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Aspartic acid-96 is the internal proton donor in the reprotonation of the Schiff base of bacteriorhodopsin

TLDR
Both the proton and azide effects, which are absent in wild type, indicate that the internal donor is removed and that the reprotonation pathway is different from wild type in these mutants.
Abstract
Above pH 8 the decay of the photocycle intermediate M of bacteriorhodopsin splits into two components: the usual millisecond pH-independent component and an additional slower component with a rate constant proportional to the molar concentration of H+, [H+]. In parallel, the charge translocation signal associated with the reprotonation of the Schiff base develops a similar slow component. These observations are explained by a two-step reprotonation mechanism. An internal donor first reprotonates the Schiff base in the decay of M to N and is then reprotonated from the cytoplasm in the N----O transition. The decay rate of N is proportional to [H+]. By postulating a back reaction from N to M, the M decay splits up into two components, with the slower one having the same pH dependence as the decay of N. Photocycle, photovoltage, and pH-indicator experiments with mutants in which aspartic acid-96 is replaced by asparagine or alanine, which we call D96N and D96A, suggest that Asp-96 is the internal proton donor involved in the re-uptake pathway. In both mutants the stoichiometry of proton pumping is the same as in wild type. However, the M decay is monophasic, with the logarithm of the decay time [log (tau)] linearly dependent on pH, suggesting that the internal donor is absent and that the Schiff base is directly reprotonated from the cytoplasm. Like H+, azide increases the M decay rate in D96N. The rate constant is proportional to the azide concentration and can become greater than 100 times greater than in wild type. Thus, azide functions as a mobile proton donor directly reprotonating the Schiff base in a bimolecular reaction. Both the proton and azide effects, which are absent in wild type, indicate that the internal donor is removed and that the reprotonation pathway is different from wild type in these mutants.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Electron-crystallographic refinement of the structure of bacteriorhodopsin.

TL;DR: Using electron diffraction data corrected for diffuse scattering together with additional phase information from 30 new images of tilted specimens, an improved experimental density map has been calculated for bacteriorhodopsin and the overall accuracy of the co-ordinates of residues in the other six helices has been improved.
Journal ArticleDOI

Microbial and animal rhodopsins: structures, functions, and molecular mechanisms.

TL;DR: Rhodopsins found in Eukaryotes, Bacteria, and Archaea consist of opsin apoproteins and a covalently linked retinal which is employed to absorb photons for energy conversion or the initiation of intra- or intercellular signaling.
Journal ArticleDOI

Surface of bacteriorhodopsin revealed by high-resolution electron crystallography

TL;DR: In this paper, electron microscopy was used to obtain images of bacteriorhodopsin at 3.0 A resolution, revealing the distribution of charged residues on both sides of the membrane surface.
Journal ArticleDOI

From femtoseconds to biology: mechanism of bacteriorhodopsin's light-driven proton pump.

TL;DR: In this article, the C-T model for bacteriorhodopsin has been integrated into an explicit molecular model for proton pumping in the retinal chromophore of a retinal-containing protein that functions as a light-driven proton pump.
Journal ArticleDOI

Vibrational spectroscopy of bacteriorhodopsin mutants: light-driven proton transport involves protonation changes of aspartic acid residues 85, 96, and 212

TL;DR: A model for the proton-pumping mechanism of bR is derived, which features proton transfers among Asp-85, -96, and -212, the chromophore Schiff base, and other ionizable groups within the protein.
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