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1.
Proton translocation in the BR mutants D85N, D85T and D85,96N was studied by attachment of purple membranes to planar lipid bilayers. Pump currents in these mutants were measured via capacitive coupling and by use of the appropriate ionophores. All mutants have a reduced pK of their Schiff bases around 8-8.5 in common. At physiological pH, a mixture of chromophores absorbing at 410 nm (deprotonated form) and around 600 nm (protonated form) coexists. Excitation with continuous blue light induces in all three mutants an outwardly directed stationary pump current. These currents are enhanced upon addition of azide in D85N and D85,96N by a factor of 50, but no azide enhancement is observed in D85T. Yellow light alone induces transient inwardly directed currents in the mutants but additional blue light leads to a stationary current with the same direction. All the observed currents are carried by protons, so that the consecutive absorption of a yellow and a blue photon leads to inverted stationary photocurrents by the mutants, as observed with halorhodopsin (HR). A mechanistic model describing the inversion of proton pumping is discussed by the cis-trans, trans-cis isomerization of the retinal and the different proton accessibility of the Schiff base from the extracellular or the cytoplasmic side of the membrane.  相似文献   

2.
Bacterioopsin, expressed in Escherichia coli as a fusion protein with 13 heterologous residues at the amino terminus, has been purified in the presence of detergents and retinylated to give bacteriorhodopsin. Further purification yielded pure bacteriorhodopsin, which had an absorbance ratio (A280/A lambda max) of 1.5 in the dark-adapted state in a single-detergent environment. This protein has a folding rate, absorbance spectrum, and light-induced proton pumping activity identical with those of bacteriorhodopsin purified from Halobacterium halobium. Protein expressed from the mutants D85N, D96N, and R82Q and purified similarly yielded pure protein with absorbance ratios of 1.5. Proton pumping rates of bacteriorhodopsins with the wild-type sequence and variants D85N, D96N, and R82Q were determined in phospholipid vesicles as a function of pH. D85N was inactive at all pH values, whereas D96N was inactive from pH 7.0 to pH 8.0, where wild type is most active, but had some activity at low pH. R82Q showed diminished proton pumping with the same pH dependence as for wild type. Bacteriorhodopsin purified from E. coli crystallized in two types of two-dimensional crystal lattices suitable for low-dose electron diffraction, which permit detailed analysis of structural differences in site-directed variants. One lattice was trigonal, as in purple membrane, and showed a high-resolution electron diffraction pattern from glucose-sustained patches. The other lattice was previously uncharacterized with unit cell dimensions a = 127 A, b = 67 A, and symmetry of the orthorhombic plane group pgg.  相似文献   

3.
Different modes of proton translocation by sensory rhodopsin I.   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
U Haupts  E Bamberg    D Oesterhelt 《The EMBO journal》1996,15(8):1834-1841
The membrane-bound complex between sensory rhodopsin I (SRI) and its transducer HtrI forms the functional photoreceptor unit that allows transmission of light signals to the flagellar motor. Although being a photosensor, SRI, the mutant SRI-D76N and the HtrI-SRI complex can transport protons, as we demonstrate by using the sensitive and ion-specific black lipid membrane technique. SRI sustains an orange light-driven (one-photon-driven) outward proton transport which is enhanced by additional blue light (two-photon-driven). The vectoriality of the two-photon-driven transport could be reversed at neutral pH from the outward to the inward direction by switching the cut-off wavelength of the long wavelength light from 550 to 630 nm. The cut-off wavelength determining the reversal point decreases with decreasing pH. The currents could be enhanced by azide. A two-photon-driven inward proton transport by SRI-D76N (catalyzed by azide) and by the complex HtrI-SRI is demonstrated. The influence of pH and azide concentration on the rise and decay kinetics of the SRI380 intermediate is analyzed. The different modes of proton translocation of the SRI species are discussed on the basis of a general model of proton translocation of retinal proteins and in the context of signal transduction.  相似文献   

