Search results for "rhodopsin"

showing 10 items of 63 documents

Differential expression and interaction with the visual G-protein transducin of centrin isoforms in mammalian photoreceptor cells.

2004

Photoisomerization of rhodopsin activates a heterotrimeric G-protein cascade leading to closure of cGMP-gated channels and hyperpolarization of photoreceptor cells. Massive translocation of the visual G-protein transducin, Gt, between subcellular compartments contributes to long term adaptation of photoreceptor cells. Ca(2+)-triggered assembly of a centrin-transducin complex in the connecting cilium of photoreceptor cells may regulate these transducin translocations. Here we demonstrate expression of all four known, closely related centrin isoforms in the mammalian retina. Interaction assays revealed binding potential of the four centrin isoforms to Gtbetagamma heterodimers. High affinity b…

Rhodopsingenetic structuresLightBlotting WesternBiologyBiochemistryRetinaRats Sprague-DawleyMiceCalcium-binding proteinHeterotrimeric G proteinmedicineAnimalsProtein IsoformsScattering RadiationCiliaTransducinMicroscopy ImmunoelectronMolecular BiologyCyclic GMPGlutathione TransferaseCentrosomeRetinaChromatographyDose-Response Relationship DrugReverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain ReactionCiliumCalcium-Binding ProteinsCell BiologySequence Analysis DNARod Cell Outer SegmentRecombinant ProteinsCell biologyRatsMice Inbred C57BLKineticsProtein Transportmedicine.anatomical_structureMicroscopy FluorescenceRhodopsinCentrosomeCentrinbiology.proteinCalciumCattleElectrophoresis Polyacrylamide Gelsense organsTransducinProtein BindingThe Journal of biological chemistry
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Expression and subcellular localization of USH1C/harmonin in the human retina provide insights into pathomechanisms and therapy

2021

AbstractUsher syndrome (USH) is the most common form of hereditary deafness-blindness in humans. USH is a complex genetic disorder, assigned to three clinical subtypes differing in onset, course, and severity, with USH1 being the most severe. Rodent USH1 models do not reflect the ocular phenotype observed in human patients to date; hence, little is known about the pathophysiology of USH1 in the human eye. One of the USH1 genes, USH1C, exhibits extensive alternative splicing and encodes numerous harmonin protein isoforms that function as scaffolds for organizing the USH interactome. RNA-seq analysis of human retinas uncovered harmonin_a1 as the most abundant transcript of USH1C. Bulk RNA-seq…

Scaffold proteinGene isoformRetinabiologyUsher syndromeCiliummedicine.diseasePhenotypeCell biologymedicine.anatomical_structureRhodopsinotorhinolaryngologic diseasesmedicinebiology.proteinMuller glia
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The photocycle and the structure of iron containing bacteriorhodopsin ?a kinetic and M�ssbauer spectroscopy investigation

1990

Bacteriorhodopsin (bR), converted by deionization to the blue form was reconstituted to the active purple membrane by the addition of Fe2+ or Fe3+ ions. 57Fe Mossbauer spectra of these samples were measured at different pH values (pH 3.9, pH 5.0 and pH 7.0) and at temperatures ranging from 4 K to 300 K. The hyperfine parameters reveal two iron environments with oxygen atoms in the neighbourhood of iron. Iron type 1 is in the 3+ high spin state. It is bound to acid side chains of the protein and/or the phosphate groups of the lipids. Iron type 2 is in the 2+ high spin state and is linked to carboxy groups of the protein in a rather unspecific way. Dynamics as measured by Mossbauer spectrosco…

Spin statesbiologyProtonChemistryBiophysicsBacteriorhodopsinGeneral MedicineIonCrystallographyMembraneMössbauer spectroscopySide chainbiology.proteinHyperfine structureEuropean Biophysics Journal
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Light-driven proton transport of bacteriorhodopsin incorporated into long-term stable liposomes of a polymerizable sulfolipid

1983

Abstract The chromoprotein bacteriorhodopsin from Halobacterium halobium has been incorporated into liposomes made of a fully synthetic, polymerizable lipid. Bacteriorhodopsin is found to be active in these polymer liposomes. The advantage in the use of such polymer systems concerning long-term stability in comparison with liposomes made of natural lipid is demonstrated.

