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1.
The photoactivation mechanism of the sensory rho-dopsin II (SRII)-HtrII receptor-transducer complex of Natronomonas pharaonis was investigated by time-resolved Fourier transform infrared difference spectroscopy to identify structural changes associated with early events in the signal relay mechanism from the receptor to the transducer. Several prominent bands in the wild-type SRII-HtrII spectra are affected by amino acid substitutions at the receptor Tyr(199) and transducer Asn(74) residues, which form a hydrogen bond between the two proteins near the middle of the bilayer. Our results indicate disappearance of this hydrogen bond in the M and O photointermediates, the likely signaling states of the complex. This event represents one of the largest light-induced alterations in the binding contacts between the receptor and transducer. The vibrational frequency changes suggest that Asn(74) and Tyr(199) form other stronger hydrogen bonds in the M state. The light-induced disruption of the Tyr(199)-Asn(74) bond also occurs when the Schiff base counterion Asp(75) is replaced with a neutral asparagine. We compared the decrease in intensity of difference bands assigned to the Tyr(199)-Asn(74) pair and to chromophore and protein groups of the receptor at various time points during the recovery of the initial state. All difference bands exhibit similar decay kinetics indicating that reformation of the Tyr(199)-Asn(74) hydrogen bond occurs concomitantly with the decay of the M and O photointermediates. This work demonstrates that the signal relay from SRII to HtrII involves early structural alterations in the deeply membrane-embedded domain of the complex and provides a spectroscopic signal useful for correlation with the downstream events in signal transduction.  相似文献   

2.
The phototaxis receptor complex composed of sensory rhodopsin II (SRII) and the transducer subunit HtrII mediates photorepellent responses in haloarchaea. Light-activated SRII transmits a signal through two HAMP switch domains (HAMP1 and HAMP2) in HtrII that bridge the photoreceptive membrane domain of the complex and the cytoplasmic output kinase-modulating domain. HAMP domains, widespread signal relay modules in prokaryotic sensors, consist of four-helix bundles composed of two helices, AS1 and AS2, from each of two dimerized transducer subunits. To examine their molecular motion during signal transmission, we incorporated SRII-HtrII dimeric complexes in nanodiscs to allow unrestricted probe access to the cytoplasmic side HAMP domains. Spin-spin dipolar coupling measurements confirmed that in the nanodiscs, SRII photoactivation induces helix movement in the HtrII membrane domain diagnostic of transducer activation. Labeling kinetics of a fluorescein probe in monocysteine-substituted HAMP1 mutants revealed a light-induced shift of AS2 against AS1 by one-half α-helix turn with minimal other changes. An opposite shift of AS2 against AS1 in HAMP2 at the corresponding positions supports the proposal from x-ray crystal structures by Airola et al. (Airola, M. V., Watts, K. J., Bilwes, A. M., and Crane, B. R. (2010) Structure 18, 436-448) that poly-HAMP chains undergo alternating opposite interconversions to relay the signal. Moreover, we found that haloarchaeal cells expressing a HAMP2-deleted SRII-HtrII exhibit attractant phototaxis, opposite from the repellent phototaxis mediated by the wild-type di-HAMP SRII-HtrII complex. The opposite conformational changes and corresponding opposite output signals of HAMP1 and HAMP2 imply a signal transmission mechanism entailing small shifts in helical register between AS1 and AS2 alternately in opposite directions in adjacent HAMPs.  相似文献   

3.
Bacteriorhodopsin (BR) and sensory rhodopsin II (SRII), homologous photoactive proteins in haloarchaea, have different molecular functions. BR is a light-driven proton pump, whereas SRII is a phototaxis receptor that transmits a light-induced conformational change to its transducer HtrII. Despite these distinctly different functions, a single residue substitution, Ala215 to Thr215 in the BR retinal-binding pocket, enables its photochemical reactions to transmit signals to HtrII and mediate phototaxis. We pursued a crystal structure of the signaling BR mutant (BR_A215T) to determine the structural changes caused by the A215T mutation and to assess what new photochemistry is likely to be introduced into the BR photoactive site. We crystallized BR_A215T from bicelles and solved its structure to 3.0 Å resolution to enable an atomic-level comparison. The analysis was complemented by molecular dynamics simulation of BR mutated in silico. Three main conclusions regarding the roles of photoactive site residues in signaling emerge from the comparison of BR_A215T, BR, and SRII structures: (i) the Thr215 residue in signaling BR is positioned nearly identically with respect to the retinal chromophore as in SRII, consistent with its role in producing a steric conflict with the retinal C14 group during photoisomerization, proposed earlier to be essential for SRII signaling from vibrational spectroscopy and motility measurements; (ii) Tyr174–Thr204 hydrogen bonding, critical in SRII signaling and mimicked in signaling BR, is likely auxiliary, for example, to maintain Thr204 in the proper position for the steric trigger to occur; and (iii) the primary role of Arg72 in SRII is spectral tuning and not signaling.  相似文献   