4.
Molecular dynamics simulations of wild-type bacteriorhodopsin (bR) and of its D85N, D85T, D212N, and Y57F mutants have been carried out to investigate possible differences in the photoproducts of these proteins. For each mutant, a series of 50 molecular dynamics simulations of the photoisomerization and subsequent relaxation process were completed. The photoproducts can be classified into four distinct classes: 1) 13-cis retinal, with the retinal N-H+ bond oriented toward Asp-96; 2) 13-cis retinal, with the N-H+ oriented toward Asp-85 and hydrogen-bonded to a water molecule; 3) 13,14-di-cis retinal; 4) all-trans retinal. Simulations of wild-type bR and of its Y57F mutant resulted mainly in class 1 and class 2 products; simulations of D85N, D85T, and D212N mutants resulted almost entirely in class 1 products. The results support the suggestion that only class 2 products initiate a functional pump cycle. The formation of class 1 products for the D85N, D85T, and D212N mutants can explain the reversal of proton pumping under illumination by blue and yellow light.  相似文献   

5.
The photovoltage kinetics of the bacteriorhodopsin mutants Asp212-->Asn and Asp85-->Asn after excitation at 580 nm have been investigated in the pH range from 0 to 11. With the mutant Asp85-->Asn (D85N) at pH 7 no net charge translocation is observed and the signal is the same, both in the presence of Cl- (150 mM) and in its absence (75 mM SO4(2-)). Under both conditions the color of the pigment is blue (lambda max = 615 nm). The time course of the photovoltage kinetics is similar to that of the acid-blue form of wild-type, except that an additional transient charge motion occurs with time constants of 60 microseconds and 1.3 ms, indicating the transient deprotonation and reprotonation of an unknown group to and from the extracellular side of the membrane. It is suggested that this is the group XH, which is responsible for proton release in wild-type. At pH 1, the photovoltage signal of D85N changes upon the addition of Cl- from that characteristic for the acid-blue state of wild-type to that characteristic for the acid-purple state. Therefore, the protonation of the group at position at 85 is necessary, but not sufficient for the chloride-binding. At pH 11, well above the pKa of the Schiff base, there is a mixture of "M-like" and "N-like" states. Net proton transport in the same direction as in wild-type is restored in D85N from this N-like state. With the mutant Asp212-->Asn (D212N), time-resolved photovoltage measurements show that in the absence of halide ions the signal is similar to that of the acid-blue form of wild-type and that no net charge translocation occurs in the entire pH range from 0 to 11. Upon addition of Cl- in the pH range from 3.8 to 7.2 the color of the pigment returns to purple and the photovoltage experiments indicate that net proton pumping is restored. However, this Cl(-)-induced activation of net charge-transport in D212N is only partial. Outside this pH range, no net charge transport is observed even in the presence of chloride, and the photovoltage shows the same chloride-dependent features as those accompanying the acid-blue to acid-purple transition of the wild-type.  相似文献   

6.
Crystal structures are reported for the D85S and D85S/F219L mutants of the light-driven proton/hydroxyl-pump bacteriorhodopsin. These mutants crystallize in the orthorhombic C222(1) spacegroup, and provide the first demonstration that monoolein-based cubic lipid phase crystallization can support the growth of well-diffracting crystals in non-hexagonal spacegroups. Both structures exhibit similar and substantial differences relative to wild-type bacteriorhodopsin, suggesting that they represent inherent features resulting from neutralization of the Schiff base counterion Asp85. We argue that these structures provide a model for the last photocycle intermediate (O) of bacteriorhodopsin, in which Asp85 is protonated, the proton release group is deprotonated, and the retinal has reisomerized to all-trans. Unlike for the M and N photointermediates, where structural changes occur mainly on the cytoplasmic side, here the large-scale changes are confined to the extracellular side. As in the M intermediate, the side-chain of Arg82 is in a downward configuration, and in addition, a pi-cloud hydrogen bond forms between Trp189 NE1 and Trp138. On the cytoplasmic side, there is increased hydration near the surface, suggesting how Asp96 might communicate with the bulk during the rise of the O intermediate.  相似文献   