SulfolipidBiophysicsBacteriorhodopsinHalobacterium halobiumBiochemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundStructural BiologyChromoproteinProton transportGeneticsOrganic chemistryLight-driven proton pumpLong-term stabilityMolecular Biologychemistry.chemical_classificationLiposomebiologyBacteriorhodopsinCell BiologyPolymerLiposomechemistrybiological sciencesbiology.proteinLight drivenBiophysicsPolymerizable synthetic lipidFEBS Letters
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Protein dynamics observed by tunable mid-IR quantum cascade lasers across the time range from 10 ns to 1 s

2017

We have developed a spectrometer based on tunable quantum cascade lasers (QCLs) for recording time-resolved absorption spectra of proteins in the mid-infrared range. We illustrate its performance by recording time-resolved difference spectra of bacteriorhodopsin in the carboxylic range (1800–1700 cm− 1) and on the CO rebinding reaction of myoglobin (1960–1840 cm− 1), at a spectral resolution of 1 cm− 1. The spectrometric setup covers the time range from 4 ns to nearly a second with a response time of 10–15 ns. Absorption changes as low as 1 × 10− 4 are detected in single-shot experiments at t > 1 μs, and of 5 × 10− 6 in kinetics obtained after averaging 100 shots. While previous time-res…

Time FactorsSpectrophotometry InfraredAbsorption spectroscopyAnalytical chemistry010402 general chemistry53001 natural sciencesMolecular physicsSpectral lineAnalytical Chemistrylaw.inventionchannelrhodopsinflash photolysislawSpectral resolutionAbsorption (electromagnetic radiation)InstrumentationSpectroscopyCarbon MonoxidebiologySpectrometerChemistrybacteriorhodopsinLasers010401 analytical chemistry500 Naturwissenschaften und Mathematik::530 Physik::530 PhysikWaterBacteriorhodopsinLasertime-resolved IR spectroscopyAtomic and Molecular Physics and Optics0104 chemical sciencesSolutionsKineticsCascadeBacteriorhodopsinsmyoglobinbiology.proteinQuantum Theory
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Retinal Vibrations in Bacteriorhodopsin are Mechanically Harmonic but Electrically Anharmonic: Evidence From Overtone and Combination Bands

2021

Fundamental vibrations of the chromophore in the membrane protein bacteriorhodopsin (BR), a protonated Schiff base retinal, have been studied for decades, both by resonance Raman and by infrared (IR) difference spectroscopy. Such studies started comparing vibrational changes between the initial BR state (all-trans retinal) and the K intermediate (13-cis retinal), being later extended to the rest of intermediates. They contributed to our understanding of the proton-pumping mechanism of BR by exploiting the sensitivity of fundamental vibrational transitions of the retinal to its conformation. Here, we report on new bands in the 2,500 to 1,800 cm−1 region of the K-BR difference FT-IR spectrum.…

bacteriorhodopsinQH301-705.5anharmonicityFTIR—spectroscopymicrobial rhodopsinscombinations and overtonesBiochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous)Biochemistryretinalanharmonic vibrational calculationsvibrational quasi-degenerate perturbation theoryMolecular BiosciencesBiology (General)Molecular BiologyOriginal ResearchFrontiers in Molecular Biosciences
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The binding of G-protein to rod outer segment phospholipids at the nitrogen–water interface

