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Ultrafast structural changes direct the first molecular events of vision

Authors :
Thomas Gruhl
Tobias Weinert
Matthew Rodrigues
Christopher J Milne
Giorgia Ortolani
Karol Nass
Eriko Nango
Saumik Sen
Philip J M Johnson
Claudio Cirelli
Antonia Furrer
Sandra Mous
Petr Skopintsev
Daniel James
Florian Dworkowski
Petra Båth
Demet Kekilli
Dmitry Ozerov
Rie Tanaka
Hannah Glover
Camila Bacellar
Steffen Brünle
Cecilia M Casadei
Azeglio D Diethelm
Dardan Gashi
Guillaume Gotthard
Ramon Guixà-González
Yasumasa Joti
Victoria Kabanova
Gregor Knopp
Elena Lesca
Pikyee Ma
Isabelle Martiel
Jonas Mühle
Shigeki Owada
Filip Pamula
Daniel Sarabi
Oliver Tejero
Ching-Ju Tsai
Niranjan Varma
Anna Wach
Sébastien Boutet
Kensuke Tono
Przemyslaw Nogly
Xavier Deupi
So Iwata
Richard Neutze
Jörg Standfuss
Gebhard FX Schertler
Valerie Panneels
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Vision is initiated by the rhodopsin family of light-sensitive G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs). A photon is absorbed by the 11-cis retinal chromophore of rhodopsin, which isomerizes within 200 femtoseconds to the all-trans conformation, thereby initiating the cellular signal transduction processes that ultimately lead to vision. However, the intramolecular mechanism by which the photoactivated retinal induces the activation events inside rhodopsin remains experimentally unclear. Here we use ultrafast time-resolved crystallography at room temperature to determine how an isomerized twisted all-trans retinal stores the photon energy that is required to initiate the protein conformational changes associated with the formation of the G protein-binding signalling state. The distorted retinal at a 1-ps time delay after photoactivation has pulled away from half of its numerous interactions with its binding pocket, and the excess of the photon energy is released through an anisotropic protein breathing motion in the direction of the extracellular space. Notably, the very early structural motions in the protein side chains of rhodopsin appear in regions that are involved in later stages of the conserved class A GPCR activation mechanism. Our study sheds light on the earliest stages of vision in vertebrates and points to fundamental aspects of the molecular mechanisms of agonist-mediated GPCR activation.<br />視覚に関わるタンパク質の超高速分子動画 --薄暗いところで光を感じる仕組み--. 京都大学プレスリリース. 2023-03-23.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5a6e4e1e23892118ac11c72f2ba04337