Search results for "CONFORMATIONAL-CHANGE"
showing 4 items of 4 documents
Tracking the structural dynamics of proteins in solution using time-resolved wide-angle X-ray scattering (vol 5, pg 881, 2008)
2008
Tracking Ca2+ ATPase intermediates in real time by x-ray solution scattering
2020
Sarco/endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ ATPase (SERCA) transporters regulate calcium signaling by active calcium ion reuptake to internal stores. Structural transitions associated with transport have been characterized by x-ray crystallography, but critical intermediates involved in the accessibility switch across the membrane are missing. We combined time-resolved x-ray solution scattering (TR-XSS) experiments and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations for real-time tracking of concerted SERCA reaction cycle dynamics in the native membrane. The equilibrium [Ca2] E1 state before laser activation differed in the domain arrangement compared with crystal structures, and following laser-induced release o…
Tips and turns of bacteriophytochrome photoactivation
2020
Phytochromes are ubiquitous photosensor proteins, which control the growth, reproduction and movement in plants, fungi and bacteria. Phytochromes switch between two photophysical states depending on the light conditions. In analogy to molecular machines, light absorption induces a series of structural changes that are transduced from the bilin chromophore, through the protein, and to the output domains. Recent progress towards understanding this structural mechanism of signal transduction has been manifold. We describe this progress with a focus on bacteriophytochromes. We describe the mechanism along three structural tiers, which are the chromophore-binding pocket, the photosensory module,…
Observing myoglobin proteinquake with an X-ray free-electron laser
2015
The events following the photodissociation of the bond be- tween myoglobin and its ligand have been extensively studied with a variety of experimental, theoretical and computational methods [1]. The results of these investigations have been rationalized in terms of a model that implies a protein quake- like motion [2], i.e. the propagation of the strain released upon photoexcitation through the protein similar to the prop- agation of acoustic waves during an earthquake. The exper- imental investigations performed so far have been based on spectroscopic measurements or did not have sufficient time- resolution to measure the timescale of such “proteinquake”. We have obtained direct experiment…