J

Jörg Standfuss

Paul Scherrer Institute

Publishes on Photoreceptor and optogenetics research, Receptor Mechanisms and Signaling, Photosynthetic Processes and Mechanisms. 82 papers and 5.8k citations.

82Publications
5.8kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

A three-dimensional movie of structural changes in bacteriorhodopsin
Eriko Nango, Antoine Royant, Minoru Kubo et al.|Science|2016
Cited by 436Open Access

Bacteriorhodopsin (bR) is a light-driven proton pump and a model membrane transport protein. We used time-resolved serial femtosecond crystallography at an x-ray free electron laser to visualize conformational changes in bR from nanoseconds to milliseconds following photoactivation. An initially twisted retinal chromophore displaces a conserved tryptophan residue of transmembrane helix F on the cytoplasmic side of the protein while dislodging a key water molecule on the extracellular side. The resulting cascade of structural changes throughout the protein shows how motions are choreographed as bR transports protons uphill against a transmembrane concentration gradient.

Retinal isomerization in bacteriorhodopsin captured by a femtosecond x-ray laser
Cited by 390Open Access

Ultrafast isomerization of retinal is the primary step in photoresponsive biological functions including vision in humans and ion transport across bacterial membranes. We used an x-ray laser to study the subpicosecond structural dynamics of retinal isomerization in the light-driven proton pump bacteriorhodopsin. A series of structural snapshots with near-atomic spatial resolution and temporal resolution in the femtosecond regime show how the excited all-trans retinal samples conformational states within the protein binding pocket before passing through a twisted geometry and emerging in the 13-cis conformation. Our findings suggest ultrafast collective motions of aspartic acid residues and functional water molecules in the proximity of the retinal Schiff base as a key facet of this stereoselective and efficient photochemical reaction.