The site of attachment of retinal in bacteriorhodopsin. The epsilon-amino group in Lys-41 is not required for proton translocation

Huang, K. S. ; Liao, M. J. ; Gupta, C. M. ; Royal, N. ; Biemann, K. ; Khorana, H. G. (1982) The site of attachment of retinal in bacteriorhodopsin. The epsilon-amino group in Lys-41 is not required for proton translocation Journal of Biological Chemistry, 257 . pp. 8596-8599. ISSN 0021-9258

[img]
Preview
PDF - Publisher Version
426kB

Official URL: http://www.jbc.org/content/257/15/8596.abstract

Abstract

Chymotryptic fragments C-1 (amino acids 72-248) and C-2 (amino acids 1-71) of bacteriorhodopsin have been shown previously to reassociate so as to regenerate the native bacteriorhodopsin chromophore in lipid/detergent mixtures and to form functional proton-translocating vesicles. The fragment C-2 has now been selectively methylated with formaldehyde and sodium cyanoborohydride to give the epsilon-dimethylamino derivatives of Lys-30, 40, and 41 in 96-99% average yield. The methylated and unmethylated C-2 fragments were identical in their ability to reassociate with fragment C-1 and retinal to regenerate the bacteriorhodopsin chromophore and to form functional proton-translocating vesicles. In contrast, dimethylation of the lysine residues of the C-1 fragment gave a derivative which did not form an active complex with unmethylated C-2. We conclude that the epsilon-amino group in Lys-41 is not required for Schiff's base formation with retinal at any step in the light-driven proton-translocation cycle.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology.
ID Code:15948
Deposited On:16 Nov 2010 13:41
Last Modified:17 May 2016 00:47

Repository Staff Only: item control page