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1.
Bovine rhodopsin was bleached and regenerated with 7,9-dicis-retinal to form 7,9-dicis-rhodopsin, which was purified on a concanavalin A affinity column. The absorption maximum of the 7,9-dicis pigment is 453 nm, giving an opsin shift of 1600 cm-1 compared to 2500 cm-1 for 11-cis-rhodopsin and 2400 cm-1 for 9-cis-rhodopsin. Rapid-flow resonance Raman spectra have been obtained of 7,9-dicis-rhodopsin in H2O and D2O at room temperature. The shift of the 1654-cm-1 C = N stretch to 1627 cm-1 in D2O demonstrates that the Schiff base nitrogen is protonated. The absence of any shift in the 1201-cm-1 mode, which is assigned as the C14-C15 stretch, or of any other C-C stretching modes in D2O indicates that the Schiff base C = N configuration is trans (anti). Assuming that the cyclohexenyl ring binds with the same orientation in 7,9-dicis-, 9-cis-, and 11-cis-rhodopsins, the presence of two cis bonds requires that the N-H bond of the 7,9-dicis chromophore points in the opposite direction from that in the 9-cis or 11-cis pigment. However, the Schiff base C = NH+ stretching frequency and its D2O shift in 7,9-dicis-rhodopsin are very similar to those in 11-cis- and 9-cis-rhodopsin, indicating that the Schiff base electrostatic/hydrogen-bonding environments are effectively the same. The C = N trans (anti) Schiff base geometry of 7,9-dicis-rhodopsin and the insensitivity of its Schiff base vibrational properties to orientation are rationalized by examining the binding site specificity with molecular modeling.  相似文献   

2.
Time-resolved resonance Raman spectra of the hRL intermediate of halorhodopsin have been obtained. The structurally sensitive fingerprint region of the hRL spectrum is very similar to that of bacteriorhodopsin's L550 intermediate, which is known to have a 13-cis configuration. This indicates that hRL contains a 13-cis chromophore and that an all-trans----13-cis isomerization occurs in the halorhodopsin photocycle. hRL exhibits a Schiff base stretching mode at 1644 cm-1, which shifts to 1620 cm-1 in D2O. This demonstrates that the Schiff base linkage to the protein is protonated. The insensitivity of the C-C stretching mode frequencies to N-deuteriation suggests that the Schiff base configuration is anti. The 24 cm-1 shift of the Schiff base mode in D2O indicates that the Schiff base proton in hRL has a stronger hydrogen-bonding interaction with the protein than does hR578.  相似文献   

3.
The structure of the retinal chromophore about the C = N and C14-C15 bonds in bacteriorhodopsin's M412 intermediate has been determined by analyzing resonance Raman spectra of 2H and 13C isotopic derivatives. Normal mode calculations on 13-cis-retinal Schiff bases demonstrate that the C15-D rock and N-CLys stretch are strongly coupled for C = N-syn chromophores and weakly coupled for C = N-anti chromophores. When the Schiff base geometry is anti, the C15-D rock appears as a localized resonance Raman active mode at approximately 980 cm-1, which is moderately sensitive to 13C substitution at positions 14 and 15 (approximately 7 cm-1) and insensitive to 13C substitution at the epsilon position of lysine. When the Schiff base geometry is syn, in-phase and out-of-phase combinations of the C15-D rock and N-CLys stretch are predicted at approximately 1060 and approximately 910 cm-1, respectively. The in-phase mode is more sensitive to 13C substitution at positions 14 and 15 (approximately 15 cm-1) and at the epsilon position of lysine (approximately 4 cm-1). Calculations and comparison with experimental data on dark-adapted bacteriorhodopsin indicate that the in-phase mode at approximately 1060 cm-1 carries the majority of the resonance Raman intensity. M412 exhibits a C15-D rock at 968 cm-1 that shifts 8 cm-1 when 13C is added at positions 14 and 15 and is insensitive to 13C substitution at the epsilon-position of lysine. This demonstrates that M412 contains a C = N-anti Schiff base.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
Sensory rhodopsin I (SR-I) is a retinal-containing pigment which functions as a phototaxis receptor in Halobacterium halobium. We have obtained resonance Raman vibrational spectra of the native membrane-bound form of SR587 and used these data to determine the structure of its retinal prosthetic group. The similar frequencies and intensities of the skeletal fingerprint modes in SR587, bacteriorhodopsin (BR568), and halorhodopsin (HR578) as well as the position of the dideuterio rocking mode when SR-I is regenerated with 12,14-D2 retinal (915 cm-1) demonstrate that the retinal chromophore has an all-trans configuration. The shift of the C = N stretching mode from 1628 cm-1 in H2O to 1620 cm-1 in D2O demonstrates that the chromophore in SR587 is bound to the protein by a protonated Schiff base linkage. The small shift of the 1195 cm-1 C14-C15 stretching mode in D2O establishes that the protonated Schiff base bond has an anti configuration. The low value of the Schiff base stretching frequency together with its small 8 cm-1 shift in D2O indicates that the Schiff base proton is weakly hydrogen bonded to its protein counterion. This suggests that the red shift in the absorption maximum of SR-I (587 nm) compared with HR (578 nm) and BR (568 nm) is due to a reduction of the electrostatic interaction between the protonated Schiff base group and its protein counterion.  相似文献   

