Molecular mechanisms and evolutionary robustness of a color switch in proteorhodopsins

Author:

Mao Jiafei1ORCID,Jin Xinsheng2ORCID,Shi Man2,Heidenreich David1,Brown Lynda J.3ORCID,Brown Richard C. D.3ORCID,Lelli Moreno45ORCID,He Xiao26ORCID,Glaubitz Clemens1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute for Biophysical Chemistry and Center for Biomolecular Magnetic Resonance (BMRZ), Goethe University Frankfurt, Max von Laue Straße 9, 60438 Frankfurt am Main, Germany.

2. Shanghai Engineering Research Center of Molecular Therapeutics and New Drug Development, Shanghai Frontiers Science Center of Molecule Intelligent Syntheses, School of Chemistry and Molecular Engineering, East China Normal University, Shanghai, 200062, China.

3. Department of Chemistry, University of Southampton, Southampton, SO17 1BJ UK.

4. Department of Chemistry “Ugo Schiff” and Magnetic Resonance Center (CERM), University of Florence, Via della Lastruccia 3, Sesto Fiorentino, 50019 Italy.

5. Consorzio Interuniversitario Risonanze Magnetiche MetalloProteine (CIRMMP), Via Luigi Sacconi 6, Sesto Fiorentino, 50019 Italy.

6. New York University–East China Normal University Center for Computational Chemistry, New York University Shanghai, Shanghai, 200062, China.

Abstract

Proteorhodopsins are widely distributed photoreceptors from marine bacteria. Their discovery revealed a high degree of evolutionary adaptation to ambient light, resulting in blue- and green-absorbing variants that correlate with a conserved glutamine/leucine at position 105. On the basis of an integrated approach combining sensitivity-enhanced solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (ssNMR) spectroscopy and linear-scaling quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics (QM/MM) methods, this single residue is shown to be responsible for a variety of synergistically coupled structural and electrostatic changes along the retinal polyene chain, ionone ring, and within the binding pocket. They collectively explain the observed color shift. Furthermore, analysis of the differences in chemical shift between nuclei within the same residues in green and blue proteorhodopsins also reveals a correlation with the respective degree of conservation. Our data show that the highly conserved color change mainly affects other highly conserved residues, illustrating a high degree of robustness of the color phenotype to sequence variation.

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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