skip to main content


Title: “Watching” a molecular twist in a protein by Raman optical activity
Light-absorbing chromophores in photoreceptors contain a π-electron system and are intrinsically planar molecules. However, within a protein environment these cofactors often become nonplanar and chiral in a manner that is widely believed to be functionally important. When the same chromophore is out-of-plane distorted in opposite directions in different members of a protein family, such conformers become a set of enantiomers. In techniques using chiral optical spectroscopy such as Raman optical activity (ROA), such proteins are expected to show opposite signs in their spectra. Here we use two microbial rhodopsins, Gloeobacter rhodopsin and sodium ion pump rhodopsin (NaR), to provide the first experimental and theoretical evidence that the twist direction of the retinal chromophore indeed determines the sign of the ROA spectrum. We disrupt the hydrogen bond responsible for the distortion of the retinal in NaR and show that the sign of the ROA signals of this nonfunctional mutant is flipped. The reported ROA spectra are monosignate, a property that has been seen for a variety of photoreceptors, which we attribute to an energetically favorable gradual curvature of the chromophore.  more » « less
Award ID(s):
1726397
NSF-PAR ID:
10253585
Author(s) / Creator(s):
Date Published:
Journal Name:
The journal of physical chemistry letters
Volume:
11
Issue:
20
ISSN:
1948-7185
Page Range / eLocation ID:
8579-8584
Format(s):
Medium: X
Sponsoring Org:
National Science Foundation
More Like this
  1. Abstract Color tuning in animal and microbial rhodopsins has attracted the interest of many researchers, as the color of their common retinal chromophores is modulated by the amino acid residues forming the chromophore cavity. Critical cavity amino acid residues are often called “color switches”, as the rhodopsin color is effectively tuned through their substitution. Well-known color switches are the L/Q and A/TS switches located in the C and G helices of the microbial rhodopsin structure respectively. Recently, we reported on a third G/P switch located in the F helix of the light-driven sodium pumps of KR2 and Js NaR causing substantial spectral red-shifts in the latter with respect to the former. In order to investigate the molecular-level mechanism driving such switching function, here we present an exhaustive mutation, spectroscopic and computational investigation of the P219X mutant set of KR2. To do so, we study the changes in the absorption band of the 19 possible mutants and construct, semi-automatically, the corresponding hybrid quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics models. We found that the P219X feature a red-shifted light absorption with the only exception of P219R. The analysis of the corresponding models indicate that the G/P switch induces red-shifting variations via electrostatic interactions, while replacement-induced chromophore geometrical (steric) distortions play a minor role. However, the same analysis indicates that the P219R blue-shifted variant has a more complex origin involving both electrostatic and steric changes accompanied by protonation state and hydrogen bond networks modifications. These results make it difficult to extract simple rules or formulate theories for predicting how a switch operates without considering the atomistic details and environmental consequences of the side chain replacement. 
    more » « less
  2. For sustained vision, photoactivated rhodopsin (Rho*) must undergo hydrolysis and release of all- trans -retinal, producing substrate for the visual cycle and apo-opsin available for regeneration with 11- cis -retinal. The kinetics of this hydrolysis has yet to be described for rhodopsin in its native membrane environment. We developed a method consisting of simultaneous denaturation and chromophore trapping by isopropanol/borohydride, followed by exhaustive protein digestion, complete extraction, and liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry. Using our method, we tracked Rho* hydrolysis, the subsequent formation of N -retinylidene-phosphatidylethanolamine ( N -ret-PE) adducts with the released all- trans -retinal, and the reduction of all- trans -retinal to all- trans -retinol. We found that hydrolysis occurred faster in native membranes than in detergent micelles typically used to study membrane proteins. The activation energy of the hydrolysis in native membranes was determined to be 17.7 ± 2.4 kcal/mol. Our data support the interpretation that metarhodopsin II, the signaling state of rhodopsin, is the primary species undergoing hydrolysis and release of its all- trans -retinal. In the absence of NADPH, free all- trans -retinal reacts with phosphatidylethanolamine (PE), forming a substantial amount of N -ret-PE (∼40% of total all- trans -retinal at physiological pH), at a rate that is an order of magnitude faster than Rho* hydrolysis. However, N -ret-PE formation was highly attenuated by NADPH-dependent reduction of all- trans -retinal to all- trans -retinol. Neither N -ret-PE formation nor all- trans -retinal reduction affected the rate of hydrolysis of Rho*. Our study provides a comprehensive picture of the hydrolysis of Rho* and the release of all- trans -retinal and its reentry into the visual cycle, a process in which alteration can lead to severe retinopathies. 
    more » « less
  3. Abstract The understanding of how the rhodopsin sequence can be modified to exactly modulate the spectroscopic properties of its retinal chromophore, is a prerequisite for the rational design of more effective optogenetic tools. One key problem is that of establishing the rules to be satisfied for achieving highly fluorescent rhodopsins with a near infrared absorption. In the present paper we use multi-configurational quantum chemistry to construct a computer model of a recently discovered natural rhodopsin, Neorhodopsin, displaying exactly such properties. We show that the model, that successfully replicates the relevant experimental observables, unveils a geometrical and electronic structure of the chromophore featuring a highly diffuse charge distribution along its conjugated chain. The same model reveals that a charge confinement process occurring along the chromophore excited state isomerization coordinate, is the primary cause of the observed fluorescence enhancement. 
    more » « less
  4. Abstract

