, of which the residue is conserved as Asp among all other microbial rhodopsins, and the absorption maximum and pKa of the proton acceptor group were measured by absorption spectroscopy at various pHs. Anabaena rhodopsin was expressed best in Escherichia coli in the absence of extra leader sequence when exogenous all-trans retinal was added. The wild-type Anabaena rhodopsin showed small absorption maximum changes between pH 4 and 11. In addition, Pro206Asp showed 46 nm blue-shift at pH 7.0. Pro206Glu or Asp may change the contribution to the electron distribution of the retinal that is involved in the major role of color tuning for this pigment. The critical residue Ser86 (Asp 96 position in bacteriorhodopsin: proton donor) for the pumping activity was replaced with Asp, but it did not change the proton pumping activity of Anabaena rhodopsin.  相似文献   

7.
The folding of the transmembrane protein bacteriorhodopsin that occurs during the binding of its retinal cofactor is investigated in a membrane-like environment. Changes in the retinal absorption band reveal two transient retinal-protein intermediate states, with apparent absorption maxima at 380 nm and 440 nm, respectively. Studies on a bacteriorhodopsin mutant of Lys216, which cannot bind retinal covalently, add to evidence that retinal is non-covalently bound in these intermediate states. The two retinal-protein intermediates are genuine intermediate states that form in parallel, each with an observed rate constant of 1.1 s-1. Meanwhile no formation of the folded state is detected. Folded bacteriorhodopsin, with all trans retinal covalently bound, forms from both retinal-bound intermediates with the same apparent rate constant of 0.0070 s-1 that is independent of retinal concentration. Retinal isomerisation then occurs with a rate constant of 0.00033 s-1 to give bacteriorhodopsin containing all trans and 13 cis-retinal. These results provide experimental evidence for multiple folding routes for a membrane protein that are pH dependent, with pH conditions determining the apparent folding route. These observed parallel folding paths are kinetically indistinguishable, which contrasts with most other observations of parallel folding pathways where only pathways with different kinetics have been reported. Furthermore, together with previous work, this study shows that bacteriorhodopsin has to populate at least two folding intermediates, during folding in the mixed lipid micelles investigated here, before the final fold is attained.  相似文献   

8.
The detailed mechanism of retinal binding to bacterio-opsin is important to understanding retinal pigment formation as well as to the process of membrane protein folding. We have measured the temperature dependence of bacteriorhodopsin formation from bacterio-opsin and all-trans retinal. An Arrhenius plot of the apparent second-order rate constants gives an activation energy of 11.6 +/- 0.7 kcal/mol and an activation entropy of -4 +/- 2 cal/mol deg. Comparison of the activation entropy to model compound reactions suggests that chromophore formation in bacteriorhodopsin involves a substantial protein conformational change. Cleavage of the polypeptide chain between residues 71 and 72 has little effect on the activation energy or entropy, indicating that the connecting loop between helices B and C is not involved in this conformational change.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
We have developed a surface model of purple membrane and applied it in an analysis of the purple-to-blue color change of bacteriorhodopsin which is induced by acidification or deionization. The model is based on dissociation and double layer theory and the known membrane structure. We calculated surface pH, ion concentrations, charge density, and potential as a function of bulk pH and concentration of mono- and divalent cations. At low salt concentrations, the surface pH is significantly lower than the bulk pH and it becomes independent of bulk pH in the deionized membrane suspension. Using an experimental acid titration curve for neutral, lipid-depleted membrane, we converted surface pH into absorption values. The calculated bacteriohodopsin color changes for acidification of purple, and titrations of deionized blue membrane with cations or base agree well with experimental results. No chemical binding is required to reproduce the experimental curves. Surface charge and potential changes in acid, base and cation titrations are calculated and their relation to the color change is discussed. Consistent with structural data, 10 primary phosphate and two basic surface groups per bacteriorhodopsin are sufficient to obtain good agreement between all calculated and experimental curves. The results provide a theoretical basis for our earlier conclusion that the purple-to-blue transition must be attributed to surface phenomena and not to cation binding at specific sites in the protein.  相似文献   

