The spectral and photochemical properties of proteorhodopsin (PR) were determined to compare its proton transport steps to those of bacteriorhodopsin (BR). Static and time-resolved measurements on wild-type PR and several mutants were done in the visible and infrared (FTIR and FT-Raman). Assignment of the observed C=O stretch bands indicated that Asp-97 and Glu-108 serve as the proton acceptor and donor, respectively, to the retinal Schiff base, as do the residues at corresponding positions in BR, but there are numerous spectral and kinetic differences between the two proteins. There is no detectable dark-adaptation in PR, and the chromophore contains nearly entirely all-trans retinal. Because the pK(a) of Asp-97 is relatively high (7.1), the proton-transporting photocycle is produced only at alkaline pH. It contains at least seven transient states with decay times in the range from 10 micros to 200 ms, but the analysis reveals only three distinct spectral forms. The first is a red-shifted K-like state. Proton release does not occur during the very slow (several milliseconds) rise of the second, M-like, intermediate, consistent with lack of the residues facilitating extracellular proton release in BR. Proton uptake from the bulk, presumably on the cytoplasmic side, takes place prior to release (tau approximately 2 ms), and coincident with reprotonation of the retinal Schiff base. The intermediate produced by this process contains 13-cis retinal as does the N state of BR, but its absorption maximum is red-shifted relative to PR (like the O state of BR). The decay of this N-like state is coupled to reisomerization of the retinal to all-trans, and produces a state that is O-like in its C-C stretch bands, but has an absorption maximum apparently close to that of unphotolyzed PR.
Glu-194 near the extracellular surface of bacteriorhodopsin is indispensable for proton release to the medium upon protonation of Asp-85 during light-driven transport. As for Glu-204, its replacement with glutamine (but not aspartate) abolishes both proton release and the anomalous titration of Asp-85 that originates from coupling between the pKa of this buried aspartate and those of the other acidic groups. Unlike the case of Glu-204, however, replacement of Glu-194 with aspartate raises the pKa for proton release. In Fourier transform infrared spectra of the E194D mutant a prominent positive band is observed at 1720 cm-1. It can be assigned from [4-13C]aspartate and D2O isotope shifts to the C&dbd;O stretch of protonated Asp-194. Its rise correlates with proton transfer from the retinal Schiff base to Asp-85. Its decay coincides with the appearance of a proton at the surface, detected under similar conditions with fluorescein covalently bound to Lys-129 and with pyranine. Its amplitude decreases with increasing pH, with a pKa of about 9. We show that this pKa is likely to be that of the internal proton donor to Asp-194, the Glu-204 site, before photoexcitation, while 13C NMR titration indicates that Asp-194 has an initial pKa of about 3. We propose that there is a chain of interacting residues between the retinal Schiff base and the extracellular surface. After photoisomerization of the retinal the pKa's change so as to allow (i) Asp-85 to become protonated by the Schiff base, (ii) the Glu-204 site to transfer its proton to Asp-194 in E194D, and therefore to Glu-194 in the wild type, and (iii) residue 194 to release the proton to the medium.
One of the distinctive features of eubacterial retinal based proton pumps, proteorhodopsins, xanthorhodopsin and others, is hydrogen bonding of the key aspartate residue, the counterion to the retinal Schiff base, to a histidine. We describe properties of the recently found eubacterium proton pump from Exiguobacterium sibiricum (named ESR) expressed in E. coli, especially features that depend on Asp-His interaction, the protonation state of the key aspartate, Asp85, and its ability to accept proton from the Schiff base during the photocycle. Proton pumping by liposomes and E. coli cells containing ESR occurs in a broad pH range above pH 4.5. Large light-induced pH changes indicate that ESR is a potent proton pump. Replacement of His57 with methionine or asparagine strongly affects the pH dependent properties of ESR. In the H57M mutant a dramatic decrease in the quantum yield of chromophore fluorescence emission and a 45 nm blue shift of the absorption maximum upon raising the pH from 5 to 8 indicates deprotonation of the counterion with a pKa of 6.3, which is also the pKa at which the M intermediate is observed in the photocycle of the protein solubilized in detergent (DDM). This is in contrast with the wild type protein, in which the same experiments show that the major fraction of Asp85 is deprotonated at pH > 3 and that it protonates only at low pH, with a pKa of 2.3. The M intermediate in the wild type photocycle accumulates only at high pH, with an apparent pKa of 9 from deprotonation of a residue interacting with Asp85, presumably His57. In liposomes reconstituted with ESR the pKas for M formation and spectral shifts are 2–3 pH units lower than in DDM. The distinctively different pH dependencies of the protonation of Asp85 and the accumulation of the M intermediate in the wild type protein vs. the H57M mutant indicate that there is strong Asp-His interaction, which substantially lowers the pKa of Asp85 by stabilizing its deprotonated state.
At pH >7, proteorhodopsin functions as an outward-directed proton pump in cell membranes, and Asp-97 and Glu-108, the homologues of the Asp-85 and Asp-96 in bacteriorhodopsin, are the proton acceptor and donor to the retinal Schiff base, respectively. It was reported, however [Friedrich, T. et al. (2002) J. Mol. Biol., 321, 821-838], that proteorhodopsin transports protons also at pH <7 where Asp-97 is protonated and in the direction reverse from that at higher pH. To explore the roles of Asp-97 and Glu-108 in the proposed pumping with variable vectoriality, we compared the photocycles of D97N and E108Q mutants, and the effects of azide on the photocycle of the E108Q mutant, at low and high pH. Unlike at high pH, at a pH low enough to protonate Asp-97 neither the mutations nor the effects of azide revealed evidence for the participation of the acidic residues in proton transfer, and as in the photocycle of the wild-type protein, no intermediate with unprotonated Schiff base accumulated. In view of these findings, and the doubts raised by absence of charge transfer after flash excitation at low pH, we revisited the question whether transport occurs at all under these conditions. In both oriented membrane fragments and liposomes reconstituted with proteorhodopsin, we found transport at high pH but not at low pH. Instead, proton transport activity followed the titration curve for Asp-97, with an apparent pK(a) of 7.1, and became zero at the pH where Asp-97 is fully protonated.
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