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1.
Sensory rhodopsin I (SR-I) is a retinal-containing pigment which functions as a phototaxis receptor in Halobacterium halobium. We have obtained resonance Raman vibrational spectra of the native membrane-bound form of SR587 and used these data to determine the structure of its retinal prosthetic group. The similar frequencies and intensities of the skeletal fingerprint modes in SR587, bacteriorhodopsin (BR568), and halorhodopsin (HR578) as well as the position of the dideuterio rocking mode when SR-I is regenerated with 12,14-D2 retinal (915 cm-1) demonstrate that the retinal chromophore has an all-trans configuration. The shift of the C = N stretching mode from 1628 cm-1 in H2O to 1620 cm-1 in D2O demonstrates that the chromophore in SR587 is bound to the protein by a protonated Schiff base linkage. The small shift of the 1195 cm-1 C14-C15 stretching mode in D2O establishes that the protonated Schiff base bond has an anti configuration. The low value of the Schiff base stretching frequency together with its small 8 cm-1 shift in D2O indicates that the Schiff base proton is weakly hydrogen bonded to its protein counterion. This suggests that the red shift in the absorption maximum of SR-I (587 nm) compared with HR (578 nm) and BR (568 nm) is due to a reduction of the electrostatic interaction between the protonated Schiff base group and its protein counterion.  相似文献   

2.
Magic angle sample spinning (MASS) 13C NMR spectra have been obtained of bovine rhodopsin regenerated with retinal prosthetic groups isotopically enriched with 13C at C-5 and C-14. In order to observe the 13C retinal chromophore resonances, it was necessary to employ low temperatures (-15-----35 degrees C) to restrict rotational diffusion of the protein. The isotropic chemical shift and principal values of the chemical shift tensor of the 13C-5 label indicate that the retinal chromophore is in the twisted 6-s-cis conformation in rhodopsin, in contrast to the planar 6-s-trans conformation found in bacteriorhodopsin. The 13C-14 isotropic shift and shift tensor principal values show that the Schiff base C = N bond is anti. Furthermore, the 13C-14 chemical shift (121.2 ppm) is within the range of values (120-123 ppm) exhibited by protonated (C = N anti) Schiff base model compounds, indicating that the C = N linkage is protonated. Our results are discussed with regard to the mechanism of wavelength regulation in rhodopsin.  相似文献   

3.
Rhodopsins possess retinal chromophore surrounded by seven transmembrane α-helices, are widespread in prokaryotes and in eukaryotes, and can be utilized as optogenetic tools. Although rhodopsins work as distinctly different photoreceptors in various organisms, they can be roughly divided according to their two basic functions, light-energy conversion and light-signal transduction. In microbes, light-driven proton transporters functioning as light-energy converters have been modified by evolution to produce sensory receptors that relay signals to transducer proteins to control motility. In this study, we cloned and characterized two newly identified microbial rhodopsins from Haloquadratum walsbyi. One of them has photochemical properties and a proton pumping activity similar to the well known proton pump bacteriorhodopsin (BR). The other, named middle rhodopsin (MR), is evolutionarily transitional between BR and the phototactic sensory rhodopsin II (SRII), having an SRII-like absorption maximum, a BR-like photocycle, and a unique retinal composition. The wild-type MR does not have a light-induced proton pumping activity. On the other hand, a mutant MR with two key hydrogen-bonding residues located at the interaction surface with the transducer protein HtrII shows robust phototaxis responses similar to SRII, indicating that MR is potentially capable of the signaling. These results demonstrate that color tuning and insertion of the critical threonine residue occurred early in the evolution of sensory rhodopsins. MR may be a missing link in the evolution from type 1 rhodopsins (microorganisms) to type 2 rhodopsins (animals), because it is the first microbial rhodopsin known to have 11-cis-retinal similar to type 2 rhodopsins.  相似文献   

4.
Resonance Raman excitation profiles have been measured for the bovine visual pigment rhodopsin using excitation wavelengths ranging from 457.9 to 647.1 nm. A complete Franck-Condon analysis of the absorption spectrum and resonance Raman excitation profiles has been performed using an excited-state, time-dependent wavepacket propagation technique. This has enabled us to determine the change in geometry upon electronic excitation of rhodopsin's 11-cis-retinal protonated Schiff base chromophore along 25 normal coordinates. Intense low-frequency Raman lines are observed at 98, 135, 249, 336, and 461 cm-1 whose intensities provide quantitative, mode-specific information about the excited-state torsional deformations that lead to isomerization. The dominant contribution to the width of the absorption band in rhodopsin results from Franck-Condon progressions in the 1,549 cm-1 ethylenic normal mode. The lack of vibronic structure in the absorption spectrum is shown to be caused by extensive progressions in low-frequency torsional modes and a large homogeneous linewidth (170 cm-1 half-width) together with thermal population of low-frequency modes and inhomogeneous site distribution effects. The resonance Raman cross-sections of rhodopsin are unusually weak because the excited-state wavepacket moves rapidly (approximately 35 fs) and permanently away from the Franck-Condon geometry along skeletal stretching and torsional coordinates.  相似文献   