4.
The structures of the cytoplasmic loops of the phototaxis receptor sensory rhodopsin II (SRII) and the membrane-proximal cytoplasmic domain of its bound transducer HtrII were examined in the dark and in the light-activated state by fluorescent probes and cysteine cross-linking. Light decreased the accessibility of E-F loop position 154 in the SRII-HtrII complex, but not in free SRII, consistent with HtrII proximity, which was confirmed by tryptophans placed within a 5-residue region identified in the HtrII membrane-proximal domain that exhibited Forster resonance energy transfer to a fluorescent probe at position 154 in SRII. The Forster resonance energy transfer was eliminated in the signaling deficient HtrII mutant G83F without loss of affinity for SRII. Finally, the presence of SRII and HtrII reciprocally inhibit homodimer disulfide cross-linking reactions in their membrane-proximal domains, showing that each interferes with the others self-interaction in this region. The results demonstrate close proximity between SRII-HtrII in the membrane-proximal domain, and in addition, light stimulation of the SRII inhibition of HtrII cross-linking was observed, indicating that the contact is enhanced in the photoactivated complex. A mechanism is proposed in which photoactivation alters the SRII-HtrII interaction in the membrane-proximal region during the signal relay process.  相似文献   

5.
Halobacterium salinarum sensory rhodopsin II (HsSRII) is a phototaxis receptor for blue-light avoidance that relays signals to its tightly bound transducer HsHtrII (H. salinarum haloarchaeal transducer for SRII). We found that disruption of the salt bridge between the protonated Schiff base of the receptor's retinylidene chromophore and its counterion Asp73 by residue substitutions D73A, N or Q constitutively activates HsSRII, whereas the corresponding Asp75 counterion substitutions do not constitutively activate Natronomonas pharaonis SRII (NpSRII) when complexed with N. pharaonis haloarchaeal transducer for SRII (NpHtrII). However, NpSRII(D75Q) in complex with HsHtrII is fully constitutively active, showing that transducer sensitivity to the receptor signal contributes to the phenotype. The swimming behaviour of cells expressing chimeras exchanging portions of the two homologous transducers localizes their differing sensitivities to the HtrII transmembrane domains. Furthermore, deletion constructs show that the known contact region in the cytoplasmic domain of the NpSRII-NpHtrII complex is not required for phototaxis, excluding the domain as a site for signal transmission. These results distinguish between the prevailing models for SRII-HtrII signal relay, strongly supporting the 'steric trigger-transmembrane relay model', which proposes that retinal isomerization directly signals HtrII through the mid-membrane SRII-HtrII interface, and refuting alternative models that propose signal relay in the cytoplasmic membrane-proximal domain.  相似文献   

6.
Bacteriorhodopsin (BR) and sensory rhodopsin II (SRII) function as a light-driven proton pump and a receptor for negative phototaxis in haloarchaeal membranes, respectively. SRII transmits light signals through changes in protein-protein interaction with its transducer HtrII. Recently, we converted BR by three mutations into a form capable of transmitting photosignals to HtrII to mediate phototaxis responses. The BR triple mutant (BR-T) provides an opportunity to identify structural changes necessary to activate HtrII by comparing light-induced infrared spectral changes of BR, BR-T, and SRII. The hydrogen out-of-plane (HOOP) vibrations of the BR-T were very similar to those of SRII, indicating that they are distributed more extensively along the retinal chromophore than in BR, as in SRII. On the other hand, the bands of the protein moiety in BR-T are similar to those of BR, indicating that they are not specific to photosensing. The alteration of the O-H stretching vibration of Thr-204 in SRII, which we had previously shown to be essential for signal relay to HtrII, occurs also in BR-T. In addition, 1670(+)/1664(-) cm(-1) bands attributable to a distorted alpha-helix were observed in BR-T in a HtrII-dependent manner, as is seen in SRII. Thus, we identified similarities and dissimilarities of BR-T to BR and SRII. The results suggest signaling function of the structural changes of the HOOP vibrations, the O-H stretching vibration of the Thr-215 residue, and a distorted alpha-helix for the signal generation. We also succeeded in measurements of L minus initial state spectra of BR-T, which are the first FTIR spectra of L intermediates among sensory rhodopsins.  相似文献   

