首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
Photoactive yellow protein (PYP) is a prototype of the PAS domain superfamily of signaling proteins. The signaling process is coupled to a three-state photocycle. After the photoinduced trans-cis isomerization of the chromophore, 4-hydroxycinnamic acid (pCA), an early intermediate (pR) is formed, which proceeds to a second intermediate state (pB) on a sub-millisecond time scale. The signaling process is thought to be connected to the conformational changes upon the formation of pB and its recovery to the ground state (pG), but the exact signaling mechanism is not known. Experimental studies of PYP by solution NMR and X-ray crystallography suggest a very flexible protein backbone in the ground as well as in the signaling state. The relaxation from the pR to the pB state is accompanied by the protonation of the chromophore's phenoxyl group. This was found to be of crucial importance for the relaxation process. With the goal of gaining a better understanding of these experimental observations on an atomistic level, we performed five MD simulations on the three different states of PYP: a 1 ns simulation of PYP in its ground state [pG(MD)], a 1 ns simulation of the pR state [pR(MD)], a 2 ns simulation of the pR state with the chromophore protonated (pRprot), a 2 ns simulation of the pR state with Glu46 exchanged by Gln (pRGln) and a 2 ns simulation of PYP in its signaling state [pB(MD)]. Comparison of the pG simulation results with X-ray and NMR data, and with the results obtained for the pB simulation, confirmed the experimental observations of a rather flexible protein backbone and conformational changes during the recovery of the pG from the pB state. The conformational changes in the region around the chromophore pocket in the pR state were found to be crucially dependent on the strength of the Glu46-pCA hydrogen bond, which restricts the mobility of the chromophore in its unprotonated form considerably. Both the mutation of Glu46 with Gln and the protonation of the chromophore weaken this hydrogen bond, leading to an increased mobility of pCA and large structural changes in its surroundings. These changes, however, differ considerably during the pRGln and pRprot simulations, providing an atomistic explanation for the enhancement of the rate constant in the Gln46 mutant. Electronic supplementary material to this article is available at and is accessible for athorized users. Electronic Publication  相似文献   

2.
G Renk  R K Crouch 《Biochemistry》1989,28(2):907-912
Several analogue pigments have been prepared containing retinals altered at the cyclohexyl ring or proximal to the aldehyde group in order to examine the role of the chromophore in the formation of the metarhodopsin I and II states of visual pigments. Deletion of the 13-methyl group on the isoprenoid chain did not affect metarhodopsin formation. However, analogue pigments containing chromophores with modified rings did not show the typical absorption changes associated with the metarhodopsin transitions of native or regenerated rhodopsins. In particular, 4-hydroxyretinal pigments did not show clear transitions between the metarhodopsin I and metarhodopsin II states. Pigment formed with an acyclic retinal showed no evidence by absorption spectroscopy of metarhodopsin formation. A retinal altered by substitution of a five-membered ring containing a nitroxide required a more acidic pH than the native pigment for formation of the metarhodopsin II state. ESR data suggest that the ring remains buried within the protein through the metarhodopsin II state. However, the Schiff base linkage is susceptible to hydrolysis of hydroxylamine in the metarhodopsin II state. These data indicate that (1), in the transition from rhodopsin to metarhodopsin II, major protein conformational changes are occurring near the lysine-retinal linkage whereas the ring portion of the chromophore remains deeply buried within the protein and (2) pigment absorptions characteristic of the metarhodopsin I and II states may be due to specific protein-chromophore interactions near the region of the chromophore ring.  相似文献   

3.
We present molecular dynamics simulations of bovine rhodopsin in a membrane mimetic environment based on the recently refined X-ray structure of the pigment. The interactions between the protonated Schiff base and the protein moiety are explored both with the chromophore in the dark-adapted 11-cis and in the photoisomerized all-trans form. Comparison of simulations with Glu181 in different protonation states strongly suggests that this loop residue located close to the 11-cis bond bears a negative charge. Restrained molecular dynamics simulations also provide evidence that the protein tightly confines the absolute conformation of the retinal around the C12-C13 bond to a positive helicity. 11-cis to all-trans isomerization leads to an internally strained chromophore, which relaxes after a few nanoseconds by a switching of the ionone ring to an essentially planar all-trans conformation. This structural transition of the retinal induces in turn significant conformational changes of the protein backbone, especially in helix VI. Our results suggest a possible molecular mechanism for the early steps of intramolecular signal transduction in a prototypical G-protein-coupled receptor.  相似文献   