5.
Ring desmethyl and acyclic analogues of all-trans retinal were incorporated into the apoprotein of the phototaxis receptor sensory rhodopsin I (SR-I) in Halobacterium halobium membranes. All modified retinals generate SR-I analogue pigments which exhibit "opsin shifts," i.e., their absorption spectra are shifted to longer wavelengths compared with model protonated Schiff bases of the same analogues. Each SR-I pigment analogue exhibits cyclic photochemical reactions as monitored by flash spectroscopy, but the analogue photocycles differ from that of native SR-I by exhibiting pronounced biphasic recovery of flash-induced absorption changes and abnormal flash-induced absorption difference spectra. Despite perturbations in the photochemical properties, the SR-I pigment analogues are capable of both attractant (single photon) and repellent (two photon) phototaxis signaling in cells. Our interpretation is that the hydrophobic ring substituents interact with the binding pocket to maintain the correct configuration for native SR-I absorption and photochemistry, but these interactions are not essential for the physiological function of SR-I as a dual attractant/repellent phototaxis receptor. These results support the conclusion emerging from several studies that the photoactivation process that triggers the conformation changes of SR-I and the related proton pump bacteriorhodopsin is conserved despite the different biological functions of their photoactivation.  相似文献   

6.
This paper reports the detection and identification of phenolic metabolites (C6-C3 and C6-C1 compounds) in Cocos nucifera. An HPLC/UV system was used to analyze the soluble and wall-associated phenolics in mesocarp and leaf tissues of C. nucifera. Alkaline hydrolysis of the cell wall material of the mesocarpic and leaf tissues yielded 4-hydroxybenzoic acid as the major phenolic compound. Other phenolic acids identified were ferulic acid, 4-coumaric acid, 4-hydroxybenzaldehyde and vanillic acid. No significant qualitative differences in composition were observed between leaf and mesocarp, but there were quantitative variations in the metabolite levels.  相似文献   

7.
In order to prepare a completely light-stable rhodopsin, we have synthesized an analog, II, of 11-cis retinal in which isomerization at the C11-C12 cis-double bond is blocked by formation of a cyclohexene ring from the C10 to C13-methyl. We used this analog to generate a rhodopsin-like pigment from opsin expressed in COS-1 cells and opsin from rod outer segments (Bhattacharya, S., Ridge, K.D., Knox, B.E., and Khorana, H. G. (1992) J. Biol. Chem. 267, 6763-6769). The pigment (lambda max, 512 nm) formed from opsin and analog II (rhodospin-II) showed ground state properties very similar to those of rhodopsin, but was not entirely stable to light. In the present work, 12 opsin mutants (Ala-117----Phe, Glu-122----Gln(Ala, Asp), Trp-126----Phe(Leu, Ala), Trp-265----Ala(Tyr, Phe), Tyr-268----Phe, and Ala-292----Asp), where the mutations were presumed to be in the retinal binding pocket, were reconstituted with analog II. While all mutants formed rhodopsin-like pigments with II, blue-shifted (12-30 nm) chromophores were obtained with Ala-117----Phe, Glu-122----Gln(Ala), Trp-126----Leu(Ala), and Trp-265----Ala(Tyr, Phe) opsins. The extent of chromophore formation was markedly reduced in the mutants Ala-117----Phe and Trp-126----Ala. Upon illumination, the reconstituted pigments showed varying degrees of light sensitivity; the mutants Trp-126----Phe(Leu) showed light sensitivity similar to wild-type. Continuous illumination of the mutants Glu-122----Asp, Trp-265----Ala, Tyr-268----Phe, and Ala-292----Asp resulted in hydrolysis of the retinyl Schiff base. Markedly reduced light sensitivity was observed with the mutant Trp-265----Tyr, while the mutant Trp-265----Phe was light-insensitive. Consistent with this result, the mutant Trp-265----Phe showed no detectable light-dependent activation of transducin or phosphorylation by rhodopsin kinase.  相似文献   

8.
Strategy of synthesis of polyene macrolide antibiotic amphotericin B using carbohydrates as starting material is discussed. The C1-C6 and C7-C12 fragments of amphotericin B are synthesized.  相似文献   

