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-   -   [NMR paper] Light-induced membrane protein phosphorylation in the bovine rod outer segment. A mag (http://www.bionmr.com/forum/journal-club-9/light-induced-membrane-protein-phosphorylation-bovine-rod-outer-segment-mag-6039/)

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Light-induced membrane protein phosphorylation in the bovine rod outer segment. A mag
 
Light-induced membrane protein phosphorylation in the bovine rod outer segment. A magic angle spinning 31P-NMR study.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/corehtml...PubMedLink.gif Related Articles Light-induced membrane protein phosphorylation in the bovine rod outer segment. A magic angle spinning 31P-NMR study.

Biophys Chem. 1990 May;36(1):27-31

Authors: Albert AD, Frye JS, Yeagle PL

Magic angle spinning 31P-NMR (MAS 31P-NMR) spectra of bovine rod outer segments, unphosphorylated and phosphorylated, were obtained. In the phosphorylated samples the spectra showed new resonances not assignable to phospholipids. These signals were present only when stimulation of receptor phosphorylation occurred. These resonances were not due to exogenous, soluble phosphorus-containing compounds. Limited proteolysis to remove the carboxyl-terminal region of the photoreceptor that contains the phosphorylation sites removed these resonances. The chemical shifts were in the usual range for serine phosphate and threonine phosphate. The pKa obtained from a pH titration of the 31P chemical shift was typical of serine phosphate. Therefore, these 31P-NMR resonances were assigned to the phosphorylation sites on membrane proteins in the rod outer segment disk membranes. Static 31P-NMR measurements revealed that at least some of these sites gave rise to relatively narrow resonances, indicative of considerable motional freedom of the carboxyl-terminal segment of the photoreceptor when phosphorylated. These data indicate that it is possible to study phosphorylation sites on membrane proteins using MAS 31P-NMR, and that using in vivo 31P 'spin labelling' one can study directly and selectively regions of receptors crucial to receptor function.

PMID: 2207270 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]



Source: PubMed


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