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1.
The two retinal-containing photoreceptors of halobacteria, P480 and sensory rhodopsin, are formed constitutively and inducibly, respectively. Both photoreceptors are synthesized as apoproteins in cells with nicotine-inhibited retinal synthesis and are reconstituted as chromoproteins by the addition of all-trans retinal to cell membrane preparations. The decrease in photoreceptor-mediated photophobic response at the stationary growth phase of cells is not due to photoreceptor degradation but due to a deficiency of the signal transduction chain in the cell.  相似文献   

2.
Halobacterium halobium swims by rotating its polarly inserted flagellar bundle. The cells are attracted by green-to-orange light which they can use for photophosphorylation but flee damaging blue or ultraviolet light. It is generally believed that this kind of 'colour vision' is achieved by the combined action of two photoreceptor proteins, sensory rhodopsins-I and -II, that switch in the light the rotational sense of the bundle and in consequence the swimming direction of a cell. By expressing the bacteriorhodopsin gene in a photoreceptor-negative background we have now demonstrated the existence of a proton-motive force sensor (protometer) and the function of bacteriorhodopsin as an additional photoreceptor covering the high intensity range. When the bacteriorhodopsin-generated proton-motive force drops caused by a sudden decrease in light intensity, the cells respond by reversing their swimming direction. This response does not occur when the proton-motive force is saturated by respiration or fermentation.  相似文献   

3.
Different modes of proton translocation by sensory rhodopsin I.   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
U Haupts  E Bamberg    D Oesterhelt 《The EMBO journal》1996,15(8):1834-1841
The membrane-bound complex between sensory rhodopsin I (SRI) and its transducer HtrI forms the functional photoreceptor unit that allows transmission of light signals to the flagellar motor. Although being a photosensor, SRI, the mutant SRI-D76N and the HtrI-SRI complex can transport protons, as we demonstrate by using the sensitive and ion-specific black lipid membrane technique. SRI sustains an orange light-driven (one-photon-driven) outward proton transport which is enhanced by additional blue light (two-photon-driven). The vectoriality of the two-photon-driven transport could be reversed at neutral pH from the outward to the inward direction by switching the cut-off wavelength of the long wavelength light from 550 to 630 nm. The cut-off wavelength determining the reversal point decreases with decreasing pH. The currents could be enhanced by azide. A two-photon-driven inward proton transport by SRI-D76N (catalyzed by azide) and by the complex HtrI-SRI is demonstrated. The influence of pH and azide concentration on the rise and decay kinetics of the SRI380 intermediate is analyzed. The different modes of proton translocation of the SRI species are discussed on the basis of a general model of proton translocation of retinal proteins and in the context of signal transduction.  相似文献   

4.
Halobacterium halobium swims with a polarly inserted motor-driven flagellar bundle. The swimming direction of the cell can be reserved by switching the rotational sense of the bundle. The switch is under the control of photoreceptor and chemoreceptor proteins that act through a branched signal chain. The swimming behavior of the cells and the switching process of the flagellar bundle were investigated with a computer-assisted motion analysis system. The cells were shown to swim faster by clockwise than by counterclockwise rotation of the flagellar bundle. From the small magnitude of speed fluctuations, it is concluded that the majority, if not all, of the individual flagellar motors of a cell rotate in the same direction at any given time. After stimulation with light (blue light pulse or orange light step-down), the cells continued swimming with almost constant speed but then slowed before they reversed direction. The cells passed through a pausing state during the change of the rotational sense of the flagellar bundle and then exhibited a transient acceleration. Both the average length of the pausing period and the transient acceleration were independent of the stimulus size and thus represent intrinsic properties of the flagellar motor assembly. The average length of the pausing period of individual cells, however, was not constant. The time course of the probability for spontaneous motor switching was calculated from frequency distribution and shown to be independent of the rotational sense. The time course further characterizes spontaneous switching as a stochastic rather than an oscillator-triggered event.  相似文献   