4.
Lemaître V  Yeagle P  Watts A 《Biochemistry》2005,44(38):12667-12680
The formation of photointermediates and conformational changes observed in the retinal chromophore of bilayer-embedded rhodopsin during the early steps of the protein activation have been studied by molecular dynamics (MD) simulation. In particular, the lysine-bound retinal has been examined, focusing on its conformation in the dark-adapted state (10 ns) and on the early steps after the isomerization of the 11-cis bond to trans (up to 10 ns). The parametrization for the chromophore is based on a recent quantum study [Sugihara, M., Buss, V., Entel, P., Elstner, M., and Frauenheim, T. (2002) Biochemistry 41, 15259-15266] and shows good conformational agreement with recent experimental results. The isomerization, induced by switching the function governing the dihedral angle for the C11=C12 bond, was repeated with several different starting conformations. From the repeated simulations, it is shown that the retinal model exhibits a conserved activation pattern. The conformational changes are sequential and propagate outward from the C11=C12 bond, starting with isomerization of the C11=C12 bond, then a rotation of methyl group C20, and followed by increased fluctuations at the beta-ionone ring. The dynamics of these changes suggest that they are linked with photointermediates observed by spectroscopy. The exact moment when these events occur after the isomerization is modulated by the starting conformation, suggesting that retinal isomerizes through multiple pathways that are slightly different. The amplitudes of the structural fluctuations observed for the protein in the dark-adapted state and after isomerization of the retinal are similar, suggesting a subtle mechanism for the transmission of information from the chromophore to the protein.  相似文献   

5.
Little is known about the structural properties of semi-denatured membrane proteins. The current study employs laser-induced oxidative labeling of methionine side chains in combination with electrospray mass spectrometry and optical spectroscopy for gaining insights into the conformation of bacteriorhodopsin (BR) under partially denaturing conditions. The native protein shows extensive oxidation at M32, M68, and M163, which are located in solvent-accessible loops. In contrast, M20 (helix A), M56/60 (helix B), M118 (helix D), M145 (helix E), and M209 (helix G) are strongly protected, consistent with the known protein structure. Exposure of the protein to acidic conditions leads to a labeling pattern very similar to that of the native state. The absence of large-scale conformational changes at low pH is in agreement with recent crystallography data. Solubilization of BR in SDS induces loss of the retinal chromophore concomitant with collapse of the binding pocket, thereby precluding solvent access to the protein interior. Tryptophan fluorescence data confirm the presence of a large protein core that remains protected from water. However, oxidative labeling indicates partial unfolding of helices A and D in SDS. Irreversible thermal denaturation of the protein at 100 °C induces a labeling pattern quite similar to that seen upon SDS exposure. Labeling experiments on refolded bacterioopsin reveal a native-like structure, but with partial unfolding of helix D. Our data suggest that noncovalent contacts with the retinal chromophore in native BR play an important role for the stability of this particular helix. Overall, the present work illustrates the viability of using laser-induced oxidative labeling as a novel tool for characterizing structural changes of membrane proteins in response to alterations of their solvent environment.  相似文献   

6.
Recently, neutron diffraction experiments have revealed well-resolved and reversible changes in the protein conformation of bacteriorhodopsin (BR) between the light-adapted ground state and the M-intermediate of the proton pumping photocycle (Dencher, Dresselhaus, Zaccai and Büldt (1989) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 86, 7876-7879). These changes are triggered by the light-induced isomerization of the chromophore retinal from the all-trans to the 13-cis configuration. Dark-adapted purple membranes contain a mixture of two pigment species with either the all-trans- or 13-cis-retinal isomer as chromophore. Employing a time-resolved neutron diffraction technique, no changes in protein conformation in the resolution regime of up to 7 A are observed during the transition between the two ground-state species 13-cis-BR and all-trans-BR. This is in line with the fact that the conversion of all-trans BR to 13-cis-BR involves an additional isomerization about the C15 = N Schiff's base bond, which in contrast to M formation minimizes retinal displacement and keeps the Schiff's base in the original protein environment. Furthermore, there is no indication for large-scale redistribution of water molecules in the purple membrane during light-dark adaptation.  相似文献   

