3 resultados para Static transfer switch

em National Center for Biotechnology Information - NCBI


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A new and sensitive molecular probe, 2-(2′-hydroxyphenyl)imidazo[1,2-a]pyridine (HPIP), for monitoring structural changes in lipid bilayers is presented. Migration of HPIP from water into vesicles involves rupture of hydrogen (H) bonds with water and formation of an internal H bond once the probe is inside the vesicle. These structural changes of the dye allow the occurrence of a photoinduced intramolecular proton-transfer reaction and a subsequent twisting/rotational process upon electronic excitation of the probe. The resulting large Stokes-shifted fluorescence band depends on the twisting motion of the zwitterionic phototautomer and is characterized in vesicles of dimyristoyl-phosphatidylcholine and in dipalmitoyl-phosphatidylcholine at the temperature range of interest and in the presence of cholesterol. Because the fluorescence of aqueous HPIP does not interfere in the emission of the probe within the vesicles, HPIP proton-transfer/twisting motion fluorescence directly allows us to monitor and quantify structural changes within bilayers. The static and dynamic fluorescence parameters are sensitive enough to such changes to suggest this photostable dye as a potential molecular probe of the physical properties of lipid bilayers.

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Unidirectional proton transport in bacteriorhodopsin is enforced by the switching machinery of the active site. Threonine 89 is located in this region, with its O—H group forming a hydrogen bond with Asp-85, the acceptor for proton transfer from the Schiff base of the retinal chromophore. Previous IR spectroscopy of [3-18O]threonine-labeled bacteriorhodopsin showed that the hydrogen bond of the O—D group of Thr-89 in D2O is strengthened in the K photocycle intermediate. Here, we show that the strength and orientation of this hydrogen bond remains unchanged in the L intermediate and through the M intermediate. Furthermore, a strong interaction between Asp-85 and the O—H (O—D) group of Thr-89 in M is indicated by a shift in the C⩵O stretching vibration of the former because of 18O substitution in the latter. Thus, the strong hydrogen bond between Asp-85 and Thr-89 in K persists through M, contrary to structural models based on x-ray crystallography of the photocycle intermediates. We propose that, upon photoisomerization of the chromophore, Thr-89 forms a tight, persistent complex with one of the side-chain oxygens of Asp-85 and is thereby precluded from participating in the switching process. On the other hand, the loss of hydrogen bonding at the other oxygen of Asp-85 in M may be related to the switching event.

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The NIFL regulatory protein controls transcriptional activation of nitrogen fixation (nif) genes in Azotobacter vinelandii by direct interaction with the enhancer binding protein NIFA. Modulation of NIFA activity by NIFL, in vivo occurs in response to external oxygen concentration or the level of fixed nitrogen. Spectral features of purified NIFL and chromatographic analysis indicate that it is a flavoprotein with FAD as the prosthetic group, which undergoes reduction in the presence of sodium dithionite. Under anaerobic conditions, the oxidized form of NIFL inhibits transcriptional activation by NIFA in vitro, and this inhibition is reversed when NIFL is in the reduced form. Hence NIFL is a redox-sensitive regulatory protein and may represent a type of flavoprotein in which electron transfer is not coupled to an obvious catalytic activity. In addition to its ability to act as a redox sensor, the activity of NIFL is also responsive to adenosine nucleotides, particularly ADP. This response overrides the influence of redox status on NIFL and is also observed with refolded NIFL apoprotein, which lacks the flavin moiety. These observations suggest that both energy and redox status are important determinants of nif gene regulation in vivo.