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Reaction Cycle of Operating Pump Protein Studied with Single-Molecule Spectroscopy

Author(s)
Talele, SaurabhKing, John T.
Issued Date
2022-11
DOI
10.1002/cphc.202200099
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/59091
Citation
CHEMPHYSCHEM, v.23, no.21, pp.e202200099
Abstract
Biological machinery relies on nonequilibrium dynamics to maintain stable directional fluxes through complex reaction cycles. For such reaction cycles, the presence of microscopically irreversible conformational transitions of the protein, and the accompanying entropy production, is of central interest. In this work, we use multidimensional single-molecule fluorescence lifetime correlation spectroscopy to measure the forward and reverse conformational transitions of bacteriorhodopsin during trans-membrane H+ pumping. We quantify the flux, affinity, enthalpy and entropy production through portions of the reaction cycle as a function of temperature. We find that affinity of irreversible conformational transitions decreases with increasing temperature, resulting in diminishing flux and entropy production. We show that the temperature dependence of the transition affinity is well fit by the Gibbs-Helmholtz relation, allowing the Delta H-trans to be experimentally extracted.
Publisher
WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
ISSN
1439-4235
Keyword (Author)
microscopic irreversibilitynonequilibrium thermodynamicspump proteinssingle-molecule spectroscopytwo-dimensional spectroscopy
Keyword
TIME-REVERSALBACTERIORHODOPSINMECHANISM

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