7.
Bacteriophytochrome from Deinococcus radiodurans (DrBphP) is a plant phytochrome homolog. To investigate the interaction of chromophore and protein structure, we purified recombinant DrBphP and performed biochemical analyses. Differences of apo- and holo-protein in electrophoretic properties in native gels and their susceptibility to trypsin indicate changes in both the conformation and surface topography of this protein as a result of chromophore assembly. Furthermore, proteolysis to Pr and Pfr conformers displayed distinctive cleavage patterns with a noticeable Pr-specific tryptic fragment. Of interest, a prolonged tryptic digestion showed a more severe impact upon the Pfr form. Most importantly, when we assessed the extent of dark reversion to evaluate the role of the cleaved part, a rapidly accelerated reversion was observed upon cleavage at residues 329-505 corresponding to the PHY domain. Our data thus show that the PHY domain is necessary for the Pfr stabilization and spectral integrity of DrBphP.  相似文献   

8.
Time-resolved resonance Raman spectroscopy is used to obtain chromophore vibrational spectra of the pR, pB', and pB intermediates during the photocycle of photoactive yellow protein. In the pR spectrum, the C8-C9 stretching mode at 998 cm(-1) is approximately 60 cm(-1) lower than in the dark state, and the combination of C-O stretching and C7H=C8H bending at 1283 cm(-1) is insensitive to D2O substitution. These results indicate that pR has a deprotonated, cis chromophore structure and that the hydrogen bonding to the chromophore phenolate oxygen is preserved and strengthened in the early photoproduct. However, the intense C7H=C8H hydrogen out-of-plane (HOOP) mode at 979 cm(-1) suggests that the chromophore in pR is distorted at the vinyl and adjacent C8-C9 bonds. The formation of pB' involves chromophore protonation based on the protonation state marker at 1174 cm(-1) and on the sensitivity of the COH bending at 1148 cm(-1) as well as the combined C-OH stretching and C7H=C8H bending mode at 1252 cm(-1) to D2O substitution. The hydrogen out-of-plane Raman intensity at 985 cm(-1) significantly decreases in pB', suggesting that the pR-to-pB' transition is the stage where the stored photon energy is transferred from the distorted chromophore to the protein, producing a more relaxed pB' chromophore structure. The C=O stretching mode downshifts from 1660 to 1651 cm(-1) in the pB'-to-pB transition, indicating the reformation of a hydrogen bond to the carbonyl oxygen. Based on reported x-ray data, this suggests that the chromophore ring flips during the transition from pB' to pB. These results confirm the existence and importance of the pB' intermediate in photoactive yellow protein receptor activation.  相似文献   

9.
Halorhodopsin (HR) and sensory rhodopsin (SR) have been regenerated with retinal analogues that are covalently locked in the 6-s-cis or 6-s-trans conformations. Both pigments regenerate more completely with the locked 6-s-trans retinal and produce analogue pigments with absorption maxima (577 nm for HR and 592 nm for SR) nearly identical to those of the native pigments (577 and 587 nm). This indicates that HR and SR bind retinal in the 6-s-trans conformation. The opsin shift for the locked 6-s-trans analogue in HR is 1,200 cm-1 less than that for the native chromophore (5,400 cm-1). The opsin shift for the 6-s-trans analogue in SR is 1,100 cm-1 less than that for the native retinal (5,700 cm-1). This demonstrates that approximately 20% of the opsin shift in these pigments arises from a protein-induced change in the chromophore conformation from twisted 6-s-cis in solution to planar 6-s-trans in the protein. The reduced opsin shift observed for the locked 6-s-cis analogue pigments compared with the locked 6-s-trans pigments may be due to a positive electrostatic perturbation near C7.  相似文献   

10.
The visual pigment rhodopsin is characterized by an 11-cis retinal chromophore bound to Lys-296 via a protonated Schiff base. Following light absorption the C(11)=C(12) double bond isomerizes to trans configuration and triggers protein conformational alterations. These alterations lead to the formation of an active intermediate (Meta II), which binds and activates the visual G protein, transducin. We have examined by UV-visible and Fourier transform IR spectroscopy the photochemistry of a rhodopsin analogue with an 11-cis-locked chromophore, where cis to trans isomerization around the C(11)=C(12) double bond is prevented by a 6-member ring structure (Rh(6.10)). Despite this lock, the pigment was found capable of forming an active photoproduct with a characteristic protein conformation similar to that of native Meta II. This intermediate is further characterized by a protonated Schiff base and protonated Glu-113, as well as by its ability to bind a transducin-derived peptide previously shown to interact efficiently with native Meta II. The yield of this active photointermediate is pH-dependent and decreases with increasing pH. This study shows that with the C(11)=C(12) double bond being locked, isomerization around the C(9)=C(10) or the C(13)=C(14) double bonds may well lead to an activation of the receptor. Additionally, prolonged illumination at pH 7.5 produces a new photoproduct absorbing at 385 nm, which, however, does not exhibit the characteristic active protein conformation.  相似文献   

