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Kinetic characteristics of chimeric channelrhodopsins implicate the molecular identity involved in desensitization

Channelrhodopsin (ChR)-1 and ChR2 were the first-identified members of ChRs which are a growing subfamily of microbial-type rhodopsins. Light absorption drives the generation of a photocurrent in cell membranes expressing ChR2. However, the photocurrent amplitude attenuates and becomes steady-state...

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Autores principales: Zamani, Alemeh, Sakuragi, Shigeo, Ishizuka, Toru, Yawo, Hiromu
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Biophysical Society of Japan (BSJ) 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5289414/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28409086
http://dx.doi.org/10.2142/biophysico.14.0_13
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author Zamani, Alemeh
Sakuragi, Shigeo
Ishizuka, Toru
Yawo, Hiromu
author_facet Zamani, Alemeh
Sakuragi, Shigeo
Ishizuka, Toru
Yawo, Hiromu
author_sort Zamani, Alemeh
collection PubMed
description Channelrhodopsin (ChR)-1 and ChR2 were the first-identified members of ChRs which are a growing subfamily of microbial-type rhodopsins. Light absorption drives the generation of a photocurrent in cell membranes expressing ChR2. However, the photocurrent amplitude attenuates and becomes steady-state during prolonged irradiation. This process, called desensitization or inactivation, has been attributed to the accumulation of intermediates less conductive to cations. Here we provided evidence that the dark-adapted (DA) photocurrent before desensitization is kinetically different from the light-adapted (LA) one after desensitization, that is, the deceleration of both basal-to-conductive and conductive-to-basal transitions. When the kinetics were compared between the DA and LA photocurrents for the ChR1/2 chimeras, the transmembrane helices, TM1 and TM2, were the determinants of both basal-to-conductive and conductive-to-basal transitions, whereas TM4 may contribute to the basal-to-conductive transitions and TM5 may contribute to the conductive-to-basal transitions, respectively. The fact that the desensitization-dependent decrease of the basal-to-conductive and conductive-to-basal transitions was facilitated by the TM1 exchange from ChR2 to ChR1 and reversed by the further TM2 exchange suggests that the conformation change for the channel gating is predominantly regulated by the interaction between TM1 and TM2. Although the exchange of TM1 from ChR2 to ChR1 showed no obvious influence on the spectral sensitivity, this exchange significantly induced the desensitization-dependent blue shift. Therefore, the TM1 and 2 are the main structures involved in two features of the desensitization, the stabilization of protein conformation and the charge distribution around the retinal-Schiff base (RSB(+)).
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spelling pubmed-52894142017-04-13 Kinetic characteristics of chimeric channelrhodopsins implicate the molecular identity involved in desensitization Zamani, Alemeh Sakuragi, Shigeo Ishizuka, Toru Yawo, Hiromu Biophys Physicobiol Regular Article Channelrhodopsin (ChR)-1 and ChR2 were the first-identified members of ChRs which are a growing subfamily of microbial-type rhodopsins. Light absorption drives the generation of a photocurrent in cell membranes expressing ChR2. However, the photocurrent amplitude attenuates and becomes steady-state during prolonged irradiation. This process, called desensitization or inactivation, has been attributed to the accumulation of intermediates less conductive to cations. Here we provided evidence that the dark-adapted (DA) photocurrent before desensitization is kinetically different from the light-adapted (LA) one after desensitization, that is, the deceleration of both basal-to-conductive and conductive-to-basal transitions. When the kinetics were compared between the DA and LA photocurrents for the ChR1/2 chimeras, the transmembrane helices, TM1 and TM2, were the determinants of both basal-to-conductive and conductive-to-basal transitions, whereas TM4 may contribute to the basal-to-conductive transitions and TM5 may contribute to the conductive-to-basal transitions, respectively. The fact that the desensitization-dependent decrease of the basal-to-conductive and conductive-to-basal transitions was facilitated by the TM1 exchange from ChR2 to ChR1 and reversed by the further TM2 exchange suggests that the conformation change for the channel gating is predominantly regulated by the interaction between TM1 and TM2. Although the exchange of TM1 from ChR2 to ChR1 showed no obvious influence on the spectral sensitivity, this exchange significantly induced the desensitization-dependent blue shift. Therefore, the TM1 and 2 are the main structures involved in two features of the desensitization, the stabilization of protein conformation and the charge distribution around the retinal-Schiff base (RSB(+)). The Biophysical Society of Japan (BSJ) 2017-01-24 /pmc/articles/PMC5289414/ /pubmed/28409086 http://dx.doi.org/10.2142/biophysico.14.0_13 Text en 2017 © The Biophysical Society of Japan
spellingShingle Regular Article
Zamani, Alemeh
Sakuragi, Shigeo
Ishizuka, Toru
Yawo, Hiromu
Kinetic characteristics of chimeric channelrhodopsins implicate the molecular identity involved in desensitization
title Kinetic characteristics of chimeric channelrhodopsins implicate the molecular identity involved in desensitization
title_full Kinetic characteristics of chimeric channelrhodopsins implicate the molecular identity involved in desensitization
title_fullStr Kinetic characteristics of chimeric channelrhodopsins implicate the molecular identity involved in desensitization
title_full_unstemmed Kinetic characteristics of chimeric channelrhodopsins implicate the molecular identity involved in desensitization
title_short Kinetic characteristics of chimeric channelrhodopsins implicate the molecular identity involved in desensitization
title_sort kinetic characteristics of chimeric channelrhodopsins implicate the molecular identity involved in desensitization
topic Regular Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5289414/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28409086
http://dx.doi.org/10.2142/biophysico.14.0_13
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