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1.
An apparatus was constructed in order to record continuously and simultaneously changes in extinction and electrical conductance of rhodopsin solutions. With this apparatus, changes in electrical conductance on exposing rhodopsin to light were investigated. On illumination solutions of rhodopsin revealed a conductance change so long as they preserved their photosensitivity. The conductance change begins almost immediately upon illumination and is almost proportional to the amount of rhodopsin decomposed, continuing until rhodopsin is converted to indicator yellow. Near pH 7 the conductance is apt to increase slightly, while it decreases considerably outside the range of pH 6–9, being accompanied by a pH change towards neutrality. The conductance change is regarded as an essential property of rhodopsin, because it occurs in aqueous suspension as well as in digitonin solution; it may be caused by hydrogen or hydroxyl ions and some other conductive substances. It is also noteworthy that the petroleum ether-soluble component of the rod outer segments—presumably the lipide—tends to increase the conductance change. In suspensions of rod outer segments and retinal homogenates, the conductance increases on illumination irrespective of pH: this may be due to secondary reactions following the photic reaction of rhodopsin. We shall discuss the significance of the conductance change in relation to the initiation of visual excitation.  相似文献   

2.
The kinetics of the metarhodopsin I–II reaction have been measured over a wide range of temperatures (1–37°C) and pH values (4.5–8) with suspensions containing fragments of bovine rod outer segments. It was found that for all conditions the occurrence of metarhodopsin II could be described by two independent first-order processes. The fast component: slow component amplitude ratio depends upon pH and temperature.The kinetics of the lumi-metarhodopsin I reaction show the same pH dependence for the fast component: slow component amplitude ratio as the one observed for the metarhodopsin II signals.All the results observed could be described with the assumption that rhodopsin itself exists in two conformational states before bleaching which are in a pH and temperature-dependent equilibrium. This hypothesis is confirmed by its ability to explain some apparently anomalous observations in the literature.  相似文献   

3.
The kinetics of the metarhodopsin I-II reaction have been measured over a wide range of temperatures (1-37C ) and pH values (4.5-8) with suspensions containing fragments of bovine rod outer segments. It was found that for all conditions the occurrence of metarhodopsin II could be described by two independent first-order processes. The fast component: slow component amplitude ratio depends upon pH and temperature. The kinetics of the lumi-metarhodopsin I reaction show the same pH dependence for the fast component: slow component amplitude ratio as the one observed for the metarhodopsin II signals. All the results observed could be described with the assumption that rhodopsin itself exists in two conformational states before bleaching which are in a pH and temperature-dependent equilibrium. This hypothesis is confirmed by its ability to explain some apparently anomalous observations in the literature.  相似文献   

4.
Vogel R  Lüdeke S  Radu I  Siebert F  Sheves M 《Biochemistry》2004,43(31):10255-10264
Meta III is an inactive intermediate thermally formed following light activation of the visual pigment rhodopsin. It is produced from the Meta I/Meta II photoproduct equilibrium of rhodopsin by a thermal isomerization of the protonated Schiff base C=N bond of Meta I, and its chromophore configuration is therefore all-trans 15-syn. In contrast to the dark state of rhodopsin, which catalyzes exclusively the cis to trans isomerization of the C11=C12 bond of its 11-cis 15-anti chromophore, Meta III does not acquire this photoreaction specificity. Instead, it allows for light-dependent syn to anti isomerization of the C15=N bond of the protonated Schiff base, yielding Meta II, and for trans to cis isomerizations of C11=C12 and C9=C10 of the retinal polyene, as shown by FTIR spectroscopy. The 11-cis and 9-cis 15-syn isomers produced by the latter two reactions are not stable, decaying on the time scale of few seconds to dark state rhodopsin and isorhodopsin by thermal C15=N isomerization, as indicated by time-resolved FTIR methods. Flash photolysis of Meta III produces therefore Meta II, dark state rhodopsin, and isorhodopsin. Under continuous illumination, the latter two (or its unstable precursors) are converted as well to Meta II by presumably two different mechanisms.  相似文献   

