Salamon Z, Wang Y, Brown M F, Macleod H A, Tollin G
Department of Biochemistry, University of Arizona, Tucson 85721.
Biochemistry. 1994 Nov 22;33(46):13706-11. doi: 10.1021/bi00250a022.
Surface plasmon resonance (SPR) spectroscopy has been used to follow incorporation and light-induced conformational changes in bovine rhodopsin reconstituted into an egg phosphatidylcholine bilayer deposited on a thin silver film. The magnitude of the SPR spectral changes caused by light varies with pH in a manner paralleling that in flash photolysis experiments, which monitor formation of metarhodopsin II. Irradiation produces an increase of approximately 4 A in the average thickness of the proteolipid layer, consistent with exposure of recognition sites for the G protein. The results demonstrate that the SPR technology described herein may be used to monitor conformational events in membrane-associated receptors such as rhodopsin.