Author:
Furuse Munenori,Tamogami Jun,Hosaka Toshiaki,Kikukawa Takashi,Shinya Naoko,Hato Masakatsu,Ohsawa Noboru,Kim So Young,Jung Kwang-Hwan,Demura Makoto,Miyauchi Seiji,Kamo Naoki,Shimono Kazumi,Kimura-Someya Tomomi,Yokoyama Shigeyuki,Shirouzu Mikako
Abstract
Although many crystal structures of microbial rhodopsins have been solved, those with sufficient resolution to identify the functional water molecules are very limited. In this study, the Acetabularia rhodopsin I (ARI) protein derived from the marine alga A. acetabulum was synthesized on a large scale by the Escherichia coli cell-free membrane-protein production method, and crystal structures of ARI were determined at the second highest (1.52–1.80 Å) resolution for a microbial rhodopsin, following bacteriorhodopsin (BR). Examinations of the photochemical properties of ARI revealed that the photocycle of ARI is slower than that of BR and that its proton-transfer reactions are different from those of BR. In the present structures, a large cavity containing numerous water molecules exists on the extracellular side of ARI, explaining the relatively low pK
a of Glu206ARI, which cannot function as an initial proton-releasing residue at any pH. An interhelical hydrogen bond exists between Leu97ARI and Tyr221ARI on the cytoplasmic side, which facilitates the slow photocycle and regulates the pK
a of Asp100ARI, a potential proton donor to the Schiff base, in the dark state.
Publisher
International Union of Crystallography (IUCr)
Subject
General Medicine,Structural Biology
Cited by
20 articles.
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