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141.
Time-resolved spectroscopy, absorption kinetic and electric signal measurement techniques were used to study the nitrate transporting photocycle of the pharaonis halorhodopsin. The spectral titration reveals two nitrate-binding constants, assigned to two independent binding sites. The high-affinity binding site (K(a) = 11 mM) contributes to the appearance of the nitrate transporting photocycle, whereas the low-affinity constant (having a K(a) of approximately 7 M) slows the last decay process in the photocycle. Although the spectra of the intermediates are not the same as those found in the chloride transporting photocycle, the sequence of the intermediates and the energy diagrams are similar. The differences in spectra and energy levels can be attributed to the difference in the size of the transported chloride or nitrate. Electric signal measurements show that a charge is transferred across the membrane during the photocycle, as expected. A new observation is an apparent release and rebinding of a small fraction of the retinal, inside the retinal pocket, during the photocycle. The release occurs during the N-to-O transition, whereas the rebinding happens in several seconds, well after the other steps of the photocycle are over.  相似文献   
142.
143.
In the photocycle of bacteriorhodopsin at pH 7, a proton is ejected to the extracellular medium during the protonation of Asp-85 upon formation of the M intermediate. The group that releases the ejected proton does not become reprotonated until the prephotolysis state is restored from the N and O intermediates. In contrast, at acidic pH, this proton release group remains protonated to the end of the cycle. Time-resolved Fourier transform infrared measurements obtained at pH 5 and 7 were fitted to obtain spectra of kinetic intermediates, from which the spectra of M and N/O versus unphotolyzed state were calculated. Vibrational features that appear in both M and N/O spectra at pH 7, but not at pH 5, are attributable to deprotonation from the proton release group and resulting structural alterations. Our results agree with the earlier conclusion that this group is a protonated internal water cluster, and provide a stronger experimental basis for this assignment. A decrease in local polarity at the N-C bond of the side chain of Lys-216 resulting from deprotonation of this water cluster may be responsible for the increase in the proton affinity of Asp-85 through M and N/O, which is crucial for maintaining the directionality of proton pumping.  相似文献   
144.
145.
The dynamics and the spectra of the excited state of the retinal in bacteriorhodopsin (bR) and its K-intermediate at pH 0 was compared with that of bR and halorhodopsin at pH 6.5. The quantum yield of photoisomerization in acid purple bR was estimated to be at least 0.5. The change of pH from 6.5 to 2 causes a shift of the absorption maximum from 568 to 600 nm (acid blue bR) and decreases the rate of photoisomerization. A further decrease in pH from 2 to 0 shifts the absorption maximum back to 575 nm when HCl is used (acid purple bR). We found that the rate of photoisomerization increases when the pH decreases from 2 to 0. The effect of chloride anions on the dynamics of the retinal photoisomerization of acid bR (pH 2 and 0) and some mutants (D85N, D212N, and R82Q) was also studied. The addition of 1 M HCl (to make acid purple bR, pH 0) or 1 M NaCl to acid blue bR (pH 2) was found to catalyze the rate of the retinal photoisomerization process. Similarly, the addition of 1 M NaCl to the solution of some bR mutants that have a reduced rate of retinal photoisomerization (D85N, D212N, and R82Q) was found to catalyze the rate of their retinal photoisomerization process up to the value observed in wild-type bR. These results are explained by proposing that the bound Cl- compensates for the loss of the negative charges of the COO- groups of Asp85 and/or Asp212 either by neutralization at low pH or by residue replacement in D85N and D212N mutants.  相似文献   
146.
Halorhodopsin is a light-driven chloride pump in the cell membrane of Halobacterium halobium. Recently, a polypeptide of apparent Mr = 20,000 has been purified that contains the halorhodopsin chromophore. Here we use 35Cl NMR to show that the purified chromoprotein possesses two previously unknown classes of chloride-binding sites. One class exhibits a low affinity (KD much greater than 1 M) for chloride and bromide. The second class exhibits a higher affinity (KD = 110 +/- 50 mM) for chloride and also binds other anions according to the affinity series I-, SCN- greater than Br-, NO-3 greater than Cl- greater than F-, citrate. Both classes of NMR site remain intact at pH 11, indicating that the essential positive charges are provided by arginine. Also, both classes are unaffected by bleaching, suggesting that the sites are not in the immediate vicinity of the halorhodopsin chromophore. Although the chromoprotein also appears to contain the chloride-transport site (Steiner, M., Oesterhelt, D., Ariki, M., and Lanyi, J. K. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 2179-2184), this site was not detected by 35Cl NMR, suggesting that the transport site is in the interior of the protein where it is sampled slowly by chloride in the medium. It is proposed that the purified chromoprotein possesses a channel leading from the medium to the transport site and that the channel contains the high affinity NMR site which facilitates the migration of chloride between the medium and the transport site. We have also used 35Cl NMR to study chloride binding to purified monomeric bacteriorhodopsin; however, this protein contains no detectable chloride-binding sites.  相似文献   
147.
