| The F0 complex of the ATP synthase of Escherichia coli contains a proton pathway with large proton polarizability caused by collective proton fluctuation Biophysical Journal, Volume 68, Issue 1, 1 January 1995, Pages 104-110 F. Bartl, G. Deckers-Hebestreit, K. Altendorf and G. Zundel Abstract The F0 complex of the Escherichia coli ATP synthase embedded into cardiolipin liposomes was studied by FT-IR spectroscopy. For comparison, respective studies were performed with dried F0 liposomes and with F0 liposomes treated with N,N'-dicyclohexyl-carbodiimide (DCCD), which binds to Asp-61 of subunit c. Furthermore, the effect of H2O-->D2O exchange on the infrared spectrum was investigated. With F0 liposomes an infrared continuum is observed beginning at about 3000 cm-1 and extending toward smaller wavenumbers. In the DCCD-treated sample, this continuum is no longer observed. It vanishes also with drying of the liposomes. After H2O-->D2O exchange, this infrared continuum begins at about 2350 cm-1 and is less intense. All of these results demonstrate that a proton pathway in native F0 is present, in which the protons are shifted in a hydrogen-bonded chain with large proton polarizability due to collective proton tunneling. With the D2O-hydrated system, deuteron polarizability due to collective deuteron motion is observed, but the polarizability due to collective deuteron motion is smaller. Such pathways are very efficient, because they conduct protons or deuterons within picoseconds. These pathways lose their polarizability if the F0 complex is blocked by DCCD or if the liposomes are dried. On the basis of our results on the proton polarizability of hydrogen bonds and hydrogen-bonded systems and on the basis of structural data from the literature, the nature of the proton pathway of the F0 complex of E. coli is discussed. Abstract | PDF (736 kb) |
| Optical Anisotropy in Lipid Bilayer Membranes: Coupled Plasmon-Waveguide Resonance Measurements of Molecular Orientation, Polarizability, and Shape Biophysical Journal, Volume 80, Issue 3, 1 March 2001, Pages 1557-1567 Zdzislaw Salamon and Gordon Tollin Abstract The birefringence and linear dichroism of anisotropic thin films such as proteolipid membranes are related to molecular properties such as polarizability, shape, and orientation. Coupled plasmon-waveguide resonance (CPWR) spectroscopy is shown in the present work to provide a convenient means of evaluating these parameters in a single lipid bilayer. This is illustrated by using 1–10mol % of an acyl chain chromophore-labeled phosphatidylcholine (PC) incorporated into a solid-supported PC bilayer deposited onto a hydrated silica surface. CPWR measurements were made of refractive index and extinction coefficient anisotropies with two exciting light wavelengths, one of which is absorbed by the chromophore and one of which is not. These results were used to calculate longitudinal and transverse molecular polarizabilities, the orientational order parameter and average angle between the longitudinal axis of the lipid molecule and the membrane normal, and the molecular shape factors of the lipid molecules. The values thereby obtained are in excellent agreement with parameters determined by other techniques, and provide a powerful tool for analyzing lipid-protein, protein-protein, and protein-ligand interactions in proteolipid films. Abstract | Full Text | PDF (256 kb) |
| Photoinduced Transformations in Bacteriorhodopsin Membrane Monitored with Optical Microcavities Biophysical Journal, Volume 92, Issue 6, 15 March 2007, Pages 2223-2229 Juraj Topolancik and Frank Vollmer Abstract Photoinduced molecular transformations in a self-assembled bacteriorhodpsin (bR) monolayer are monitored by observing shifts in the near-infrared resonant wavelengths of linearly polarized modes circulating in a microsphere cavity. We quantify the molecular polarizability change upon all- to 13- isomerization and deprotonation of the chromophore retinal (∼−57Å) and determine its orientation relative to the bR membrane (∼61°). Our observations establish optical microcavities as a sensitive off-resonant spectroscopic tool for probing conformations and orientations of molecular self-assemblies and for measuring changes of molecular polarizability at optical frequencies. We provide a general estimate of the sensitivity of the technique and discuss possible applications. Abstract | Full Text | PDF (334 kb) |
Copyright © 1995 The Biophysical Society. All rights reserved.
Biophysical Journal, Volume 69, Issue 6, 2286-2297, 1 December 1995
doi:10.1016/S0006-3495(95)80099-8
Research Article
H.X. Zhou
A general method for calculating translational friction and intrinsic viscosity is developed through exploiting relations between hydrodynamics and electrostatics. An approximate relation xi = 6 pi eta 0C between the translational friction coefficient xi of a particle (eta 0: solvent viscosity) and its capacitance C was derived previously. This involved orientationally preaveraging the Oseen tensor, but the result was found to be very accurate. Based on preaveraging, we find that the intrinsic viscosity [eta] of a particle can be estimated from its polarizability alpha through [eta] = 3/4 alpha + 1/4 Vp, where Vp is the volume of the particle. Both the capacitance and the polarizability can be obtained in a single calculation using the boundary-element technique. An efficient approach is thus found for estimating [eta], a quantity that is very useful in practice because of its sensitivity to particle shape but is notoriously difficult to calculate. Illustrative calculations on ellipsoids, cylinders, and dumbbells demonstrate both the accuracy of the approximate relations and the efficiency of the present method.