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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Light-driven proton or chloride pumping by halorhodopsin.

Halorhodopsin from Halobacterium halobium was purified and reconstituted with lipids from purple membranes. The resulting protein-containing membrane sheets were adsorbed to a planar lipid membrane and photoelectric properties were analyzed. Depending on light conditions, halorhodopsin acted either as a light-driven chloride pump or as a proton pump: green light caused chloride transport and additional blue light induced proton pumping. In the living cell, both to these vectorial processes would be directed toward the cytoplasm and, compared to ion transport by bacteriorhodopsin, this is an inversed proton flow. Azide, a catalyst for reversible deprotonation of halorhodopsin, enhanced proton transport, and the deprotonated Schiff base in the 13-cis configuration (H410) was identified as the key intermediate of this alternative catalytic cycle in halorhodopsin. While chloride transport in halorhodopsin is mediated by a one-photon process, proton transport requires the absorption of two photons: one photon for formation of H410 and release of a proton, and one photon for photoisomerization of H410 and re-formation of H578 with concomitant uptake of a proton by the Schiff base.[1]

References

  1. Light-driven proton or chloride pumping by halorhodopsin. Bamberg, E., Tittor, J., Oesterhelt, D. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. (1993) [Pubmed]
 
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