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1.
Sensory rhodopsin II (pSRII), the photophobic receptor from Natronobacterium pharaonis, has been studied by time-resolved resonance Raman (RR) spectroscopy using the rotating cell technique. Upon excitation with low laser power, the RR spectra largely reflect the parent state pSRII(500) whereas an increase of the laser power leads to a substantial accumulation of long-lived intermediates contributing to the RR spectra. All RR spectra could consistently be analysed in terms of four component spectra which were assigned to the parent state pSRII(500) and the long-lived intermediates M(400), N(485) and O(535) based on the correlation between the C = C stretching frequency and the absorption maximum. The parent state and the intermediates N(485) and O(535) exhibit a protonated Schiff base. The C = N stretching frequencies and the H/D isotopic shifts indicate strong hydrogen bonding interactions of the Schiff base in pSRII(500) and O(535) whereas these interactions are most likely very weak in N(485).  相似文献   

2.
Purified wild-type sensory rhodopsin II from Natronobacterium pharaonis (pSRII-WT) and its histidine-tagged analog (pSRII-His) were studied by laser-induced optoacoustic spectroscopy (LIOAS) and flash photolysis with optical detection. The samples were either dissolved in detergent or reconstituted into polar lipids from purple membrane (PML). The quantum yield for the formation of the long-lived state M(400) was determined as Phi(M) = 0.5 +/- 0.06 for both proteins. The structural volume change accompanying the production of K(510) as determined with LIOAS was DeltaV(R,1) /= Phi(M), indicating that the His tag does not influence this early step of the photocycle. The medium has no influence on DeltaV(R,1), which is the largest so far measured for a retinal protein in this time range (<10 ns). This confirms the occurrence of conformational movements in pSRII for this step, as previously suggested by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. On the contrary, the decay of K(510) is an expansion in the detergent-dissolved sample and a contraction in PML. Assuming an efficiency of 1.0, DeltaV(R,2) = -3 ml/mol for pSRII-WT and -4.6 ml/mol for pSRII-His were calculated in PML, indicative of a small structural difference between the two proteins. The energy content of K(510) is also affected by the tag. It is E(K) = (88 +/- 13) for pSRII-WT and (134 +/- 11) kJ/mol for pSRII-His. A slight difference in the activation parameters for K(510) decay confirms an influence of the C-terminal His on this step. At variance with DeltaV(R,1), the opposite sign of DeltaV(R,2) in detergent and PML suggests the occurrence of solvation effects on the decay of K(510), which are probably due to a different interaction of the active site with the two dissolving media.  相似文献   

3.
Natronobacterium pharaonis phoborhodopsin (ppR; also called N. pharaonis sensory rhodopsin II, NpsRII) is a photophobic sensor in N. pharaonis, and has a shorter absorption maximum (lambdamax, 500 nm) than those of other archaeal retinal proteins (lambdamax, 560-590 nm) such as bacteriorhodopsin (bR). We constructed chimeric proteins between bR and ppR to investigate the long range interactions effecting the color regulation among archaeal retinal proteins. The lambdamax of B-DEFG/P-ABC was 545 nm, similar to that of bR expressed in Escherichia coli (lambdamax, 550 nm). B-DEFG/P-ABC means a chimera composed of helices D, E, F, and G of bR and helices A, B, and C of ppR. This indicates that the major factor(s) determining the difference in lambdamax between bR and ppR exist in helices DEFG. To specify the more minute regions for the color determination between bR and ppR, we constructed 15 chimeric proteins containing helices D, E, F, and G of bR. According to the absorption spectra of the various chimeric proteins, the interaction between helices D and E as well as the effect of the hydroxyl group around protonated Schiff base on helix G (Thr-204 for ppR and Ala-215 for bR) are the main factors for spectral tuning between bR and ppR.  相似文献   

4.
The photocycle of the photophobic receptor sensory rhodopsin II from N. pharaonis was analyzed by varying measuring wavelengths, temperature, and pH, and by exchanging H2O with D2O. The data can be satisfactorily modeled by eight exponents over the whole range of modified parameters. The kinetic data support a model similar to that of bacteriorhodopsin (BR) if a scheme of irreversible first-order reactions is assumed. Eight kinetically distinct protein states can then be identified. These states are formed from five spectrally distinct species. The chromophore states Si correspond in their spectral properties to those of the BR photocycle, namely pSRII510 (K), pSRII495 (L), pSRII400 (M), pSRII485 (N), and pSRII535 (O). In comparison to BR, pSRII400 is formed approximately 10 times faster than the M state; however, the back-reaction is almost 100 times slower. Comparison of the temperature dependence of the rate constants with those from the BR photocycle suggests that the differences are caused by changes of DeltaS. The rate constants of the pSRII photocycle are almost insensitive to the pH variation from 9.0 to 5.5, and show only a small H2O/D2O effect. This analysis supports the idea that the conformational dynamics of pSRII controls the kinetics of the photocycle of pSRII.  相似文献   