5.
The first step of the bacteriorhodopsin (bR) photocycle involves the formation of a red-shifted product, K. Fourier transform infrared difference spectra of the bR570 to K630 transition at 81 K has been measured for bR containing different isotopic substitutions at the retinal Schiff base. In the case of bacteriorhodopsin containing a deuterium substitution at the Schiff base nitrogen, carbon 15, or both, we find spectral changes in the 1600-1610- and 1570-1580-cm-1 region consistent with the hypothesis that the K630 C=N stretching mode of a protonated Schiff base is located near 1609 cm-1. A similar set of Schiff base deuterium substitutions for retinal containing a 13C at the carbon 10 position strongly supports this conclusion. This assignment of the K630 C=N stretching vibration provides evidence that the bR Schiff base proton undergoes a substantial environmental change most likely due to separation from a counterion. In addition, a correlation is found between the C=N stretching frequency and the maximum wavelength of visible absorption, suggesting that movement of a counterion relative to the Schiff base proton is the main source of absorption changes in the early stages of the photocycle. Such a movement is a key prediction of several models of proton transport and energy transduction. Evidence is also presented that one or more COOH groups are involved in the formation of the K intermediate.  相似文献   

6.
13C- and 2H-labeled retinal derivatives have been used to assign normal modes in the 1100-1300-cm-1 fingerprint region of the resonance Raman spectra of rhodopsin, isorhodopsin, and bathorhodopsin. On the basis of the 13C shifts, C8-C9 stretching character is assigned at 1217 cm-1 in rhodopsin, at 1206 cm-1 in isorhodopsin, and at 1214 cm-1 in bathorhodopsin. C10-C11 stretching character is localized at 1098 cm-1 in rhodopsin, at 1154 cm-1 in isorhodopsin, and at 1166 cm-1 in bathorhodopsin. C14-C15 stretching character is found at 1190 cm-1 in rhodopsin, at 1206 cm-1 in isorhodopsin, and at 1210 cm-1 in bathorhodopsin. C12-C13 stretching character is much more delocalized, but the characteristic coupling with the C14H rock allows us to assign the "C12-C13 stretch" at approximately 1240 cm-1 in rhodopsin, isorhodopsin, and bathorhodopsin. The insensitivity of the C14-C15 stretching mode to N-deuteriation in all three pigments demonstrates that each contains a trans (anti) protonated Schiff base bond. The relatively high frequency of the C10-C11 mode of bathorhodopsin demonstrates that bathorhodopsin is s-trans about the C10-C11 single bond. This provides strong evidence against the model of bathorhodopsin proposed by Liu and Asato [Liu, R., & Asato, A. (1985) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 82, 259], which suggests a C10-C11 s-cis structure. Comparison of the fingerprint modes of rhodopsin (1098, 1190, 1217, and 1239 cm-1) with those of the 11-cis-retinal protonated Schiff base in methanol (1093, 1190, 1217, and 1237 cm-1) shows that the frequencies of the C-C stretching modes are largely unperturbed by protein binding. In particular, the invariance of the C14-C15 stretching mode at 1190 cm-1 does not support the presence of a negative protein charge near C13 in rhodopsin. In contrast, the frequencies of the C8-C9 and C14-C15 stretches of bathorhodopsin and the C10-C11 and C14-C15 stretches of isorhodopsin are significantly altered by protein binding. The implications of these observations for the mechanism of wavelength regulation in visual pigments and energy storage in bathorhodopsin are discussed.  相似文献   

