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How vertebrate and invertebrate visual pigments differ in their mechanism of photoactivation

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PubMed Central1999-05-25 更新2026-05-02 收录
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https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC26857/
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资源简介:
In vertebrate visual pigments, a glutamic acid serves as a negative counterion to the positively charged chromophore, a protonated Schiff base of retinal. When photoisomerization leads to the Schiff base deprotonating, the anionic glutamic acid becomes protonated, forming a neutral species that activates the visual cascade. We show that in octopus rhodopsin, the glutamic acid has no anionic counterpart. Thus, the “counterion” is already neutral, so no protonated form of an initially anionic group needs to be created to activate. This helps to explain another observation—that the active photoproduct of octopus rhodopsin can be formed without its Schiff base deprotonating. In this sense, the mechanism of light activation of octopus rhodopsin is simpler than for vertebrates, because it eliminates one of the steps required for vertebrate rhodopsins to achieve their activating state.
提供机构:
National Academy of Sciences
创建时间:
1999-05-25
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