5.
In many retinal proteins the proton transfer from the Schiff base to the counterion represents a functionally important step of the photoreaction. In the signaling state of sensory rhodopsin II from Natronobacterium pharaonis this transfer has already occurred, but in the counterion mutant Asp75Asn it is blocked during all steps of the photocycle. Therefore, the study of the molecular changes during the photoreaction of this mutant should provide a deeper understanding of the activation mechanism, and for this, we have applied time-resolved step-scan FTIR spectroscopy. The photoreaction is drastically altered; only red-shifted intermediates are formed with a chromophore strongly twisted around the 14-15 single bond. In addition, the photocycle is shortened by 2 orders of magnitude. Nevertheless, a transition involving only protein changes similar to that of the wild type is observed, which has been correlated with the formation of the signaling state. However, whereas in the wild type this transition occurs in the millisecond range, it is shortened to 200 micros in the mutant. The results are discussed with respect to the altered electrostatic interactions, role of proton transfer, the published 3D structure, and physiological activity.  相似文献   

6.
Tateishi Y  Abe T  Tamogami J  Nakao Y  Kikukawa T  Kamo N  Unno M 《Biochemistry》2011,50(12):2135-2143
Sensory rhodopsin II is a seven transmembrane helical retinal protein and functions as a photoreceptor protein in negative phototaxis of halophilic archaea. Sensory rhodopsin II from Natronomonas pharaonis (NpSRII) is stable under various conditions and can be expressed functionally in Escherichia coli cell membranes. Rhodopsins from microorganisms, known as microbial rhodopsins, exhibit a photocycle, and light irradiation of these molecules leads to a high-energy intermediate, which relaxes thermally to the original pigment after passing through several intermediates. For bacteriorhodopsin (BR), a light-driven proton pump, the photocycle is established as BR → K → L → M → N → O → BR. The photocycle of NpSRII is similar to that of BR except for N, i.e., M thermally decays into the O, and N has not been well characterized in the photocycle. Thus we here examined the second half of the photocycle in NpSRII, and in the present transient absorption study we found the formation of a new photointermediate whose absorption maximum is ~500 nm. This intermediate becomes pronounced in the presence of azide, which accelerates the decay of M. Transient resonance Raman spectroscopy was further applied to demonstrate that this intermediate contains a 13-cis retinal protonated Schiff base. However, detailed analysis of the transient absorption data indicated that M-decay does not directly produce N but rather produces O that is in equilibrium with N. These observations allowed us to propose a structural model for a photocycle that involves N.  相似文献   

7.
Sensory rhodopsin II (NpSRII) from Natronobacterium pharaonis was studied by resonance Raman (RR) spectroscopic techniques. Using gated 413-nm excitation, time-resolved RR measurements of the solubilized photoreceptor were carried out to probe the photocycle intermediates that are formed in the submillisecond time range. For the first time, two M-like intermediates were identified on the basis of their C=C stretching bands at 1568 and 1583 cm(-1), corresponding to the early M(L)(400) state with a lifetime of 30 micro s and the subsequent M(1)(400) state with a lifetime of 2 ms, respectively. The unusually high C=C stretching frequency of M(1)(400) has been attributed to an unprotonated retinal Schiff base in a largely hydrophobic environment, implying that the M(L)(400) --> M(1)(400) transition is associated with protein structural changes in the vicinity of the chromophore binding pocket. Time-resolved surface enhanced resonance Raman experiments of NpSRII electrostatically bound onto a rotating Ag electrode reveal that the photoreceptor runs through the photocycle also in the immobilized state. Surface enhanced resonance Raman spectra are very similar to the RR spectra of the solubilized protein, ruling out adsorption-induced structural changes in the retinal binding pocket. The photocycle kinetics, however, is sensitively affected by the electrode potential such that at 0.0 V (versus Ag/AgCl) the decay times of M(L)(400) and M(1)(400) are drastically slowed down. Upon decreasing the potential to -0.4 V, that corresponds to a decrease of the interfacial potential drop and thus of the electric field strength at the protein binding site, the photocycle kinetics becomes similar to that of NpSRII in solution. The electric-field dependence of the protein structural changes associated with the M-state transitions, which in the present spectroscopic work is revealed on a molecular level, appears to be related to the electric-field control of bacteriorhodopsin's photocycle, which has been shown to be of functional relevance.  相似文献   

