Inward H+ pump xenorhodopsin Mechanism and alternative optogenetic approach

Open Access
Authors
  • V. Shevchenko
  • T. Mager
  • K. Kovalev
  • V. Polovinkin
  • A. Alekseev
  • J. Juettner
  • I. Chizhov
  • C. Bamann
  • C. Vavourakis
  • R. Ghai
  • I. Gushchin
  • V. Borshchevskiy
  • A. Rogachev
  • I. Melnikov
  • A. Popov
  • T. Balandin
  • F. Rodriguez-Valera
  • D.J. Manstein
  • G. Bueldt
  • E. Bamberg
  • V. Gordeliy
Publication date 2017
Journal Sciences advances
Article number e1603187
Volume | Issue number 3 | 9
Number of pages 10
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Institute for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Dynamics (IBED)
Abstract
Generation of an electrochemical proton gradient is the first step of cell bioenergetics. In prokaryotes, the gradient is created by outward membrane protein proton pumps. Inward plasma membrane native proton pumps are yet unknown. We describe comprehensive functional studies of the representatives of the yet noncharacterized xenorhodopsins from Nanohaloarchaea family of microbial rhodopsins. They are inward proton pumps as we demonstrate in model membrane systems, Escherichia coli cells, human embryonic kidney cells, neuroblastoma cells, and rat hippocampal neuronal cells. We also solved the structure of a xenorhodopsin from the nanohalosarchaeon Nanosalina (NsXeR) and suggest a mechanism of inward proton pumping. We demonstrate that the NsXeR is a powerful pump, which is able to elicit action potentials in rat hippocampal neuronal cells up to their maximal intrinsic firing frequency. Hence, inwardly directed proton pumps are suitable for light-induced remote control of neurons, and they are an alternative to the well-known cation-selective channelrhodopsins.
Document type Article
Language English
Related dataset Crystal structure of the inward H(+) pump xenorhodopsin
Published at https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.1603187
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