Back to Search Start Over

Channelrhodopsin-2, a directly light-gated cation-selective membrane channel

Authors :
Suneel Kateriya
Peter Berthold
Nona Adeishvili
Georg Nagel
Ernst Bamberg
Doris Ollig
Peter Hegemann
Wolfram Huhn
Tanjef Szellas
Publication Year :
2003
Publisher :
National Academy of Sciences, 2003.

Abstract

Microbial-type rhodopsins are found in archaea, prokaryotes, and eukaryotes. Some of them represent membrane ion transport proteins such as bacteriorhodopsin, a light-driven proton pump, or channelrhodopsin-1 (ChR1), a recently identified light-gated proton channel from the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii . ChR1 and ChR2, a related microbial-type rhodopsin from C. reinhardtii , were shown to be involved in generation of photocurrents of this green alga. We demonstrate by functional expression, both in oocytes of Xenopus laevis and mammalian cells, that ChR2 is a directly light-switched cation-selective ion channel. This channel opens rapidly after absorption of a photon to generate a large permeability for monovalent and divalent cations. ChR2 desensitizes in continuous light to a smaller steady-state conductance. Recovery from desensitization is accelerated by extracellular H + and negative membrane potential, whereas closing of the ChR2 ion channel is decelerated by intracellular H + . ChR2 is expressed mainly in C. reinhardtii under low-light conditions, suggesting involvement in photoreception in dark-adapted cells. The predicted seven-transmembrane α helices of ChR2 are characteristic for G protein-coupled receptors but reflect a different motif for a cation-selective ion channel. Finally, we demonstrate that ChR2 may be used to depolarize small or large cells, simply by illumination.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e865b6471a666191de6ca22bf73abc41