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  • Title: Time-resolved fourier transform infrared study of structural changes in the last steps of the photocycles of Glu-204 and Leu-93 mutants of bacteriorhodopsin.
    Author: Kandori H, Yamazaki Y, Hatanaka M, Needleman R, Brown LS, Richter HT, Lanyi JK, Maeda A.
    Journal: Biochemistry; 1997 Apr 29; 36(17):5134-41. PubMed ID: 9136874.
    Abstract:
    The last intermediate in the photocycle of the light-driven proton pump bacteriorhodopsin is the red-shifted O state. The structure and dynamics of the last step in the photocycle were characterized with time-resolved Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy of the mutants of Glu-204 and Leu-93, which accumulate this intermediate in much larger amounts than the wild type. The results show that E204Q and E204D give distorted all-trans-retinal chromophore like the O intermediate of the wild type. This is simply due to the perturbation of the proton acceptor function of Glu-204 in the O-to-BR transition in the Glu-204 mutants. The corresponding red-shifted intermediates of L93M, L93T, and L93S have a 13-cis chromophore like the N intermediate of the wild type, as reported from analysis of extracted retinal [Delaney, J. K., Schweiger, U., & Subramaniam, S. (1995) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 92, 11120-11124]. In spite of their different chromophore structures from the O intermediate, the red-shifted intermediates are similar to the O intermediate but not to the N intermediate of the wild type with respect to structural changes in the peptide carbonyls. The structural changes around Asp-96 in the N intermediate are completely restored also in the red-shifted intermediates of the Leu-93 mutants like in the O intermediate. These results imply that the protein structural changes in the last step proceed regardless of thermal isomerization of the chromophore. Time-resolved Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy with the Glu-204 mutants suggests that the response of Asp-204 (Glu-204 in the wild type) to the protonation of Asp-85 during formation of the M intermediate, which results in proton release, is slow and may occur through structural changes.
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