1989

In the visual process, one photoexcited rhodopsin (R*) catalyzes the activation of hundreds of G-proteins. It remains to be determined whether G-protein and R* find one another by membrane surface diffusion of these components (diffusion model) or by diffusion of G-protein through the aqueous phase (hopping model). A monolayer of each main rod outer segment (ROS) phospholipid interacting with a subphase containing G-protein, has been used to simulate the interaction of G-protein with the cytoplasmic surface of discal membranes. The possible diffusion of G-protein through the aqueous phase was then measured by observing its adsorption–desorption in the monolayer of each main ROS phospholipi…

biologyChemistryAqueous two-phase systemPhospholipidMembrane ProteinsCell BiologySurface pressureBiochemistryCrystallographychemistry.chemical_compoundMembraneGTP-Binding ProteinsCytoplasmRhodopsinMonolayerbiology.proteinAnimalsCattlePhotoreceptor CellsDiffusion (business)Molecular BiologyPhospholipidsBiochemistry and Cell Biology
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Insertion of Bacteriorhodopsin Helix C Variants into Biological Membranes

2019

A peptide corresponding to bacteriorhodopsin (bR) helix C, later named pHLIP, inserts across lipid bilayers as a monomeric α-helix at acidic pH, but is an unstructured surface-bound monomer at neutral pH. As a result of such pH-responsiveness, pHLIP targets acidic tumors and has been used as a vehicle for imaging and drug-delivery cargoes. To gain insights about the insertion of bR helix C into biological membranes, we replaced two key aspartic residues that control the topological transition from the aqueous phase into a lipid bilayer. Here, we used an in vitro transcription–translation system to study the translocon-mediated insertion of helix C-derived segments into rough microsomes. Our…

chemistry.chemical_classification0303 health sciencesLiposomebiologyChemistryGeneral Chemical EngineeringPeptideBiological membraneBacteriorhodopsinGeneral ChemistryTransloconArticleTransmembrane proteinChemistry03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineHelixBiophysicsbiology.proteinLipid bilayerQD1-999030217 neurology & neurosurgery030304 developmental biologyACS Omega
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On the role of the triplet state in the cis/trans isomerization of rhodopsin: A CASPT2//CASSCF study of a model chromophore

2011

The possibility of population of the lowest-lying triplet state (T1) in the early events of the photochemical isomerization process of a model chromophore of Rhodopsin (Rh) has been analyzed using multireference perturbation theory (CASPT2//CASSCF) methods. It is shown that the characteristics of the isomerization process namely small S1−T1 gap, presence of hydrogen out of plane active vibrational modes, and existence of a dense manifold of vibrational states, render possible the fulfilment of the conditions needed for the population of T1. The possible consequences for the photochemistry and photophysics of Rh are also discussed. © 2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Int J Quantum Chem 111:3431–3…

education.field_of_studybiologyChemistrytripletPopulationChromophoreCondensed Matter PhysicsPhotochemistryInternal conversion (chemistry)Atomic and Molecular Physics and OpticsCis trans isomerizationIntersystem crossingrhodopsinComputational chemistryRhodopsinPHOTOISOMERIZATIONCASPT2//CASSCFbiology.proteinPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryTriplet stateeducationIsomerization
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Suppression and Replacement Gene Therapy for Autosomal Dominant Disease in a Murine Model of Dominant Retinitis Pigmentosa

2011

For dominantly inherited disorders development of gene therapies, targeting the primary genetic lesion has been impeded by mutational heterogeneity. An example is rhodopsin-linked autosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa with over 150 mutations in the rhodopsin gene. Validation of a mutation-independent suppression and replacement gene therapy for this disorder has been undertaken. The therapy provides a means of correcting the genetic defect in a mutation-independent manner thereby circumventing the mutational diversity. Separate adeno-associated virus (AAV) vectors were used to deliver an RNA interference (RNAi)-based rhodopsin suppressor and a codon-modified rhodopsin replacement gene res…

genetic structuresGenetic enhancementMice TransgenicPolymerase Chain ReactionPhotoreceptor cellMiceRNA interferenceRetinitis pigmentosaDrug DiscoverymedicineGeneticsElectroretinographyAnimalsGeneMolecular BiologyPharmacologyGene therapy of the human retinabiologyAutosomal dominant traitGenetic Therapymedicine.diseaseMolecular biologyDisease Models Animalmedicine.anatomical_structureRhodopsinbiology.proteinMolecular MedicineOriginal Articlesense organsRetinitis PigmentosaMolecular Therapy
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