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Dive into the research topics where Gordon Tollin is active.

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Featured researches published by Gordon Tollin.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002

Crystal structure and electron transfer kinetics of CueO, a multicopper oxidase required for copper homeostasis in Escherichia coli

Sue A. Roberts; Andrzej Weichsel; Gregor Grass; Keshari M. Thakali; James T. Hazzard; Gordon Tollin; William R. Montfort

CueO (YacK), a multicopper oxidase, is part of the copper-regulatory cue operon in Escherichia coli. The crystal structure of CueO has been determined to 1.4-Å resolution by using multiple anomalous dispersion phasing and an automated building procedure that yielded a nearly complete model without manual intervention. This is the highest resolution multicopper oxidase structure yet determined and provides a particularly clear view of the four coppers at the catalytic center. The overall structure is similar to those of laccase and ascorbate oxidase, but contains an extra 42-residue insert in domain 3 that includes 14 methionines, nine of which lie in a helix that covers the entrance to the type I (T1, blue) copper site. The trinuclear copper cluster has a conformation not previously seen: the Cu-O-Cu binuclear species is nearly linear (Cu-O-Cu bond angle = 170°) and the third (type II) copper lies only 3.1 Å from the bridging oxygen. CueO activity was maximal at pH 6.5 and in the presence of >100 μM Cu(II). Measurements of intermolecular and intramolecular electron transfer with laser flash photolysis in the absence of Cu(II) show that, in addition to the normal reduction of the T1 copper, which occurs with a slow rate (k = 4 × 107 M−1⋅s−1), a second electron transfer process occurs to an unknown site, possibly the trinuclear cluster, with k = 9 × 107 M−1⋅s−1, followed by a slow intramolecular electron transfer to T1 copper (k ∼10 s−1). These results suggest the methionine-rich helix blocks access to the T1 site in the absence of excess copper.


Biophysical Journal | 1997

Coupled plasmon-waveguide resonators: a new spectroscopic tool for probing proteolipid film structure and properties

Zdzislaw Salamon; H.A. Macleod; Gordon Tollin

A variant of surface plasmon resonance (SPR) spectroscopy has been developed that involves a coupling of plasmon resonances in a thin metal film and waveguide modes in a dielectric overcoating. This new technique is referred to as coupled plasmon-waveguide resonance (CPWR) spectroscopy. It combines a greatly enhanced sensitivity (due to increased electromagnetic field intensities at the dielectric surface) and spectral resolution (due to decreased resonance linewidths), with the ability to directly measure anisotropies in refractive index and optical absorption coefficient in a dielectric film adsorbed onto the surface of the overcoating. Experimental data obtained with an egg phosphatidylcholine bilayer are presented to document these properties.


Biophysical Journal | 2001

Optical Anisotropy in Lipid Bilayer Membranes: Coupled Plasmon-Waveguide Resonance Measurements of Molecular Orientation, Polarizability, and Shape

Zdzislaw Salamon; Gordon Tollin

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 1-10 mol % 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.


Biophysical Journal | 1998

New Photocycle Intermediates in the Photoactive Yellow Protein from Ectothiorhodospira halophila: Picosecond Transient Absorption Spectroscopy

L. Ujj; Savitha Devanathan; T.E. Meyer; Michael A. Cusanovich; Gordon Tollin; G.H. Atkinson

Previous studies have shown that the room temperature photocycle of the photoactive yellow protein (PYP) from Ectothiorhodospira halophila involves at least two intermediate species: I1, which forms in <10 ns and decays with a 200-micros lifetime to I2, which itself subsequently returns to the ground state with a 140-ms time constant at pH 7 (Genick et al. 1997. Biochemistry. 36:8-14). Picosecond transient absorption spectroscopy has been used here to reveal a photophysical relaxation process (stimulated emission) and photochemical intermediates in the PYP photocycle that have not been reported previously. The first new intermediate (I0) exhibits maximum absorption at approximately 510 nm and appears in </=3 ps after 452 nm excitation (5 ps pulse width) of PYP. Kinetic analysis shows that I0 decays with a 220 +/- 20 ps lifetime, forming another intermediate (Idouble dagger0) that has a similar difference wavelength maximum, but with lower absorptivity. Idouble dagger0 decays with a 3 +/- 0.15 ns time constant to form I1. Stimulated emission from an excited electronic state of PYP is observed both within the 4-6-ps cross-correlation times used in this work, and with a 16-ps delay for all probe wavelengths throughout the 426-525-nm region studied. These transient absorption and emission data provide a more detailed understanding of the mechanistic dynamics occurring during the PYP photocycle.


