4.8 Article

A single point mutation converts a proton-pumping rhodopsin into a red-shifted, turn-on fluorescent sensor for chloride

Journal

CHEMICAL SCIENCE
Volume 12, Issue 15, Pages 5655-5663

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d0sc06061e

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Funding

  1. NIGMS NIH HHS [R35 GM128704] Funding Source: Medline

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The power of protein engineering was demonstrated by converting the fluorescent proton-pumping rhodopsin GR into GR1, a red-shifted, turn-on fluorescent sensor for chloride. GR1 provides a pH-dependent response in detergent micelles and live Escherichia coli, offering a reversible, ratiometric readout of changes in extracellular chloride.
The visualization of chloride in living cells with fluorescent sensors is linked to our ability to design hosts that can overcome the energetic penalty of desolvation to bind chloride in water. Fluorescent proteins can be used as biological supramolecular hosts to address this fundamental challenge. Here, we showcase the power of protein engineering to convert the fluorescent proton-pumping rhodopsin GR from Gloeobacter violaceus into GR1, a red-shifted, turn-on fluorescent sensor for chloride in detergent micelles and in live Escherichia coli. This non-natural function was unlocked by mutating D121, which serves as the counterion to the protonated retinylidene Schiff base chromophore. Substitution from aspartate to valine at this position (D121V) creates a binding site for chloride. The binding of chloride tunes the pK(a) of the chromophore towards the protonated, fluorescent state to generate a pH-dependent response. Moreover, ion pumping assays combined with bulk fluorescence and single-cell fluorescence microscopy experiments with E. coli, expressing a GR1 fusion with a cyan fluorescent protein, show that GR1 does not pump ions nor sense membrane potential but instead provides a reversible, ratiometric readout of changes in extracellular chloride at the membrane. This discovery sets the stage to use natural and laboratory-guided evolution to build a family of rhodopsin-based fluorescent chloride sensors with improved properties for cellular applications and learn how proteins can evolve and adapt to bind anions in water.

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