5.
Halobacterium salinarium responds to blue light by reversing its swimming direction. Fumarate has been proposed as one of the molecular components of this sensory system and is involved in the switching process of the flagellar motor. In order to obtain chemical proof for this role of fumarate, cells were stimulated with a pulse of blue light and lysed by rapid mixing with distilled water. The lysate contained fumarate in free and bound form, which were separated by ultrafiltration. The fumarate concentration in the low-molecular-mass fraction (<5 kDa) of the lysate was assayed enzymatically and a light-induced increase was observed. Additionally, the total cellular fumarate content decreased in response to light, indicating that fumarate was released from a cellular pool rather than being formed by de novo synthesis. The light-induced release was not detected in a mutant defective in sensory rhodopsin-l and -II. Therefore it is concluded that photoreceptor activation rather than a direct effect of light on the activity of metabolic enzymes causes fumarate release. For each photoactivated sensory rhodopsin-II molecule at least 350 molecules of fumarate were liberated demonstrating efficient amplification. The rate of light-induced fumarate release is at least 10-times faster than the fumarate turnover number of the citric acid cycle which was estimated as approximately 4300 per cell and second. Therefore this metabolic process is not expected to be part of the signal transduction chain in the halobacterial cell.  相似文献   

6.
Melanopsin is an opsin-family photopigment required for photosensitivity of the intrinsically photosensitive retinal ganglion cells (ipRGCs), which subserve photic entrainment of circadian rhythms in mammals. The melanopsin photocycle is presently unknown but is independent of the enzymatic photocycle employed by rhodopsin and cone opsins. Recent experiments have demonstrated that red-light exposure potentiates circadian phase-shifting responses to blue-light stimuli, consistent with the hypothesis that melanopsin functions as a bistable photopigment. To further test this hypothesis, we analyzed ipRGC firing activity in response to 480-nm blue light with or without intervening long-wavelength 620-nm red-light stimulation, using in vitro multielectrode array recording of postnatal day 8 to 10 murine retina. Cell-firing responses to 480-nm light were highly reproducible. No significant potentiating or bleaching effect of intervening subthreshold 620-nm light on ipRGC firing to 480-nm light could be discerned. Further physiologic and biochemical analysis of the ipRGC photoreception is required to reconcile the presence of long-wavelength potentiation at the level of the SCN with its absence in light-induced ipRGC firing.  相似文献   

7.
Photoresponse in the heterotrophic marine dinoflagellate Oxyrrhis marina   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Expressed rhodopsins were detected by proteomic analysis in an investigation of potential signal receptors in the cell membrane of the marine heterotrophic dinoflagellate Oxyrrhis marina (CCMP604). We inferred these to be sensory rhodopsins, a type of G-protein-coupled receptor trans-membrane signaling molecule. Because phototactic behavior based on sensory rhodopsins has been reported in other protists, we investigated the photosensory response of O. marina. This dinoflagellate exhibited strongest positive phototaxis at low levels (2-3 μE/m(2)/s) of white light when the cells were previously light adapted and well fed. Positive phototaxis was also found for blue (450 nm), green (525 nm), and red (680 nm) wavelengths. In a further test, O. marina showed significantly greater phototaxis toward concentrated algal food illuminated by blue light to stimulate red chlorophyll-a autofluorescence in the prey, compared with using bleached algae as prey. Concentration of a cytoplasmic downstream messenger molecule, cyclic adenosine monophosphate, a component of the signaling pathway of G-protein-coupled receptor molecules, rapidly increased in O. marina cells after exposure to white light. In addition, treatment with hydroxylamine, a rhodopsin signaling inhibitor, significantly decreased their phototactic response. Our results demonstrate that a heterotrophic marine dinoflagellate can orient to light based on rhodopsins present in the outer cell membrane and may be able to use photosensory response to detect algal prey based on chlorophyll autofluorescence.  相似文献   

8.
It has been shown previously that the proton-pumping activity of bacteriorhodopsin from Halobacterium salinarium can transmit an attractant signal to the bacterial flagella upon an increase in light intensity over a wide range of wavelengths. Here, we studied the effect of blue light on phototactic responses by the mutant strain Pho8l-B4, which lacks both sensory rhodopsins but has the ability to synthesize bacteriorhodopsin. Under conditions in which bacteriorhodopsin was largely accumulated as the M412 bacteriorhodopsin photocycle intermediate, halobacterial cells responded to blue light as a repellent. This response was pronounced when the membrane electric potential level was high in the presence of arginine, active oxygen consumption, or high-background long-wavelength light intensity but was inhibited by an uncoupler of oxidative phosphorylation (carbonyl cyanide 3-chlorophenylhydrazone) and was inverted in a background of low long-wavelength light intensity. The response to changes in the intensity of blue light under high background light was asymmetric, since removal of blue light did not produce an expected suppression of reversals. Addition of ammonium acetate, which is known to reduce the pH gradient changes across the membrane, did not inhibit the repellent effect of blue light, while the discharge of the membrane electric potential by tetraphenylphosphonium ions inhibited this sensory reaction. We conclude that the primary signal from bacteriorhodopsin to the sensory pathway involves changes in membrane potential.  相似文献   