Biophysical Journal | 1989

Photoactive yellow protein from the purple phototrophic bacterium, Ectothiorhodospira halophila. Quantum yield of photobleaching and effects of temperature, alcohols, glycerol, and sucrose on kinetics of photobleaching and recovery

T.E. Meyer; Gordon Tollin; J.H. Hazzard; Michael A. Cusanovich

A water-soluble yellow protein from E. halophila was previously shown to be photoactive (Meyer, T. E., E. Yakali, M. A. Cusanovich, and G. Tollin. 1987. Biochemistry. 26:418-423). Pulsed laser excitation in the protein visible absorption band (maximum at 445 nm) causes a rapid bleach of color (k = 7.5 x 10(3) s-1) followed by a slower dark recovery (k = 2.6 s-1). This is analogous to the photocycle of sensory rhodopsin II from Halobacterium (which also has k = 2.6 s-1 for recovery). We have now determined the quantum yield of the photobleaching process to be 0.64, which is comparable with that of bacteriorhodopsin (0.25), and is thus large enough to be biologically significant. Although the photoreactions of yellow protein were previously shown to be relatively insensitive to pH, ionic strength and the osmoregulator betaine, the present experiments demonstrate that temperature, glycerol, sucrose, and various alcohol-water mixtures strongly influence the kinetics of photobleaching and recovery. The effect of temperature follows normal Arrhenius behavior for the bleach reaction (Ea = 15.5 kcal/mol). The rate constant for the recovery reaction increases with temperature between 5 degrees C and 35 degrees C, but decreases above 35 degrees C indicating alternate conformations with differing kinetics. There is an order of magnitude decrease in the rate constant for photobleaching in both glycerol and sucrose solutions that can be correlated with the changes in viscosity. We conclude from this that the protein undergoes a conformational change as a consequence of the photoinduced bleach. Recovery kinetics are affected by glycerol and sucrose to a much smaller extent and in a more complicated manner. Aliphatic, monofunctional alcohol-water solutions increase the rate constant for the bleach reaction and decrease the rate constant for the recovery reaction, each by an order of magnitude. These effects do not correlate with dielectric constant, indicating that the photocycle probably does not involve separation or recombination of charge accessible to the protein surface. However, the effects on both bleaching and recovery correlate well with the relative hydrophobicity(as measured by partition coefficients in detergent/water mixtures), in the order of increasing effectiveness:methanol < ethanol < iso-propanol <n-propanol < n-butanol. We conclude that the change in conformation of the protein induced by light exposes a hydrophobic site to the solvent. This suggests the possibility that light exerts its effect in vivo by exposing a region of the protein for binding to a hydrophobic receptor site in the cell, perhaps to a protein analogous to the chemotactic transducers in the cytoplasmic membranes of enteric bacteria.


Trends in Biochemical Sciences | 1999

Plasmon resonance spectroscopy: probing molecular interactions within membranes

Zdzislaw Salamon; Michael F. Brown; Gordon Tollin

Surface plasmon resonance (SPR) has become a popular method for investigating biomolecular interactions. A new variant of this technique, coupled plasmon-waveguide resonance (CPWR) spectroscopy, allows the characterization of anisotropic biological membranes. Plasmon resonance can therefore be used to study the molecular events involved in a wide variety of membrane processes, including energy conversion and signal transduction.