7.
J B Ames  J Raap  J Lugtenburg  R A Mathies 《Biochemistry》1992,31(50):12546-12554
Kinetic resonance Raman spectra of the HR520, HR640, and HR578 species in the halorhodopsin photocycle are obtained using time delays ranging from 5 microseconds to 10 ms in 0.3 M NO3-, 0.3 M Cl-, and 3 M Cl-. The Raman intensities are converted to absolute concentrations by using a conservation of molecules constraint. The simplest kinetic scheme that satisfactorily models the data is HR578-->HR520 in equilibrium with HR640-->HR578. The rate constant for the HR640-->HR578 transition increases with Cl- concentration, suggesting that Cl- is taken up between HR640 and HR578. The ratio of the forward to the reverse rate constants connecting HR520 and HR640 increases as the inverse of the Cl- concentration, suggesting that Cl- is released during the HR520-->HR640 step. The configuration about the C13 = C14 bond of the retinal chromophore in HR640 is examined by regenerating the protein with [12,14-2H2]retinal. The C12-2H + C14-2H rocking vibration for HR640 is observed at 943 cm-1, demonstrating that the chromophore is 13-cis. The changes in the resonance Raman spectrum of HR640 in response to 2H2O suspension indicates that the Schiff base linkage to the protein is protonated. None of the HR640 fingerprint vibrations shift significantly in 2H2O, suggesting that the Schiff base adopts a C = N anti configuration; this assignment is supported by the frequency of the C15-2H rocking mode (1002 cm-1). The 13-cis structure for the chromophore in HR640 requires that thermal isomerization back to all-trans occurs in the HR640-->HR578 transition. These structural and kinetic results are incorporated into a two-state C-T model for Cl- pumping.  相似文献   

8.
Time-resolved vibrational spectra are used to elucidate the structural changes in the retinal chromophore within the K-590 intermediate that precedes the formation of the L-550 intermediate in the room-temperature (RT) bacteriorhodopsin (BR) photocycle. Measured by picosecond time-resolved coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering (PTR/CARS), these vibrational data are recorded within the 750 cm-1 to 1720 cm-1 spectral region and with time delays of 50-260 ns after the RT/BR photocycle is optically initiated by pulsed (< 3 ps, 1.75 nJ) excitation. Although K-590 remains structurally unchanged throughout the 50-ps to 1-ns time interval, distinct structural changes do appear over the 1-ns to 260-ns period. Specifically, comparisons of the 50-ps PTR/CARS spectra with those recorded with time delays of 1 ns to 260 ns reveal 1) three types of changes in the hydrogen-out-of-plane (HOOP) region: the appearance of a strong, new feature at 984 cm-1; intensity decreases for the bands at 957 cm-1, 952 cm-1, and 939 cm-1; and small changes intensity and/or frequency of bands at 855 cm-1 and 805 cm-1; and 2) two types of changes in the C-C stretching region: the intensity increase in the band at 1196 cm-1 and small intensity changes and/or frequency shifts for bands at 1300 cm-1 and 1362 cm-1. No changes are observed in the C = C stretching region, and no bands assignable to the Schiff base stretching mode (C = NH+) mode are found in any of the PTR/CARS spectra assignable to K-590. These PTR/CARS data are used, together with vibrational mode assignments derived from previous work, to characterize the retinal structural changes in K-590 as it evolves from its 3.5-ps formation (ps/K-590) through the nanosecond time regime (ns/K-590) that precedes the formation of L-550. The PTR/CARS data suggest that changes in the torsional modes near the C14-C15 = N bonds are directly associated with the appearance of ns/K-590, and perhaps with the KL intermediate proposed in earlier studies. These vibrational data can be primarily interpreted in terms of the degree of twisting of the C14-C15 retinal bond. Such twisting may be accompanied by changes in the adjacent protein. Other smaller, but nonetheless clear, spectral changes indicate that alterations along the retinal polyene chain also occur. The changes in the retinal structure are preliminary to the deprotonation of the Schiff base nitrogen during the formation of M-412. The time constant for the ps/ns K-590 transformation is estimated from the amplitude change of four vibrational bands in the HOOP region to be 40-70 ns.  相似文献   

