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1.
The visual pigment rhodopsin is a member of the G protein-coupled receptor family. Electron cryo-microscopy was used to determine the three-dimensional structure of bovine rhodopsin from tilted two-dimensional crystals embedded in vitrified water. The effective resolution in a map obtained from the 23 best crystals was about 9.5 A horizontally and approximately 47 A normal to the plane of the membrane. Four clearly resolved tracks of density in the map correspond to four alpha-helices oriented nearly perpendicular to the plane of the membrane. One of these helices appears to be more tilted than anticipated from the projection structure published previously. The remaining three helices are presumably more highly tilted, given that they form a continuous "arc-shaped" feature and could not be resolved to the same extent. The overall density distribution in the low resolution map shows an arrangement of the helices in which the "arc-shaped" feature is extended by a fourth, less tilted helix. The band of these four tilted helices is flanked by a straight helix on the outer side and a pair of straight helices on its inner side.  相似文献   

2.
Invertebrate rhodopsins activate a G-protein signalling pathway in microvillar photoreceptors. In contrast to the transducin-cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase pathway found in vertebrate rods and cones, visual transduction in cephalopod (squid, octopus, cuttlefish) invertebrates is signalled via Gq and phospholipase C. Squid rhodopsin contains the conserved residues of the G-protein coupled receptor (GPCR) family, but has only 35% identity with mammalian rhodopsins. Unlike vertebrate rhodopsins, cephalopod rhodopsin is arranged in an ordered lattice in the photoreceptor membranes. This organization confers sensitivity to the plane of polarized light and also provides the optimal orientation of the linear retinal chromophores in the cylindrical microvillar membranes for light capture. Two-dimensional crystals of squid rhodopsin show a rectilinear arrangement that is likely to be related to the alignment of rhodopsins in vivo.Here, we present a three-dimensional structure of squid rhodopsin determined by cryo-electron microscopy of two-dimensional crystals. Docking the atomic structure of bovine rhodopsin into the squid density map shows that the helix packing and extracellular plug structure are conserved. In addition, there are two novel structural features revealed by our map. The linear lattice contact appears to be made by the transverse C-terminal helix lying on the cytoplasmic surface of the membrane. Also at the cytoplasmic surface, additional density may correspond to a helix 5-6 loop insertion found in most GPCRs relative to vertebrate rhodopsins. The similarity supports the conservation in structure of rhodopsins (and other G-protein-coupled receptors) from phylogenetically distant organisms. The map provides the first indication of the structural basis for rhodopsin alignment in the microvillar membrane.  相似文献   

3.
The structure of thin three-dimensional crystals of the light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b protein complex, an integral membrane protein from the photosynthetic membrane of chloroplasts, has been determined at 7 A (1 A = 0.1 nm) resolution in projection. The structure analysis was carried out by image processing of low-dose electron micrographs, and electron diffraction of thin three-dimensional crystals preserved in tannin. The three-dimensional crystals appeared to be stacks of two-dimensional crystals having p321 symmetry. Results of the image analysis indicated that the crystals were disordered, due to random translational displacement of stacked layers. This was established by a translation search routine that used the low-resolution projection of a single layer as a reference. The reference map was derived from the symmetrized average of two images that showed features consistent with the projected structure of negatively stained two-dimensional crystals. The phase shift resulting from the displacement of each layer was corrected. Phase shifts were then refined by minimizing the phase residual, bringing all layers to the same phase origin. Refined phases from different images were in agreement and reliable to 7 A resolution. A projection map was generated from the averaged phases and electron diffraction amplitudes. The map showed that the complex was a trimer composed of three protein monomers related by 3-fold symmetry. The projected density within the protein monomer suggested membrane-spanning alpha-helices roughly perpendicular to the crystal plane. The density in the centre and on the periphery of the trimeric complex was lower than that of the protein, indicating that this region contained low-density matter, such as lipids and antenna chlorophylls.  相似文献   

4.
Rhodopsin is the prototypical G protein-coupled receptor, responsible for detection of dim light in vision. Upon absorption of a photon, rhodopsin undergoes structural changes, characterised by distinct photointermediates. Currently, only the ground-state structure has been described. We have determined a density map of a photostationary state highly enriched in metarhodopsin I, to a resolution of 5.5 A in the membrane plane, by electron crystallography. The map shows density for helix 8, the cytoplasmic loops, the extracellular plug, all tryptophan residues, an ordered cholesterol molecule and the beta-ionone ring. Comparison of this map with X-ray structures of the ground state reveals that metarhodopsin I formation does not involve large rigid-body movements of helices, but there is a rearrangement close to the bend of helix 6, at the level of the retinal chromophore. There is no gradual build-up of the large conformational change known to accompany metarhodopsin II formation. The protein remains in a conformation similar to that of the ground state until late in the photobleaching process.  相似文献   