Biophysical Journal | 2000

Plasmon Resonance Studies of Agonist/Antagonist Binding to theHuman δ-Opioid Receptor: New Structural Insights into Receptor-Ligand Interactions

Zdzislaw Salamon; Scott Cowell; Eva V. Varga; Henry I. Yamamura; Victor J. Hruby; Gordon Tollin

Structural changes accompanying the binding of ligands to the cloned human delta-opioid receptor immobilized in a solid-supported lipid bilayer have been investigated using coupled plasmon-waveguide resonance spectroscopy. This highly sensitive technique directly monitors mass density, conformation, and molecular orientation changes occurring in anisotropic thin films and allows direct determination of binding constants. Although both agonist binding and antagonist binding to the receptor cause increases in molecular ordering within the proteolipid membrane, only agonist binding induces an increase in thickness and molecular packing density of the membrane. This is a consequence of mass movements perpendicular to the plane of the bilayer occurring within the lipid and receptor components. These results are consistent with models of receptor function that involve changes in the orientation of transmembrane helices.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1962

Stable free radicals in soil humic acid

Cornelius Steelink; Gordon Tollin

Solid soil humic acid contains stable organic free radicals, on the order of 1018 radicals/g. Solutions in organic solvents also exhibit paramagnetism. Fractionation studies reveal that these radicals are not caused by impurities or by unstable species trapped in the solid humic acid polymer but rather are an integral part of the molecule. Analysis of the EPR spectrum suggests that two stable free radicals co-exist in humic acid. One of these could be a semiquinone of a catechol-resorcinol-type copolymer; the other could be a quinhydrone-type radical.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1964

Phototaxis in euglena: I. Isolation of the eye-spot granules and identification of the eye-spot pigments

Prem P. Batra; Gordon Tollin

Abstract 1. 1. A method has been developed for the isolation of eye-spot (stigma) granules from Euglena gracilis , strain Z. 2. 2. The absorption spectrum of a suspension of the isolated granules show the presence of three maxima at 490, 462 and 436 mμ, in addition to a small shoulder at 387 mμ. The action spectrum of photoaxis follows this spectrum very closely. The possible role of the eye spot in photoaxis is discussed. 3. 3. All of the carotenoid pigments, except one, present in the eye spot hav e been identified. The principal compounds are lutein and cryptoxanthin, which together make up 83% of the total pigment complement of the granules. β-Carotene and an unidentified pigment make up the remainder. 4. 4. Preliminary studies of certain of the properties of the eye-spot granules, particularly their stability, and fine structure, as determined by electron microscopy, are reported.


Biophysical Journal | 1996

Surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy studies of membrane proteins: transducin binding and activation by rhodopsin monitored in thin membrane films

Zdzislaw Salamon; Y. Wang; José L. Soulages; Michael F. Brown; Gordon Tollin

Surface plasmon resonance (SPR) spectroscopy can provide useful information regarding average structural properties of membrane films supported on planar solid substrates. Here we have used SPR spectroscopy for the first time to monitor the binding and activation of G-protein (transducin or Gt) by bovine rhodopsin incorporated into an egg phosphatidylcholine bilayer deposited on a silver film. Rhodopsin incorporation into the membrane, performed by dilution of a detergent solution of the protein, proceeds in a saturable manner. Before photolysis, the SPR data show that Gt binds tightly (Keq approximately equal to 60 nM) and with positive cooperativity to rhodopsin in the lipid layer to form a closely packed film. A simple multilayer model yields a calculated average thickness of about 57 A, in good agreement with the structure of Gt. The data also demonstrate that Gt binding saturates at a Gt/rhodopsin ratio of approximately 0.6. Moreover, upon visible light irradiation, characteristic changes occur in the SPR spectrum, which can be modeled by a 6 A increase in the average thickness of the lipid/protein film caused by formation of metarhodopsin II (MII). Upon subsequent addition of GTP, further SPR spectral changes are induced. These are interpreted as resulting from dissociation of the alpha-subunit of Gt, formation of new MII-Gt complexes, and possible conformational changes of Gt as a consequence of complex formation. The above results clearly demonstrate the ability of SPR spectroscopy to monitor interactions among the proteins associated with signal transduction in membrane-bound systems.

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