5.
Cuttlefish (Euprymna morsei) rhodopsin solubilized in lauryl ester of sucrose and its photoproduct, acid metarhodopsin, were examined by small-angle X-ray scattering and chromatofocusing to investigate the conformation changes of visual pigment following photoconversion. From spectroscopic studies, it was found that more than 93% of Euprymna rhodopsin could be converted to meta form under the condition of red light irradiation at neutral pH. Since almost pure acid metarhodopsin solution was prepared without changing the specimen concentration, the small-angle X-ray scattering intensities of both pigment-detergent complexes were directly compared. The radius of gyration increased on going from rhodopsin to acid metarhodopsin by approximately 1.5%. There were also discernible changes in the secondary peak intensities. The distribution function, derived by the Fourier transformation of intensity data, showed a significant change around 55 A. The maximum linear dimension of the rhodopsin-detergent complex was about 95 A and hardly changed after illumination. Intensity at zero angle did not change after illumination, suggesting that the aggregation did not occur. The change of the intensity profile could be due to the conformational change of the pigment-detergent monomers. The pI value of rhodopsin determined by chromatofocusing was 5.32 and that of acid metarhodopsin was 5.06, indicating that a few carboxyl groups are newly dissociated. The shift of the protein mass and the charge redistribution were observed following photoconversion.  相似文献   

6.
Bakhtina M  Lee S  Wang Y  Dunlap C  Lamarche B  Tsai MD 《Biochemistry》2005,44(13):5177-5187
The kinetic mechanism and the structural bases of the fidelity of DNA polymerases are still highly controversial. Here we report the use of three probes in the stopped-flow studies of Pol beta to obtain new, direct evidence for our previous interpretations: (a) Increasing the viscosity of the reaction buffer by sucrose or glycerol is expected to slow down the conformational change differentially, and it was shown to slow down the first (fast) fluorescence transition selectively. (b) Use of dNTPalphaS in place of dNTP is expected to slow down the chemical step preferentially, and it was shown to slow down the second (slow) fluorescence transition selectively. (c) The substitution-inert Rh(III)dNTP was used to show for the first time that the slow fluorescence change occurs after mixing of Pol beta.DNA.Rh(III)dNTP with Mg(II). These results, along with crystal structures, suggest that the subdomain-closing conformational change occurs before binding of the catalytic Mg(II) while the rate-limiting step occurs after binding of the catalytic Mg(II). These results provide new evidence to the mechanism we suggested previously, but do not support the results of three recent papers of computational studies. The results were further supported by a "sequential mixing" stopped-flow experiment that used no analogues, and thus ruled out the possibility that the discrepancy between experimental and computational results is due to the use of analogues. The methodologies can be used to examine other DNA polymerases to answer whether the properties of Pol beta are exceptional or general.  相似文献   

7.
Summary The effect of cortisol on rabbit erythrocyte and reticulocyte acid phosphatase was studied. Isoenzymic form I (slow) was activated by cortisol, and protected towards inhibition by phosphate and fluoride. Incubation of isoenzyme III (fast) preparation with cortisol resulted in decrease of the enzyme activity and its affinity for substrate. The inhibition of form III by phosphate and fluoride was accelerated in the presence of cortisol. Form II, if present, was unaffected by cortisol. Reticulocyte isoenzymes I and III were less affected by cortisol than the erythrocyte enzymes.Abbreviations RBC red blood cells - AcP acid phosphatase - p-NPP p-nitrophenyl phosphate  相似文献   

8.
The pH and temperature dependences of tyrosine oxidation were measured in reaction centers from mutants of Rhodobacter sphaeroides containing a tyrosine residue near a highly oxidizing bacteriochlorophyll dimer. Under continuous illumination, a rapid increase in the absorption change at 420 nm was observed because of the formation of a charge-separated state involving the oxidized dimer and reduced primary quinone, followed by a slow absorption decrease attributed to tyrosine oxidation. Both the amplitude and rate of the slow absorption change showed a pH dependency, indicating that, at low pH, the rate of tyrosine oxidation is limited by the transfer of the phenolic proton to a nearby base. Below 17 degrees C, the rate of the slow absorption change had a strong exponential dependence on the temperature, indicating a high activation energy. At higher pH and temperature, the overall rate of tyrosyl formation appears to be limited by a proposed conformational change in the reaction center that is also observed in reaction centers that do not undergo tyrosine oxidation. The yield of tyrosyl formation measured using electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy decreased significantly at 4 degrees C compared to 20 degrees C and was lower at both temperatures in mutants expected to have a slightly smaller driving force for tyrosyl formation.  相似文献   