7.
Sporangiophores of the zygomycete fungus Phycomyces blakesleeanus are sensitive to near UV and blue light. The quantum effectiveness of yellow and red light is more than 6 orders of magnitude below that of near UV or blue light. Phototropism mutants with a defect in the gene madC are about 106 times less sensitive to blue light than the wild type. These mutants respond, however, to yellow and red light when the long wavelength light is given simultaneously with actinic blue light. In the presence of yellow or red light the photogravitropic threshold of madC mutants is lowered about 100-fold though the yellow and the red light alone are phototropically ineffective. A step-up of the fluence rate of broad-band red light (> 600 nm) from 6 × 10?3 to 6W m?2 elicits, in mutant C 148 madC, a transient deceleration of the growth rate. The growth rate of the wild type is not affected by the same treatment. The results are interpreted in terms of a red light absorbing intermediate of the blue light photoreceptor of Phycomyces. The intermediate should be short-lived in the wild type and should accumulate in madC mutants.  相似文献   

8.
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   

9.
The role of the extracellular Glu side chains of bacteriorhodopsin in the proton transport mechanism has been studied using the single mutants E9Q, E74Q, E194Q, and E204Q; the triple mutant E9Q/E194Q/E204Q; and the quadruple mutant E9Q/E74Q/E194Q/E204Q. Steady-state difference and deconvoluted Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy has been applied to analyze the M- and N-like intermediates in membrane films maintained at a controlled humidity, at 243 and 277 K at alkaline pH. The mutants E9Q and E74Q gave spectra similar to that of wild type, whereas E194Q, E9Q/E194Q/E204Q, and E9Q/E74Q/E194Q/E204Q showed at 277 K a N-like intermediate with a single negative peak at 1742 cm(-1), indicating that Asp(85) and Asp(96) are deprotonated. Under the same conditions E204Q showed a positive peak at 1762 cm(-1) and a negative peak at 1742 cm(-1), revealing the presence of protonated Asp(85) (in an M intermediate environment) and deprotonated Asp(96). These results indicate that in E194Q-containing mutants, the second increase in the Asp(85) pK(a) is inhibited because of lack of deprotonation of the proton release group. Our data suggest that Glu(194) is the group that controls the pK(a) of Asp(85).  相似文献   

10.
Titration of Asp-85, the proton acceptor and part of the counterion in bacteriorhodopsin, over a wide pH range (2-11) leads us to the following conclusions: 1) Asp-85 has a complex titration curve with two values of pKa; in addition to a main transition with pKa = 2.6 it shows a second inflection point at high pH (pKa = 9.7 in 150-mM KCl). This complex titration behavior of Asp-85 is explained by interaction of Asp-85 with an ionizable residue X'. As follows from the fit of the titration curve of Asp-85, deprotonation of X' increases the proton affinity of Asp-85 by shifting its pKa from 2.6 to 7.5. Conversely, protonation of Asp-85 decreases the pKa of X' by 4.9 units, from 9.7 to 4.8. The interaction between Asp-85 and X' has important implications for the mechanism of proton transfer. In the photocycle after the formation of M intermediate (and protonation of Asp-85) the group X' should release a proton. This deprotonated state of X' would stabilize the protonated state of Asp-85.2) Thermal isomerization of the chromophore (dark adaptation) occurs on transient protonation of Asp-85 and formation of the blue membrane. The latter conclusion is based on the observation that the rate constant of dark adaptation is directly proportional to the fraction of blue membrane (in which Asp-85 is protonated) between pH 2 and 11. The rate constant of isomerization is at least 10(4) times faster in the blue membrane than in the purple membrane. The protonated state of Asp-85 probably is important for the catalysis not only of all-trans <=> 13-cis thermal isomerization during dark adaptation but also of the reisomerization of the chromophore from 13-cis to all-trans configuration during N-->O-->bR transition in the photocycle. This would explain why Asp-85 stays protonated in the N and O intermediates.  相似文献   

11.
Maximum of the M intermediate difference spectrum in the wild-type Halobacterium salinarium purple membrane is localized at 405-406 nm under conditions favoring accumulation of the M(N) intermediate (6 M guanidine chloride, pH 9.6), whereas immediately after laser flash the maximum is localized at 412 nm. The maximum is also localized at 412 nm 0.1 msec after the flash in the absence of guanidine chloride at pH 11.3. Within several milliseconds the maximum is shifted to short-wavelength region by 5-6 nm. This shift is similar to that in the D96N mutant which accompanies the M(N) (M(open)) intermediate formation. The main two differences are: 1) the rate of the shift is slower in the wild-type bacteriorhodopsin, and is similar to the rate of the M to N intermediate transition (t1/2 approximately 2 msec); 2) the shift in the wild-type bacteriorhodopsin is observed at alkaline pH values which are higher than pK of the Schiff base (approximately 10.8 at 1 M NaCl) in the N intermediate with the deprotonated Asp-96. Thus, the M(N) (M(open)) intermediate with open water-permeable inward proton channel is observed only at high pH, when the Schiff base and Asp-96 are deprotonated. The data confirmed our earlier conclusion that the M intermediate observed at lower pH has the closed inward proton channel.  相似文献   