11.
Molecular dynamics simulation was carried out for the rhodopsin protein to investigate its conformational changes in respect to inclusion of 11-cis retinal chromophore. Molecular dynamics calculations were performed within the time frame 3000 ps. Totally, 3 X 10(6) configurations ofrhodopsin and free opsin were analyzed and compared. It has been shown that the 11-cis retinal rearrangement (adaptation) in opsin strongly affects the surrounding amino acid residues of protein binding pocket and the protein cytoplasmic region. The extracellular part, however, shows comparatively little changes. On basis of the simulation results obtained we propose a molecular mechanism for the rhodopsin protein function as a G-protein-coupled receptor in the state of darkness. We discuss the role of the retinal chromophore as a ligand-antagonist stabilizing the inactive conformation of rhodopsin.  相似文献   

12.
The 39-kDa fragment of oat phytochrome phyA, obtained by tryptic digestion at the amino acids 65 and 425, was studied by resonance Raman spectroscopy. The parent state P(r) reveals far-reaching similarities with that of the native phytochrome implying that the structures of the tetrapyrrole chromophore and its immediate protein environment are not affected by the proteolysis. However, the resonance Raman spectrum of the final product of the P(r) phototransformation, denoted as P(bl), is more closely related to that of the P(fr) precursor of the native phytochrome, i.e. meta-R(C), rather than to that of P(fr) itself. The resonance Raman spectra indicate a high conformational flexibility of the chromophore in P(bl) so that, unlike in P(fr), the tetrapyrrole rings C and D adopt a largely coplanar conformation. The protein interactions with ring D of the chromophore, which in the native phytochrome stabilize the specific chromophore structure of P(fr), cannot be established in the 39-kDa fragment due to the lack of the major C-terminal part of the protein. These findings, furthermore, support the view that the meta-R(C)-->P(fr) transition is associated with a coupling of chromophore and protein structural changes that represent crucial events for the photoactivation of phytochrome.  相似文献   

13.
A novel, to our knowledge, in situ photoirradiation system for solid-state NMR measurements is improved and demonstrated to successfully identify the M-photointermediate of pharaonis phoborhodopsin (ppR or sensory rhodopsin II), that of the complex with transducer (ppR/pHtrII), and T204A mutant embedded in a model membrane. The 13C NMR signals from [20-13C]retinal-ppR and ppR/pHtrII revealed that multiple M-intermediates with 13-cis, 15-anti retinal configuration coexisted under the continuously photoirradiated condition. NMR signals observed from the photoactivated retinal provide insights into the process of photocycle in the ppR/pHtrII complex.  相似文献   

14.
Rotational resonance solid state nuclear magnetic resonance has been used to determine the relative orientation of the beta-ionone ring and the polyene chain of the chromophore 11-Z-retinylidene of rhodopsin in rod outer segment membranes from bovine retina. The bleached protein was regenerated with either 11-Z-[8,18-(13)C(2)]retinal or 11-Z-[8,16/17(13)C(2)]retinal, the latter having only one (13)C label at either of the chemically equivalent positions 16 and 17. Observation of (13)C selectively enriched in the ring methyl groups, C16/17, revealed alternative conformational states for the ring. Minor spectral components comprised around 26% of the chromophore. The major conformation (approximately 74%) has the chemical shift resolution required for measuring internuclear distances to (13)C in the retinal chain (C8) separately from each of these methyl groups. The resulting distance constraints, C8 to C16 and C17 (4.05 +/- 0.25 A) and from C8 to C18 (2.95 +/- 0.15 A), show that the major portion of retinylidene in rhodopsin has a twisted 6-s-cis conformation. The more precise distance measurement made here between C8 and C18 (2.95 A) predicts that the chain is twisted out-of-plane with respect to the ring by a modest amount (C5-C6-C7-C8 torsion angle = -28 +/- 7 degrees ).  相似文献   