7.
Nishikata K  Ikeguchi M  Kidera A 《Biochemistry》2012,51(30):5958-5966
The complex of sensory rhodopsin II (SRII) and its cognate transducer HtrII (2:2 SRII-HtrII complex) consists of a photoreceptor and its signal transducer, respectively, associated with negative phototaxis in extreme halophiles. In this study to investigate how photoexcitation in SRII affects the structures of the complex, we conducted two series of molecular dynamics simulations of the complex of SRII and truncated HtrII (residues 1-136) of Natronomonas pharaonis linked with a modeled HAMP domain in the lipid bilayer using the two crystal structures of the ground state and the M-intermediate state as the starting structures. The simulation results showed significant enhancements of the structural differences observed between the two crystal structures. Helix F of SRII showed an outward motion, and the C-terminal end of transmembrane domain 2 (TM2) in HtrII rotated by ~10°. The most significant structural changes were observed in the overall orientations of the two SRII molecules, closed in the ground state and open in the M-state. This change was attributed to substantial differences in the structure of the four-helix bundle of the HtrII dimer causing the apparent rotation of TM2. These simulation results established the structural basis for the various experimental observations explaining the structural differences between the ground state and the M-intermediate state.  相似文献   

8.
Sensory rhodopsin II (SRII, also called pharaonis phoborhodopsin, ppR) is responsible for negative phototaxis in Natronomonas pharaonis. Photoisomerization of the retinal chromophore from all- trans to 13- cis initiates conformational changes in the protein, leading to activation of the cognate transducer protein (HtrII). We previously observed enhancement of the C 14-D stretching vibration of the retinal chromophore at 2244 cm (-1) upon formation of the K state and interpreted that a steric constraint occurs at the C 14D group in SRII K. Here, we identify the counterpart of the C 14D group as Thr204, because the C 14-D stretching signal disappeared in T204A, T204S, and T204C mutants as well as a C 14-HOOP (hydrogen out-of-plane) vibration at 864 cm (-1). Although the K state of the wild-type bacteriorhodopsin (BR), a light-driven proton pump, possesses neither 2244 nor 864 cm (-1) bands, both signals appeared for the K state of a triple mutant of BR that functions as a light sensor (P200T/V210Y/A215T). We found a positive correlation between these vibrational amplitudes of the C 14 atom at 77 K and the physiological phototaxis response. These observations strongly suggest that the steric constraint between the C 14 group of retinal and Thr204 of the protein is a prerequisite for light-signal transduction by SRII.  相似文献   

9.
Organisms sense and respond to environmental stimuli through membrane-embedded receptors and transducers. Sensory rhodopsin I (SRI) and sensory rhodopsin II (SRII) are the photoreceptors for the positive and negative phototaxis in microorganisms, respectively. They form signaling complexes in the membrane with their cognate transducer proteins, HtrI and HtrII, and these SRI-HtrI and SRII-HtrII complexes transmit a light signal through their cytoplasmic sensory signaling system, inducing opposite effects (i.e., the inactivation or activation of the kinase CheA). Here we found, by using Fourier transformed infrared spectroscopy, that a conserved residue, Asp102 in Salinibacter SRI (SrSRI), which is located close to the β-ionone ring of the retinal chromophore, is deprotonated upon formation of the active M-intermediate. Furthermore, the D102E mutant of SrSRI affects the structure and/or structural changes of Cys130. This mutant shows a large spectral shift and is comparably unstable, especially in the absence of Cl(-). These phenomena have not been observed in the wild-type, or the N105Q and N105D mutants of Natronomonas pharaonis SRII (NpSRII), indicating differences in the structure and structural changes between SrSRI and NpSRII around the β-ionone ring. These differences could also be supported by the measurements of the reactivity with the water-soluble reagent azide. On the basis of these results, we discuss the structure and structural changes around the retinal chromophore in SrSRI.  相似文献   