9.
By varying the pH, the D85N mutant of bacteriorhodopsin provides models for several photocycle intermediates of the wild-type protein in which D85 is protonated. At pH 10.8, NMR spectra of [zeta-(15)N]lys-, [12-(13)C]retinal-, and [14,15-(13)C]retinal-labeled D85N samples indicate a deprotonated, 13-cis,15-anti chromophore. On the other hand, at neutral pH, the NMR spectra of D85N show a mixture of protonated Schiff base species similar to that seen in the wild-type protein at low pH, and more complex than the two-state mixture of 13-cis,15-syn, and all-trans isomers found in the dark-adapted wild-type protein. These results lead to several conclusions. First, the reversible titration of order in the D85N chromophore indicates that electrostatic interactions have a major influence on events in the active site. More specifically, whereas a straight chromophore is preferred when the Schiff base and residue 85 are oppositely charged, a bent chromophore is found when both the Schiff base and residue 85 are electrically neutral, even in the dark. Thus a "bent" binding pocket is formed without photoisomerization of the chromophore. On the other hand, when photoisomerization from the straight all-trans,15-anti configuration to the bent 13-cis,15-anti does occur, reciprocal thermodynamic linkage dictates that neutralization of the SB and D85 (by proton transfer from the former to the latter) will result. Second, the similarity between the chromophore chemical shifts in D85N at alkaline pH and those found previously in the M(n) intermediate of the wild-type protein indicate that the latter has a thoroughly relaxed chromophore like the subsequent N intermediate. By comparison, indications of L-like distortion are found for the chromophore of the M(o) state. Thus, chromophore strain is released in the M(o)-->M(n) transition, probably coincident with, and perhaps instrumental to, the change in the connectivity of the Schiff base from the extracellular side of the membrane to the cytoplasmic side. Because the nitrogen chemical shifts of the Schiff base indicate interaction with a hydrogen-bond donor in both M states, it is possible that a water molecule travels with the Schiff base as it switches connectivity. If so, the protein is acting as an inward-driven hydroxyl pump (analogous to halorhodopsin) rather than an outward-driven proton pump. Third, the presence of a significant C [double bond] N syn component in D85N at neutral pH suggests that rapid deprotonation of D85 is necessary at the end of the wild-type photocycle to avoid the generation of nonfunctional C [double bond] N syn species.  相似文献   

10.
The analysis of the vibrational spectrum of the retinal chromophore in bacteriorhodopsin with isotopic derivatives provides a powerful "structural dictionary" for the translation of vibrational frequencies and intensities into structural information. Of importance for the proton-pumping mechanism is the unambiguous determination of the configuration about the C13=C14 and C=N bonds, and the protonation state of the Schiff base nitrogen. Vibrational studies have shown that in light-adapted BR568 the Schiff base nitrogen is protonated and both the C13=C14 and C=N bonds are in a trans geometry. The formation of K625 involves the photochemical isomerization about only the C13=C14 bond which displaces the Schiff base proton into a different protein environment. Subsequent Schiff base deprotonation produces the M412 intermediate. Thermal reisomerization of the C13=C14 bond and reprotonation of the Schiff base occur in the M412------O640 transition, resetting the proton-pumping mechanism. The vibrational spectra can also be used to examine the conformation about the C--C single bonds. The frequency of the C14--C15 stretching vibration in BR568, K625, L550 and O640 argues that the C14--C15 conformation in these intermediates is s-trans. Conformational distortions of the chromophore have been identified in K625 and O640 through the observation of intense hydrogen out-of-plane wagging vibrations in the Raman spectra (see Fig. 2). These two intermediates are the direct products of chromophore isomerization. Thus it appears that following isomerization in a tight protein binding pocket, the chromophore cannot easily relax to a planar geometry. The analogous observation of intense hydrogen out-of-plane modes in the primary photoproduct in vision (Eyring et al., 1982) suggests that this may be a general phenomenon in protein-bound isomerizations. Future resonance Raman studies should provide even more details on how bacterio-opsin and retinal act in concert to produce an efficient light-energy convertor. Important unresolved questions involve the mechanism by which the protein catalyzes deprotonation of the L550 intermediate and the mechanism of the thermal conversion of M412 back to BR568. Also, it has been shown that under conditions of high ionic strength and/or low light intensity two protons are pumped per photocycle (Kuschmitz & Hess, 1981). How might this be accomplished?(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
Resonance raman spectroscopy of an ultraviolet-sensitive insect rhodopsin   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
C Pande  H Deng  P Rath  R H Callender  J Schwemer 《Biochemistry》1987,26(23):7426-7430
We present the first visual pigment resonance Raman spectra from the UV-sensitive eyes of an insect, Ascalaphus macaronius (owlfly). This pigment contains 11-cis-retinal as the chromophore. Raman data have been obtained for the acid metarhodopsin at 10 degrees C in both H2O and D2O. The C = N stretching mode at 1660 cm-1 in H2O shifts to 1631 cm-1 upon deuteriation of the sample, clearly showing a protonated Schiff base linkage between the chromophore and the protein. The structure-sensitive fingerprint region shows similarities to the all-trans-protonated Schiff base of model retinal chromophores, as well as to the octopus acid metarhodopsin and bovine metarhodopsin I. Although spectra measured at -100 degrees C with 406.7-nm excitation, to enhance scattering from rhodopsin (lambda max 345 nm), contain a significant contribution from a small amount of contaminants [cytochrome(s) and/or accessory pigment] in the sample, the C = N stretch at 1664 cm-1 suggests a protonated Schiff base linkage between the chromophore and the protein in rhodopsin as well. For comparison, this mode also appears at approximately 1660 cm-1 in both the vertebrate (bovine) and the invertebrate (octopus) rhodopsins. These data are particularly interesting since the absorption maximum of 345 nm for rhodopsin might be expected to originate from an unprotonated Schiff base linkage. That the Schiff base linkage in the owlfly rhodopsin, like in bovine and in octopus, is protonated suggests that a charged chromophore is essential to visual transduction.  相似文献   

