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Variations on a molecular switch: transport and sensory signalling by archaeal rhodopsins
Author(s) -
Spudich John L.
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
molecular microbiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.857
H-Index - 247
eISSN - 1365-2958
pISSN - 0950-382X
DOI - 10.1046/j.1365-2958.1998.00859.x
Subject(s) - halobacterium salinarum , biology , phototaxis , bacteriorhodopsin , halorhodopsin , microbiology and biotechnology , halobacterium , biophysics , transmembrane protein , cytoplasm , visual phototransduction , biochemistry , receptor , membrane , genetics , retinal
The archaeal rhodopsins are a family of seven‐transmembrane‐helix, visual pigment‐like proteins found in Halobacterium salinarum and related halophilic Archaea. Two, bacteriorhodopsin (BR) and halorhodopsin (HR), are transport rhodopsins that carry out light‐driven electrogenic translocation of protons and chloride, respectively, across the cell membrane. The other two, sensory rhodopsins I and II (SRI and SRII), are phototaxis receptors that send signals to tightly bound transducer proteins that in turn control a phosphorylation cascade modulating the cell's flagellar motors. Recent progress has cast light on how nature has modified the common design of these proteins to carry out their distinctly different functions: electrogenic ion transport and non‐electrogenic signal transduction. A key shared mechanism between BR and SRII appears to be an interhelical salt bridge locked conformational switch that is released by photoisomerization of retinal. In BR disruption of the lock opens a cytoplasmic half‐channel that ensures uptake of the transported proton from the cytoplasmic side of the membrane at a critical time in the pumping cycle. Transducer‐free SRI uses the same mechanism to carry out light‐driven proton transport, but interaction with its transducer blocks the cytoplasmic half‐channel thereby interrupting the transport cycle. In SRI, transducer interaction also disrupts the salt bridge in the dark, poising the receptor in an intermediate conformation able to produce opposite signals depending on the colour of the stimulus light. A model for signalling is proposed in which the salt bridge‐controlled half‐channel is used to modulate interaction with the Htr proteins when the receptor signalling states are formed.