    Experimental vibrational Raman and Raman optical activity (ROA) spectra for diacetyl L‐tartaric acid (DAT), two of its esters, namely, monomethyl and lauryl esters (T1OH and T12OH), and corresponding sodium salts (DATNa, T1ONa, and T12ONa), are measured. T12OH and T12ONa represent the first chiral surfactants investigated using ROA spectroscopy. The quantum chemical (QC) predictions using B3LYP functional and 6‐311++G(2d,2p) basis set are used to interpret the ROA spectra for DAT, DATNa, T1OH, and T1ONa. It is found that the use of implicit solvation, as represented in polarizable continuum model (PCM), for predicting the experimental ROA spectra in aqueous solutions is inadequate for DAT and T1OH. However, the same PCM predicts the experimental ROA spectra satisfactorily for the DATNa and T1ONa. This favorable observation for the latter is attributed to the absence of intra‐ and inter‐molecular hydrogen bonding interactions for sodium salts in aqueous solutions. The overwhelming number of conformations resulting from 12‐carbon alkyl chain, in T12OH and T12ONa, makes it impractical to undertake QC predictions for them. Nevertheless, it is found that the predictions made for shorter alkyl chain analogs, namely, T1OH and T1ONa, may be used to explain the experimental ROA spectra of T12OH and T12ONa. The current work highlights the importance of converting carboxylic acids to corresponding sodium salts and of QC predictions for shorter achiral alkyl chain analogs to interpret the ROA spectra of chiral surfactants that contain long achiral alkyl chains.

     
    more » « less
  5. Anabaena sensory rhodopsin (ASR) is a particular microbial retinal protein for which light-adaptation leads to the ability to bind both the all- trans , 15- anti (AT) and the 13- cis , 15- syn (13C) isomers of the protonated Schiff base of retinal (PSBR). In the context of obtaining insight into the mechanisms by which retinal proteins catalyse the PSBR photo-isomerization reaction, ASR is a model system allowing to study, within the same protein, the protein–PSBR interactions for two different PSBR conformers at the same time. A detailed analysis of the vibrational spectra of AT and 13C, and their photo-products in wild-type ASR obtained through femtosecond (pump-) four-wave-mixing is reported for the first time, and compared to bacterio- and channelrhodopsin. As part of an extensive study of ASR mutants with blue-shifted absorption spectra, we present here a detailed computational analysis of the origin of the mutation-induced blue-shift of the absorption spectra, and identify electrostatic interactions as dominating steric effects that would entail a red-shift. The excited state lifetimes and isomerization reaction times (IRT) for the three mutants V112N, W76F, and L83Q are studied experimentally by femtosecond broadband transient absorption spectroscopy. Interestingly, in all three mutants, isomerization is accelerated for AT with respect to wild-type ASR, and this the more, the shorter the wavelength of maximum absorption. On the contrary, the 13C photo-reaction is slightly slowed down, leading to an inversion of the ESLs of AT and 13C, with respect to wt-ASR, in the blue-most absorbing mutant L83Q. Possible mechanisms for these mutation effects, and their steric and electrostatic origins are discussed. 
    more » « less