12.
In a light-driven proton-pump protein, bacteriorhodopsin (BR), protonated Schiff base of the retinal chromophore and Asp85 form ion-pair state, which is stabilized by a bridged water molecule. After light absorption, all-trans to 13-cis photoisomerization takes place, followed by the primary proton transfer from the Schiff base to Asp85 that triggers sequential proton transfer reactions for the pump. Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy first observed O-H stretching vibrations of water during the photocycle of BR, and accurate spectral acquisition has extended the water stretching frequencies into the entire stretching frequency region in D(2)O. This enabled to capture the water molecules hydrating with negative charges, and we have identified the water O-D stretch at 2171 cm(-1) as the bridged water interacting with Asp85. We found that retinal isomerization weakens the hydrogen bond in the K intermediate, but not in the later intermediates such as L, M, and N. On the basis of the observation particularly on the M intermediate, we proposed a model for the mechanism of proton transfer from the Schiff base to Asp85. In the "hydration switch model", hydration of a water molecule is switched in the M intermediate from Asp85 to Asp212. This will have raised the pK(a) of the proton acceptor, and the proton transfer is from the Schiff base to Asp85.  相似文献   

13.
We have obtained Raman spectra of a series of all-trans retinal protonated Schiff-base isotopic derivatives. 13C-substitutions were made at the 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, and 15 positions while deuteration was performed at position 15. Based on the isotopic shifts, the observed C--C stretching vibrations in the 1,100-1,400 cm-1 fingerprint region are assigned. Normal mode calculations using a modified Urey-Bradley force field have been refined to reproduce the observed frequencies and isotopic shifts. Comparison with fingerprint assignments of all-trans retinal and its unprotonated Schiff base shows that the major effect of Schiff-base formation is a shift of the C14--C15 stretch from 1,111 cm-1 in the aldehyde to approximately 1,163 cm-1 in the Shiff base. This shift is attributed to the increased C14--C15 bond order that results from the reduced electronegativity of the Schiff-base nitrogen compared with the aldehyde oxygen. Protonation of the Schiff base increases pi-electron delocalization, causing a 6 to 16 cm-1 frequency increase of the normal modes involving the C8--C9, C10--C11, C12--C13, and C14--C15 stretches. Comparison of the protonated Schiff base Raman spectrum with that of light-adapted bacteriorhodopsin (BR568) shows that incorporation of the all-trans protonated Schiff base into bacterio-opsin produces an additional approximately 10 cm-1 increase of each C--C stretching frequency as a result of protein-induced pi-electron delocalization. Importantly, the frequency ordering and spacing of the C--C stretches in BR568 is the same as that found in the protonated Schiff base.  相似文献   

