Molecular dynamics simulations of retinal in rhodopsin: from the dark-adapted state towards lumirhodopsin.
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] T. Straatsma,et al. THE MISSING TERM IN EFFECTIVE PAIR POTENTIALS , 1987 .
[2] Klaus Schulten,et al. Molecular dynamics investigation of primary photoinduced events in the activation of rhodopsin. , 2002, Biophysical journal.
[3] R G Griffin,et al. Solid-state NMR studies of the mechanism of the opsin shift in the visual pigment rhodopsin. , 1990, Biochemistry.
[4] H. D. de Groot,et al. Retinylidene ligand structure in bovine rhodopsin, metarhodopsin-I, and 10-methylrhodopsin from internuclear distance measurements using 13C-labeling and 1-D rotational resonance MAS NMR. , 1999, Biochemistry.
[5] K. Palczewski,et al. Activation of rhodopsin: new insights from structural and biochemical studies. , 2001, Trends in biochemical sciences.
[6] R. Mathies,et al. Chromophore structure in lumirhodopsin and metarhodopsin I by time-resolved resonance Raman microchip spectroscopy. , 2001, Biochemistry.
[7] H. D. de Groot,et al. Ultra-high-field MAS NMR assay of a multispin labeled ligand bound to its G-protein receptor target in the natural membrane environment: electronic structure of the retinylidene chromophore in rhodopsin. , 2001, Biochemistry.
[8] H Gobind Khorana,et al. Rhodopsin structure, dynamics, and activation: a perspective from crystallography, site-directed spin labeling, sulfhydryl reactivity, and disulfide cross-linking. , 2003, Advances in protein chemistry.
[9] R. Mathies,et al. Resonance Raman studies of bathorhodopsin: evidence for a protonated Schiff base linkage. , 1979, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[10] Klaus Schulten,et al. Structural changes during the formation of early intermediates in the bacteriorhodopsin photocycle. , 2002, Biophysical journal.
[11] G. Fain,et al. Adaptation in vertebrate photoreceptors. , 2001, Physiological reviews.
[12] H. Hamm. How activated receptors couple to G proteins , 2001, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[13] Jürgen Hafner,et al. The Nature of the Complex Counterion of the Chromophore in Rhodopsin , 2004 .
[14] K. Palczewski,et al. Crystal Structure of Rhodopsin: A G‐Protein‐Coupled Receptor , 2000, Science.
[15] D. Sandström,et al. Direct determination of a molecular torsional angle in the membrane protein rhodopsin by solid-state NMR , 1997 .
[16] T. Sakmar,et al. Chromophore structural changes in rhodopsin from nanoseconds to microseconds following pigment photolysis. , 1997, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[17] E. Evans. Energy landscapes of biomolecular adhesion and receptor anchoring at interfaces explored with dynamic force spectroscopy. , 1998, Faraday discussions.
[18] Anthony Watts,et al. Relative orientation between the beta-ionone ring and the polyene chain for the chromophore of rhodopsin in native membranes. , 2002, Biochemistry.
[19] A. Lewis,et al. ASSIGNING THE RESONANCE RAMAN SPECTRAL FEATURES OF RHODOPSIN, ISORHODOPSIN AND BATHORHODOPSIN IN BOVINE PHOTOSTATIONARY STATE SPECTRA ‡ , 1979, Photochemistry and photobiology.
[20] S. Kiihne,et al. 1H and 13C MAS NMR evidence for pronounced ligand–protein interactions involving the ionone ring of the retinylidene chromophore in rhodopsin , 2002, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[21] T. Sakmar. Rhodopsin: a prototypical G protein-coupled receptor. , 1998, Progress in nucleic acid research and molecular biology.
[22] K. Palczewski,et al. Turned on by Ca2+! The physiology and pathology of Ca2+-binding proteins in the retina , 1996, Trends in Neurosciences.
[23] Ursula Rothlisberger,et al. Early steps of the intramolecular signal transduction in rhodopsin explored by molecular dynamics simulations. , 2002, Biochemistry.
[24] M. Karplus,et al. Evaluation of comparative protein modeling by MODELLER , 1995, Proteins.
