A Novel Color Switch of Microbial Rhodopsin

Biochemistry. 2023 Jul 4;62(13):2013-2020. doi: 10.1021/acs.biochem.3c00131. Epub 2023 Jun 23.

Abstract

Function of animal and microbial rhodopsins starts by light absorption of the retinal chromophore. The absorption maximum wavelength (λmax) of rhodopsins is determined by the energy gap between the electronically ground (S0) and first excited (S1) state of the retinal chromophore, and the color tuning mechanism is one of the central topics in rhodopsin research. "Color switches", color-determining residues, are red- and blue-shifting amino acids at the same position in two rhodopsins, whose exchange causes spectral blue- and red-shifts, respectively, in each rhodopsin. As mutation easily destroys elaborate chromophore-protein interactions, the known color switches in microbial rhodopsins are limited; the L/Q switch in C-helix (TM3), the A/TS switch in G-helix (TM7), and the G/P switch in F-helix (TM6). Here, we report a novel color switch of microbial rhodopsins, which is located in D-helix (TM4). In this color switch, the red- and blue-shifting amino acids are Asn (N) and Leu (L)/Ile (I), respectively. As Asn and Leu/Ile are polar and nonpolar amino acids, respectively, and the position is located near the β-ionone ring, the N/LI switch matches the general rule of color tuning by polarity. The N/LI switch is also useful for optogenetics, as many ion-transporting rhodopsins contain blue-shifting amino acids, such as L and I, at that position.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Amino Acids / genetics
  • Animals
  • Color
  • Mutation
  • Rhodopsin* / chemistry
  • Rhodopsins, Microbial* / chemistry

Substances

  • Rhodopsin
  • Rhodopsins, Microbial
  • Amino Acids