Issue 4, 2023

Specific zinc binding to heliorhodopsin

Abstract

Heliorhodopsins (HeRs), a recently discovered family of rhodopsins, have an inverted membrane topology compared to animal and microbial rhodopsins. The slow photocycle of HeRs suggests a light-sensor function, although the actual function remains unknown. Although HeRs exhibit no specific binding of monovalent cations or anions, recent ATR-FTIR spectroscopy studies have demonstrated the binding of Zn2+ to HeR from Thermoplasmatales archaeon (TaHeR) and 48C12. Even though ion-specific FTIR spectra were observed for many divalent cations, only helical structural perturbations were observed for Zn2+-binding, suggesting a possible modification of the HeR function by Zn2+. The present study shows that Zn2+-binding lowers the thermal stability of TaHeR, and slows back proton transfer to the retinal Schiff base (M decay) during its photocycle. Zn2+-binding was similarly observed for a TaHeR opsin that lacks the retinal chromophore. We then studied the Zn2+-binding site by means of the ATR-FTIR spectroscopy of site-directed mutants. Among five and four mutants of His and Asp/Glu, respectively, only E150Q exhibited a completely different spectral feature of the α-helix (amide-I) in ATR-FTIR spectroscopy, suggesting that E150 is responsible for Zn2+-binding. Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations built a coordination structure of Zn2+-bound TaHeR, where E150 and protein bound water molecules participate in direct coordination. It was concluded that the specific binding site of Zn2+ is located at the cytoplasmic side of TaHeR, and that Zn2+-binding affects the structure and structural dynamics, possibly modifying the unknown function of TaHeR.

Graphical abstract: Specific zinc binding to heliorhodopsin

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
10 Oct 2022
Accepted
21 Dec 2022
First published
13 Jan 2023

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2023,25, 3535-3543

Author version available

Specific zinc binding to heliorhodopsin

M. Hashimoto, K. Miyagawa, M. Singh, K. Katayama, M. Shoji, Y. Furutani, Y. Shigeta and H. Kandori, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2023, 25, 3535 DOI: 10.1039/D2CP04718G

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