41 research outputs found

    Electronic excitations in long polyenes revisited

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    The changing face of protein production

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    Evidence for a 13,14-Cis Cycle in Bacteriorhodopsin

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    We discuss to what extent the vibrational spectra of bacteriorhodopsin that have been observed and assigned by Smith et al. (1, 2) by means of resonance Raman and by Gerwert and Siebert (EMBO (Eur. Mol. Biol. Organ.) J. In press) by means of infrared absorption experiments are in agreement with a photo-cycle of bacteriorhodopsin that involves the sequence BR, IO(all-trans) → K(13,14-cis) → L(13,14-cis) → M(13-cis) → N(13-cis) → O(all-trans). Our discussion is based on a quantumchemical modified neglect of diatomic overlap [MNDO] calculation of the vibrational spectra of the relevant isomers of the protonated retinal Schiff base. In particular, we investigated in these calculations the effects of different charge environments on the frequencies of the relevant C-C single bond stretching vibrations of these isomers

    The Effect of Protonation and Electrical Interactions on the Stereochemistry of Retinal Schiff Bases

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    Based on quantumchemical MNDOC calculations it is shown that the ground-state properties of a retinal Schiff base depend sensitively on its protonation state and charge environment. This is exemplified for the equilibrium geometry, for the distribution of partial charges and, in particular, for the thermal isomerization barriers around the π-bonds. It is demonstrated that a protein, by protonating the retinal Schiff base and by providing one or two negative ions in its environment, can reduce double-bond isomerization barriers from 50 kcal/mol for the unprotonated compound to ∼ 5 kcal/mol and can increase single bond barriers from 5 kcal/mol to ∼ 20 kcal/mol. Thereby, the specific location of the ions relative to the polyene chain of the protonated retinal Schiff base determines the barrier heights. The results explain the ground-state isomerization reactions of retinal observed in bacteriorhodopsin and in squid retinochrome

    Structural investigation of bacteriorhodopsin and some of its photoproducts by polarized Fourier transform infrared spectroscopic methods-difference spectroscopy and photoselection

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    The direction of selected IR-transition moments of the retinal chromophore of bacteriorhodopsin (BR) and functional active amino acid residues are determined for light- and dark-adapted BR and for the intermediates K and L of the photocycle. Torsions around single bonds of the chromophore are found to be present in all the investigated BR states. The number of twisted single bonds and the magnitude of these torsions decreases in the order K, L, light-adapted BR, dark-adapted BR. In the last, only the C(14)—C(15) single bond is twisted. The orientation of molecular planes and chemical bonds of such protein side chains, which are perturbed during the transition of light-adapted BR to the respective intermediates, are deduced and the results compared with the current three dimensional model of BR. Trp 86 and Trp 185 are found to form a rigid part of the protein, whereas Asp 96 and Asp 115 perform molecular rearrangements upon formation of the L-intermediate
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