11.
A Aharoni  M Ottolenghi  M Sheves 《Biochemistry》2001,40(44):13310-13319
It has previously been shown that, in mutants lacking the Lys-216 residue, protonated Schiff bases of retinal occupy noncovalently the bacteriorhodopsin (bR) binding site. Moreover, the retinal-Lys-216 covalent bond is not a prerequisite for initiating the photochemical and proton pump activity of the pigment. In the present work, various Schiff bases of aromatic polyene chromophores were incubated with bacterioopsin to give noncovalent pigments that retain the Lys-216 residue in the binding site. It was observed that the pigment's absorption was considerably red-shifted relative to the corresponding protonated Schiff bases (PSB) in solution and was sensitive to Schiff base linkage substitution. Their PSB pK(a) is considerably elevated, similarly to those of related covalently bound pigments. However, the characteristic low-pH purple to blue transition is not observed, but rather a chromophore release from the binding site takes place that is characterized by a pK(a) of approximately 6 (sensitive to the specific complex). It is suggested that, in variance with native bR, in these complexes Asp-85 is protonated and Asp-212 serves as the sole negatively charged counterion. In contrast to the bound analogues, no photocycle could be detected. It is suggested that a specific retinal-protein geometrical arrangement in the binding site is a prerequisite for achieving the selective retinal photoisomerization.  相似文献   

12.
Previous studies of N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCCD)-modified bacteriorhodopsin (Renthal, R. et al. (1985) Biochemistry 24, 4275-4279) used reaction conditions (detergent micelles) that are not optimal for subsequent physical studies. The present work describes new conditions for reaction of bacteriorhodopsin with DCCD in intact purple membrane sheets in the presence of 4.5% (v/v) diethylether and light. Like the detergent reaction system, the reaction is light induced, incorporates approximately 1 mol [14C]DCCD per mol bacteriorhodospin, and results in a bleached chromophore. Peptide mapping indicates that the likely site of modification in intact membranes is identical to the site in the detergent reaction system: Asp 115. The retinal chromophore of DCCD-modified purple membrane has an absorbance maximum at 390 nm and very little induced circular dichroism. The retinal is easily extracted in hexane, yielding a 3:1 ratio of all-trans to 13-cis retinal. Borohydride reduces the retinal onto the protein within the 1-71 region of the amino acid sequence. These results suggest that Asp-115 is near the retinal binding cavity of bacteriorhodopsin. When DCCD reacts with Asp 115, retinal is displaced from its binding site.  相似文献   

13.
Recent advances in the crystallography of bacteriorhodopsin, the light-driven proton pump, have yielded structural models for all intermediates of the photochemical cycle. For seven of the species, X-ray diffraction data were collected from trapped photostationary states in crystals, and for the two remaining ones the structures of selected mutants are available. The changes of the retinal chromophore, protein and bound water describe, at an atomic level, how accommodation of the twisted photoisomerized retinal to its binding site causes de-protonation of the retinal Schiff base and initiates cascades of gradual conformational rearrangements of the protein. One cascade propagates in the extracellular direction and results in proton release, and the other in the cytoplasmic direction and results in side-chain and main-chain rearrangements, formation of a chain of hydrogen-bonded water, and proton uptake from the bulk. Such local-global conformational coupling, with gradual spreading of a local perturbation over the rest of the protein, might be the uniting principle of transporters and receptors.  相似文献   