9.
Blue light induces both depolarization of membrane potentialin the motor cell and turgor movement in the laminar pulvinusof bean plant. This paper describes the changes of electricpotential and turgor pressure induced in Phaseolus vulgarisL. by blue light pulses. A transient depolarization of membranepotential as large as 40 mV was induced by a short pulse of15 s blue light in motor cells of the laminar pulvinus. Thischange was not an action potential because of the absence ofa refractory period and threshold. The magnitudes of the responsewere dependent on the fluence of light. The response was long-lived,indicating that continuous input of light energy is not requiredfor a sustained response. The potential change was always followedby a transient turgor movement of the pulvinus. A molecular mechanism similar to a model postulated for theblue light response of stomata may operate in the motor cell.However, the direction of the electrical response to blue light(depolarization) in the motor cell was the opposite of thatin the guard cell (hyperpolarization). Turgor change of themotor cell by blue light was also opposite in direction (decrease). (Received February 19, 1988; Accepted June 28, 1988)  相似文献   

10.

Background  

Photo- and chemotaxis of the archaeon Halobacterium salinarum is based on the control of flagellar motor switching through stimulus-specific methyl-accepting transducer proteins that relay the sensory input signal to a two-component system. Certain members of the transducer family function as receptor proteins by directly sensing specific chemical or physical stimuli. Others interact with specific receptor proteins like the phototaxis photoreceptors sensory rhodopsin I and II, or require specific binding proteins as for example some chemotaxis transducers. Receptor activation by light or a change in receptor occupancy by chemical stimuli results in reversible methylation of glutamate residues of the transducer proteins. Both, methylation and demethylation reactions are involved in sensory adaptation and are modulated by the response regulator CheY.  相似文献   

11.
Nonbleachable rhodopsins containing retinal moieties with fixed 11-ene structures have been prepared. When the nonbleachable rhodopsin analogue corresponding to the natural pigment was flash-photolysed at 20.8 degrees C, no absorption changes occurred at the monitoring wavelengths of 380, 480, and 580 nm for the time range of 2 microseconds--10 s. This observation is in contrast to that of natural rhodopsin which showed the formation of metarhodopsin I and its decay to meta II. Irradiation of the artificial rhodopsin, 77 K, with light of 460 and 540 nm, also gave no spectral changes; in the case of natural rhodopsin, however, the irradiation leads to formation of the red-shifted intermediate bathorhodopsin. The absence of photochemistry in the artificial pigment shows that an 11-cis to trans photoisomerization of the retinal moiety is a crucial step in inducing the chain of events in te photolysis of rhodopsin.  相似文献   

12.
N J Ryba  D Marsh    R Uhl 《Biophysical journal》1993,64(6):1801-1812
The effects of light on rhodopsin reconstituted into dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine at a molar ratio of 1:70 have been studied as a function of temperature and time. The lipid phase behavior and thermal stability of rhodopsin in the system used to measure the photolytic reactions were also determined. Thus, it was shown that the gel-to-fluid phase transition of the reconstituted membrane had a marked influence on the bleaching kinetics and thermodynamics of rhodopsin-bleaching equilibria, whereas lipid-protein interactions were also directly involved. Rhodopsin photolysis resulted in temperature-sensitive equilibria between three main photoproducts, with absorption maximal of approximately 480, 380, and 465 nm. Below the lipid phase transition temperature, the main photoproduct had an absorption maximum at 480 nm. With increasing temperature progressively more of the 380 nm-absorbing species was formed. The photoproduct with a spectral-maximum at 465 nm absorption was formed more slowly. Increasing temperatures decreased the ratio of the 465:380 nm-absorbing species. The thermal reactions were reversible: on cooling the higher-temperature products were converted back to the lower-temperature products. The results indicate that rhodopsin has extensive photochemical activity when reconstituted in dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine. The equilibria that we have measured resemble those of rhodopsin in the disk membrane. However, the kinetics of meta-II and meta-III formation appear to be considerably faster in the reconstituted membranes and the meta-I-to-meta-II equilibrium is displaced in the direction of the meta-I state relative to native rod outer segment disk membranes. The displacement of the meta-rhodopsin equilibrium from its position in the rod outer segment is attributed mainly to the effects of lipid-lipid interactions in the membrane bilayer and correlates with the difference in gel-to-fluid phase transition temperature of the different lipids.  相似文献   