8.
Phoborhodopsin (pR; also sensory rhodopsin II, sRII) is a retinoid protein in Halobacterium salinarum and works as a receptor of negative phototaxis. Pharaonis phoborhodopsin (ppR; also pharaonis sensory rhodopsin II, psRII) is a corresponding protein of Natronobacterium pharaonis. In bacterial membrane, ppR forms a complex with its transducer pHtrII, and this complex transmits the light signal to the sensory system in the cytoplasm. We expressed pHtrII-free ppR or ppR-pHtrII complex in H. salinarum Pho81/wr(-) cells. Flash-photolysis experiments showed no essential changes between pHtrII-free ppR and the complex. Using SnO2 electrode, which works as a sensitive pH electrode, and envelope membrane vesicles, we showed the photo-induced outward proton transport. This membranous proton transport was also shown using membrane vesicles from Escherichia coli in which ppR was functionally expressed. On the other hand, the proton transport was ceased when ppR formed a complex with pHtrII. Using membrane sheet, it was shown that the complex undergoes first proton uptake and then release during the photocycle, the same as pHtrII-free ppR, although the net proton transport ceases. Taking into consideration that the complex of sRII (pR) and its transducer undergoes extracellular proton circulation (J. Sasaki and J. L., Biophys. J. 77:2145-2152), we inferred that association with pHtrII closes a cytoplasmic channel of ppR, which lead to the extracellular proton circulation.  相似文献   

9.
Sensory rhodopsin II, a repellent phototaxis receptor from Natronobacterium pharaonis (NpSRII) forms a tight complex with its cognate transducer (NpHtrII). Light excitation of the receptor triggers conformational changes in both proteins, thereby activating the cellular two-component signalling cascade. In membranes, the two proteins form a 2:2 complex, which dissociates to a 1:1 heterodimer in micelles. Complexed to the transducer sensory rhodopsin II is no longer capable of light-driven proton pumping. In order to elucidate the dimerisation and the size of the receptor-binding domain of the transducer, isothermal titration calorimetry and electrophysiological experiments have been carried out. It is shown, that an N-terminal sequence of 114 amino acid residues is sufficient for tight binding (K(d)=240nM; DeltaH=-17.6kJmol(-1)) and for inhibiting the proton transfer. These data and results obtained from selected site-directed mutants indicate a synergistic interplay of transducer transmembrane domain (1-82) and cytoplasmic peptide (83-114) leading to an optimal and specific interaction between receptor and transducer.  相似文献   

10.
The early steps in the photocycle of the aspartate 75-mutated sensory rhodopsin II from Natrobacterium pharaonis (pSRII-D75N) were studied by time-resolved laser-induced optoacoustic spectroscopy combined with quantum yield determinations by flash photolysis with optical detection. Similar to the case of pSRII-WT, excitation of pSRII-D75N produces in subnanosecond time a K-like intermediate. Different to the case of K in pSRII-WT, in pSRII-D75N there are two K states. K(E) decays into K(L) with a lifetime of 400 ns (independent of temperature in the range 6.5-52 degrees C) which is optically silent under the experimental conditions of our transient absorption experiments. This decay is concomitant with an expansion of 6.5 ml/mol of produced intermediate. This indicates a protein relaxation not affecting the chromophore absorption. For pSRII-D75N reconstituted into polar lipids from purple membrane, the mutation of Asp-75 by the neutral residue Asn affects neither the K(E) production yield (PhiK(e) 0.51 +/- 0.05) nor the energy stored by this intermediate (E(E)K(E) = 91 +/- 11 kJ/mol), nor the expansion upon its production (DeltaV(R,1) = 10 +/- 0.3 ml/mol). All these values are very similar to those previously determined for K with pSRII-WT in the same medium. The millisecond transient species is attributed to K(L) with a lifetime corresponding to that determined by electronic absorption spectroscopy for K(565). The determined energy content of the intermediates as well as the structural volume changes for the various steps afford the calculation of the free energy profile of the phototransformation during the pSRII-D75N photocycle. These data offer insights regarding the photocycle in pSRII-WT. Detergent solubilization of pSRII-D75N affects the sample properties to a larger extent than in the case of pSRII-WT.  相似文献   

