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Bacteriorhodopsin The Purple Membrane Protein Mike Goodreid CHEM*4550 seminar
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Outline of Presentation Introduce Bacteriorhodopsin (BR) History of its structural analysis Structural features of the protein Mechanism of action Energy involved in action
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Source of BR Archaebacteria Halobacteria Salinarium are the source of bacteriorhodopsin They are halophilic bacteria (found in very salty water e.g. Great Salt Lake)
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What is the purple membrane? The purple membrane patches are areas on the membrane where BR is concentrated BR absorbs light @ 570 nm (visible green light) Red and Blue light is reflected, giving membrane its purple colour
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So what does BR do? BR functions as a proton pump Long story short: protons are pumped one at a time from the inside of the cell to the outside Photons react with a bound retinal group causing conformational change in BR
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Photons for Protons Bacteriorhodopsin takes energy from photons This energy is converted and creates a proton gradient by pumping protons outside the cell Protons are allowed back into the cell by an ATP synthase In a nutshell: Photons are used to power the cell
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Milestones in BR Structural Determination In order to assess the structure and mechanism of BR, or any membrane protein, we really need to understand its tertiary structure by X-ray crystallography BUT, membrane proteins don’t crystallize easily
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Nobel Prize in Chemistry (1988) Hartmut Michel First to crystallize BR in 1980 Contribution to determination of structure of a photosynthetic reaction center earned him a Nobel Prize
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Hartmut’s Experiment
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Findings Could get protein crystallization Crystals were too small and disordered to determine tertiary structure Results uncommon because – BR is a very stable protein – BR forms a 2D lattice in vivo and in vitro (later)
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1990 Henderson et al. use cryo-crystallography to study BR Crystallization occurred First instances of structural determination However, some areas of the protein could not be resolved
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1990 First structure of BR First structures of BR from side and top/bottom
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1996: E.M Landau & J.P. Rosenbusch Paradigm shift in crystallization of membrane proteins Use Cubic Lipid Phase Matrix First complete structural determination of BR
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Intro to CLP CLP matrix (bicontinuous cubic phase) Involves -high lipid content monoolein (1-monooleoyl-rac-glycerol, C 18:1c9, = MO ) -aqueous pores that penetrate membrane -proteins embedded At high concentrations of lipids, more complex phase behaviour occurs (say goodbye to micelles and bilayers)
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Seeding and Feeding Purple membrane patches (or BR monomers) diffuse into the CLP Addition of Sorensen salt increases curvature of the CLP’s membranes
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Seeding and Feeding Protein separates into planar domains (crystal formation) Mature crystals co-exist with BR depleted cubic phase Hydration (dilution of Sorensen salt solution) reverses the crystallization process (crystals dissolve back into CLP matrix)
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Results Hexagonal crystals from MO bicontinuous lipid phase lead to complete structural determination of BR (3.7 Angstrom resolution)
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BR gene expression 786 nt structural gene 13 AA precursor sequence +248 AA in mature BR +1 AA (D) at C-terminal sequence No intervening sequences No prokaryotic promoter (yet?)
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Brp has role in retinal synthesis from beta-carotene Blh has a similar role(?)
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Structural Features of BR Extracellular matrix Cytosol H+ | V
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Structural Info 7 TM helices Forms a homotrimer Homotrimers aggregate to form the purple membrane Stability of trimer by: – G113, I117, L48 – Most stability comes from surrounding lipids
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Are There Any Highly- conserved Residues? You’d better believe it! L. Brown, 2001: -Upon BLASTing the H. Salinarium BR, found very high homology among all BR from a number of different Halobacterium -Around the K216 schiff base, there is no deviation in AA composition for a good 4.5 Angstroms -This type of analysis shows the entire retinal binding pocket is highly conserved. Therefore, MANY of the AAs in BR are structurally and/or catalytically important. SDM is a useful tool for validating this statement.
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Photocycle A lesson in pushing protons
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Photocycle of BR begins with absorption of a photon with wavelength of 550 nm. All-trans retinal 13-cis retinal 13 | CHO All-trans retinal (blue) Carbon 13 (red)
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Photocycle of BR begins with absorption of a photon with wavelength of 550 nm. All-trans retinal 13-cis retinal 13 | CHO 13-cis retinal (blue+cyan) Carbon 13 (red)
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Photocycle (K) Extracellular matrix Cytosol H+ | V K H H PRS H cis
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Photocycle (L) Extracellular matrix Cytosol H+ | V KLKL H H -Partial retinal relaxation -Subtle changes in protein conformation PRS H cis
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Photocycle (M) Extracellular matrix Cytosol H+ | V LMLM H H -K216 (schiff base deprotonated) -D85 picks up proton (perhaps via H2O intermediate) -Proton lost from PRS PRS cis
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Photocycle (N) Extracellular matrix Cytosol H+ | V MNMN H H -D96 deprotonated -K216 picks up proton PRS cis
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Photocycle (O) Extracellular matrix Cytosol H+ | V NONO H H -Retinal reisomerizes back to All-Trans -D96 reprotonated from cytosol PRS H
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Photocycle (final step) Extracellular matrix Cytosol H+ | V OKOK H H -D85 deprotonated -PRS reprotonated -back to square 1 until another proton isomerizes the All-trans retinal PRS H
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Basic Biophysics And now for something completely different
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Thermodynamics of Transport Energy of a photon: E=hc/lambda let lambda = 550 nm E photon =3.61x10^(-19) J Energy req’d to move H + /\G=RTln([H+out]/[H+in]) -zF/\psi let: H+out=10,000 H+in, T=295K /\G=3.75E-20(J/H+) - zF/\psi let:Vm=-60mV (an estimate) /\G=(3.75(E-20) – 9.61E(-21)) J/H+ /\G = + 4.7E-20J Since Ephoton>/\G, we can see that the photon is sufficiently energized to move the proton
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What promise does BR hold? Bioengineering: -Scaffold for a light powered Cation pump -Facilitate environmental cleanup of heavy metals -Cheap, easy way of accumulating protons: -Industry -Fuel cell cars
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References Lanyi, J.K. (2001) Biochemistry (Moscow) 66, 1477-1482 Brown, L.S. (2001) Biochemistry (Moscow) 66, 1546-1552 Dunn, R., McCoy, J., Simsek, M., Majumdar, A., Chang, S.H., Rajbhandary, U.L., and Khorana, H.G..(1981) Proc Natl Acad Sci USA.78, 6744-6748. Jagannathan, K., Chang, R., and Yethiraj, A. (2002) Biophys J 83, 1902-1916 Peck, R.F., Echavarri-Erasun, C., Johnson, E.A., Ng, W.V., Kennedy S.P., Hood, L., DasSarma, S., and Krebs, M.P. (2001) J Biol Chem. 23, 5739-5744 Landau, E.M.and Rosenbusch, J.P. (1996) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 93, 14532-14535 Nollert, P. Qiu, H., Caffrey, M., Rosenbusch, J.P., and Landau, E.M. (2001) FEBS Lett. 504, 179-186
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