10.
A conformational change of the transducer HtrII upon photoexcitation of the associated photoreceptor sensory rhodopsin II (SRII) was investigated by monitoring the kinetics of volume changes and the diffusion coefficient (D) of the complex during the photochemical reaction cycle. To localize the region of the transducer responsible, we truncated it at various positions in the cytoplasmic HAMP (histidine kinases, adenylyl cyclases, methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins, and phosphatases) domain. The truncations do not alter receptor binding, which is dependent primarily on membrane-embedded domain interactions. We found that the light-induced reduction in D occurs in transducers of lengths 120 and 157 residues (Tr120 and Tr157), which are both predicted to contain a HAMP domain consisting of two amphipathic α-helices (AS-1 and AS-2). In contrast, the change in D was abolished in a transducer of 114 amino acid residues (Tr114), which lacks a distal portion of the second α-helix AS-2. The volume changes in SRII-Tr114 are comparable in amplitude and kinetics with those in SRII-Tr120 and SRII-Tr157, confirming the integrity of the complex, which was previously concluded from the similar SRII binding affinity and similar blocking of SRII proton transport by full-length HtrII and Tr114. Our results indicate that a substantial conformational change occurs in the HAMP domain during SRII-HtrII signaling. The data presented here are the first demonstration of stimulus-induced conformational changes of a HAMP domain and provide evidence that the presence of AS-2 is crucial for the conformational alterations. The reduction in diffusion coefficient is likely to due to structural changes in the AS-1 and AS-2 helices such that hydrogen bonding with the surrounding water molecules is increased, thereby increasing friction with the solvent. Similar structural changes may be a general feature in HAMP domain switching, which occurs in diverse signaling proteins, including sensor kinases, taxis receptors/transducers, adenylyl cyclases, and phosphatases.  相似文献   

11.
Sensory rhodopsin II (NpSRII) is a phototaxis receptor of Natronomonas pharaonis that performs its function in complex with its cognate transducer (NpHtrII). Upon light activation NpSRII triggers by means of NpHtrII a signal transduction chain homologous to the two component system in eubacterial chemotaxis. The D75N mutant of NpSRII, which lacks the blue-shifted M intermediate and therefore exhibits a significantly faster photocycle compared to the wild-type, mediates normal phototaxis responses demonstrating that deprotonation of the Schiff base is not a prerequisite for transducer activation. Using site-directed spin labeling and time resolved electron paramagnetic-resonance spectroscopy, we show that the mechanism revealed for activation of the wild-type complex, namely an outward tilt motion of the cytoplasmic part of the receptor helix F and a concomitant rotation of the transmembrane transducer helix TM2, is also valid for the D75N variant. Apparently, the D75N mutation shifts the ground state conformation of NpSRII-D75N and its cognate transducer into the direction of the signaling state.  相似文献   

12.
Sensory rhodopsins (SRs) are light receptors that belong to the growing family of microbial rhodopsins. SRs have now been found in all three major domains of life including archaea, bacteria, and eukaryotes. One of the most extensively studied sensory rhodopsins is SRII, which controls a blue light avoidance motility response in the halophilic archaeon Natronobacterium pharaonis. This seven-helix integral membrane protein forms a tight intermolecular complex with its cognate transducer protein, HtrII. In this work, the structural changes occurring in a fusion complex consisting of SRII and the two transmembrane helices (TM1 and TM2) of HtrII were investigated by time-resolved Fourier transform infrared difference spectroscopy. Although most of the structural changes observed in SRII are conserved in the fusion complex, several distinct changes are found. A reduction in the intensity of a prominent amide I band observed for SRII indicates that its structural changes are altered in the fusion complex, possibly because of the close interaction of TM2 with the F helix, which interferes with the F helix outward tilt. Deprotonation of at least one Asp/Glu residue is detected in the transducer-free receptor with a pKa near 7 that is abolished or altered in the fusion complex. Changes are also detected in spectral regions characteristic of Asn and Tyr vibrations. At high hydration levels, transducer-fusion interactions lead to a stabilization of an M-like intermediate that most likely corresponds to an active signaling form of the transducer. These findings are discussed in the context of a recently elucidated x-ray structure of the fusion complex.  相似文献   