We compared (13)C NMR spectra of [3-(13)C]Ala- and [1-(13)C]Val-labeled bacterio-opsin (bO), produced either by bleaching bR with hydroxylamine or from a retinal-deficient strain, with those of bacteriorhodopsin (bR), in order to gain insight into the conformational changes of the protein backbone that lead to correct folding after retinal is added to bO. The observed (13)C NMR spectrum of bO produced by bleaching is not greatly different from that of bR, except for the presence of suppressed or decreased peak-intensities. From careful evaluation of the intensity differences between cross polarization magic angle spinning (CP-MAS) and dipolar decoupled-magic angle spinning (DD-MAS) spectra, it appears that the reduced peak-intensities arise from reduced efficiency of cross polarization or interference of internal motions with proton decoupling frequencies. In particular, the E-F and F-G loops and some transmembrane helices of the bleached bO have acquired internal motions whose frequencies interfere with proton decoupling frequencies. In contrast, the protein backbone of the bO from the retinal-negative cells is incompletely folded. Although it contains mainly a-helices, its very broad (13)C NMR signals indicate that its tertiary structure is different from bR. Importantly, this changed structure is identical in form to that of bleached bO from wild-type bR after it was regenerated with retinal in vitro, and bleached with hydroxylamine. We conclude that the binding of retinal is essential for the correct folding of bR after it is inserted in vitro into the lipid bilayer, and the final folded state does not revert to the partially folded form upon removal of the retinal.  相似文献   
148.
The recent discovery of a carotenoid light-harvesting antenna in xanthorhodopsin, a retinal-based proton pump in Salinibacter ruber, made use of photoinhibition of respiration in whole cells to obtain action spectra [Balashov et al. Science 309, (2005) 2061-2064]. Here we provide further details of this phenomenon, and compare action spectra in three different systems where carotenoids have different functions or efficiencies of light-harvesting. The kinetics of light-induced inhibition of respiration in Salinibacter ruber was determined with single short flashes, and the photochemical cross section of the photoreaction was estimated. These measurements confirm that the xanthorhodopsin complex includes no more than a few, and most likely only one, carotenoid molecule, which is far less than the core complex antenna of photosynthetic bacteria. Although the total cross-section of light absorption in the purple bacterium Rhodospirillum rubrum greatly exceeds that in Salinibacter, the cross-sections are roughly equivalent in the shared wavelength range. We show further that despite interaction of bacterioruberin with archaerhodopsin, another retinal-based proton pump, there is no significant energy transfer from this carotenoid. This emphasizes the uniqueness of the salinixanthin-retinal interaction in xanthorhodopsin, and indicates that bacterioruberin in Halorubrum species has a structural or photoprotective rather than energetic role.  相似文献   
149.
The isomeric composition of retinal in membrane-bound and in purified but detergent-free, dark-adapted halorhodopsin was found to be about 70% 13-cis and 30% all-trans. Any illumination increased the all-trans content relative to the dark-adapted state, but blue illumination shifted the isomeric composition more toward all-trans while red illumination of blue-adapted samples shifted it more toward 13-cis. In the presence of chloride this photoisomerization caused the kind of photochromic behavior reported earlier in Smith, S. O., Marvin, M. J., Bogomolni, R. A., and Mathies, R. A. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 12326-12329, i.e. blue light caused the absorption maximum to move toward longer wavelengths and red light reversed the shift. Only the all-trans chromophore exhibited the complete photocycle described earlier in detergent-solubilized halorhodopsin, and this was the form that could be associated with light-driven chloride transport activity in cell envelope vesicles. In the absence of chloride the spectroscopic changes caused by illumination were much smaller. Reconstitution of bleached preparations with 13-cis- and all-trans-retinal, in the presence and absence of chloride, confirmed that the difference between the absorption maxima of the two isomeric forms of the chromophore is affected by chloride: 13-cis-halorhodopsin absorbs at about 567-568 nm with and without chloride, and the all-trans pigment absorbs near 568 nm in the absence of chloride, but at 578 nm in its presence. The simplest explanation of this finding is that most of the red-shift which accompanies the 13-cis----all-trans transition originates from electrostatic interaction of the retinal with chloride bound in its vicinity.  相似文献   
150.
Balashov SP  Imasheva ES  Lanyi JK 《Biochemistry》2006,45(36):10998-11004
In xanthorhodopsin, a retinal protein-carotenoid complex of Salinibacter ruber, the carotenoid salinixanthin functions as a light-harvesting antenna in supplying additional excitation energy for retinal isomerization and proton transport. Another retinal protein, archaerhodopsin, has been shown to contain a carotenoid, bacterioruberin, but without an antenna function. We report here that the binding site confers a chiral geometry on salinixanthin in xanthorhodopsin and confirm that the same is true for bacterioruberin in archaerhodopsin. Cell membranes containing these rhodopsins exhibit CD spectra with sharp positive bands in the visible region where the carotenoids absorb, and in the case of xanthorhodopsin a negative band at 536 nm, as well as bands in the UV region. The carotenoid in ethanol has very weak optical activity in the visible region of the spectrum. Denaturation of the opsin upon deprotonation of the Schiff base at pH 12.5 eliminates the induced CD bands in both proteins. In one of these proteins, but not in the other, the carotenoid binding site depends entirely on the retinal. Hydrolysis of the retinal Schiff base of xanthorhodopsin with hydroxylamine eliminates the induced CD bands of salinixanthin. In contrast, hydrolysis of the Schiff base in archaerhodopsin does not abolish the CD bands of bacterioruberin. Thus, consistent with its antenna function, the carotenoid binding site interacts closely with the retinal only in xanthorhodopsin, and this interaction is the major source of the CD bands. In this protein, protonation of the counterion with a decrease in pH from 8 to 5 causes significant changes in the CD spectrum. The observed spectral features suggest that binding of salinixanthin in xanthorhodopsin involves the cyclohexenone ring of the carotenoid and its conformational heterogeneity is restricted.  相似文献   
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