14.
Characterization of metal ion-binding sites in bacteriorhodopsin   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
We have investigated the effects of the binding of various metal ions to cation-free bacteriorhodopsin ("blue membrane"). The following have been measured: shift of the absorption maximum from 603 to 558 nm (blue to purple transition), binding isotherms, the release of H+ upon binding, and the decay of the deprotonated intermediate of the photocycle, M412. We find that all cations of the lanthanide series, as well as the alkali and alkali earth metals earlier investigated, are able to bring about the absorption shift, whereas Hg2+ and Pt4+ are not. Sigmoidal spectroscopic titration curves and nonsigmoidal binding curves suggest that there are two high affinity sites for cations in bacteriorhodopsin. Binding to the site with the second highest affinity is responsible for the absorption shift. Divalent cation binding to blue membrane causes release of about six protons, whereas higher numbers of protons are released by trivalent cations, suggesting that the shift of absorption maximum involves proton release from carboxyl group(s). The metal ion bound to this site must be surrounded by carboxyl oxygen atoms acting together as a multidentate ligand with a specific geometry because multivalent ions are effective only when capable of octahedral coordination. Lanthanide ions dramatically inhibit M412 decay at pH above 6.3, an effect probably due to binding to lipid phosphoryl groups.  相似文献   

15.
Irradiation with visible light of human serum albumin in aqueous solution at pH 8, in the presence of catalytic amounts of rose bengal or methylene blue, resulted in random oxidation of the histidine residues in the protein under consumption of one mole O2, and release of somewhat less than one proton, per histidine residue degraded. An increase of light absorption at 250 nm was proportional to the amount of oxygen consumed. Bilirubin bound to the oxidized protein showed an increased light absorption at its maximum, 460 nm, and a decreased binding affinity, indicating a conformational change of the protein on oxidation of histidine residues. This change also resulted in a slight perturbation of tyrosine light absorption, corresponding to a shift of the chromophore to more polar surroundings. Further, a sensitized oligomerization of albumin was observed, independent of oxidation of the histidine residues, and not consuming oxygen. Irradiation of a complex of human serum albumin with one molecule of bound bilirubin, in the absence of a sensitizing dye, resulted in a fast, non-oxygen consuming process whereby the light absorption maximum of the pigment was shifted 4 nm towards longer wavelength and part of the bilirubin was converted to a more polar pigment, bound less firmly to the protein. This was followed by a relatively slow oxidation of the pigment under uptake of one mole O2. Parallel photooxidation of the protein carrier could not be detected. It is considered possible that the fast, anaerobic process is operative in phototherapy of hyperbilirubinemia in the newborn. Serum albumin is probably not oxidized during this treatment.  相似文献   

16.
Recent advances in the crystallography of bacteriorhodopsin, the light-driven proton pump, have yielded structural models for all intermediates of the photochemical cycle. For seven of the species, X-ray diffraction data were collected from trapped photostationary states in crystals, and for the two remaining ones the structures of selected mutants are available. The changes of the retinal chromophore, protein and bound water describe, at an atomic level, how accommodation of the twisted photoisomerized retinal to its binding site causes de-protonation of the retinal Schiff base and initiates cascades of gradual conformational rearrangements of the protein. One cascade propagates in the extracellular direction and results in proton release, and the other in the cytoplasmic direction and results in side-chain and main-chain rearrangements, formation of a chain of hydrogen-bonded water, and proton uptake from the bulk. Such local-global conformational coupling, with gradual spreading of a local perturbation over the rest of the protein, might be the uniting principle of transporters and receptors.  相似文献   

17.
The chromophore of bacteriorhodopsin undergoes a transition from purple (570 nm absorbance maximum) to blue (605 nm absorbance maximum) at low pH or when the membrane is deionized. The blue form was stable down to pH 0 in sulfuric acid, while 1 M NaCl at pH 0 completely converted the pigment to a purple form absorbing maximally at 565 Other acids were not as effective as sulfuric in maintaining the blue form, and chloride was the best anion for converting blue membrane to purple membrane at low pH. The apparent dissociation constant for Cl- was 35 mM at pH 0, 0.7 M at pH 1 and 1.5 M at pH 2. The pH dependence of apparent Cl- binding could be modeled by assuming two different types of chromophore-linked Cl- binding site, one pH-dependent. Chemical modification of bacteriorhodopsin carboxyl groups (probably Asp-96, -102 and/or -104) by 1-ethyl-3-dimethlyaminopropyl carbodiimide, Lys-41 by dansyl chloride, or surface arginines by cyclohexanedione had no effect on the conversion of blue to purple membrane at pH 1. Fourier transform infrared difference spectroscopy of chloride purple membrane minus acid blue membrane showed the protonation of a carboxyl group (trough at 1392 cm -1 and peak at 1731 cm -1). The latter peak shifted to 1723 cm -1 in D2O. Ultraviolet difference spectroscopy of chloride purple membrane minus acid blue membrane showed ionization of a phenolic group (peak at 243 nm and evidence for a 295 nm peak superimposed on a tryptophan perturbation trough). This suggests the possibility of chloride-induced proton transfer from a tyrosine phenolic group to a carboxylate side-chain. We propose a mechanism for the purple to acid blue to chloride purple transition based on these results and the proton pump model of Braiman et al. (Biochemistry 27 (1988) 8516-8520).  相似文献   