15.
The light-driven proton pump bacteriorhodopsin (bR) undergoes a bleaching reaction with hydroxylamine in the dark, which is markedly catalyzed by light. The reaction involves cleavage of the (protonated) Schiff base bond, which links the retinyl chromophore to the protein. The catalytic light effect is currently attributed to the conformational changes associated with the photocycle of all-trans bR, which is responsible for its proton pump mechanism and is initiated by the all-trans --> 13-cis isomerization. This hypothesis is now being tested in a series of experiments, at various temperatures, using three artificial bR molecules in which the essential C13==C14 bond is locked by a rigid ring structure into an all-trans or 13-cis configuration. In all three cases we observe an enhancement of the reaction by light despite the fact that, because of locking of the C13==C14 bond, these molecules do not exhibit a photocycle, or any proton-pump activity. An analysis of the rate parameters excludes the possibility that the light-catalyzed reaction takes place during the approximately 20-ps excited state lifetimes of the locked pigments. It is concluded that the reaction is associated with a relatively long-lived (micros-ms) light-induced conformational change that is not reflected by changes in the optical spectrum of the retinyl chromophore. It is plausible that analogous changes (coupled to those of the photocycle) are also operative in the cases of native bR and visual pigments. These conclusions are discussed in view of the light-induced conformational changes recently detected in native and artificial bR with an atomic force sensor.  相似文献   

16.
The energetics, protein dynamics, and diffusion coefficients of three mutants of photoactive yellow protein, R52Q, P68A, and W119G, were studied by the transient grating and pulsed laser-induced photoacoustic method. We observed a new dynamics with a lifetime of approximately 1 micro s in the transient grating signal, which is silent by the light absorption technique. This fact indicates that, after the structure change around the chromophore is completed (pR(1)), the protein part located far from the chromophore is still moving to finally create another pR (pR(2)) species, which can transform to the next intermediate, pB. Although the kinetics of pR(2)-->pB-->pG are very different depending on the mutants, the enthalpies of the first long-lived (in micro seconds, 100-micro s range) intermediate species (pR(2)) are similar and very high for all mutants. The diffusion coefficients of the parent (pG) and pB species of the mutants are also similar to that of the wild-type photoactive yellow protein. From the temperature dependence of the volume change, the difference in the thermal expansion coefficients taken as indicator of the flexibility of the structure between pG and pR(2) is measured. They are also similar to that of the wild-type photoactive yellow protein. These results suggest that the protein structures of pR(2) and pB in these mutants are globally different from that of pG, and this structural change is not altered so much by the single amino acid residue mutation. This is consistent with the partially unfolded nature of these intermediate species. On the other hand, the volume changes during pR(1)-->pR(2) are sensitive to the mutations, which may suggest that the volume change reflects a rather local character of the structure, such as the chromophore-protein interaction.  相似文献   

17.
The guanine nucleotide-binding protein (G-protein)-coupled receptor superfamily (GPCR) is comprised of a large group of membrane proteins involved in a wide range of physiological signaling processes. The functional switch from a quiescent to an active conformation is at the heart of GPCR action. The GPCR rhodopsin has been studied extensively because of its key role in scotopic vision. The ground state chromophore, 11-cis-retinal, holds the transmembrane region of the protein in the inactive conformation. Light induces cis-trans isomerization and rhodopsin activation. Here we show that rhodopsin regenerated with a ring-constrained 11-cis-retinal analog undergoes photoisomerization; however, it remains marginally active because isomerization occurs without the chromophore-induced conformational change of the opsin moiety. Modeling the locked chromophore analogs in the active site of rhodopsin suggests that the beta-ionone ring rotates but is largely confined within the binding site of the natural 11-cis-retinal chromophore. This constraint is a result of the geometry of the stable 11-cis-locked configuration of the chromophore analogs. These results suggest that the native chromophore cis-trans isomerization is merely a mechanism for repositioning of the beta-ionone ring which ultimately leads to helix movements and determines receptor activation.  相似文献   

