J. Biological
Chemistry, vol. 284, p.13562-13569 (2009).
The
four stationary states of retinal isomerization :
(protonated
Schiff-base (PSB) of the retinal in yellow)
A) All-trans ground state: the positively charged PSB makes favorable interactions with the nearby negative groups (chloride and Asp238). B) Transition state ‡(Ser115) of the counter-clockwise route for cis→trans isomerization. C) Transition state ‡(Asp238) of the clockwise route for cis→trans isomerization. D) 13-cis planar K-state: the PSB makes poorer interactions with the negative groups than in A). This is the energy storage mechanism. |
Minimum Energy
Pathway (MEP) along a 360° rotation of the PSB: QM/MM energy profile of the
pathway through the four structures shown on the left:
trans → ‡(Ser115) → 13‑cis→ ‡(Asp238) → transThe total energy (continuous black line) is the sum of: - the retinal self energy (in blue) - the opsin self energy (everything excluding retinal, in red) - and the interaction between retinal and the opsin (in green). The arrows show the two possible decay routes of 13-cis. Molecular movies showing these transitions are shown below. |
Movie 1. Decay of
K-state via ‡(Asp238),
clockwise rotation of the PSB.
The energy barrier is 18
kcal/mol relative to the 13-cis K-state. This is the preferred route
for 13-cis → trans
backisomerisation.
Download the movie
(0.4Mb)
Movie 2. Decay of K-state via ‡(Ser115),
counter-clockwise rotation of the PSB.
The energy
barrier is 23 kcal/mol relative to the 13-cis K-state.
Download the movie
(0.6Mb)
Movie 3. 360° rotation of the PSB, trans →
‡(Ser115) → 13‑cis→ ‡(Asp238) → trans.
Concatenation of movies 1 and 2. Same order of events as in the
energy profile shown above.
Download the movie
(0.9Mb)