9.
With the aim of preparing a light-stable rhodopsin-like pigment, an analog, II, of 11-cis retinal was synthesized in which isomerization of the C11-C12 cis-double bond is blocked by a cyclohexene ring built around the C10 to C13-methyl. The analog II formed a rhodopsin-like pigment (rhodopsin-II) with opsin expressed in COS-1 cells and with opsin from rod outer segments. The rate of rhodopsin-II formation from II and opsin was approximately 10 times slower than that of rhodopsin from 11-cis retinal and opsin. After solubilization in dodecyl maltoside and immunoaffinity purification, rhodopsin-II displayed an absorbance ratio (A280nm/A512nm) of 1.6, virtually identical with that of rhodopsin. Acid denaturation of rhodopsin-II formed a chromophore with lambda max, 452 nm, characteristic of protonated retinyl Schiff base. The ground state properties of rhodopsin-II were similar to those of rhodopsin in extinction coefficient (41,200 M-1 cm-1) and opsin-shift (2600 cm-1). Rhodopsin-II was stable to hydroxylamine in the dark, while light-dependent bleaching by hydroxylamine was slowed by approximately 2 orders of magnitude relative to rhodopsin. Illumination of rhodopsin-II for 10 s caused approximately 3 nm blue-shift and 3% loss of visible absorbance. Prolonged illumination caused a maximal blue-shift up to approximately 20 nm and approximately 40% loss of visible absorbance. An apparent photochemical steady state was reached after 12 min of illumination. Subsequent acid denaturation indicated that the retinyl Schiff base linkage was intact. A red-shift (approximately 12 nm) in lambda max and a 45% recovery of visible absorbance was observed after returning the 12-min illuminated pigment to darkness. Rhodopsin-II showed marginal light-dependent transducin activation and phosphorylation by rhodopsin kinase.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Sumii M  Furutani Y  Waschuk SA  Brown LS  Kandori H 《Biochemistry》2005,44(46):15159-15166
Leptosphaeria rhodopsin (LR) is an archaeal-type rhodopsin found in fungi, and is the first light-driven proton-pumping retinal protein from eukaryotes. LR pumps protons in a manner similar to that of bacteriorhodopsin (BR), a light-driven proton pump of haloarchaea. The amino acid sequence of LR is more homologous to that of Neurospora rhodopsin (NR) than BR, whereas NR has no proton-pumping activity. These facts raise the question of how the proton-pumping function is achieved. In this paper, we studied structural changes of LR following the retinal photoisomerization by means of low-temperature Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy, and compared the obtained spectra with those for BR and NR. While the light-induced photoisomerization from the all-trans to 13-cis form was commonly observed among LR, BR, and NR, we found that the structural changes of LR are closer to those of BR than to those of NR in terms of detailed vibrational bands of retinal and protein. The most prominent difference was seen for the water O-D stretching vibrations (measured in D2O). LR exhibits an O-D stretch of water at 2257 cm(-1), indicating the presence of a strongly hydrogen-bonded water molecule. Such strongly hydrogen-bonded water molecules (O-D stretch at <2400 cm(-1)) were observed for BR, but not for NR. Comprehensive studies of BR mutants and archaeal rhodopsins have revealed that strongly hydrogen-bonded water molecules are found only in the proteins exhibiting proton-pumping activity, suggesting that strongly hydrogen-bonded water molecules and transient weakening of their binding are essential for the proton-pumping function of rhodopsins. This observation for LR provided additional experimental evidence of the correlation between strongly hydrogen-bonded water molecules and proton-pumping activity of archaeal rhodopsins.  相似文献   

12.
Primary structure of sensory rhodopsin I, a prokaryotic photoreceptor.   总被引:17,自引:4,他引:13       下载免费PDF全文
The gene coding for sensory rhodopsin I (SR-I) has been identified in a restriction fragment of genomic DNA from the Halobacterium halobium strain L33. Of the 1014 nucleotides whose sequence was determined, 720 belong to the structural gene of SR-I. In the 5' non-coding region two putative promoter elements and a ribosomal binding site have been identified. The 3' flanking region bears a potential terminator structure. The SR-I protein moiety carries no signal peptide and is not processed at its N terminus. The C terminus, however, lacks the last aspartic acid residue encoded by the gene. Analysis of the primary structure of SR-I reveals no consistent homology with the eukaryotic photoreceptor rhodopsin, but 14% homology with the halobacterial ion pumps, bacteriorhodopsin (BR) and halorhodopsin (HR). Residues conserved in all three proteins are discussed with respect to their contribution to secondary structure, retinal binding and ion translocation. The aspartic acid residue which mediates in BR the reprotonation of the Schiff base (D96) is replaced in SR-I by a tyrosine (Y87). This amino acid replacement is proposed to be of crucial importance in the evolution of the slow-cycling photosensing pigment SR-I.  相似文献   