18.
Experiments have been performed to examine any influence of the chromophore retinal in bacteriorhodopsin (BR) on the passive proton/hydroxide ion flux through this integral membrane protein. BR was reconstituted into dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC)-phosphatidylserine or DMPC-dimyristoylphosphatidylglycerol unilamellar vesicles with molar lipid to protein ratios ranging from 30 to 150. The entrapped fluorescence dye pyranine served as a reliable indicator of the internal proton concentration. Transmembrane pH-gradients were quickly established across the vesicular membrane and the kinetics of the induced fluorescence changes were compared for vesicles with incorporated native BR, BR bleached to the chromophore-free protein bacterioopsin, and BR regenerated from bacterioopsin with all-trans-retinal, respectively. For aggregated protein molecules, the H+/OH- diffusion across bacterioopsin was always considerably faster than that through the protein containing covalently bound retinal. The decay rate of the imposed pH-gradient was 4.4-9.1 and 2.0-5.1 times slower for native and regenerated BR, respectively, as compared to bacterioopsin. Stepwise regeneration of bacterioopsin with all-trans-retinal revealed a linear dependence of the predominant delta pH-decay time on the degree of regeneration. Essentially the same observations were made with monomeric protein molecules in vesicular lipid membranes. The results demonstrate that the chromophore retinal itself blocks the H+/OH- conducting pathway across the transmembrane protein BR or indirectly controls this path by inducing conformational changes in the protein upon binding.  相似文献   

19.
High quality surface-enhanced resonance Raman (SERR) spectra were recorded from native and denatured phycocyanin and allophycocyanin on ascorbic acid treated silver hydrosols. The visible-excited SERR and resonance Raman (RR) spectra of the phycobiliproteins were very similar, indicating a predominantly electromagnetic surface enhancement mechanism. Investigation of pH-induced denaturation ofx allophycocyanin has shown that even small differences in protein/chromophore conformational are sensitively reflected by the SERR spectra. Concerning the adsorption of the protein to the metal surface, the experiments have shown that: (i) there is limited possibility for changing protein conformation during the adsorption process, (ii) there are no changes after the protein has been adsorbed onto the silver surface and (iii) for each protein an optimal activation of the silver sol has to be found for recording proper SERR spectra. The results obtained on phycobiliproteins are also discussed in connection with the interpretation of phytochrome Raman spectra.  相似文献   

20.
The chromophore conformations of the red and far red light induced product states "Pfr" and "Pr" of the N-terminal photoreceptor domain Cph1-N515 from Synechocystis 6803 have been investigated by NMR spectroscopy, using specific 13C isotope substitutions in the chromophore. 13C-NMR spectroscopy in the Pfr and Pr states indicated reversible chemical shift differences predominantly of the C(4) carbon in ring A of the phycocyanobilin chromophore, in contrast to differences of C15 and C5, which were much less pronounced. Ab initio calculations of the isotropic shielding and optical transition energies identify a region for C4-C5-C6-N2 dihedral angle changes where deshielding of C4 is correlated with red-shifted absorption. These could occur during thermal reactions on microsecond and millisecond timescales after excitation of Pr which are associated with red-shifted absorption. A reaction pathway involving a hula-twist at C5 could satisfy the observed NMR and visible absorption changes. Alternatively, C15 Z-E photoisomerization, although expected to lead to a small change of the chemical shift of C15, in addition to changes of the C4-C5-C6-N2 dihedral angle could be consistent with visible absorption changes and the chemical shift difference at C4. NMR spectroscopy of a 13C-labeled chromopeptide provided indication for broadening due to conformational exchange reactions in the intact photoreceptor domain, which is more pronounced for the C- and D-rings of the chromophore. This broadening was also evident in the F2 hydrogen dimension from heteronuclear 1H-13C HSQC spectroscopy, which did not detect resonances for the 13C5-H, 13C10-H, and 13C15-H hydrogen atoms whereas strong signals were detected for the (13)C-labeled chromopeptide. The most pronounced 13C-chemical shift difference between chromopeptide and intact receptor domain was that of the 13C4-resonance, which could be consistent with an increased conformational energy of the C4-C5-C6-N2 dihedral angle in the intact protein in the Pr state. Nuclear Overhauser effect spectroscopy experiments of the 13C-labeled chromopeptide, where chromophore-protein interactions are expected to be reduced, were consistent with a ZZZssa conformation, which has also been found for the biliverdin chromophore in the x-ray structure of a fragment of Deinococcus radiodurans bacteriophytochrome in the Pr form.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号