| Literature DB >> 29925949 |
Alina Pushkarev1, Keiichi Inoue2,3,4,5, Shirley Larom1, José Flores-Uribe1, Manish Singh2, Masae Konno2, Sahoko Tomida2, Shota Ito2, Ryoko Nakamura2, Satoshi P Tsunoda2,5, Alon Philosof1, Itai Sharon6,7, Natalya Yutin8, Eugene V Koonin8, Hideki Kandori9,10, Oded Béjà11.
Abstract
Many organisms capture or sense sunlight using rhodopsin pigments1,2, which are integral membrane proteins that bind retinal chromophores. Rhodopsins comprise two distinct protein families 1 , type-1 (microbial rhodopsins) and type-2 (animal rhodopsins). The two families share similar topologies and contain seven transmembrane helices that form a pocket in which retinal is linked covalently as a protonated Schiff base to a lysine at the seventh transmembrane helix2,3. Type-1 and type-2 rhodopsins show little or no sequence similarity to each other, as a consequence of extensive divergence from a common ancestor or convergent evolution of similar structures 1 . Here we report a previously unknown and diverse family of rhodopsins-which we term the heliorhodopsins-that we identified using functional metagenomics and that are distantly related to type-1 rhodopsins. Heliorhodopsins are embedded in the membrane with their N termini facing the cell cytoplasm, an orientation that is opposite to that of type-1 or type-2 rhodopsins. Heliorhodopsins show photocycles that are longer than one second, which is suggestive of light-sensory activity. Heliorhodopsin photocycles accompany retinal isomerization and proton transfer, as in type-1 and type-2 rhodopsins, but protons are never released from the protein, even transiently. Heliorhodopsins are abundant and distributed globally; we detected them in Archaea, Bacteria, Eukarya and their viruses. Our findings reveal a previously unknown family of light-sensing rhodopsins that are widespread in the microbial world.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29925949 DOI: 10.1038/s41586-018-0225-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962