5.
The structure of the visual pigment rhodopsin in the dark state was first investigated by electron microscopy (EM). More recently, rhodopsin has been crystallised in two different space groups--a tetragonal P4(1) crystal form and a trigonal P3(1) packing arrangement. The structures of the pigment, determined by X-ray crystallography from these two crystal forms, show many similarities, but also significant differences. These differences are most extensive in the G-protein-binding region of the cytoplasmic surface, where the location of the loop between helices 5 and 6 is highly variable. A combination of EM and spin labelling suggests that this loop adopts the native conformation in the P3(1) crystal form. The X-ray structures also show the location of structural water molecules that are important for colour tuning, stabilisation of the ground state and receptor activation, and act as a template for modelling other G-protein-coupled receptors. A major current focus of structural work on rhodopsin is investigation of the activated state of the receptor. After careful spectroscopic characterisation of light activation in two-dimensional crystals, a map of the metarhodopsin I intermediate was obtained by EM from two-dimensional crystals. In addition, NMR studies are providing information about the structure of activated states of rhodopsin. In the future, structural information will show how rhodopsin becomes activated and how it couples to downstream signalling pathways.  相似文献   

6.
Thin, three-dimensional crystals of CaATPase have been studied at high resolution by electron crystallography. These crystals were grown by adding purified CaATPase to appropriate concentrations of lipid, detergent and calcium. A thin film of crystals was then rapidly frozen and maintained in the frozen-hydrated state during electron microscopy. The resulting electron diffraction patterns extend to 4.1 A resolution and images contain phase data to 6 A resolution. By combining Fourier amplitudes from electron diffraction patterns with phases from images, a density map has been calculated in projection. Comparison of this map from unstained crystals with a previously determined map from negatively stained crystals reveals distinct contributions from intramembranous and extramembranous protein domains. On the basis of this distinction and of the packing of molecules in the crystal, we have proposed a specific arrangement for the ten alpha-helices that have been suggested as spanning the bilayer.  相似文献   

7.
Rhodopsin, the prototypical G-protein-coupled receptor, which is densely packed in the disc membranes of rod outer segments, was proposed to function as a monomer. However, a growing body of evidence indicates dimerization and oligomerization of numerous G-protein-coupled receptors, and atomic force microscopy images revealed rows of rhodopsin dimers in murine disc membranes. In this work we demonstrate by electron microscopy of negatively stained samples, blue native- and sodium dodecyl sulphate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, chemical crosslinking, and by proteolysis that native bovine rhodopsin exists mainly as dimers and higher oligomers. These results corroborate the recent findings from atomic force microscopy and molecular modeling on the supramolecular structure and packing arrangement of murine rhodopsin dimers.  相似文献   

8.
Rhodopsin, the prototypical G-protein-coupled receptor, which is densely packed in the disc membranes of rod outer segments, was proposed to function as a monomer. However, a growing body of evidence indicates dimerization and oligomerization of numerous G-protein-coupled receptors, and atomic force microscopy images revealed rows of rhodopsin dimers in murine disc membranes. In this work we demonstrate by electron microscopy of negatively stained samples, blue native- and sodium dodecyl sulphate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, chemical crosslinking, and by proteolysis that native bovine rhodopsin exists mainly as dimers and higher oligomers. These results corroborate the recent findings from atomic force microscopy and molecular modeling on the supramolecular structure and packing arrangement of murine rhodopsin dimers.  相似文献   

9.
Rhodopsin, the membrane protein responsible for dim-light vision, until recently was the only G-protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) with a known crystal structure. As a result, there is enormous interest in studying its structure, dynamics, and function. Here we report the results of three all-atom molecular dynamics simulations, each at least 1.5 μs, which predict that substantial changes in internal hydration play a functional role in rhodopsin activation. We confirm with 1H magic angle spinning NMR that the increased hydration is specific to the metarhodopsin-I intermediate. The internal water molecules interact with several conserved residues, suggesting that changes in internal hydration may be important during the activation of other GPCRs. The results serve to illustrate the synergism of long-time-scale molecular dynamics simulations and NMR in enhancing our understanding of GPCR function.  相似文献   