13.
Trivedi VD  Spudich JL 《Biochemistry》2003,42(47):13887-13892
A chimeric fusion protein consisting of Natronomonas pharaonis sensory rhodopsin II (SRII), fused by a flexible linker to the two transmembrane helices of its cognate transducer protein, HtrII, followed by the HtrII membrane-proximal cytoplasmic fragment joined to the cytoplasmic domains of the Escherichia coli chemotaxis receptor Tsr, was expressed in E. coli. Purified fusion chimera protein reconstituted in liposomes binds to E. coli CheA kinase in the presence of the coupling protein CheW, and activates CheA autophosphorylation activity. CheA kinase activity is stimulated by photoexcitation of the SRII domain of the fusion protein, as shown by the wavelength-dependence of photostimulated phosphotransfer to the E. coli flagellar motor response regulator CheY in the purified in vitro liposomal system. Further confirming the fidelity of the in vitro system, increased and decreased levels of CheA activation in vitro result from overmethylated and undermethylated fusion protein purified from methylesterase and methyltransferase-deficient E. coli, respectively. Photoexcitation of the undermethylated fusion protein resulted in a 3-fold increase in phosphotransfer over that of the dark state. The results directly demonstrate the coupling of SRII photoactivated states to histidine kinase activity, previously predicted on the basis of sequence homologies of the haloarchaeal phototaxis system components to those of E. coli chemotaxis. The fusion chimera provides the first tool for in vitro measurement of photosignaling activity of SRII-HtrII molecular complexes.  相似文献   

14.
Mizuno M  Sudo Y  Homma M  Mizutani Y 《Biochemistry》2011,50(15):3170-3180
Sensory rhodopsin II (SRII) is a negative phototaxis receptor containing retinal as its chromophore, which mediates the avoidance of blue light. The signal transduction is initiated by the photoisomerization of the retinal chromophore, resulting in conformational changes of the protein which are transmitted to a transducer protein. To gain insight into the SRII sensing mechanism, we employed time-resolved ultraviolet resonance Raman spectroscopy monitoring changes in the protein structure in the picosecond time range following photoisomerization. We used a 450 nm pump pulse to initiate the SRII photocycle and two kinds of probe pulses with wavelengths of 225 and 238 nm to detect spectral changes in the tryptophan and tyrosine bands, respectively. The observed spectral changes of the Raman bands are most likely due to tryptophan and tyrosine residues located in the vicinity of the retinal chromophore, i.e., Trp76, Trp171, Tyr51, or Tyr174. The 225 nm UVRR spectra exhibited bleaching of the intensity for all the tryptophan bands within the instrumental response time, followed by a partial recovery with a time constant of 30 ps and no further changes up to 1 ns. In the 238 nm UVRR spectra, a fast recovering component was observed in addition to the 30 ps time constant component. A comparison between the spectra of the WT and Y174F mutant of SRII indicates that Tyr174 changes its structure and/or environment upon chromophore photoisomerization. These data represent the first real-time observation of the structural change of Tyr174, of which functional importance was pointed out previously.  相似文献   

15.
pharaonis phoborhodopsin (ppR, also called pharaonis sensory rhodopsin II, psRII) is a receptor for negative phototaxis in Natronobacterium pharaonis. It forms a 2:2 complex with its transducer protein, pHtrII, in membranes, and the association is weakened by 2 orders of magnitude in the M intermediate. Such change is believed to correspond to the transfer of the light signal to pHtrII. In this paper, we applied Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy to the active M intermediate in the absence and presence of pHtrII. The obtained difference FTIR spectra were surprisingly similar, notwithstanding the presence of pHtrII. This result strongly suggests that the transducer activation in the ppR-pHtrII system does not induce secondary structure alterations of the pHtrII itself. On the other hand, we found that the hydrogen bond of the OH group of Thr204 is altered in the primary K intermediate, but restored in the M intermediate. The hydrogen bond of Asn74 in pHtrII is strengthened in M, presumably because of the change in interaction with Tyr199 of ppR. These facts provided a light signaling pathway from Lys205 (retinal) of the receptor to Asn74 of the transducer through Thr204 and Tyr199. Transducer activation is likely to involve a relaxation of Thr204 in the receptor and hydrogen bonding alteration of Asn74 in the transducer, during which the helices of the transducer perform rigid-body motion without changing their secondary structures.  相似文献   

16.
Sensory rhodopsin II (SRII) in Halobacterium salinarum membranes is a phototaxis receptor that signals through its bound transducer HtrII for avoidance of blue-green light. In the present study we investigated the proton movements during the photocycle of SRII in the HtrII-free and HtrII-complexed form. We monitored sustained light-induced pH changes with a pH electrode, and laser flash-induced pH changes with the pH indicator pyranine using sealed membrane vesicles and open sheets containing the free or the complexed receptor. The results demonstrated that SRII takes up a proton in M-to-O conversion and releases it during O-decay. The uptake and release are from and to the extracellular side, and therefore SRII does not transport the proton across the membrane. The pH dependence of the SRII photocycle indicated the presence of a protonatable group (pK(a) approximately 7.5) in the extracellular proton-conducting path, which plays a role in proton uptake by the Schiff base in the M-to-O conversion. The extracellular proton circulation produced by SRII was not blocked by HtrII complexation, unlike the cytoplasmic proton conduction in SRI that was found in the same series of measurements to be blocked by its transducer, HtrI. The implications of this finding for current models of SRI and SRII signaling are discussed.  相似文献   

