РефератыИностранный языкThThe Biochemical Nature Oflight Detection And Emission

The Biochemical Nature Oflight Detection And Emission

The Biochemical Nature Of?light Detection And Emission Essay, Research Paper


In this essay I aim to describe the range of biochemical pathways and


mechanisms used by living organisms both to detect and to emit light.? I will discuss general principles employed,


and illustrate the range of different biochemistry involved by the use of many


specific examples.Light Detection ????


I will discuss the mechanism and function of light detection by five


groups of light detecting molecule.? The


biggest of these is the rhodopsin group of proteins, I will also look at the


role of phytochromes, cryptochromes, flavoproteins and porphirins in light


detection.????


Rhodopsins are found in a diverse array of organisms, all featuring a


retinoid prosthetic group linked to a an apo-protein, opsin via a protonated


schiff base linkage.? Electrons from the


schiff base lone pair occupy an extra orbital?


(the ?n orbital?), therefore electrons can undergo a n-p* transition as


well as a p-p* transition.? ?Retinal proteins were first discovered in 1876 by Bell, who


observed a reddish pigment that bleaches on exposure to light, which he called


visual purple.? Most rhodopsins contain


retinal as the prosthetic group, but some have one of the other chromophores as


shown below.?? For example freshwater


fish have a rhodopsin containing 3,4-didehydroretinal, which has a red shifted


UV absorption band.?? The opsins found


in all organisms show strong homology for one another.??


All rhodopsins seem to be involved in light detection, with the notable


exception of bacteriorhodopsin, which pumps protons using energy from light


photons in order to generate ATP in anaerobic conditions i.e. is not a light


sensing protein. ????


Halobacteria do however have two sensory rhodopsins.? Sensory rhodopsin I (archaeorhodopsin) has


all trans retinal as the prosthetic group in its native state.? It is photoisomerised by green-orange light


(lmax


= 587 nm) to the deprotonated 13-cis state (lmax = 370nm).? Reisomerisation to the all-trans state is


accelerated by absorption at 370nm.? A response is elucidated in the bacterium


by a pumping of protons by the rhodopsin.?


Sensory rhodopsin I causes the halobacteria to show a phototactic


response to green light (needed for bacteriorhodopsin function), and a


photophobic response to UV light (causes cell damage).?? Sensory rhodopsin II (photorhodopsin) also


has the retinal chromophore in the all-trans state.? Light absorption causes chloride ions to


be pumped across the membrane, triggering a photophobic response to blue-green


light. ???


???


Bovine rhodopsin is the most extensively studied of mammalian


rhodopsins.? It is a single polypeptide


of 348 amino acids which forms 7 TM helices and has a Mr of approximately


38kDa.? Upon absorption of light it


follows the photocycle pictured below.????


The retinal chromophore shows a bathochromic shift on attachment to an


opsin.? This can be explained by an


interaction with two carboxylate groups which act as counter ions, shifting the


lmax


from 440nm (in methanol) to 500nm (in rhodopsin).?? The different absorption maximums of the cone cells of the


retina can be explained by differing counter ion structure in their opsins.? Glu 113 has been determined as a counter ion


by site directed mutagenesis experiments. ????


The photocycles of rhodopsins have been studied using time resolved


laser spectroscopy.? The intermediates


have been isolated by low-temperature spectroscopy, i.e. rapid cooling thus


blocking the normal decay of the intermediates.? For example the photocycle of Octopus rhodopsin was


elucidated.?? It was found that


metarhodopsin is thermostable , thus doesn?t bleach in the retina.? FTIR data has suggested that the interaction


of the chromophore with opsin in the batho state is very different to bovine


rhodopsin.????


Fly visual sense cells have a sensitizing pigment ? 3-hydroxyretinol,


which binds non-covalently to the rhodopsin.??


The sensitizing pigment absorbs in the UV, then transfers the energy to


11-cis 3-hydroxyretinal via radiationless dipole-dipole interactions.?? This allows flys to receive visual


information from wavelengths in the UV (lmax = 350nm). ????


????


The physiological response to light absorption has been studied in


detail in higher animals.?? In mammals


the rhodopsin molecules are found in the membrane of the outer segment of the


retina?s rod (or cone) cells.? In the


dark sodium and calcium ions are able to enter the outer segment through cGMP


gated channels.? This inward movement


balances the outward flux of cations caused by the sodium-potassium pump. Upon


absorption of a photon and the isomerisation of retinal, the following


transduction cascade occurs. ??????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????


cGMP???????????????? inactive cGMP???????????????????????? active cGMP???????????????????????????????????? cation channnels phosphodiesterase??????????????????? phosphodiesterase??????????????????????????? close ???????????? ????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????


5` GMP ? ?????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????


??????????????????????????????????????hyperpolarised ???????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????


electrical signal ? ?????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????


????????????? ??????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????


slowing of neurotransmitter ??????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????


release at synaptic terminal????


The cGMP phosphodiesterase is activated by the G-protein Transducin?s a subunit.


Transducin is activated by the binding of Metarhodopsin II (the photoexcited


state of rhodopsin).?? This transduction


cascade allows a large amplification of the original photon absorption into a


transmittable electrical signal. One Metarhodopsin II molecule can activate


many Tas before the retinal dissociates from the opsin apo-protein. One Ta will remove the


inhibition from one phosphodiesterase, which can hydrolyse up to 1000 cGMP


molecules per second. ????


Cryo-elcctron microscopy has delivered structural information about


rhodopsin and t

he intermediates of the photocycle that has allowed the changes


in structure on photoexcitation to be elucidated.? A motion of helix III relative to helix IV has been identified ?


this would mean a change in the conformation of the third cytoplasmic loop,


which is the region that interacts with Ta.? Retinal directly interacts with helix III in the region of


Glu121.? Isomerisation of retinal


results in a rearrangement in hydrogen bonding between Glu134, Tyr223, Trp265,


Lys296 and Tyr306.? Breakage of the salt


bridge between Lys296 and Glu113 allows activation to take place i.e.


metarhodopsin II can form.??


