Abstract

In spite of many still unsolved problems, the mechanism and energetics of the light-driven proton transport are now basically understood. Energy captured during photoexcitation, and retained in the form of bond rotations and strains of the retinal, is transformed into directed changes in the pKa values of vectorially arranged proton transfer groups. The framework for the spatial and temporal organization of these changes is provided by the protein near the retinal Schiff base. The transport is completed by proton transfer among three essential groups in three domains lying roughly parallel with the membrane plane (Fig. 1): (a) the anionic D85 that is included in a complex of residues on the extracellular side containing also R82, D212, Y57 and bound water; (b) the protonated Schiff base; and (c) the protonated D96 that is included in a complex of residues on the cytoplasmic side containing also R227, T46, S226, and bound water. Other neighboring polar groups and water bound elsewhere which play a role in the transport do so either by further influencing the pKa values of the three protonable groups, or by providing passive pathways for proton transfer. The Schiff base proton, destabilized after photoexcitation, is transferred to the low pKa group D85 located on the extracellular side. The access of the deprotonated Schiff base then changes to the cytoplasmic side (the 'reprotonation switch') and its proton affinity increases. Finally, the proton of the high pKa group D96, with access to the cytoplasmic side, is destabilized by a protein conformational change through rearrangement of R227, T46, S226 and bound water, and becomes transferred to the Schiff base. As shown schematically in Fig. 3, these internal events are coupled to proton release and uptake at the two aqueous surfaces. The charge of the extracellular hydrogen-bonded complex is redistributed upon protonation of D85, and if the pH is above the pKa of the complex a proton is released to the bulk. After reprotonation of the Schiff base the pKa of the cytoplasmic hydrogen-bonded complex is raised well above the pH, and D96 regains a proton from the bulk. If the pH is lower than the pKa of the extracellular complex the proton release is delayed until the end of the photocycle. In either sequence there is net transfer of a proton from the cytoplasmic to the extracellular phase. The transfer of excess free energy from the chromophore to the protein, and finally to the transported proton, is described by a characteristic thermodynamic cycle.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

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