9.
Firshein, William (Wesleyan University, Middletown, Conn.), Robert J. Erickson, and Bernadette A. Gargan. Differential effects of deoxyribonucleotides on respiration of virulent pneumococci. J. Bacteriol. 92:1645-1654. 1966.-Four naturally occurring deoxyribonucleotides affect respiration in three virulent pneumococcal types (Diplococcus pneumoniae) differentially. Deoxyadenylic acid (dAMP) stimulates respiration in type I and slightly stimulates respiration in type III, but has no effect in type II. Deoxyguanylic acid (dGMP) stimulates respiration in type I, inhibits respiration in type II, and has no effect in type III. Thymidylic acid (dTMP) inhibits respiration of type I, but is stimulatory in types II and III. Deoxycytidylic acid (dCMP) inhibits respiration of all three pneumococcal types. Of a large number of related compounds, including many of the naturally occurring deoxynucleosides, nucleosides, nucleotides, purines, and pyrimidines, thymidine is slightly effective in types II and III, and deoxycytidine is slightly inhibitory in all three types. None of the remaining compounds affects respiration significantly. With a few exceptions, there is a correlation between the extent of uptake of each deoxynucleotide in the three types and their ability to stimulate (or inhibit) respiration. The greater the uptake, the greater the enhancement of respiration. The less uptake, the greater the inhibition of respiration. In cell-free extracts of type I, dAMP also stimulates the oxidative decarboxylation of pyruvic acid. During this reaction, dAMP is phosphorylated to deoxyadenosine diphosphate (dADP) and to deoxyadenosine triphosphate (dATP).  相似文献   

10.
Vogel R  Siebert F  Zhang XY  Fan G  Sheves M 《Biochemistry》2004,43(29):9457-9466
Thermal isomerization of the retinal Schiff base C=N double bond is known to trigger the decay of rhodopsin's Meta I/Meta II photoproduct equilibrium to the inactive Meta III state [Vogel, R., Siebert, F., Mathias, G., Tavan, P., Fan, G., and Sheves, M. (2003) Biochemistry 42, 9863-9874]. Previous studies have indicated that the transition to Meta III does not occur under conditions that strongly favor the active state Meta II but requires a residual amount of Meta I in the initial photoproduct equilibrium. In this study we show that the triggering event, the thermal isomerization of the protonated Schiff base, is independent of the presence of Meta II and occurs even under conditions where the transition to Meta II is completely prevented. We have examined two examples in which the transitions from Lumi to Meta I or from Meta I to Meta II are blocked. This was achieved using dry films of rhodopsin and rhodopsin reconstituted into rather rigid lipid bilayers. In both cases, the resulting fully inactive room temperature photoproducts decay specifically by thermal isomerization of the protonated Schiff base C=N double bond to an all-trans 15-syn chromophore isomer, corresponding to that of Meta III. This thermal isomerization becomes less efficient as the conformation of the respective photoproduct approaches that of Meta II and is fully absent in a pure Meta II state. These results indicate that the decay of the Meta I/Meta II photoproduct equilibrium to Meta III proceeds via Meta I and not via Meta II.  相似文献   

11.
Disruption of an interhelical salt bridge between the retinal protonated Schiff base linked to H7 and Glu113 on H3 is one of the decisive steps during activation of rhodopsin. Using previously established stabilization strategies, we engineered a stabilized E113Q counterion mutant that converted rhodopsin to a UV-absorbing photoreceptor with deprotonated Schiff base and allowed reconstitution into native-like lipid membranes. Fourier-transform infrared difference spectroscopy reveals a deprotonated Schiff base in the photoproducts of the mutant up to the active state Meta II, the absence of the classical pH-dependent Meta I/Meta II conformational equilibrium in favor of Meta II, and an anticipation of active state features under conditions that stabilize inactive photoproduct states in wildtype rhodopsin. Glu181 on extracellular loop 2, is found to be unable to maintain a counterion function to the Schiff base on the activation pathway of rhodopsin in the absence of the primary counterion, Glu113. The Schiff base becomes protonated in the transition to Meta III. This protonation is, however, not associated with a deactivation of the receptor, in contrast to wildtype rhodopsin. Glu181 is suggested to be the counterion in the Meta III state of the mutant and appears to be capable of stabilizing a protonated Schiff base in Meta III, but not of constraining the receptor in an inactive conformation.  相似文献   