12.
Replacement of the Arg residue at position 82 in bacteriorhodopsin by Gln or Ala was previously shown to slow the rate of proton release and raise the pK of Asp 85, indicating that R82 is involved both in the proton release reaction and in stabilizing the purple form of the chromophore. We now find that guanidinium chloride lowers the pK of D85, as monitored by the shift of the 587-nm absorbance maximum to 570 nm (blue to purple transition) and increased yield of photointermediate M. The absorbance shift follows a simple binding curve, with an apparent dissociation constant of 20 mM. When membrane surface charge is taken into account, an intrinsic dissociation constant of 0.3 M fits the data over a range of 0.2-1.0 M cation concentration (Na+ plus guanidinium) and pH 5.4-6.7. A chloride counterion is not involved in the observed spectral changes, as chloride up to 0.2 M has little effect on the R82Q chromophore at pH 6, whereas guanidinium sulfate has a similar effect to guanidinium chloride. Furthermore, guanidinium does not affect the chromophore of the double mutant R82Q/D85N. Taken together, these observations suggest that guanidinium binds to a specific site near D85 and restores the purple chromophore. Surprisingly, guanidinium does not restore rapid proton release in the photocycle of R82Q. This result suggests either that guanidinium dissociates during the pump cycle or that it binds with a different hydrogen-bonding geometry than the Arg side chain of the wild type.  相似文献   

13.
13C NMR spectra of [3-(13)C]Ala- and [1-(13)C]Val-labeled D85N mutant of bacteriorhodopsin (bR) reconstituted in egg PC or DMPC bilayers were recorded to gain insight into their secondary structures and dynamics. They were substantially suppressed as compared with those of 2D crystals, especially at the loops and several transmembrane alphaII-helices. Surprisingly, the 13C NMR spectra of [3-(13)C]Ala-D85N turned out to be very similar to those of [3-(13)C]Ala-bR in lipid bilayers, in spite of the presence of globular conformational and dynamics changes in the former as found from 2D crystalline preparations. No further spectral change was also noted between the ground (pH 7) and M-like state (pH 10) as far as D85N in lipid bilayers was examined, in spite of their distinct changes in the 2D crystalline state. This is mainly caused by that the resulting 13C NMR peaks which are sensitive to conformation and dynamics changes in the loops and several transmembrane alphaII-helices of the M-like state are suppressed already by fluctuation motions in the order of 10(4)-10(5) Hz interfered with frequencies of magic angle spinning or proton decoupling. However, 13C NMR signal from the cytoplasmic alpha-helix protruding from the membrane surface is not strongly influenced by 2D crystal or monomer. Deceptively simplified carbonyl 13C NMR signals of the loop and transmembrane alpha-helices followed by Pro residues in [1-(13)C]Val-labeled bR and D85N in 2D crystal are split into two peaks for reconstituted preparations in the absence of 2D crystalline lattice. Fortunately, 13C NMR spectral feature of reconstituted [1-(13)C]Val and [3-(13)C]Ala-labeled bR and D85N was recovered to yield characteristic feature of 2D crystalline form in gel-forming lipids achieved at lowered temperatures.  相似文献   

