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Potential Proton‐Release Channels in Bacteriorhodopsin
Author(s) -
Chaumont Alain,
Baer Marcel,
Mathias Gerald,
Marx Dominik
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
chemphyschem
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.016
H-Index - 140
eISSN - 1439-7641
pISSN - 1439-4235
DOI - 10.1002/cphc.200800471
Subject(s) - bacteriorhodopsin , protonation , chemistry , deprotonation , proton transport , proton , chemical physics , gating , molecule , proton pump , photochemistry , membrane , biophysics , ion , organic chemistry , physics , biochemistry , atpase , quantum mechanics , biology , enzyme
The protein bacteriorhodopsin pumps protons across a bacterial membrane; its pumping cycle is triggered by the photoisomerization of a retinal cofactor and involves multiple proton‐transfer reactions between intermittent protonation sites. These transfers are either direct or mediated by hydrogen‐bonded networks, which may include internal water molecules. The terminal step of the proton‐transfer sequence is the proton release from a pocket near Glu194 and Glu204 to the extracellular bulk during the transition from the L to the M photointermediate states. The polar and charged side chains connecting these two regions in the crystal structures show no structural changes between the initial bR state and the L/M states, and no intermittent protonation changes have been detected so far in this region. Based on biomolecular simulations, we propose two potential proton‐release channels, which connect the release pocket to the extracellular medium. In simulations of the L photointermediate we observe bulk water entering these channels and forming transient hydrogen‐bonded networks, which could serve as fast deprotonation pathways from the release pocket to the bulk via a Grotthuss mechanism. For the first channel, we find that the triple Arg7, Glu9, and Tyr79 acts as a valve, thereby gating water uptake and release. The second channel has two release paths, which split at the position Asn76/Pro77 underneath the release group. Here, water molecules either exchange directly with the bulk or diffuse within the protein towards Arg 134/Lys129, where the exchange with the bulk occurs.