11.
In the present work the light-activated proton transfer reactions of sensory rhodopsin II from Natronobacterium pharaonis (pSRII) and those of the channel-mutants D75N-pSRII and F86D-pSRII are investigated using flash photolysis and black lipid membrane (BLM) techniques. Whereas the photocycle of the F86D-pSRII mutant is quite similar to that of the wild-type protein, the photocycle of D75N-pSRII consists of only two intermediates. The addition of external proton donors such as azide, or in the case of F86D-pSRII, imidazole, accelerates the reprotonation of the Schiff base, but not the turnover. The electrical measurements prove that pSRII and F86D-pSRII can function as outwardly directed proton pumps, whereas the mutation in the extracellular channel (D75N-pSRII) leads to an inwardly directed transient current. The almost negligible size of the photostationary current is explained by the long-lasting photocycle of about a second. Although the M decay, but not the photocycle turnover, of pSRII and F86D-pSRII is accelerated by the addition of azide, the photostationary current is considerably increased. It is discussed that in a two-photon process a late intermediate (N- and/or O-like species) is photoconverted back to the original resting state; thereby the long photocycle is cut short, giving rise to the large increase of the photostationary current. The results presented in this work indicate that the function to generate ion gradients across membranes is a general property of archaeal rhodopsins.  相似文献   

12.
《FEBS letters》1999,442(2-3):198-202
Bacteriorhodopsin (BR) from Halobacterium salinarum as well as halorhodopsin (pHR) and sensory rhodopsin II (pSRII) from Natronobacterium pharaonis were functionally expressed in E. coli using the method of Shimono et al. [FEBS Lett. (1997) 420, 54–56]. The histidine tagged proteins were purified with yields up to 1.0 mg/l cell culture and characterized by ESI mass spectrometry and their photocycle. The pSRII and pHR photocycles were indistinguishable from the wild type proteins. The BR photocycle was considerably prolonged. pSOII is located in the cytoplasmic membrane and the C-terminus is oriented towards the cytoplasm as determined by immunogold labelling.  相似文献   

13.
Pharaonis halorhodopsin (phR) is an inward light-driven chloride ion pump from Natronobacterium pharaonis. In order to clarify the role of Ser-130(phR) residue which corresponds to Ser-115(shR) for salinarum hR on the anion-binding affinity, the wild-type and Ser-130 mutants substituted with Thr, Cys and Ala were expressed in E. coli cells and solubilized with 0.1% n-dodecyl beta-D-maltopyranoside The absorption maximum (lambda(max)) of the S130T mutant indicated a blue shift from that of the wild type in the absence and presence of chloride. For S130A, a large red shift (12 nm) in the absence of chloride was observed. The wild-type and all mutants showed the blue-shift of lambda(max) upon Cl(-) addition, from which the dissociation constants of Cl(-) were determined. The dissociation constants were 5, 89, 153 and 159 mM for the wild-type, S130A, S130T and S130C, respectively, at pH 7.0 and 25 degrees C. Circular dichroic spectra of the wild-type and the Ser-130 mutants exhibited an oligomerization. The present study revealed that the Ser-130 of N. pharaonis halorhodopsin is important for the chloride binding.  相似文献   

14.
Sensory rhodopsin II (also called phoborhodopsin) from the archaeal Natronobacterium pharaonis (pSRII) functions as a repellent phototaxis receptor. The excitation of the receptor by light triggers the activation of a transducer molecule (pHtrII) which has close resemblance to the cytoplasmic domain of bacterial chemotaxis receptors. In order to elucidate the first step of the signal transduction chain, the accessibility as well as static and transient mobility of cytoplasmic residues in helices F and G were analysed by electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy. The results indicate an outward tilting of helix F during the early steps of the photocycle which is sustained until the reformation of the initial ground state. Co-expression of pSRII with a truncated fragment of pHtrII affects the accessibility and/or the mobility of certain spin-labelled residues on helices F and G. The results suggest that these sites are located within the binding surface of the photoreceptor with its transducer.  相似文献   

