Rhodopsin-bestrophin fusion proteins from unicellular algae form gigantic pentameric ion channels

NATURE STRUCTURAL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY(2022)

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Abstract
Many organisms sense light using rhodopsins, photoreceptive proteins containing a retinal chromophore. Here we report the discovery, structure and biophysical characterization of bestrhodopsins, a microbial rhodopsin subfamily from marine unicellular algae, in which one rhodopsin domain of eight transmembrane helices or, more often, two such domains in tandem, are C-terminally fused to a bestrophin channel. Cryo-EM analysis of a rhodopsin-rhodopsin-bestrophin fusion revealed that it forms a pentameric megacomplex (~700 kDa) with five rhodopsin pseudodimers surrounding the channel in the center. Bestrhodopsins are metastable and undergo photoconversion between red- and green-absorbing or green- and UVA-absorbing forms in the different variants. The retinal chromophore, in a unique binding pocket, photoisomerizes from all- trans to 11- cis form. Heterologously expressed bestrhodopsin behaves as a light-modulated anion channel.
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Biophysics,Structural biology,Life Sciences,general,Biochemistry,Protein Structure,Membrane Biology,Biological Microscopy
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