scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Rapid-flow resonance Raman spectroscopy of photolabile molecules: rhodopsin and isorhodopsin.

TLDR
A theory for predicting the effective sample composition in the illuminated volume as a function of the flow rate, light intensity, and spectral characteristics of the photolabile species is presented.
Abstract
We have devised a method for obtaining the resonance Raman spectrum of a photolabile molecule before it is modified by light. The essence of this technique is that the sample is flowed through the light beam at a sufficiently high velocity so that the fraction of photoisomerized (or photodestroyed) molecules in the illuminated volume is very low. This rapid-flow technique has enabled us to measure the resonance Raman spectrum of unphotolyzed bovine rhodopsin in Ammonyx LO detergent solution and in sonicated retinal disc membranes. The major features of these spectra, which are very similar to one another, are the protonated Schiff base line near 1660 cm-1, the ethylenic line at 1545 cm-1, lines due to skeletal modes at 1216, 1240, and 1270 cm-1, and a line due to C-H bending at 971 cm-1. The resonance Raman spectrum of unphotolyzed isorhodopsin formed by the addition of 9-cis-retinal to opsin was also measured. The spectrum of isorhodopsin is more complex and differs markedly from that of rhodopsin. In isorhodopsin, the ethylenic line is shifted to 1550 cm-1, and there are six lines between 1153 and 1318 cm-1. The rapid-flow technique described here makes it feasible to control the extent of interaction between light and any photolabile molecule. We present a theory for predicting the effective sample composition in the illuminated volume as a function of the flow rate, light intensity, and spectral characteristics of the photolabile species.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Retinal has a highly dipolar vertically excited singlet state: implications for vision.

TL;DR: The large excited state dipole moment of all-trans retinal indicates that the vertically excited state, which is of 1Bu parentage (C2h), has become significantly mixed with even-parity states, and is expected to facilitate isomerization in the singlet manifold.
Journal ArticleDOI

Chromophore structure in bacteriorhodopsin's N intermediate: implications for the proton-pumping mechanism.

TL;DR: By elevating the pH to 9.5 in 3 M KCl, the concentration of the N intermediate in the bacteriorhodopsin photocycle has been enhanced, and time-resolved resonance Raman spectra of this intermediate have been obtained, arguing that M412 decays directly to N in the light-adapted Photocycle.
Journal ArticleDOI

Determination of retinal chromophore structure in bacteriorhodopsin with resonance Raman spectroscopy.

TL;DR: Vibrational studies have shown that following isomerization in a tight protein binding pocket, the chromophore cannot easily relax to a planar geometry, and important unresolved questions involve the mechanism by which the protein catalyzes deprotonation of the L550 intermediate and the mechanism of the thermal conversion of M412 back to BR568.
Journal ArticleDOI

Calculations of resonance Raman spectra of conjugated molecules

TL;DR: In this article, a method for calculating the complete resonance Raman spectrum of large conjugated molecules is presented based on calculations of the Franck-Condon factors and on differentiation of the electronic transition moments with respect to the vibrational normal modes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Spectroscopic calibration and quantitation using artificial neural networks

TL;DR: Les reseaux neuronaux artificiels sont appliques pour l'etalonnage de multiples parametres spectroscopiques non lineaires en utilisant des donnees de spectroscopy infrarouge and UV-visible as discussed by the authors.
Related Papers (5)