14.
Na,K-ATPase mediates net electrogenic transport by extruding three Na+ ions and importing two K+ ions across the plasma membrane during each reaction cycle. We mutated putative cation coordinating amino acids in transmembrane hairpin M5-M6 of rat Na,K-ATPase: Asp776 (Gln, Asp, Ala), Glu779 (Asp, Gln, Ala), Asp804 (Glu, Asn, Ala), and Asp808 (Glu, Asn, Ala). Electrogenic cation transport properties of these 12 mutants were analyzed in two-electrode voltage-clamp experiments on Xenopus laevis oocytes by measuring the voltage dependence of K+-stimulated stationary currents and pre-steady-state currents under electrogenic Na+/Na+ exchange conditions. Whereas mutants D804N, D804A, and D808A hardly showed any Na+/K+ pump currents, the other constructs could be classified according to the [K+] and voltage dependence of their stationary currents; mutants N776A and E779Q behaved similarly to the wild-type enzyme. Mutants E779D, E779A, D808E, and D808N had in common a decreased apparent affinity for extracellular K+. Mutants N776Q, N776D, and D804E showed large deviations from the wild-type behavior; the currents generated by mutant N776D showed weaker voltage dependence, and the current-voltage curves of mutants N776Q and D804E exhibited a negative slope. The apparent rate constants determined from transient Na+/Na+ exchange currents are rather voltage-independent and at potentials above -60 mV faster than the wild type. Thus, the characteristic voltage-dependent increase of the rate constants at hyperpolarizing potentials is almost absent in these mutants. Accordingly, dislocating the carboxamide or carboxyl group of Asn776 and Asp804, respectively, decreases the extracellular Na+ affinity.  相似文献   

15.
Spectral and kinetic transformations were studied in gelatin films made with 14-F wild type (WT) bacteriorhodopsin (BR) and 14-F D96N mutant BR. Unlike the recent study of water suspensions of the same pigments, where a red shifted species at 660 nm was shown to form under the light in 14-F WT only, there are no drastic differences in photoinduced behavior between gelatin films based on 14-F WT and 14-F D96N. It is not observed any photoinduced formation of red shifted species at 660 nm for both types of films as it is observed for corresponding pigments in water suspension. The observed results are explained in a terms of relationship between the rates of two photoinduced processes that occur in suspensions and films of corresponding pigments. Kinetic characteristics of the photoinduced processes for the films with chemical additives suggest that there are no advantages in using 14-F D96N films when compared to films based on 14-F WT.  相似文献   

16.
The gene coding for bacteriorhodopsin was modified in vitro to replace Asp212 with asparagine and expressed in Halobacterium halobium. X-ray diffraction measurements showed that the major lattice dimension of purple membrane containing the mutated bacteriorhodopsin was the same as wild type. At pH greater than 7, the Asp212----Asn chromophore was blue (absorption maximum at 585 nm) and exhibited a photocycle containing only the intermediates K and L, i.e. a reaction sequence very similar to that of wild-type bacteriorhodopsin at pH less than 3 and the blue form of the Asp85----Glu protein at pH less than 9. Since in the latter cases these effects are attributed to protonation of residue 85, it now appears that removal of the carboxylate of Asp212 has similar consequences as removing the carboxylate of Asp85. However, an important difference is that only Asp85 affects the pKa of the Schiff base. At pH less than 7, the Asp212----Asn protein was purple (absorption maximum at 569 nm) but photoexcitation produced only 15% of the normal amount of M and the transport activity was partial. The reactions of the blue and purple forms after photoexcitation are both quantitatively accounted for by a proposed scheme, K in equilibrium with L1 in equilibrium with L2----BR, but with the addition of an L1 in equilibrium with M reaction with unfavorable pKa for Schiff base deprotonation in the purple form. The latter hinders the transient accumulation of M, and the consequent branching at L1 allows only partial proton transport activity. The results are consistent with the existence of a complex counterion for the Schiff base proposed earlier (De Groot, H. J. M., Harbison, G. S., Herzfeld, J., and Griffin, R. G. (1989) Biochemistry 28, 3346-3353) and suggest that Asp85, Asp212, and at least one other protonable residue participate in it.  相似文献   

17.
The photoreaction of the E194Q mutant of bacteriorhodopsin has been investigated at various pH values by time-resolved step-scan Fourier-transform infrared difference spectroscopy employing the attenuated total reflection technique. The difference spectrum at pH 8.4 is comparable to the N-BR difference spectra of the wild type with the remarkable exception that D85 is deprotonated. Since the retinal configuration is not perturbed by the E194Q mutation, it is concluded that there is no interaction of D85 with retinal during the lifetime of the N state. At pH 6, a consecutive state to the O intermediate is detected in which D212 is transiently protonated. The comparison with wild-type bacteriorhodopsin reveals that protonation of D212 represents an intermediate step during proton transfer from D85 to the proton release group in the final stage of the reaction cycle. The described effects are more pronounced in the E194Q mutant than in the E204Q mutant demonstrating different roles of these two glutamates/glutamic acids at least in the final stages of the catalytic cycle of bacteriorhodopsin.  相似文献   

