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1.
J Am Chem Soc ; 146(28): 19118-19127, 2024 Jul 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38950551

ABSTRACT

The ability to track minute changes of a single amino acid residue in a cellular environment is causing a paradigm shift in the attempt to fully understand the responses of biomolecules that are highly sensitive to their environment. Detecting early protein dynamics in living cells is crucial to understanding their mechanisms, such as those of photosynthetic proteins. Here, we elucidate the light response of the microbial chloride pump NmHR from the marine bacterium Nonlabens marinus, located in the membrane of living Escherichia coli cells, using nanosecond time-resolved UV/vis and IR absorption spectroscopy over the time range from nanoseconds to seconds. Transient structural changes of the retinal cofactor and the surrounding apoprotein are recorded using light-induced time-resolved UV/vis and IR difference spectroscopy. Of particular note, we have resolved the kinetics of the transient deprotonation of a single cysteine residue during the photocycle of NmHR out of the manifold of molecular vibrations of the cells. These findings are of high general relevance, given the successful development of optogenetic tools from photoreceptors to interfere with enzymatic and neuronal pathways in living organisms using light pulses as a noninvasive trigger.


Subject(s)
Escherichia coli , Halorhodopsins , Escherichia coli/chemistry , Escherichia coli/metabolism , Halorhodopsins/chemistry , Halorhodopsins/metabolism , Spectrophotometry, Infrared/methods , Light , Halobacteriaceae/chemistry , Halobacteriaceae/metabolism , Kinetics
2.
J Phys Chem B ; 127(39): 8358-8369, 2023 Oct 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37729557

ABSTRACT

Directional ion transport across biological membranes plays a central role in many cellular processes. Elucidating the molecular determinants for vectorial ion transport is key to understanding the functional mechanism of membrane-bound ion pumps. The extensive investigation of the light-driven proton pump bacteriorhodopsin from Halobacterium salinarum(HsBR) enabled a detailed description of outward proton transport. Although the structure of inward-directed proton pumping rhodopsins is very similar to HsBR, little is known about their protonation pathway, and hence, the molecular reasons for the vectoriality of proton translocation remain unclear. Here, we employ a combined experimental and theoretical approach to tracking protonation steps in the light-driven inward proton pump xenorhodopsin from Nanosalina sp. (NsXeR). Time-resolved infrared spectroscopy reveals the transient deprotonation of D220 concomitantly with deprotonation of the retinal Schiff base. Our molecular dynamics simulations support a proton release pathway from the retinal Schiff base via a hydrogen-bonded water wire leading to D220 that could provide a putative gating point for the proton release and with allosteric interactions to the retinal Schiff base. Our findings support the key role of D220 in mediating proton release to the cytoplasmic side and provide evidence that this residue is not the primary proton acceptor of the proton transiently released by the retinal Schiff base.

3.
J Phys Chem B ; 127(37): 7872-7886, 2023 09 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37694950

ABSTRACT

Microbial rhodopsins are light-activated retinal-binding membrane proteins that perform a variety of ion transport and photosensory functions. They display several cases of convergent evolution where the same function is present in unrelated or very distant protein groups. Here we report another possible case of such convergent evolution, describing the biophysical properties of a new group of sensory rhodopsins. The first representative of this group was identified in 2004 but none of the members had been expressed and characterized. The well-studied haloarchaeal sensory rhodopsins interacting with methyl-accepting Htr transducers are close relatives of the halobacterial proton pump bacteriorhodopsin. In contrast, the sensory rhodopsins we describe here are relatives of proteobacterial proton pumps, proteorhodopsins, but appear to interact with Htr-like transducers likewise, even though they do not conserve the residues important for the interaction of haloarchaeal sensory rhodopsins with their transducers. The new sensory rhodopsins display many unusual amino acid residues, including those around the retinal chromophore; most strikingly, a tyrosine in place of a carboxyl counterion of the retinal Schiff base on helix C. To characterize their unique sequence motifs, we augment the spectroscopy and biochemistry data by structural modeling of the wild-type and three mutants. Taken together, the experimental data, bioinformatics sequence analyses, and structural modeling suggest that the tyrosine/aspartate complex counterion contributes to a complex water-mediated hydrogen-bonding network that couples the protonated retinal Schiff base to an extracellular carboxylic dyad.


Subject(s)
Bacteriorhodopsins , Sensory Rhodopsins , Sensory Rhodopsins/genetics , Schiff Bases , Rhodopsins, Microbial/genetics
4.
J Chem Phys ; 156(20): 204201, 2022 May 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35649857

ABSTRACT

Mid-IR spectroscopy is a powerful and label-free technique to investigate protein reactions. In this study, we use quantum-cascade-laser-based dual-comb spectroscopy to probe protein conformational changes and protonation events by a single-shot experiment. By using a well-characterized membrane protein, bacteriorhodopsin, we provide a comparison between dual-comb spectroscopy and our homebuilt tunable quantum cascade laser (QCL)-based scanning spectrometer as tools to monitor irreversible reactions with high time resolution. In conclusion, QCL-based infrared spectroscopy is demonstrated to be feasible for tracing functionally relevant protein structural changes and proton translocations by single-shot experiments. Thus, we envisage a bright future for applications of this technology for monitoring the kinetics of irreversible reactions as in (bio-)chemical transformations.


Subject(s)
Bacteriorhodopsins , Lasers, Semiconductor , Kinetics , Proteins/chemistry , Spectrophotometry, Infrared
5.
Photochem Photobiol ; 93(3): 857-864, 2017 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28500710

ABSTRACT

The recently discovered photo-activated adenylyl cyclase (mPAC from Microcoleus chthonoplastes) is the first PAC that owes a light-, oxygen- and voltage-sensitive (LOV) domain for blue-light sensing. The photoreaction of the mPAC receptor was studied by time-resolved UV/vis and light-induced Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) absorption difference spectroscopy. The photocycle comprises of the typical triplet state LOV715 and the thio-adduct state LOV390 . While the adduct state decays with a time constant of 8 s, the lifetime of the triplet state is with 656 ns significantly shorter than in all other reported LOV domains. The light-induced FTIR difference spectrum shows the typical bands of the LOV390 and LOV450 intermediates. The negative S-H stretching vibration at 2573 cm-1 is asymmetric suggesting two rotamer configurations of the protonated side chain of C194. A positive band at 3632 cm-1 is observed, which is assigned to an internal water molecule. In contrast to other LOV domains, mPAC exhibits a second positive feature at 3674 cm-1 which is due to the O-H stretch of a second intrinsic water molecule and the side chain of Y476. We conclude that the latter might be involved in the dimerization of the cyclase domain which is crucial for ATP binding.


Subject(s)
Adenylyl Cyclases/metabolism , Light , Spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared/methods , Enzyme Activation
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