17.
Motile bacteria and archaea respond to chemical and physical stimuli seeking optimal conditions for survival. To this end transmembrane chemo- and photoreceptors organized in large arrays initiate signaling cascades and ultimately regulate the rotation of flagellar motors. To unravel the molecular mechanism of signaling in an archaeal phototaxis complex we performed coarse-grained molecular dynamics simulations of a trimer of receptor/transducer dimers, namely NpSRII/NpHtrII from Natronomonas pharaonis. Signaling is regulated by a reversible methylation mechanism called adaptation, which also influences the level of basal receptor activation. Mimicking two extreme methylation states in our simulations we found conformational changes for the transmembrane region of NpSRII/NpHtrII which resemble experimentally observed light-induced changes. Further downstream in the cytoplasmic domain of the transducer the signal propagates via distinct changes in the dynamics of HAMP1, HAMP2, the adaptation domain and the binding region for the kinase CheA, where conformational rearrangements were found to be subtle. Overall these observations suggest a signaling mechanism based on dynamic allostery resembling models previously proposed for E. coli chemoreceptors, indicating similar properties of signal transduction for archaeal photoreceptors and bacterial chemoreceptors.  相似文献   

18.
The interaction between sensory rhodopsin II (SRII) and its transducer HtrII was studied by the time-resolved laser-induced transient grating method using the D75N mutant of SRII, which exhibits minimal visible light absorption changes during its photocycle, but mediates normal phototaxis responses. Flash-induced transient absorption spectra of transducer-free D75N and D75N joined to 120 amino-acid residues of the N-terminal part of the SRII transducer protein HtrII (DeltaHtrII) showed only one spectrally distinct K-like intermediate in their photocycles, but the transient grating method resolved four intermediates (K(1)-K(4)) distinct in their volumes. D75N bound to HtrII exhibited one additional slower kinetic species, which persists after complete recovery of the initial state as assessed by absorption changes in the UV-visible region. The kinetics indicate a conformationally changed form of the transducer portion (designated Tr*), which persists after the photoreceptor returns to the unphotolyzed state. The largest conformational change in the DeltaHtrII portion was found to cause a DeltaHtrII-dependent increase in volume rising in 8 micros in the K(4) state and a drastic decrease in the diffusion coefficient (D) of K(4) relatively to those of the unphotolyzed state and Tr*. The magnitude of the decrease in D indicates a large structural change, presumably in the solvent-exposed HAMP domain of DeltaHtrII, where rearrangement of interacting molecules in the solvent would substantially change friction between the protein and the solvent.  相似文献   

19.
HAMP domains are widely abundant signaling modules. The putative mechanism of their function comprises switching between two distinct states. To unravel these conformational transitions, we apply site-directed spin labeling and time-resolved EPR spectroscopy to the phototactic receptor/transducer complex NpSRII/NpHtrII. We characterize the kinetic coupling of NpHtrII to NpSRII along with the activation period of the transducer and follow the transient conformational signal. The observed transient shift towards a more compact state of the HAMP domain upon light-activation agrees with structure-based calculations. It thereby validates the two modeled signaling states and integrates the domain’s dynamics into the current model.  相似文献   

20.
In haloarchaea, sensory rhodopsin II (SRII) mediates a photophobic response to avoid photo-oxidative damage in bright light. Upon light activation the receptor undergoes a conformational change that activates a tightly bound transducer molecule (HtrII), which in turn by a chain of homologous reactions transmits the signal to the chemotactic eubacterial two-component system. Here, using single-molecule force spectroscopy, we localize and quantify changes to the intramolecular interactions within SRII of Natronomonas pharaonis (NpSRII) upon NpHtrII binding. Transducer binding affected the interactions at transmembrane alpha helices F and G of NpSRII to which the transducer was in contact. Remarkably, the interactions were distributed asymmetrically and significantly stabilized alpha helix G entirely but alpha helix F only at its extracellular tip. These findings provide unique insights into molecular mechanisms that "prime" the complex for signaling, and guide the receptor toward transmitting light-activated structural changes to its cognate transducer.  相似文献   

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