18.
P Ormos  K Chu  J Mourant 《Biochemistry》1992,31(30):6933-6937
Infrared spectroscopy is used to characterize the transitions in the photocycle of bR involving the M intermediate. It has been shown previously that in this part of the photocycle a large protein conformational change takes place that is important for proton pumping. In this work we separate the spectra of the L, M, and N intermediates in order to better describe the timing of the molecular changes. We use the photoreaction of the M intermediate to separate its spectrum from those of L and N. At temperatures between 220 and 270 K a mixture of M and L or N is produced by illumination with green light. Subsequent blue illumination selectively drives M back into the ground state and the difference between the spectra before and after blue excitation yields the spectrum of M. Below about 250 K and L/M mixture is separated; at higher temperatures an M/N mixture is seen. We find that the spectrum of M is identical in the two temperature regions. The large protein conformational change is seen to occur during the M to N transition. Our results confirm that Asp-96 is transiently deprotonated in the L state. The only aspartic protonation changes between M and bR are the protonation of Asp-85 and Asp-212 that occur simultaneously during the L to M transition. Blue-light excitation of M results in deprotonation of both. The results suggest a quadrupolelike interaction of the Schiff base, Asp-85, Asp-212, and an additional positive charge in bR.  相似文献   

19.
Glutaraldehyde, aluminum ions and glycerol (that inhibit the M intermediate decay in the wild-type bacteriorhodopsin and azide-induced M decay in the D96N mutant by stabilization of the M(closed)) accelerate the N decay in the D96N mutant. The aluminum ions, the most potent activator of the N decay, induce a blue shift of the N difference spectrum by approximately 10 nm. Protonated azide as well as acetate and formate inhibit the N decay in both the D96N mutant and the wild-type protein. It is concluded that the N intermediate represents, in fact, an equilibrium mixture of the two ('open' and 'closed') forms. These two forms, like M(closed) and M(open), come to an equilibrium in the microseconds range. The absorption spectrum of the N(open) is slightly shifted to red in comparison to that of the N(closed). Again, this resembles the M forms. 13-cis-all-trans re-isomerization is assumed to occur in the N(closed) form only. Binding of 1-2 molecules of protonated azide stabilizes the N(open) form. Existence of the 'open' and 'closed' forms of the M and N intermediates provides the appropriate explanation of the cooperative phenomenon as well as some other effects on the bacteriorhodopsin photocycle. Summarizing the available data, we suggest that M(open) is identical to the M(N) form, whereas M1 and M2 are different substates of M(closed).  相似文献   

20.
The pK(a) values of D85 in the wild-type and R82Q, as well as R82A recombinant bacteriorhodopsins, and the Schiff base in the D85N, D85T, and D85N/R82Q proteins, have been determined by spectroscopic titrations in the dark. They are used to estimate the coulombic interaction energies and the pK(a) values of the Schiff base, D85, and R82 during proton transfer from the Schiff base to D85, and the subsequent proton release to the bulk in the initial part of the photocycle. The pK(a) of the Schiff base before photoexcitation is calculated to be in effect only 5.3-5.7 pH units higher than that of D85; overcoming this to allow proton transfer to D85 requires about two thirds of the estimated excess free energy retained after absorption of a photon. The proton release on the extracellular surface is from an unidentified residue whose pK(a) is lowered to about 6 after deprotonation of the Schiff base (Zimanyi, L., G. Varo, M. Chang, B. Ni, R. Needleman, and J.K. Lanyi, 1992. Biochemistry. 31:8535-8543). We calculate that the pK(a) of the R82 is 13.8 before photoexcitation, and it is lowered after proton exchange between the Schiff base and D85 only by 1.5-2.3 pH units. Therefore, coulombic interactions alone do not appear to change the pK(a) of R82 as much and D85 only by 1.5-2.3 pH units. Therefore, coulombic interactions alone do not appear to change the pK(a) of R82 as much as required if it were the proton release group.  相似文献   

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