Jureepan Saranak
Syracuse University
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Featured researches published by Jureepan Saranak.
Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology B-biology | 1991
Kenneth W. Foster; Jureepan Saranak; Peter A. Dowben
Retinal normally binds opsin forming the chromophore of the visual pigment, rhodopsin. In this investigation synthetic analogs were bound by the opsin of living cells of the alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii; the effect was assayed by phototaxis to give an activation spectrum for each rhodopsin analog. The results show the influence of different chromophores and the protein on the absorption of light. The maxima of the phototaxis action spectra shifted systematically with the number of double bonds conjugated with the imine (C = N+H) bond of the chromophore. Chromophores lacking a beta-ionone ring, methyl groups and all C = C double bonds photoactivated the rhodopsin of Chlamydomonas with normal efficiency. On the basis of a simple model involving one-electron transitions between occupied and virtual molecular orbitals, we estimate the charge distribution along the chromophore in the binding site. With this restraint we define a unique structural model for eukaryotic rhodopsins and explain the spectral clustering of pigments, the spectral differences between red and green rhodopsins and the molecular basis of color blindness. Our results are consistent with the triggering of the activation of rhodopsin by the light-mediated change in electric dipole moment rather than the steric cis-trans isomerization of the chromophore.
Eukaryotic Cell | 2005
Jureepan Saranak; Kenneth W. Foster
ABSTRACT When it is gliding, the unicellular euglenoid Peranema trichophorum uses activation of the photoreceptor rhodopsin to control the probability of its curling behavior. From the curled state, the cell takes off in a new direction. In a similar manner, archaea such as Halobacterium use light activation of bacterio- and sensory rhodopsins to control the probability of reversal of the rotation direction of flagella. Each reversal causes the cell to change its direction. In neither case does the cell track light, as known for the rhodopsin-dependent eukaryotic phototaxis of fungi, green algae, cryptomonads, dinoflagellates, and animal larvae. Rhodopsin was identified in Peranema by its native action spectrum (peak at 2.43 eV or 510 nm) and by the shifted spectrum (peak at 3.73 eV or 332 nm) upon replacement of the native chromophore with the retinal analog n-hexenal. The in vivo physiological activity of n-hexenal incorporated to become a chromophore also demonstrates that charge redistribution of a short asymmetric chromophore is sufficient for receptor activation and that the following isomerization step is probably not required when the rest of the native chromophore is missing. This property seems universal among the Euglenozoa, Plant, and Fungus kingdom rhodopsins. The rhodopsins of animals have yet to be studied in this respect. The photoresponse appears to be mediated by Ca2+ influx.
Biologia | 2009
Maskiet Boonyareth; Jureepan Saranak; Darawan Pinthong; Yupin Sanvarinda; Kenneth W. Foster
Chlamydomonas reinhardtii swims toward or away from light (phototaxis) in a graded way depending on various conditions. Activation of rhodopsin provides signals to control the steering of this unicellular organism relative to a light source and to up-regulate rhodopsin biosynthesis. Intracellular cAMP and cGMP concentrations were measured in positive (1117, swims toward light) and negative (806, swims away from light) phototactic strains with and without light stimulation or 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine (IBMX). In the dark, the levels of cAMP and cGMP were significantly higher in the strain with positive phototaxis than in the strain with negative phototaxis. To test whether either cyclic nucleotide influenced the direction, their pre-stimulus levels were pharmacologically manipulated. Higher pre-stimulus levels of cAMP biased the cells to swim toward green light and lower levels biased the cells to swim away. In addition, green-light activation of rhodopsin or addition of IBMX causes a sustained increase in cAMP in both strains. As a consequence of this increase in cAMP, carotenogenesis is induced, as shown by recovery of phototaxis in a carotenoid mutant. Thus, two functions for cAMP were identified: high pre-stimulus level biases swimming toward a light source and sustained elevation following rhodopsin activation increases rhodopsin biosynthesis.
international conference of the ieee engineering in medicine and biology society | 2006
Kenneth W. Foster; Keith Josef; Jureepan Saranak; Ned Tuck
The processing components and the dynamic signaling network that an individual cell uses to do signal integration and make decisions based on multiple sensory inputs are being identified in a well studied free-swimming unicellular green algal model organism, Chlamydomonas. It has many sensory photoreceptors and measurable behavior associated with its orienting and swimming with respect to light sources in its environment. Study of the dynamics of the beating of its two steering cilia reveals their complex specialization
Proceedings of SPIE | 2011
Howard A. Blair; Jureepan Saranak; Kenneth W. Foster
Cells as microorganisms and within multicellular organisms make robust decisions. Knowing how these complex cells make decisions is essential to explain, predict or mimic their behavior. The discovery of multi-layer multiple feedback loops in the signaling pathways of these modular hybrid systems suggests their decision making is sophisticated. Hybrid systems coordinate and integrate signals of various kinds: discrete on/off signals, continuous sensory signals, and stochastic and continuous fluctuations to regulate chemical concentrations. Such signaling networks can form reconfigurable networks of attractors and repellors giving them an extra level of organization that has resilient decision making built in. Work on generic attractor and repellor networks and on the already identified feedback networks and dynamic reconfigurable regulatory topologies in biological cells suggests that biological systems probably exploit such dynamic capabilities. We present a simple behavior of the swimming unicellular alga Chlamydomonas that involves interdependent discrete and continuous signals in feedback loops. We show how to rigorously verify a hybrid dynamical model of a biological system with respect to a declarative description of a cells behavior. The hybrid dynamical systems we use are based on a unification of discrete structures and continuous topologies developed in prior work on convergence spaces. They involve variables of discrete and continuous types, in the sense of type theory in mathematical logic. A unification such as afforded by convergence spaces is necessary if one wants to take account of the affect of the structural relationships within each type on the dynamics of the system.
Nature | 1984
Kenneth W. Foster; Jureepan Saranak; Nayana Patel; Gerald Zarilli; Masami Okabe; Toni Kline; Koji Nakanishi
Nature | 1997
Jureepan Saranak; Kenneth W. Foster
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1988
Kenneth W. Foster; Jureepan Saranak; G. Zarrilli
Biochemistry | 1989
Kenneth W. Foster; Jureepan Saranak; Fadila Derguini; Gerald R. Zarrilli; Randy Johnson; Masami Okabe; Koji Nakanishi
Photochemistry and Photobiology | 1991
Fadila Derguini; Paul Mazur; Koji Nakanishi; Dorine M. Starace; Jureepan Saranak; Kenneth W. Foster