12.
A novel fluorescence method has been developed for detecting the light-induced conformational changes of rhodopsin and for monitoring the interaction between photolyzed rhodopsin and G-protein or arrestin. Rhodopsin in native membranes was selectively modified with fluorescent Alexa594-maleimide at the Cys(316) position, with a large excess of the reagent Cys(140) that was also derivatized. Modification with Alexa594 allowed the monitoring of fluorescence changes at a red excitation light wavelength of 605 nm, thus avoiding significant rhodopsin bleaching. Upon absorption of a photon by rhodopsin, the fluorescence intensity increased as much as 20% at acidic pH with an apparent pK(a) of approximately 6.8 at 4 degrees C, and was sensitive to the presence of hydroxylamine. These findings indicated that the increase in fluorescence is specific for metarhodopsin II. In the presence of transducin, a significant increase in fluorescence was observed. This increase of fluorescence emission intensity was reduced by addition of GTP, in agreement with the fact that transducin enhances the formation of metarhodopsin II. Under conditions that favored the formation of a metarhodopsin II-Alexa594 complex, transducin slightly decreased the fluorescence. In the presence of arrestin, under conditions that favored the formation of metarhodopsin I or II, a phosphorylated, photolyzed rhodopsin-Alexa594 complex only slightly decreased the fluorescence intensity, suggesting that the cytoplasmic surface structure of metarhodopsin II is different in the complex with arrestin and transducin. These results demonstrate the application of Alexa594-modified rhodopsin (Alexa594-rhodopsin) to continuously monitor the conformational changes in rhodopsin during light-induced transformations and its interactions with other proteins.  相似文献   

13.
We have previously described [H, Kühn et al. (1981) Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA, 78, 6873-6877] a light-induced scattering change ('binding signal') associated with a stoichiometric binding between photoexcited rhodopsin and a peripheral membrane protein, the GTP-binding protein, in bovine rod outer segment suspensions. We have attempted here to identify the rhodopsin intermediate R* which is responsible for this interaction, by studying its dependence on pH, temperature and ionic strength. The results strongly suggest that the active state is metarhodopsin II (M II). 1. The initial phase of the binding signal is slightly slower than the formation of metarhodopsin II (2-37 degrees C, pH 5.5-9). 2. The kinetics of the decay of the active rhodopsin state are similar to those of the metarhodopsin II leads to metarhodopsin III transition (37 degrees C, pH 7.3). 3. All conditions which lead to light-induced binding of the GTP-binding protein to R* also lead to the formation of M II. At 2 degrees C, pH 8.3, in particular where no M II is formed in the absence of GTP-binding protein, binding signals and light-induced attachment of the GTP-binding protein to the membrane are still observed. Consistently, addition of GTP-binding protein to a suspension of extracted membranes bleached at 2 degrees C (pH 8.3) shifts the metarhodopsin I in equilibrium metarhodopsin II equilibrium towards metarhodopsin II. The shift is reversed by GTP, which dissociates the rhodopsin--GTP-binding protein complex. 4. At low ionic strength, where the GTP-binding protein is soluble in the dark (instead of being associated to the membrane as in the above experiments) M II still induces the binding whereas M I does not, indicating a much lower affinity of the GTP-binding protein for MI.  相似文献   

14.
he fluorescence yield of chlorophyll a in dark adapted Anacystis nidulans undergoes a slow change with continuous illumination. After the completion of the initial fast transient, the fluorescence yield rises from the level S to a plateau M within a minute, declining only after prolonged illumination. Both normal and 1,1-dimethyl-3(3'4'-dichloro)-phenylurea (DCMU)-poisoned Anacystis are capable of these changes. In normal Anacystis, the slow increase in the fluorescence yield (S --> M) requires light absorbed in system II while light absorbed in system I is ineffective. In DCMU-poisoned Anacystis, however, these changes are also promoted by light absorbed in system I. Addition of carbonyl cyanide p-trifluoromethoxy phenylhydrazone (FCCP), a photophosphorylation uncoupler acting near the photosynthetic electron transport chain, abolishes the rise from S to M in normal but has no effect in the DCMU-poisoned system. Phlorizin, a phosphorylase inhibitor, has very little effect. These results suggest that the light-induced variation in the fluorescence yield is related to the conformational changes which accompany photophosphorylation. The fluorescence yield of the auxiliary pigment phycocyanin remains constant throughout the interval of the light-induced changes in the fluorescence yield of chlorophyll a. Consequently, the fluorescence spectrum of the alga is variable on continuous illumination.  相似文献   

