Low-Temperature FTIR Spectroscopy of the L/Q Switch of Proteorhodopsin

Abstract

Rhodopsins are photoreceptive membrane proteins containing a retinal chromophore, and color tuning mechanism in rhodopsins is one of the important topics. Color switch is a color-determining residue at the same position, where replacement of red- and blue-shifting amino acids in two wild-type rhodopsins causes spectral blue- and red-shifts, respectively. The first and most famous color switch in microbial rhodopsins is the L/Q switch in proteorhodopsins (PRs). Green- or blue-absorbing PR (GPR or BPR) contain Leu and Gln at position 105 of C-helix (TM3), respectively, and their replacement converted absorbing colors. The L/Q switch enables bacteria to absorb green or blue light in shallow or deep ocean waters, respectively. Although Gln and Leu are hydrophilic and hydrophobic residues, respectively, comprehensive mutation study of position 105 in GPR revealed the λmax correlating with the volume of residues, not hydropathy index. To gain structural insights of the mechanism, we applied low-temperature FTIR spectroscopy of L105Q GPR, and the obtained spectra were compared with those of GPR and BPR. The difference FTIR spectra of L105Q GPR were similar to those of BPR, not GPR, implying that the L/Q switch converts GPR into BPR regarding the local environments of the retinal chromophore. It includes retinal skeletal vibration, hydrogen-bonding strength of the protonated Schiff base, amide-A vibration (peptide backbone), and protein-bound water molecules. Together with such structural alterations, color is also switched, and known as the L/Q switch.

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
01 6 2024
Accepted
05 8 2024
First published
07 8 2024

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2024, Accepted Manuscript

Low-Temperature FTIR Spectroscopy of the L/Q Switch of Proteorhodopsin

T. Nishikino, T. Sugimoto and H. Kandori, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2024, Accepted Manuscript , DOI: 10.1039/D4CP02248C

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