13.
In vivo radiolabeling of Halobacterium halobium phototaxis mutants and revertants with L-[methyl-3H] methionine implicated seven methyl-accepting protein bands with apparent molecular masses from 65 to 150 kilodaltons (kDa) in adaptation of the organism to chemo and photo stimuli, and one of these (94 kDa) was specifically implicated in phototaxis. The lability of the radiolabeled bands to mild base treatment indicated that the methyl linkages are carboxylmethylesters, as is the case in the eubacterial chemotaxis receptor-transducers. The 94-kDa protein was present in increased amounts in an overproducer of the apoprotein of sensory rhodopsin I, one of two retinal-containing phototaxis receptors in H. halobium. It was absent in a strain that contained sensory rhodopsin II and that lacked sensory rhodopsin I and was also absent in a mutant that lacked both photoreceptors. Based on the role of methyl-accepting proteins in chemotaxis in other bacteria, we suggest that the 94-kDa protein is the signal transducer for sensory rhodopsin I. By [3H]retinal labeling studies, we previously identified a 25-kDa retinal-binding polypeptide that was derived from photochemically reactive sensory rhodopsin I. When H. halobium membranes containing sensory rhodopsin I were treated by a procedure that stably reduced [3H]retinal onto the 25-kDa apoprotein, a 94-kDa protein was also found to be radiolabeled. Protease digestion confirmed that the 94-kDa retinal-labeled protein was the same as the methyl-accepting protein that was suggested above to be the signal transducer for sensory rhodopsin I. Possible models are that the 25- and 94-kDa proteins are tightly interacting components of the photosensory signaling machinery or that both are forms of sensory rhodopsin I.  相似文献   

14.
Spin labeling EPR spectroscopy has been used to characterize light-induced conformational changes of bacteriorhodopsin (bR). Pairs of nitroxide spin labels were attached to engineered cysteine residues at strategic positions near the cytoplasmic ends of transmembrane alpha-helices B, F, and G in order to monitor distance changes upon light activation. The EPR analysis of six doubly labeled bR mutants indicates that the cytoplasmic end of helix F not only tilts outwards, but also rotates counter-clockwise during the photocycle. The direction of the rotation of helix F is the opposite of the clockwise rotation previously reported for bovine rhodopsin. The opposite chirality of the F helix rotation in the two systems is perhaps related to the differences in the cis-trans photoisomerization of the retinal in the two proteins. Using time-resolved EPR, we monitored the rotation of helix F also in real time, and found that the signal from the rotation arises concurrently with the reprotonation of the retinal Schiff base.  相似文献   

15.
Visual pigments are a class of receptor proteins that absorb light and trigger sensory signals. Retinal-containing proteins are used in nature as photoreceptors mainly in animals vision. Mammalian rhodopsin is the best studied example of a light sensor which couples photon absorption to a cascade of biochemical reactions amplifying the input signal. A surprising discovery was to find rhodopsin also in Archaebacteria and in unicellular eukaryotes. On the basis of absorption microspectroscopic measurements and of inhibition experiments on pigment biosynthetic pathways, we have recently suggested that a rhodopsin could be the functional receptor of the visual process in Euglena gracilis, a flagellate which can use light directly to promote photosynthetic reactions, or as an incident flux of information to adjust its swimming orientation. We here report purification and identification of all-trans-retinal by column chromatography, HPLC and GC-MS in E. gracilis; these findings indicate with absolute certainty that rhodopsin is the photoreceptor molecule of this microorganism.  相似文献   