18.
The surface potential of purple membranes and the release of protons during the bacteriorhodopsin photocycle have been studied with the covalently linked pH indicator dye, fluorescein. The titration of acidic lipids appears to cause the surface potential to be pH-dependent and causes other deviations from ideal behavior. If these anomalies are neglected, the appearance of protons can be followed by measuring the absorption change of fluorescein bound to various residues at the extracellular surface. Contrary to widely held assumption, the activation enthalpies of kinetic components, deuterium isotope effects in the time constants, and the consequences of the D85E, F208R, and D212N mutations demonstrate a lack of direct correlation between proton transfer from the buried retinal Schiff base to D85 and proton release at the surface. Depending on conditions and residue replacements, the proton release can occur at any time between the protonation of D85 and the recovery of the initial state. We conclude that once D85 is protonated the proton release at the extracellular protein surface is essentially independent of the chromophore reactions that follow. This finding is consistent with the recently suggested version of the alternating access mechanism of bacteriorhodopsin, in which the change of the accessibility of the Schiff base is to and away from D85 rather than to and away from the extracellular membrane surface.  相似文献   

19.
The pKa values of ionizable groups that lie between the active site region of bacteriorhodopsin (bR) and the extracellular surface of the protein are reported. Glu-204 is found to have an elevated pKa in the resting state of bR, suggesting that it corresponds to the proton-releasing group in bR. Its elevated pKa is predicted to be due in part to strong repulsive interactions with Glu-9. Following trans-cis isomerization of the retinal chromophore and the transfer of a proton to Asp-85, polar groups on the protein are able to interact more strongly with the ionized state of Glu-204, leading to a substantial reduction of its pKa. This suggests a general mechanism for proton release in which isomerization and subsequent charge separation initially produce a new electrostatic balance in the active site of bR. Here it is proposed that those events in turn drives a conformational change in the protein in which the ionized state of Glu-204 can be stabilized through interactions with groups that were previously inaccessible. Whether these groups should be identified with polar moieties in the protein, bound waters, or Arg-82 is an important mechanistic question whose elucidation will require further study.  相似文献   

20.
A Maeda  A E Asato  R S Liu  T Yoshizawa 《Biochemistry》1984,23(11):2507-2513
Absorption spectral properties of aromatic analogues of retinal with apopurple membrane of Halobacterium halobium were studied. The spectra of the all-trans forms were composed of two or more absorption bands. During incubation at 20 degrees C, an absorption band above 500 nm increased in intensity gradually at the expense of an absorption band in the shorter wavelength region with no isomerization of the chromophore. The longer wavelength species was shown to be the protonated form of the shorter wavelength species by changing the pH of the medium. Upon irradiation with blue light, the bandwidth of the spectrum became smaller with isomerization of the chromophore to its 13-cis form. Irreversible binding of protons on the membrane occurred during this process. The rate of the increase in the longer wavelength absorption band was especially low in the reaction with the all-trans form of retinal analogues having a bulky substituent at the para or meta positions of the phenyl ring. In contrast, the 13-cis isomer of aromatic retinal analogues gave a single absorption peak. The extent of the spectral shift upon binding to apopurple membranes was compared over a series of aromatic retinals, and the results were explained in terms of steric interactions of the chromophore with the protein.  相似文献   

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