FTIR Analysis of a Light-driven Inward Proton-pumping Rhodopsin at 77 K

Photochem Photobiol. 2017 Nov;93(6):1381-1387. doi: 10.1111/php.12771. Epub 2017 Jun 22.

Abstract

Parvularcula oceani xenorhodopsin (PoXeR) is a light-driven inward proton pump that was discovered from deep ocean marine bacteria. PoXeR is categorized into the same family of Anabaena sensory rhodopsin (ASR) that functions as a photochromic sensor. In this study, we applied light-induced difference Fourier-transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy to PoXeR at 77 K, and the obtained spectra were compared with those of ASR. The structure and structural changes in the primary processes of PoXeR are common to all microbial rhodopsins. The red-shifted K formation (PoXeRK ) was accompanied by retinal photoisomerization from the all-trans to 13-cis form resulting in a distorted structure of the retinal. The observed hydrogen out-of-plane (HOOP) vibrations were sensitive to H/D exchange, indicating that the chromophore distortion by retinal isomerization is located near the Schiff base region in PoXeR. The hydrogen-bonding strength of the protonated Schiff base is similar between PoXeR and ASR, whose acceptor is presumably a water molecule. Unlike ASR, however, PoXeR contains strongly hydrogen-bonded water (O-D stretch at 2277 cm-1 in D2 O), which is also the case for outward proton pumps. The detailed structure, structural changes upon retinal photoisomerization, as well as functional correlation in PoXeR are discussed based on the present FTIR study.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Light*
  • Proton Pumps / chemistry*
  • Rhodopsin / chemistry*
  • Spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared

Substances

  • Proton Pumps
  • Rhodopsin