15.
The effect of oxidative stress on the process of spermatogenesis in terms of hsp70 expression was studied. For creating different oxidative stressed mice, three selenium (Se) levels viz., deficient (group I), adequate (group II) and excess (group III) were fed for 8 weeks in a yeast-based diet. After completion of diet feeding, Se level was significantly decreased in group I and significantly increased in group III, as compared to group II. Glutathione peroxidase (GSH-Px) activity was significantly decreased in both liver and testis in group I animals; however, the activity was comparable in groups II and III. Significant increase in the testis glutathione-S-transferase (GST) activity was observed in group I. No change was seen in group III, when compared to group II. Histological analysis of testis revealed a significant decrease in the germ cell population in group I, as compared to group II, with a predominant effect on spermatid and mature sperm numbers. In group III, displacement of germ cell population was observed. ELISA assays for hsp70 level showed increase in group I as compared to group II, whereas no significant change was observed in group III, as compared to group II. Immunohistochemical analysis revealed intense localization of hsp70 only in spermatid and sperm cells. The expression in groups II and III was homogeneous with slightly increased expression around lumen in group III. The data indicate that excessive oxidative stress in Se deficient group, affects the spermatogenesis process, especially affecting the mature sperm number which in turn leads to infertility.  相似文献   

16.
Absorbance difference spectra were recorded at 20 degrees C from 30 ns to milliseconds after photolysis of lauryl maltoside suspensions of artificial visual pigments derived from 9-cis isomers of 5-ethylretinal, 8,16-methanoretinal (a 6-s-trans-bicyclic analogue), or 5-demethyl-8-methylretinal. In all three pigments, the earliest intermediate that was detected had the characteristics of a mixture of bathorhodopsin and a blue-shifted intermediate, BSI, which is the first decay product of bathorhodopsin in bovine rhodopsin. The first decays resolved on the nanosecond time scale were the formation of the lumirhodopsin analogues. Subsequent decays were able to be fit with a mechanistic scheme which has been shown to apply to both membrane and detergent suspensions of rhodopsin. Large increases were seen in the amount of metarhodopsin I which appeared after photolysis of 5-ethylisorhodopsin and the bicyclic isorhodopsin analogue, while 5-demethyl-8-methylisorhodopsin more closely followed native rhodopsin in decaying through meta I380, a 380 nm absorbing precursor to metarhodopsin II. In addition to forming more metarhodopsin I, the bicyclic analogue stabilized the metarhodopsin I-metarhodopsin II equilibrium similarly to what has been previously reported for 9-demethylrhodopsin in detergent, introducing the possibility that the bicyclic analogue could similarly be defective in transducin activation. These observations support the idea that long after initial photolysis, structural details of the retinylidene chromophore continue to play a decisive role in processes leading to the activated form, metarhodopsin II.  相似文献   

17.
Binding of arrestin to cytoplasmic loop mutants of bovine rhodopsin   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Raman D  Osawa S  Weiss ER 《Biochemistry》1999,38(16):5117-5123
The binding of arrestin to rhodopsin is a multistep process that begins when arrestin interacts with the phosphorylated C terminus of rhodopsin. This interaction appears to induce a conformational change in arrestin that exposes a high-affinity binding site for rhodopsin. Several studies in which synthetic peptides were used have suggested that sites on the rhodopsin cytoplasmic loops are involved in this interaction. However, the precise amino acids on rhodopsin that participate in this interaction are unknown. This study addresses the role of specific amino acids in the cytoplasmic loops of rhodopsin in binding arrestin through the use of site-directed mutagenesis and direct binding assays. A series of alanine mutants within the three cytoplasmic loops of rhodopsin were expressed in HEK-293 cells, reconstituted with 11-cis-retinal, prephosphorylated with rhodopsin kinase, and examined for their ability to bind in vitro-translated, 35S-labeled arrestin. Mutations at Asn-73 in loop I as well as at Pro-142 and Met-143 in loop II resulted in dramatic decreases in the level of arrestin binding, whereas the level of phosphorylation by rhodopsin kinase was similar to that of wild-type rhodopsin. The results indicate that these amino acids play a significant role in arrestin binding.  相似文献   