10.
Elucidating the detailed mechanism of activation of membrane protein receptors and their ligand binding is essential for structure-based drug design. Membrane protein crystal structure analysis successfully aids in understanding these fundamental molecular interactions. However, protein crystal structure analysis of the G-protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) remains challenging, even for the class of GPCRs which have been included in the majority of structure analysis reports among membrane proteins, due to the substantial instability of these receptors when extracted from lipid bilayer membranes. It is known that increased thermostability tends to decrease conformational flexibility, which contributes to the generation of diffraction quality crystals. However, this is still not straightforward, and significant effort is required to identify thermostabilized mutants that are optimal for crystallography. To address this issue, a versatile screening platform based on a label-free ligand binding assay combined with transient overexpression in virus-like particles was developed. This platform was used to generate thermostabilized GPR40 [also known as free fatty acid receptor 1 (FFAR1)] for fasiglifam (TAK-875). This demonstrated that the thermostabilized mutant GPR40 (L42A/F88A/G103A/Y202F) was successfully used for crystal structure analysis.  相似文献   

11.
Michel H 《The EMBO journal》1982,1(10):1267-1271
The three-dimensional crystals of the integral membrane protein bacteriorhodopsin have been characterized by X-ray diffraction and freeze-fracture electron microscopy: the needle-like form A crystals belong to space group P 1 (pseudohexagonal) with seven molecules per crystallographic unit cell forming one turn of a non-crystallographic helix. The probable arrangement of the bacteriorhodopsin molecules is derived from freeze-fracture electron micrographs and chromophore orientation. Membrane-like structures are not present. The same helices of bacteriorhodopsin molecules found in crystal form A also make up the cube-like crystal form B. They are now arranged in all three mutually perpendicular directions. These cubes are always highly disordered, since the unit cell length corresponds to 6.7 molecules of the 7-fold helix. Very often, conversion of bacteriorhodopsin from the three-dimensional crystals into filamentous material occurs.  相似文献   

12.
Low dose electron diffraction and imaging techniques have been applied to the study of the crystalline structure of gp32*I, a DNA helix destabilizing protein derived from bacteriophage T4 gene 32 protein. A quantitative analysis of intensities from electron diffraction patterns from tilted, multilayered gp32*I crystal has provided the unit cell thickness of the crystal. The three-dimensional phases indicate that the space group P2(1)2(1)2. By taking into account the unit cell volume and the solvent content in the crystal, it was deduced that there is one gp32*I molecule in each asymmetric unit. A projected density map of unstained, glucose-embedded gp32*I crystal was synthesized with amplitudes from electron diffraction intensities and phases from electron images with reflections out to 7.6 A. Because of the similarity in the scattering density between glucose and protein, this projected map cannot be interpreted with certainty. A low resolution three-dimensional reconstruction shows that the protein molecule is about 90 A long and about 20 A in diameter. Because the dimer is formed around a dyad axis, the protein molecules comprising it must be arranged head-to-head. This dimeric arrangement of the proteins in the unit cell may be implicated as one of the conformational states of this protein in solution.  相似文献   

13.
Respiratory complex I (NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase) is an L-shaped multisubunit protein assembly consisting of a hydrophobic membrane arm and a hydrophilic peripheral arm. It catalyses the transfer of two electrons from NADH to quinone coupled to the translocation of four protons across the membrane. Although we have solved recently the crystal structure of the peripheral arm, the structure of the complete enzyme and the coupling mechanism are not yet known. The membrane domain of Escherichia coli complex I consists of seven different subunits with total molecular mass of 258 kDa. It is significantly more stable than the whole enzyme, which allowed us to obtain well-ordered two-dimensional crystals of the domain, belonging to the space group p22(1)2(1). Comparison of the projection map of negatively stained crystals with previously published low-resolution structures indicated that the characteristic curved shape of the membrane domain is remarkably well conserved between bacterial and mitochondrial enzymes, helping us to interpret projection maps in the context of the intact complex. Two pronounced stain-excluding densities at the distal end of the membrane domain are likely to represent the two large antiporter-like subunits NuoL and NuoM. Cryo-electron microscopy on frozen-hydrated crystals allowed us to calculate a projection map at 8 A resolution. About 60 transmembrane alpha-helices, both perpendicular to the membrane plane and tilted, are present within one membrane domain, which is consistent with secondary structure predictions. A possible binding site and access channel for quinone are found at the interface with the peripheral arm. Tentative assignment of individual subunits to the features of the map has been made. The location of subunits NuoL and NuoM at substantial distance from the peripheral arm, which contains all the redox centres of the complex, indicates that conformational changes are likely to play a role in the mechanism of coupling between electron transfer and proton pumping.  相似文献   