13.
The sensory rhodopsin II from Natronobacterium pharaonis (NpSRII) was mutated to try to create functional properties characteristic of bacteriorhodopsin (BR), the proton pump from Halobacterium salinarum. Key residues from the cytoplasmic and extracellular proton transfer channel of BR as well as from the retinal binding site were chosen. The single site mutants L40T, F86D, P183E, and T204A did not display altered function as determined by the kinetics of their photocycles. However, the photocycle of each of the subsequent multisite mutations L40T/F86D, L40T/F86D/P183E, and L40T/F86D/P183E/T204A was quite different from that of the wild-type protein. The reprotonation of the Schiff base could be accelerated approximately 300- to 400-fold, to approximately two to three times faster than the corresponding reaction in BR. The greatest effect is observed for the quadruple mutant in which Thr-204 is replaced by Ala. This result indicates that mutations affecting conformational changes of the protein might be of decisive importance for the creation of BR-like functional properties.  相似文献   

14.
K H Jung  E N Spudich  P Dag  J L Spudich 《Biochemistry》1999,38(40):13270-13274
Sensory rhodopsin I (SRI) is a seven-transmembrane helix retinylidene protein that mediates color-sensitive phototaxis responses through its bound transducer HtrI in the archaeon Halobacterium salinarum. Deprotonation of the Schiff base attachment site of the chromophore accompanies formation of the SRI signaling state, S(373). We measured the rate of laser flash-induced S(373) formation in the presence and absence of HtrI, and the effects of mutations in SRI or HtrI on the kinetics of this process. In the absence of HtrI, deprotonation occurs rapidly (halftime 10 micros) if the proton acceptor Asp76 is ionized (pK(a) = approximately 7), and only very slowly (halftime > 10 ms) when Asp76 is protonated. Transducer-binding, although it increases the pK(a) of Asp76 so that it is protonated throughout the range of pH studied, results in a first order, pH-independent rate of S(373) formation of approximately 300 micros. Therefore, the complexation of HtrI facilitates the proton-transfer reaction, increasing the rate approximately 50-fold at pH6. Arrhenius analysis shows that HtrI-binding accelerates the reaction primarily by an entropic effect, suggesting HtrI constrains the SRI molecule in the complex. Function-perturbing mutations in SRI and HtrI also alter the rate of S(373) formation and the lambda(max) of the parent state as assessed by laser flash-induced kinetic difference spectroscopy, and shifts to longer wavelength are correlated with slower deprotonation. The data indicate that HtrI affects electrostatic interactions of the protonated Schiff base and not only receives the signal from SRI but also optimizes the photochemical reaction process for SRI signaling.  相似文献   

15.
We have performed resonance enhanced Raman measurements of retinal isomers in solution (all-trans, 11-cis, 9-cis, and 13-cis) and cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB) detergent extracts of bovine rhodopsin near physiological temperatures (17 degrees C). In order to measure these photolabile systems, we have developed a general technique which allows Raman measurements of any photosensitive material. This technique involves imposing a molecular velocity transverse to the Raman exciting laser beam sufficient to ensure that any given molecule moves through the beam so that it has little probability of absorbing a photon. We have also measured the resonance Raman spectra of crystals of the same retinal isomers. The data show that each isomer has a distinct and characteristic Raman spectra and that the spectrum of 11-cis-retinal is quite similar but not identical with that of rhodopsin and similarly for 9-cis-retinal compared with isorhodopsin. In agreement with previous work, the Raman data demonstrate that retinal and opsin are joined by a protonated Schiff base. Due to the fact that the Raman spectra of 11-cis-retinal (solution) and rhodopsin show bands near 998 and 1018 cm(-1), a spectral region previously assigned to C-Me stretching motions, it is suggested that 11-cis-retinal in solution is compased of a mixture of 12-s-trans and 12-s-cis, and that the conformation of rhodopsin is (perhaps distorted) 12-s-trans.  相似文献   