18.
Deactivation of light-activated rhodopsin (metarhodopsin II) involves, after rhodopsin kinase and arrestin interactions, the hydrolysis of the covalent bond of all-trans-retinal to the apoprotein. Although the long-lived storage form metarhodopsin III is transiently formed, all-trans-retinal is eventually released from the active site. Here we address the question of whether the release results in a retinal that is freely diffusible in the lipid phase of the photoreceptor membrane. The release reaction is accompanied by an increase in intrinsic protein fluorescence (release signal), which arises from the relief of the fluorescence quenching imposed by the retinal in the active site. An analogous fluorescence decrease (uptake signal) was evoked by exogenous retinoids when they non-covalently bound to native opsin membranes. Uptake of 11-cis-retinal was faster than formation of the retinylidene linkage to the apoprotein. Endogenous all-trans-retinal released from the active site during metarhodopsin II decay did not generate the uptake signal. The data show that in addition to the retinylidene pocket (site I) there are two other retinoidbinding sites within opsin. Site II involved in the uptake signal is an entrance site, while the exit site (site III) is occupied when retinal remains bound after its release from site I. Support for a retinal channeling mechanism comes from the rhodopsin crystal structure, which unveiled two putative hydrophobic binding sites. This mechanism enables a unidirectional process for the release of photoisomerized chromophore and the uptake of newly synthesized 11-cis-retinal for the regeneration of rhodopsin.  相似文献   

19.
Two minor proteins of frog rod outer segments become phosphorylated when retinas are incubated in the dark with 32Pi. The proteins, designated component I (13,000 daltons) and component II (12,000 daltons), are dephosphorylated when retinas are illuminated. The dephosphorylation is reversible; the two proteins are rephosphorylated when illumination ceases. Each outer segment contains approximately 10(6( molecules of components I and II. These remain associated with both fragmented and intact outer segments but dissociate from the outer segment membranes under hypoosmotic conditions. The extent of the light-induced dephosphorylation increases with higher intensities of illumination and is maximal with continuous illumination which bleaches 5.0 x 10(5) rhodopsin molecules/outer segment per second. Light which bleaches 5.0 x 10(3) rhodopsin molecules/outer segment per second causes approximately half-maximal dephosphorylation. This same intermediate level of illumination causes half-suppression of the light-sensitive permeability mechanism in isolated outer segments (Brodie and Bownds. 1976. J. Gen Physiol. 68:1-11) and also induces a half-maximal decrease in their cyclic GMP content (Woodruff et al. 1977. J. Gen. Physiol. 69:667-679). The phosphorylation of components I and II is enhanced by the addition of cyclic GMP or cyclic AMP to either retinas or isolated rod outer segments maintained in the dark. Several pharmacological agents which influence cyclic GMP levels in outer segments, including calcium, cause similar effects on the phosphorylation of components I and II and outer segment permeability. Although the cyclic nucleotide-stimulated phosphorylation can be observed either in retinas or isolated rod outer segments, the light-induced dephosphorylation is observed only in intact retinas.  相似文献   

20.
In the photoregeneration process of squid rhodopsin, an intermediate has been found at neutral pH values (phosphate buffer) with a flash light (lambda greater than 540 nm). An intermediate R430, with the 11-cis retinal as chromophore, is produced from metarhodopsin in light and is converted to rhodopsin through the processes R430 leads to P380 and P380 leads to rhodopsin. The pH dependence of the velocity of the conversions suggests that processes R430 leads to P380 and P380 leads to rhodopsin involve a protolytic reaction and that the ionized group is a histidine residue of opsin. Kinetic parameters show that the largest conformational change in opsin occurs in the conversion of R430 leads to P380.  相似文献   

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