4.8 Article

Red-shifting mutation of light-driven sodium-pump rhodopsin

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 10, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-019-10000-x

Keywords

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Funding

  1. JSPS KAKENHI, Japan [26708001, 26620005, 17H03007, 25104009, 15H02391]
  2. JST, PRESTO, Japan [JPMJPR15P2]
  3. MIUR
  4. NSF [CHE-CLP-1710191]
  5. NIH [GM126627 01]
  6. USIAS 2015 grant

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Microbial rhodopsins are photoreceptive membrane proteins that transport various ions using light energy. While they are widely used in optogenetics to optically control neuronal activity, rhodopsins that function with longer-wavelength light are highly demanded because of their low phototoxicity and high tissue penetration. Here, we achieve a 40-nm red-shift in the absorption wavelength of a sodium-pump rhodopsin (KR2) by altering dipole moment of residues around the retinal chromophore (KR2 P219T/S254A) without impairing its iontransport activity. Structural differences in the chromophore of the red-shifted protein from that of the wildtype are observed by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. QM/MM models generated with an automated protocol show that the changes in the electrostatic interaction between protein and chromophore induced by the amino-acid replacements, lowered the energy gap between the ground and the first electronically excited state. Based on these insights, a natural sodium pump with red-shifted absorption is identified from Jannaschia seosinensis.

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