• Title of article

    Structural Role of Bacterioruberin in the Trimeric Structure of Archaerhodopsin-2

  • Author/Authors

    Keiko Yoshimura، نويسنده , , Tsutomu Kouyama، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
  • Pages
    15
  • From page
    1267
  • To page
    1281
  • Abstract
    Archaerhodopsin-2 (aR2), a retinal protein–carotenoid complex found in the claret membrane of Halorubrum sp. aus-2, functions as a light-driven proton pump. In this study, the membrane fusion method was utilized to prepare trigonal P321 crystals (a = b = 98.2 Å, c = 56.2 Å) and hexagonal P63 crystals (a = b = 108.8 Å, c = 220.7 Å). The trigonal crystal is made up of stacked membranes in which the aR2 trimers are arranged on a honeycomb lattice. Similar membranous structures are found in the hexagonal crystal, but four membrane layers with different orientations are contained in the unit cell. In these crystals, the carotenoid bacterioruberin [5,32-bis(2-hydroxypropan-2-yl)-2,8,12,16,21,25,29,35-octamethylhexatriaconta-6,8,10,12,14,16,18,20,22,24,26,28,30-tridecaene-2,35-diol] binds to crevices between the subunits of the trimer. Its polyene chain is inclined from the membrane normal by an angle of about 20° and, on the cytoplasmic side, it is surrounded by helices AB and DE of neighbouring subunits. This peculiar binding mode suggests that bacterioruberin plays a striking structural role for the trimerization of aR2. When compared with the aR2 structure in another crystal form containing no bacterioruberin, the proton release channel takes a more closed conformation in the P321 or P63 crystal; i.e., the native conformation of protein is stabilized in the trimeric protein–bacterioruberin complex. Interestingly, most residues participating in the trimerization are not conserved in bacteriorhodopsin, a homologous protein capable of forming a trimeric structure in the absence of bacterioruberin. Despite a large alteration in the amino acid sequence, the shape of the intratrimer hydrophobic space filled by lipids is highly conserved between aR2 and bacteriorhodopsin. Since a transmembrane helix facing this space undergoes a large conformational change during the proton pumping cycle, it is feasible that trimerization is an important strategy to capture special lipid components that are relevant to the protein activity.
  • Keywords
    Bacterioruberin , retinal , membrane protein crystallization , bacteriorhodopsin , proton pump
  • Journal title
    Journal of Molecular Biology
  • Serial Year
    2008
  • Journal title
    Journal of Molecular Biology
  • Record number

    1256225