Metarhodopsin II is deactivated by phosphorylation and arrestin


binding.?? Arrestin binds to Ser334,


Ser338, Ser343 near the C terminus of opsin. Ta deactivates itself by its


own GTPase activity. ?Rhodopsin kinase


is inhibited by Ca2+ bound recoverin, so when the cytosolic [Ca2+]


decreases rhodopsin kinase becomes more active.? Phosphodiesterase recombines with its inhibitory subunits.??? The drop in cytosolic calcium


concentration from 0.5 to 0.1mM after a light flash stimulates guanylate cyclase which results in


the reopening of cation channels and the dissipation of the electrical


signal.??? The regeneration of rhodopsin


after photobleaching starts with the dissociation of all-trans retinal from opsin


and its conversion to all-trans retinol.?


An isomerase converts all-trans to 11-cis retinol, which is then


dehydrogenated to 11-cis retinal.?? This


mechanism would not be fast enough to maintain the rhodopsin content of the


membrane, so it only occurs occasionally.?


There is instead a fast light mediated interconversion between


metarhodopsin and rhodopsin, i.e. rhodopsin is regenerated by the absorption of


light by metarhodopsin and subsequent reisomerisation of retinal.?? In invertebrates the retinal does not


dissociate fron the opsin, an exchange of chromophore occurs between two


pigment systems, rhodopsin and retinochrome by a retinal binding protein.? Retinochrome is found associated with the


inner segment.? It consists of an


apo-protein of Mr 24000 and bound retinal (all-trans).? Absorbance of light (lmax = 496nm)


causes isomerisation of all-trans to 11-cis retinal. ???


There are two known retinal disorders related to rhodopsin, Retinis


pigmentosa and congenital night blindness.??


70 different mutations in the rhodopsin gene have been identified that


can cause retinis pigmentosa, either by producing a misfolded opsin or


producing one which is unable to bind retinal.?


Congenital night blindness is an inability of the retina to adapt to


dark conditions.? Two disease causing


mutations have been identified ? Ala292 to Glu and Gly90 to Asp. ???????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????


????


The phytochrome light detection and signaling pathway has a wide range


of physiological roles within plants including phototropism of seedlings, ion


fluxes, leaf orientation, intracellular movements and day length dependent


processes. The phytochrome protein has a Mr 0f 120,000 an exists as a dimer.? Little sequence homology is seen between


phytochromes in different plants, for example only 65% homology between oat and


zucchini. However the hydropathy profiles between different phytochromes are


very similar.? Light absorption by the


tetrapyrrole chromophore causes structural changes in the chromophore which are


transmitted to the surrounding apo-protein.?


CD studies carried out in the UV spectrum have revealed that large


conformational changes occur near the N-terminus upon phototransformation of Pr


to Pfr and vice versa.? Absorption in


the red band of the spectrum (lmax = 666nm) converts the inactive Pr to the physiologically active


Pfr.? Absorption in the far red (lmax = 730nm)


will reconvert the phytochrome.????? ??? Pr???


??????????????????Lumi-R? ????Meta-Ra? ?????Meta-Rc?????????Pfr????????????????? ?????????response Biosynthesis???????????????????????????????????? ????????????????????????????????Degradation ?? ????


Absorption at 666nm causes the isomerisation of the C15-C16 bond from


cis to trans.? The structures of the two


forms of the tetrapyrrole chromophore are shown below. ??? The


chromophore is linked to the protein via a thioester linkage, although the


nature of the overall chromophore-protein interaction is still unclear, it is


thought that hydrophobic interactions might be important.?? The apo-protein and chromophore synthesis


are regulated separately-only Pr is synthesised and Pfr is degraded 100x faster


than Pr, thus functioning as a mechanism of replenishing Pr. The biochemical


mechanism for Pfr elucidating its response is not known, but a kinase activity


has been found in phytochrome preparations, so it could be by phosphorylation.? ?It


is thought that Pfr binds to operators on the DNA sequence and effects the rate


of transcription.?? Pfr thus regulates


gene expression in a tissue specific manner.?


It can also elicit a response by regulating enzyme activity.? ????


The physiological response could be under control of one of a range of


light factors measured by phytochrome; light quality (spectral distribution),


light quantity, direction of light, duration of light and polarisation of


light. ????


It is likely that phytochrome regulates enzymes by phosphorylating them,


for example NTPase activity can be shown to be light controlled.? Intracellular movement is regulated by the


Ca2+ gradient across the cell, which in turn is generated by the Pr/Pfr


gradient across the cell.? Phytochrome


is oriented in the membrane, and can therefore cause a response to the direction


of light.? The direction of light


falling on a leaf will cause a specific Pr/Pfr gradient to be set up across the


cell, which will effect actin/myosin such that the leaf is directed at 90o


to the plane of light.????


Porphyrins are derivatives of porphin such as haem or uroporphirnogen


VII.Evidence for their participation in


photobiological phenomena relies on the similarity in spectral nature between


the absorption spectra of the porphyrin and the action spectra of the biological


response.?? The spectral nature or a


particular porphyrin depends on the side chain protonation of N atoms and the chelation


of metal of metal ions.? They typically


have a strong absorption band in the far violet called the ?Soret band?.

Сохранить в соц. сетях:
Обсуждение:
comments powered by Disqus

Название реферата: The Biochemical Nature Oflight Detection And Emission

Слов:1953
Символов:15216
Размер:29.72 Кб.