16.
Vogel R  Siebert F  Mathias G  Tavan P  Fan G  Sheves M 《Biochemistry》2003,42(33):9863-9874
Light-induced isomerization of rhodopsin's retinal chromophore to the activating all-trans geometry initializes the formation of the active receptor state, Meta II. In the absence of peripheral regulatory proteins, the activity of Meta II is switched off spontaneously by two independent pathways: either by hydrolysis of the retinal Schiff base and dissociation of the light receptor into apoprotein opsin plus free retinal or by formation of Meta III, an inactive species with intact retinal protonated Schiff base absorbing at 470 nm. By FTIR spectroscopy on rhodopsin reconstituted with isotopically labeled chromophores in combination with quantum mechanical DFT calculations, we show that the deactivating step during formation of Meta III involves a thermal isomerization of the chromophore C[double bond]N, such that the chromophore in Meta III is all-trans-15-syn. This isomerization step is catalyzed by the protein environment and proceeds via Meta I, as suggested by its dependence on pH and on properties of the lipid/detergent environment of the protein. In the long term, Meta III decays likewise to opsin and free retinal by slow hydrolysis of the Schiff base.  相似文献   

17.
Solid-state 13C magic angle sample spinning NMR spectroscopy has been used to study the ionone ring portion of the chromophore of bacteriorhodopsin. Spectra were obtained from fully hydrated samples regenerated with retinals 13C labeled at positions C-5, C-6, C-7, C-8, and C-18 and from lyophilized samples regenerated with retinals labeled at C-9 and C-13. C-15-labeled samples were studied in both lyophilized and hydrated forms. Three independent NMR parameters (the downfield element of the C-5 chemical shift tensor, the C-8 isotropic chemical shift, and the C-18 longitudinal relaxation time) indicate that the chromophore has a 6-s-trans conformation in the protein, in contrast to the 6-s-cis conformation that is energetically favored for retinoids in solution. We also observe an additional 27 ppm downfield shift in the middle element of the C-5 shift tensor, which provides support for the existence of a negatively charged protein residue near C-5. Evidence for a positive charge near C-7, possibly the counterion for the negative charge, is also discussed. On the basis of these results, we present a new model for the retinal binding site, which has important implications for the mechanism of the "opsin shift" observed in bacteriorhodopsin.  相似文献   

18.
19.
The ultraviolet absorbance of squid and octopus rhodopsin changes reversibly at 234 nm and near 280 nm in the interconversion of rhodopsin and metarhodopsin. The absorbance change near 280 nm is ascribed to both protein and chromophore parts. Rhodopsin is photoregenerated from metarhodopsin via an intermediate, P380, on irradiation with yellow light (λ > 520 nm). The ultraviolet absorbance decreases in the change from rhodopsin to metarhodopsin and recovers in two steps; mostly in the process from metarhodopsin to P380 and to a lesser extent in the process from P380 to rhodopsin. P380 has a circular dichroism (CD) band at 380 nm and its magnitude is the same order as that of rhodopsin. Thus it is considered that the molecular structure of P380 is close to that of rhodopsin and that the chromophore is fixed to opsin as in rhodopsin. In the change from metarhodopsin to P380, the chromophore is isomerized from the all-trans to the 11-cis form, and the conformation of opsin changes to fit 11-cis retinal. In the change from P380 to rhodopsin, a small change in the conformation of the protein part and the protonation of the Schiff base, the primary retinal-opsin link, occur.  相似文献   

20.
Rhodopsin is a prototype for G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) that are implicated in many biological responses in humans. A site-directed (2)H NMR approach was used for structural analysis of retinal within its binding cavity in the dark and pre-activated meta I states. Retinal was labeled with (2)H at the C5, C9, or C13 methyl groups by total synthesis, and was used to regenerate the opsin apoprotein. Solid-state (2)H NMR spectra were acquired for aligned membranes in the low-temperature lipid gel phase versus the tilt angle to the magnetic field. Data reduction assumed a static uniaxial distribution, and gave the retinylidene methyl bond orientations plus the alignment disorder (mosaic spread). The dark-state (2)H NMR structure of 11-cis-retinal shows torsional twisting of the polyene chain and the beta-ionone ring. The ligand undergoes restricted motion, as evinced by order parameters of approximately 0.9 for the spinning C-C(2)H(3) groups, with off-axial fluctuations of approximately 15 degrees . Retinal is accommodated within the rhodopsin binding pocket with a negative pre-twist about the C11=C12 double bond that explains its rapid photochemistry and the trajectory of 11-cis to trans isomerization. In the cryo-trapped meta I state, the (2)H NMR structure shows a reduction of the polyene strain, while torsional twisting of the beta-ionone ring is maintained. Distortion of the retinal conformation is interpreted through substituent control of receptor activation. Steric hindrance between trans retinal and Trp265 can trigger formation of the subsequent activated meta II state. Our results are pertinent to quantum and molecular mechanics simulations of ligands bound to GPCRs, and illustrate how (2)H NMR can be applied to study their biological mechanisms of action.  相似文献   

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