[25] H. Seedorf,et al. Conformational similarities in the beta-ionone ring region of the rhodopsin chromophore in its ground state and after photoactivation to the metarhodopsin-I intermediate. , 2003, Biochemistry.
[26] R. Birge,et al. Structural studies of metarhodopsin II, the activated form of the G-protein coupled receptor, rhodopsin. , 2002, Biochemistry.
[27] Marcus Elstner,et al. The retinal conformation and its environment in rhodopsin in light of a new 2.2 A crystal structure. , 2004, Journal of molecular biology.
[28] B. Honig,et al. Photoisomerization, energy storage, and charge separation: a model for light energy transduction in visual pigments and bacteriorhodopsin. , 1979, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[29] M. Sheves,et al. STRUCTURAL CHANGES IN EARLY PHOTOLYSIS INTERMEDIATES OF RHODOPSIN FROM TIME-RESOLVED SPECTRAL MEASUREMENTS OF ARTIFICIAL PIGMENTS STERICALLY HINDERED ALONG THE CHROMOPHORE CHAIN , 1995 .
[30] Thomas B Woolf,et al. Molecular dynamics simulation of dark-adapted rhodopsin in an explicit membrane bilayer: coupling between local retinal and larger scale conformational change. , 2003, Journal of molecular biology.
[31] K. Palczewski,et al. Crystal structure of rhodopsin: implications for vision and beyond. , 2001, Current opinion in structural biology.
[32] H. Kandori,et al. Photoisomerization in Rhodopsin , 2001, Biochemistry (Moscow).
[33] T. Huber,et al. Membrane model for the G-protein-coupled receptor rhodopsin: hydrophobic interface and dynamical structure. , 2004, Biophysical journal.
[34] J. Gillespie,et al. PHOTOEXCITATION OF RHODOPSIN: CONFORMATION CHANGES IN THE CHROMOPHORE, PROTEIN AND ASSOCIATED LIPIDS AS DETERMINED BY FTIR DIFFERENCE SPECTROSCOPY , 1988, Photochemistry and photobiology.
[35] H. Kandori,et al. Absolute absorption spectra of batho- and photorhodopsins at room temperature. Picosecond laser photolysis of rhodopsin in polyacrylamide. , 1989, Biophysical journal.
[36] R A Mathies,et al. The first step in vision: femtosecond isomerization of rhodopsin. , 1991, Science.
[37] W. C. Lai,et al. Protein-induced bonding perturbation of the rhodopsin chromophore detected by double-quantum solid-state NMR. , 2004, Journal of the American Chemical Society.
[38] D. Oprian,et al. Mechanism of activation and inactivation of opsin: role of Glu113 and Lys296. , 1992, Biochemistry.
[39] M. Elstner,et al. 11-cis-retinal protonated Schiff base: influence of the protein environment on the geometry of the rhodopsin chromophore. , 2002, Biochemistry.
[40] R. Callender,et al. A study of the Schiff base mode in bovine rhodopsin and bathorhodopsin. , 1987, Biochemistry.
[41] K. Nakanishi,et al. Fourier-transform infrared difference spectroscopy of rhodopsin and its photoproducts at low temperature. , 1985, Biochemistry.
[42] D C Teller,et al. Advances in determination of a high-resolution three-dimensional structure of rhodopsin, a model of G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs). , 2001, Biochemistry.
[43] T. Yamato,et al. A computational study on the stability of the protonated Schiff base of retinal in rhodopsin , 2002 .
[44] Graham R. Smith,et al. Setting up and optimization of membrane protein simulations , 2002, European Biophysics Journal.
[45] F. Young. Biochemistry , 1955, The Indian Medical Gazette.
[46] Y. Shichida,et al. Visual pigment: G-protein-coupled receptor for light signals , 1998, Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences CMLS.
[47] R. Mathies,et al. Complete assignment of the hydrogen out-of-plane wagging vibrations of bathorhodopsin: chromophore structure and energy storage in the primary photoproduct of vision. , 1989, Biochemistry.
[48] G. Wald. The Molecular Basis of Visual Excitation , 1968, Nature.
[49] O. Berger,et al. Molecular dynamics simulations of a fluid bilayer of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine at full hydration, constant pressure, and constant temperature. , 1997, Biophysical journal.
[50] M. Sheves,et al. A New Photolysis Intermediate in Artificial and Native Visual Pigments. , 1991 .