15.
Iwamoto M  Hasegawa C  Sudo Y  Shimono K  Araiso T  Kamo N 《Biochemistry》2004,43(11):3195-3203
pharaonis phoborhodopsin (ppR, also called pharaonis sensory rhodopsin II, psRII) is a photo-receptor for negative phototaxis in Natronobacterium pharaonis. During the photoreaction cycle (photocycle), ppR exhibits intraprotein proton movements, resulting in proton pumping from the cytoplasmic to the extracellular side, although it is weak. In this study, light-induced proton uptake and release of ppR reconstituted with phospholipid were analyzed using a SnO(2) electrode. The reconstituted ppR exhibited properties in proton uptake and release that are different from those of dodecyl maltoside solubilized samples. It showed fast proton release before the decay of ppR(M) (M-photointermediate) followed by proton uptake, which was similar to that of bacteriorhodopsin (BR), a light-driven proton pump. Mutant analysis assigned Asp193 to one (major) of the members of the proton-releasing group (PRG). Fast proton release was observed only when the pH was approximately 5-8 in the presence of Cl(-). When Cl(-) was replaced with SO(4)(2-), the reconstituted ppR did not exhibit fast proton release at any pH, suggesting Cl(-) binding around PRG. PRG in BR consists of Glu204 (Asp193 in ppR) and Glu194 (Pro183 in ppR). Replacement of Pro183 by Glu/Asp, a negatively charged residue, led to Cl(-)-independent fast proton release. The transducer binding affected the properties of PRG in ppR in the ground state and in the ppR(M) state, suggesting that interaction with the transducer extends to the extracellular surface of ppR. Differences and similarities in the molecular mechanism of the proton movement between ppR and BR are discussed.  相似文献   

16.

We describe the preparation and properties of lipodisc nanoparticles–lipid membrane fragments with a diameter of about 10 nm, stabilized by amphiphilic synthetic polymer molecules. We used the lipodisc nanoparticles made of Escherichia coli polar lipids and compared lipodisc nanoparticles that contained the photosensitive protein complex of the sensory rhodopsin with its cognate transducer from the halobacterium Natronomonas pharaonis with empty lipodisc nanoparticles that contained no protein. The lipodisc nanoparticles were characterized by dynamic light scattering, transmission electron microscopy and atomic force microscopy. We found that the diameter of lipodisc nanoparticles was not affected by incorporation of the protein complexes, which makes them a prospective platform for single-molecule studies of membrane proteins.

  相似文献   

17.
Pharaonis phoborhodopsin (ppR; also pharaonis sensory rhodopsin II, psRII) is a receptor of the negative phototaxis of Natronobacterium pharaonis. By spectroscopic titration of D193N and D193E mutants, the pK(a) of the Schiff base was evaluated. Asp193 corresponds to Glu204 of bacteriorhodopsin (bR). The pK(a) of the Schiff base (SBH(+)) of D193N was approximately 10.1-10.0 (at XH(+)) and approximately 11.4-11.6 (at X) depending on the protonation state of a certain residue (designated by X) and independent of Cl(-), whereas those of the wild type and D193E were >12. The pK(a) values of XH(+) were approximately 11.8-11.2 at the state of SB, 10.5 at SBH(+) state in the presence of Cl(-), and 9.6 at SBH(+) without Cl(-). These imply the presence of a long-range interaction in the extracellular channel. Asp193 was suggested to be deprotonated in the present dodecyl-maltoside (DDM) solubilized wild-type ppR, which is contrary to Glu204 of bR. In the absence of salts, the irreversible denaturation of D193N (but not the wild type and D193E) occurred via a metastable state, into which the addition of Cl(-) reversed the intact pigment. This suggests that the negative charge at residue 193, which can be substituted by Cl(-), is necessary to maintain the proper conformation in the DDM-solubilized ppR.  相似文献   

18.
Pharaonis phoborhodopsin (ppR, or pharaonis sensory rhodopsin II, NpsRII) is a sensor for the negative phototaxis of Natronomonas (Natronobacterium) pharaonis. Arginine 72 of ppR corresponds to Arg-82 of bacteriorhodopsin, which is a highly conserved residue among microbial rhodopsins. Using various Arg-72 ppR mutants, we obtained the following results: 1). Arg-72(ppR) together possibly with Asp-193 influenced the pK(a) of the counterion of the protonated Schiff base. 2). The M-rise became approximately four times faster than the wild-type. 3). Illumination causes proton uptake and release, and the pH profiles of the sequence of these two proton movements were different between R72A mutant and the wild-type; it is inferred that Arg-72 connects the proton transfer events occurring at both the Schiff base and an extracellular proton-releasing residue (Asp-193). 4). The M-decays of Arg-72 mutants were faster ( approximately 8-27 folds at pH 8 depending on mutants) than the wild-type, implying that the guanidinium prevents the proton transfer from the extracellular space to the deprotonated Schiff base. 5), The proton-pumping activities were decreased for mutants having increased M-decay rates, but the extent of the decrease was smaller than expected. The role of Arg-72 of ppR on the photochemistry was discussed.  相似文献   

19.
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   

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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