P588, A SECOND RETINAL-CONTAINING PIGMENT IN HALOBACTERIUM HALOBIUM |
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Authors: | H. J. Weber R. A. Bogomolni |
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Affiliation: | Cardiovascular Research Institute and Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics, University of California, San Francisco CA 94143, U.S.A. |
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Abstract: | Abstract— Halobacterium mutant strains with defects in the biosynthesis of various pigments have been isolated. One of these strains, mutant ET-15, is incapable of producing the light-driven proton pump bacteriorhodopsin and the carotenoid bacterioruberin. However, ET-15 synthesizes another photochemically active, retinal-containing pigment, P588, which mediates light-induced proton uptake enhanced by uncouplers. P588 and bacteriorhodopsin are simultaneously present in wild-type cells grown under normal conditions; however, they can be distinguished by the following criteria. - 1 They can be separated by independent mutational events.
- 2 Proton ionophores such as FCCP diminish bacteriorhodopsin-driven proton translocation but enhance P588-mediated proton flows. We define here proton translocations which can be diminished by the addition of uncouplers (e.g. FCCP) as ‘active’, others which can be enhanced by FCCP as ‘passive’.
- 3 The kinetic and spectral properties of the photocycle intermediates of bacteriorhodopsin and P588 are different.
- 4 The action spectrum for photocycling of P588 is red-shifted with respect to that for bacteriorhodopsin.
A comparison of action spectra for proton translocations with that for photocycling links pigment P588 and light-driven, passive proton uptake by ET-15 envelope vesicles. When chemically bleached P588 was regenerated with all-trans-retinal, both photochemical activity and light-induced proton inflow were restored to equal extents. This identifies P588 with the energizer for the passive proton flows. |
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