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    Science. 2004 Nov 19;306(5700):1390-3. Epub 2004 Sep 30.

    Anabaena sensory rhodopsin: a photochromic color sensor at 2.0 A.

    Vogeley L, Sineshchekov OA, Trivedi VD, Sasaki J, Spudich JL, Luecke H.

    Department of Molecular Biology and Biochemistry, University of California, Irvine, CA 92697, USA.

    Microbial sensory rhodopsins are a family of membrane-embedded photoreceptors in prokaryotic and eukaryotic organisms. Structures of archaeal rhodopsins, which function as light-driven ion pumps or photosensors, have been reported. We present the structure of a eubacterial rhodopsin, which differs from those of previously characterized archaeal rhodopsins in its chromophore and cytoplasmic-side portions. Anabaena sensory rhodopsin exhibits light-induced interconversion between stable 13-cis and all-trans states of the retinylidene protein. The ratio of its cis and trans chromophore forms depends on the wavelength of illumination, thus providing a mechanism for a single protein to signal the color of light, for example, to regulate color-sensitive processes such as chromatic adaptation in photosynthesis. Its cytoplasmic half channel, highly hydrophobic in the archaeal rhodopsins, contains numerous hydrophilic residues networked by water molecules, providing a connection from the photoactive site to the cytoplasmic surface believed to interact with the receptor's soluble 14-kilodalton transducer.

    PMID: 15459346 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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    Structures reported by this article