14.
In recent years, structural information about bacteriorhodopsin has grown substantially with the publication of several crystal structures. However, precise measurements of the chromophore conformation in the various photocycle states are still lacking. This information is critical because twists about the chromophore backbone chain can influence the Schiff base nitrogen position, orientation, and proton affinity. Here, we focus on the C14-C15 bond, using solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy to measure the H-C14-C15-H dihedral angle. In the resting state (bR(568)), we obtain an angle of 164 +/- 4 degrees, indicating a 16 degrees distortion from a planar all-trans chromophore. The dihedral angle is found to decrease to 147 +/- 10 degrees in the early M intermediate (M(o)) and to 150 +/- 4 degrees in the late M intermediate (M(n)). These results demonstrate changes in the chromophore conformation undetected by recent X-ray diffraction studies.  相似文献   

15.
Resonance Raman analysis of the Pr and Pfr forms of phytochrome   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
S P Fodor  J C Lagarias  R A Mathies 《Biochemistry》1990,29(50):11141-11146
Resonance Raman vibrational spectra of the Pr and Pfr forms of oat phytochrome have been obtained at room temperature. When Pr is converted to Pfr, new bands appear in the C = C and C = N stretching region at 1622, 1599, and 1552 cm-1, indicating that a major structural change of the chromophore has occurred. The Pr to Pfr conversion results in an 11 cm-1 lowering of the N-H rocking band from 1323 to 1312 cm-1. Normal mode calculations correlate this frequency drop with a Z----E isomerization about the C15 = C16 bond. A line at 803 cm-1 in Pr is replaced by an unusually intense mode at 814 cm-1 in Pfr. Calculations on model tetrapyrrole chromophores suggest that these low-wavenumber modes are hydrogen out-of-plane (HOOP) wagging vibrations of the bridging C15 methine hydrogen and that both the intensity and frequency of the C15 HOOP mode are sensitive to the geometry around the C14-C15 and C15 = C16 bonds. The large intensity of the 814-cm-1 mode in Pfr indicates that the chromophore is highly distorted from planarity around the C15 methine bridge. If the Pr----Pfr conversion does involve a C15 = C16 Z----E isomerization, then the intensity of the C15 HOOP mode in Pfr argues that the chromophore has an E,anti conformation. On the basis of a comparison with the vibrational calculations, the low frequency (803 cm-1) and the reduced intensity of the C15 HOOP mode in Pr suggest that the chromophore in Pr adopts the C15-Z,syn conformation.  相似文献   

16.
The structure and the photocycle of bacteriorhodopsin (bR) containing 13-cis,15-syn retinal, so-called bR548, has been studied by means of molecular dynamics simulations performed on the complete protein. The simulated structure of bR548 was obtained through isomerization of in situ retinal around both its C13-C14 and its C15-N bond starting from the simulated structure of bR568 described previously, containing all-trans,15-anti retinal. After a 50-ps equilibration, the resulting structure of bR548 was examined by replacing retinal by analogues with modified beta-ionone rings and comparing with respective observations. The photocycle of bR548 was simulated by inducing a rapid 13-cis,15-anti-->all-trans,15-syn isomerization through a 1-ps application of a potential that destabilizes the 13-cis isomer. The simulation resulted in structures consistent with the J, K, and L intermediates observed in the photocycle of bR548. The results offer an explanation of why an unprotonated retinal Schiff base intermediate, i.e., an M state, is not formed in the bR548 photocycle. The Schiff base nitrogen after photoisomerization of bR548 points to the intracellular rather than to the extracellular site. The simulations suggest also that leakage from the bR548 to the bR568 cycle arises due to an initial 13-cis,15-anti-->all-trans,15-anti photoisomerization.  相似文献   

