4.5 Article

The Photocycle and Proton Translocation Pathway in a Cyanobacterial Ion-Pumping Rhodopsin

Journal

BIOPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 96, Issue 4, Pages 1471-1481

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.bpj.2008.11.026

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The genome of thylakoidless cyanobacterium Gloeobacter violaceus encodes a fast-cycling rhodopsin capable of light-driven proton transport. We characterize the dark state, the photocycle, and the proton translocation pathway of GR spectroscopically. The dark state of GR contains predominantly all-trans-retinal and, similar to proteorhodopsin, does not show the light/dark adaptation. We found an unusually strong coupling between the conformation of the retinal and the site of Glu(132), the homolog of Asp(96) of BR. Although the photocycle of GR is similar to that of proteorhodopsin in general, it differs in accumulating two intermediates typical for BR, the L-like and the N-like states. The latter state has a deprotonated cytoplasmic proton donor and is spectrally distinct from the strongly red-shifted N intermediate known for proteorhodopsin. The proton uptake precedes the release and occurs during the transition to the O intermediate. The proton translocation pathway of GR is similar to those of other proton-pumping rhodopsins, involving homologs of BR Schiff base proton acceptor and donor Asp(85) and As p(96) (Asp(121) and Glu(132)). We assigned a pair of FTIR bands (positive at 1749 cm(-1) and negative at 1734 cm(-1)) to the protonation and deprotonation, respectively, of these carboxylic acids.

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