14.
Rhodopsin is the only member of the pharmacologically important superfamily of G-protein-coupled receptors with a known structure at atomic resolution. A molecular dynamics model of rhodopsin in a POPC phospholipid bilayer was simulated for 15 ns, revealing a conformation significantly different from the recent crystal structures. The structure of the bilayer compared with a protein-free POPC control indicated hydrophobic matching with the nonpolar interface of the receptor, in agreement with deuterium NMR experiments. A new generalized molecular surface method, based on a three-dimensional Voronoi cell construction for atoms with different radii, was developed to quantify cross-sectional area profiles for the protein, lipid acyl chains and headgroups, and water. Thus, it was possible to investigate the bilayer deformation due to curvature of the individual lipid monolayers. Moreover, the generalized molecular surface derived hydrophobic interface allowed benchmarking of the hydropathy sequence analysis, an important structural genomics tool. Five water molecules diffused into internal hydration sites during the simulation, yielding a total of 12 internal waters. The cytoplasmic loops and the C-terminal tail, containing the G-protein recognition and protein sorting sequences, exhibited a high mobility, in marked contrast to the extracellular and transmembrane domains. The proposed functional coupling of the highly conserved ERY motif to the lipid-water interface via the cytoplasmic loops provides insight into lipid effects on G-protein-coupled receptor activation in terms of a flexible surface model, involving the spontaneous monolayer curvature.  相似文献   

15.
Electron microscope images of frozen-hydrated crystals of a proteolytically modified fibrinogen show excellent preservation of the structure. An electron density map of the key centric projection of the crystal at 18 A resolution has been obtained by combining the phases derived from cryo-electron microscopy with X-ray amplitudes. Simulation methods developed in earlier studies have been used to interpret the map. In contrast to the earlier images, the map allows us to visualize the coiled-coil region of the molecule and possible substructure in the beta domains. The map also shows that there is a marked difference in density in the two regions corresponding to the molecular ends where the gamma domains interact. A possible interpretation of this finding is provided by assuming substructure in the gamma domains and the breaking of molecular symmetry where these domains interact. Some additional constraints useful for the determination of the three-dimensional structure were obtained from cryo-electron micrographs of a perpendicular view at 25 A resolution. Implications of this working model for the molecular length and contacts in the filaments in both the crystal and fibrin are described. The data used here will be valuable as a starting point for obtaining the three-dimensional structure.  相似文献   

16.
Pure solubilised microsomal glutathione transferase 1 (MGST1) forms well-ordered two-dimensional (2-D) crystals of two different symmetries, one orthorhombic (p22(1)2(1)) and one hexagonal (p6), both diffracting electrons to a resolution beyond 3 A. A three-dimensional (3-D) map has previously been calculated to 6 A resolution from the hexagonal crystal form. From orthorhombic crystals we have now calculated a 6 A 3-D reconstruction displaying three repeats of four rod-like densities. These are inclined relative to the normal of the membrane plane and consistent with arising from a left-handed four-helix bundle fold. The rendered volume clearly displays the same structural features as the map previously calculated from the p6 crystal type including similar lengths and substructure of the helices, but several distinguishing features do exist. The helices are more tilted in the map calculated from the orthorhombic crystals indicating conformational flexibility. Density present on the cytosolic side is consistent with the location of the active site. In addition, the current map displays the noted similarity to subunit I of cytochrome c oxidase.  相似文献   

17.
J M Baldwin 《The EMBO journal》1993,12(4):1693-1703
G protein-coupled receptors form a large family of integral membrane proteins whose amino acid sequences have seven hydrophobic segments containing distinctive sequence patterns. Rhodopsin, a member of the family, is known to have transmembrane alpha-helices. The probable arrangement of the seven helices, in all receptors, was deduced from structural information extracted from a detailed analysis of the sequences. Constraints established include: (1) each helix must be positioned next to its neighbours in the sequence; (2) helices I, IV and V must be most exposed to the lipid surrounding the receptor and helix III least exposed. (1) is established from the lengths of the shortest loops. (2) is determined by considering: (i) sites of the most conserved residues; (ii) other sites where variability is restricted; (iii) sites that accommodate polar residues; (iv) sites of differences in sequence between pairs or within groups of closely related receptors. Most sites in the last category should be in unimportant positions and are most useful in determining the position and extent of lipid-facing surface in each helix. The structural constraints for the receptors are used to allocate particular helices to the peaks in the recently published projection map of rhodopsin and to propose a tentative three-dimensional arrangement of the helices in G protein-coupled receptors.  相似文献   