17.
Magic angle sample spinning (MASS) 13C NMR spectra have been obtained of bovine rhodopsin regenerated with retinal prosthetic groups isotopically enriched with 13C at C-5 and C-14. In order to observe the 13C retinal chromophore resonances, it was necessary to employ low temperatures (-15-----35 degrees C) to restrict rotational diffusion of the protein. The isotropic chemical shift and principal values of the chemical shift tensor of the 13C-5 label indicate that the retinal chromophore is in the twisted 6-s-cis conformation in rhodopsin, in contrast to the planar 6-s-trans conformation found in bacteriorhodopsin. The 13C-14 isotropic shift and shift tensor principal values show that the Schiff base C = N bond is anti. Furthermore, the 13C-14 chemical shift (121.2 ppm) is within the range of values (120-123 ppm) exhibited by protonated (C = N anti) Schiff base model compounds, indicating that the C = N linkage is protonated. Our results are discussed with regard to the mechanism of wavelength regulation in rhodopsin.  相似文献   

18.
Solid-state 13C NMR spectra of the M photocycle intermediate of bacteriorhodopsin (bR) have been obtained from purple membrane regenerated with retinal specifically 13C labeled at positions 5, 12, 13, 14, and 15. The M intermediate was trapped at -40 degrees C and pH = 9.5-10.0 in either 100 mM NaCl [M (NaCl)] or 500 mM guanidine hydrochloride [M (Gdn-HCl)]. The 13C-12 chemical shift at 125.8 ppm in M (NaCl) and 128.1 ppm in M (Gdn-HCl) indicates that the C13 = C14 double bond has a cis configuration, while the 13C-13 chemical shift at 146.7 ppm in M (NaCl) and 145.7 ppm in M (Gdn-HCl) demonstrates that the Schiff base is unprotonated. The principal values of the chemical shift tensor of the 13C-5 resonance in both M (NaCl) and M (Gdn-HCl) are consistent with a 6-s-trans structure and a negative protein charge localized near C-5 as was observed in dark-adapted bR. The approximately 5 ppm upfield shift of the 13C-5 M resonance (approximately 140 ppm) relative to 13C-5 bR568 and bR548 (approximately 145 ppm) is attributed to an unprotonated Schiff base in the M chromophore. Of particular interest in this study were the results obtained from 13C-14 M. In M (NaCl), a dramatic upfield shift was observed for the 13C-14 resonance (115.2 ppm) relative to unprotonated Schiff base model compounds (approximately 128 ppm). In contrast, in M (Gdn-HCl) the 13C-14 resonance was observed at 125.7 ppm. The different 13C-14 chemical shifts in these two M preparations may be explained by different C = N configurations of the retinal-lysine Schiff base linkage, namely, syn in NaCl and anti in guanidine hydrochloride.  相似文献   

19.
The Fourier transform infrared difference spectra between light-adapted bacteriorhodopsin (BR) and its photointermediates, L and M, were analyzed for the 3750-3450-cm-1 region. The O-H stretching vibrational bands were identified from spectra upon substitution with 2H2O. Among them, the 3642-cm-1 band of BR was assigned to water by substitution with H2(18)O. By a comparison with the published infrared spectra of the water in model systems [Mohr, S.C., Wilk, W.D., & Barrow, G.M. (1965) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 87, 3048-3052], it is shown that the O-H bonds of the water in BR interact very weakly. Upon formation of L, the interaction becomes stronger. The O-H bonds of the protein side chain undergo similar changes. On the other hand, M formation further weakens the interaction of the same water molecules in BR. The appearance of a sharp band at 3486 cm-1, which was assigned tentatively to the N-H stretching vibration of the peptide bond, is unique to L. The results suggest that the water molecules are involved in the perturbation of Asp-96 in the L intermediate and that they are exerted from the protonated Schiff base which changes position upon the light-induced reaction.  相似文献   

20.
The resonance Raman spectrum of photolyzed bacteriorhodopsin under conditions known to increase the concentration of the bO640 intermediate in both H2O and D2O is presented. By use of computer subtraction techniques and a knowledge of the Raman spectra of the unphotolyzed bacteriorhodopsin as well as the other intermediates in the cycle, a qualitative spectrum of bO640 is determined. The shift of a band at 1630 cm-1 in H2O to 1616 cm-1 in D2O suggests that the Schiff base of bO640 is protonated. Additional bands at 947, 965, and 992 cm-1 that appear only in D2O suspensions confirm that a proton is coupled to the retinal chromophore of bO640. The reprotonation of the Schiff base thus occurs during the bM412 to bO640 step. The fingerprint region, sensitive to the isomeric configuration of the retinal chromophore of bO640, is dissimilar to the fingerprint regions of published model compounds and other forms of bacteriorhodopsin.  相似文献   

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