16.
Hubbard has found that the photoisomerization of retinene was important for the regeneration of rhodopsin in vitro, and the object of the present investigation was to find whether this was also true for regeneration in the living human eye. In the Appendix is described a device which permits the rhodopsin density to be measured by analysing the light reflected from the fundus oculi in an ophthalmoscopic arrangement, the measurement taking about 5 seconds. Now if a blue and a yellow light viewed scotopically are adjusted in intensity so as to appear identical, they must bleach rhodopsin equally, but the blue will be more than 10 times as effective in isomerizing retinene. Therefore if retinene isomerization is important for rhodopsin regeneration, blue light should cause a more rapid regeneration after bleaching, and during bleaching the equilibrium level attained should be less profound. But, as the figures show, the course of bleaching and regeneration is identical for the matched yellow or blue bleaching lights, therefore isomerization of retinene is not important for rhodopsin regeneration in the living human eye.  相似文献   

17.
Taddei-ferretti  Cloe  Musio  Carlo  Santillo  Silvia  Cotugno  Antonio 《Hydrobiologia》2004,530(1-3):129-134
Hydra’s response to a light pulse is a phase shift of the state of bioelectric activity correlated with the periodic shortening-elongation behaviour. The direction and absolute value of a phase shift depend on intensity, direction, application phase (along the periodic activity state), and wavelength of the light pulse. Repetitive pulses entrain the behavioural cycle. The period of the behavioural cycle depends on intensity and wavelength of steady background illumination; however, the light effect is not exerted isotropically along all the phases of the behavioural cycle. Inferences are drawn on light influence on the behaviour pacemaking mechanism. By using polyclonal antibodies against squid rhodopsin, an opsin-like protein has been identified in the ectodermal layer, presumably in sensory cells.  相似文献   

18.
Saranak J  Foster KW 《Eukaryotic cell》2005,4(10):1605-1612
When it is gliding, the unicellular euglenoid Peranema trichophorum uses activation of the photoreceptor rhodopsin to control the probability of its curling behavior. From the curled state, the cell takes off in a new direction. In a similar manner, archaea such as Halobacterium use light activation of bacterio- and sensory rhodopsins to control the probability of reversal of the rotation direction of flagella. Each reversal causes the cell to change its direction. In neither case does the cell track light, as known for the rhodopsin-dependent eukaryotic phototaxis of fungi, green algae, cryptomonads, dinoflagellates, and animal larvae. Rhodopsin was identified in Peranema by its native action spectrum (peak at 2.43 eV or 510 nm) and by the shifted spectrum (peak at 3.73 eV or 332 nm) upon replacement of the native chromophore with the retinal analog n-hexenal. The in vivo physiological activity of n-hexenal incorporated to become a chromophore also demonstrates that charge redistribution of a short asymmetric chromophore is sufficient for receptor activation and that the following isomerization step is probably not required when the rest of the native chromophore is missing. This property seems universal among the Euglenozoa, Plant, and Fungus kingdom rhodopsins. The rhodopsins of animals have yet to be studied in this respect. The photoresponse appears to be mediated by Ca2+ influx.  相似文献   

19.
We have analyzed repellent signal processing in Escherichia coli by flash photorelease of leucine from photolabile precursors. We found that 1). response amplitudes of free-swimming cell populations increased with leucine jump concentration, with an apparent Hill coefficient of 1.3 and a half-maximal dose of 14.4 microM; 2). at a 0-0.5 mM leucine concentration jump sufficient to obtain a saturation motile response, the swimming cell response time of approximately 0.05 s was several-fold more rapid than the motor response time of 0.39 +/- 0.18 s measured by following the rotation of cells tethered by a single flagellum to quartz coverslips; and 3). the motor response time of individual cells was correlated with rotation bias but not cell size. These results provide information on amplification, rate-limiting step, and flagellar bundle mechanics during repellent signal processing. The difference between the half-maximal dose for the excitation response and the corresponding value reported for adaptation provides an estimate of the increase in the rate of formation of CheYP, the phosphorylated form of the signal protein CheY. The estimated increase gives a lower limit receptor kinase coupling ratio of 6.0. The magnitude and form of the motor response time distribution argue for it being determined by the poststimulus switching probability rather than CheYP turnover, diffusion, or binding. The temporal difference between the tethered and swimming cell response times to repellents can be quantitatively accounted for and suggests that one flagellum is sufficient to cause a measurable change of direction in which a bacterium swims.  相似文献   

20.
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