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Photoisomerization, energy storage, and charge separation: a model for light energy transduction in visual pigments and bacteriorhodopsin.

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TLDR
A simple model for the early events in visual pigments and bacteriorhodopsin is proposed, which makes use of the likelihood that a negatively charged amino acid forms a salt bridge with the positively charged nitrogen of the retinylic chromophore.
Abstract
A simple model for the early events in visual pigments and bacteriorhodopsin is proposed. The model makes use of the likelihood that a negatively charged amino acid forms a salt bridge with the positively charged nitrogen of the retinylic chromophore. The photochemical event is a cis-trans isomerization in visual pigments and a trans-cis isomerization in bacteriorhodopsin, which in each case cleaves the salt bridge and thus separates charge in the interior of the protein. We propose that this is how the energy of a photon is transduced into chemical free energy of the primary photoproduct. The use of photoisomerization of a flexible chromophore to achieve charge separation provides a general mechanism which may be applicable to other systems. Our model explains many of the fundamental properties of visual pigments and their photoproducts. First, the extraordinarily low rate of thermally populating the ground state of the primary photoproduct, as determined from psychophysical and electrophysiological measurements, is seen as resulting from the large barrier to thermal isomerization about a double bond, perhaps enhanced by electrostatic attraction in the salt bridge. Second, the increase in energy and the spectral red shift that characterize the primary photochemical events are natural consequences of the separation of charge. Proton-dependent processes detected with picosecond techniques are proposed to be ground-state relaxation processes following the primary photochemical event. Finally, the charged groups of the salt bridge, repositioned by photoisomerization, provide a simple mechanism for vectorial proton translocation in bacteriorhodopsin.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Cyclic GMP cascade of vision.

TL;DR: The coming together of electrophysiology, biochemistry, and molecular genetics affords new opportunities in unraveling the molecular mechanism of visual transduction, and the interplay of cGMP, calcium ion, and phosphoinositides in excitation and adaptation is delineated.
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

Electrostatic calculations of the pKa values of ionizable groups in bacteriorhodopsin

TL;DR: In this article, the effects of solvation and charge-charge interactions on the pKa of ionizable groups in bacteriorhodopsin have been studied using a macroscopic dielectric model with atom-level detail.
Journal ArticleDOI

Constitutively active mutants of rhodopsin

TL;DR: It is concluded that opsin is constrained to an inactive conformation by a salt bridge between Lys-296 and Glu-113, the Schiff base counterion of visual pigment rhodopsin.
Journal ArticleDOI

The dielectric constant of a folded protein.

TL;DR: A form of the Kirkwood–Fröhlich dielectric theory that applies to polar solids and folded proteins is developed, which incorporates a factor expressing the degree to which dipolar groups are constrained within the material's structure, as well as a generalized form of Kirkwood's correlation factor.
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