18.
The determination of the structure of PSII at high resolution is required in order to fully understand its reaction mechanisms. Two-dimensional crystals of purified highly active Synechococcus elongatus PSII dimers were obtained by in vitro reconstitution. Images of these crystals were recorded by electron cryo-microscopy, and their analysis revealed they belong to the two-sided plane group p22(1)2(1), with unit cell parameters a = 121 A, b = 333 A, and alpha = 90 degrees. From these crystals, a projection map was calculated to a resolution of approximately 16 A. The reliability of this projection map is confirmed by its close agreement with the recently presented three-dimensional model of the same complex obtained by X-ray crystallography. Comparison of the projection map of the Synechococcus elongatus PSII complex with data obtained by electron crystallography of the spinach PSII core dimer reveals a similar organization of the main transmembrane subunits. However, some differences in density distribution between the cyanobacterial and higher plant PSII complexes exist, especially in the outer region of the complex between CP43 and cytochrome b(559) and adjacent to the B-helix of the D1 protein. These differences are discussed in terms of the number and organization of some of the PSII low molecular weight subunits.  相似文献   

19.
Large two-dimensional crystals of H+-ATPase, a 100 kDa integral membrane protein, were grown directly onto the carbon surface of an electron microscope grid. This procedure prevented the fragmentation that is normally observed upon transfer of the crystals from the air-water interface to a continuous carbon support film. Crystals grown by this method measure approximately 5 microm across and have a thickness of approximately 240 A. They are of better quality than the monolayers previously obtained at the air-water interface, yielding structure factors to at least 8 A in-plane resolution by electron image processing. Unlike most other two-dimensional crystals of membrane proteins they do not contain a lipid bilayer, but consist of detergent-protein micelles of H+-ATPase hexamers tightly packed on a trigonal lattice. The crystals belong to the two-sided plane group p321 (a=b=165 A), containing two layers of hexamers related by an in-plane axis of 2-fold symmetry. The protein is in contact with the carbon surface through its large, hydrophilic 70 kDa cytoplasmic portion, yet due to the presence of detergent in the crystallizing buffer, the hydrophobicity of the carbon surface does not appear to affect crystal formation. Surface crystallisation may be a useful method for other proteins which form fragile two-dimensional crystals, in particular if conditions for obtaining three-dimensional crystals are known, but their quality or stability is insufficient for X-ray structure determination.  相似文献   

20.
The structure of Na, K-ATPase was determined by electron crystallography at 9.5 A from multiple small 2-D crystals induced in purified membranes isolated from the outer medulla of pig kidney. The density map shows a protomer stabilized in the E(2) conformation which extends approximately 65 A x 75 A x 150 A in the asymmetric unit of the P2 type unit cell. The alpha, beta, and gamma subunits were demonstrated in the membrane crystals with Western blotting and related to distinct domains in the density map. The alpha subunit corresponds to most of the density in the transmembrane region as well as the large hydrophilic headpiece on the cytoplasmic side of the membrane. The headpiece is divided into three separated domains, which are similar in overall shape to the domains of the calcium pump of the sarcoplasmic reticulum. One of these domains gives rise to a characteristic elongated projection onto the membrane plane while the putative nucleotide binding and phosphorylation domains form comparatively compact densities in the rest of the cytoplasmic part of the structure. Density on the extracellular face corresponds to the protein part of the beta subunit and is located as an extension of the transmembrane region perpendicular to the membrane plane. The structure of the lipid bilayer spanning part suggests the positions for the transmembrane helix from the beta subunit as well as the small gamma subunit present in this Na,K-ATPase. Two groups of ten helices from the catalytic alpha subunit corresponds to the remaining density in the transmembrane region. The present results demonstrate distinct similarities between the structure of the alpha subunit of Na,K-ATPase as determined here by cryo-electron microscopy and the reported X-ray structure of Ca-ATPase. However, conformational changes between the E(1) and E(2) forms are suggested by different relative positions of cytoplasmatic domains.  相似文献   

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