[51] A. Cooper. Energy uptake in the first step of visual excitation , 1979, Nature.
[52] K Schulten,et al. VMD: visual molecular dynamics. , 1996, Journal of molecular graphics.
[53] K. Rothschild,et al. Photoactivation of rhodopsin: interplay between protein and chromophore. , 1999, Novartis Foundation symposium.
[54] Yoshinori Shichida,et al. Functional role of internal water molecules in rhodopsin revealed by x-ray crystallography , 2002, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[55] M. Sheves,et al. Steric barrier to bathorhodopsin decay in 5-demethyl and mesityl analogues of rhodopsin. , 2001, Journal of the American Chemical Society.
[56] T. Sakmar,et al. Rhodopsin: insights from recent structural studies. , 2002, Annual review of biophysics and biomolecular structure.
[57] P. Yeagle,et al. Structural studies on rhodopsin. , 2002, Biochimica et biophysica acta.
[58] S. O. Smith,et al. Low-temperature solid-state 13C NMR studies of the retinal chromophore in rhodopsin. , 1987, Biochemistry.
[59] V. Buss,et al. Inherent chirality of the retinal chromophore in rhodopsin-A nonempirical theoretical analysis of chiroptical data. , 2001, Chirality.
[60] Steven O. Smith,et al. Carbon-13 magic-angle spinning NMR studies of bathorhodopsin, the primary photoproduct of rhodopsin , 1991 .
[61] Judith Klein-Seetharaman,et al. Dynamics in Rhodopsin , 2002, Chembiochem : a European journal of chemical biology.
[62] A. Hirshfeld,et al. Coupling of retinal isomerization to the activation of rhodopsin. , 2004, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[63] Manfred Burghammer,et al. Structure of bovine rhodopsin in a trigonal crystal form. , 2003, Journal of molecular biology.
[64] R. Birge,et al. Conformation and orientation of the retinyl chromophore in rhodopsin: a critical evaluation of recent NMR data on the basis of theoretical calculations results in a minimum energy structure consistent with all experimental data. , 2001, Biochemistry.
[65] W. S. Veeman,et al. High-resolution solid-state 13C-NMR study of carbons C-5 and C-12 of the chromophore of bovine rhodopsin. Evidence for a 6-S-cis conformation with negative-charge perturbation near C-12. , 1987, European journal of biochemistry.
[66] Alessandro Laio,et al. A molecular spring for vision. , 2004, Journal of the American Chemical Society.
[67] D. Baylor,et al. Activation, deactivation, and adaptation in vertebrate photoreceptor cells. , 2001, Annual review of neuroscience.
[68] L. P. Murray,et al. The nature of the primary photochemical events in rhodopsin and isorhodopsin. , 1988, Biophysical journal.
[69] S. O. Smith,et al. The steric trigger in rhodopsin activation. , 1997, Journal of molecular biology.
[70] S. O. Smith,et al. 13C magic-angle spinning NMR studies of bathorhodopsin, the primary photoproduct of rhodopsin. , 1991, Biochemistry.
[71] T. Thorgeirsson,et al. Nanosecond photolysis of rhodopsin: evidence for a new, blue-shifted intermediate. , 1990, Biochemistry.
[72] S. Misra,et al. Kinetics and pH Dependence of Light-Induced Deprotonation of the Schiff Base of Rhodopsin: Possible Coupling to Proton Uptake and Formation of the Active Form of Meta II , 2001, Biochemistry (Moscow).
[73] R A Mathies,et al. Photons, femtoseconds and dipolar interactions: a molecular picture of the primary events in vision. , 1999, Novartis Foundation symposium.
[74] D. Kliger,et al. Spectral and Kinetic Characterization of Visual Pigment Photointermediates , 1995 .
[75] R. Mathies,et al. Retinal counterion switch in the photoactivation of the G protein-coupled receptor rhodopsin , 2003, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[76] Steven O. Smith,et al. MAGIC ANGLE SPINNING NMR STUDIES ON THE METARHODOPSIN II INTERMEDIATE OF BOVINE RHODOPSIN: EVIDENCE FOR AN UNPROTONATED SCHIFF BASE , 1992, Photochemistry and photobiology.