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Crystal structure of metarhodopsin II

  • Hui Woog Choe*
  • , Yong Ju Kim
  • , Jung Hee Park
  • , Takefumi Morizumi
  • , Emil F. Pai
  • , Norbert Krau
  • , Klaus Peter Hofmann
  • , Patrick Scheerer
  • , Oliver P. Ernst
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin
  • Jeonbuk National University
  • University of Toronto
  • Queen Mary University of London
  • Humboldt University of Berlin

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articlepeer-review

Abstract

G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are seven transmembrane helix (TM) proteins that transduce signals into living cells by binding extracellular ligands and coupling to intracellular heterotrimeric G proteins (Gαβ2β3). The photoreceptor rhodopsin couples to transducin and bears its ligand 11-cis-retinal covalently bound via a protonated Schiff base to the opsin apoprotein. Absorption of a photon causes retinal cis/trans isomerization and generates the agonist all-trans-retinal in situ. After early photoproducts, the active G-protein-binding intermediate metarhodopsin II (MetaII) is formed, in which the retinal Schiff base is still intact but deprotonated. Dissociation of the proton from the Schiff base breaks a major constraint in the protein and enables further activating steps, including an outward tilt of TM6 and formation of a large cytoplasmic crevice for uptake of the interacting C terminus of the Gα subunit. Owing to Schiff base hydrolysis, MetaII is short-lived and notoriously difficult to crystallize. We therefore soaked opsin crystals with all-trans-retinal to form MetaII, presuming that the crystal's high concentration of opsin in an active conformation (Ops*) may facilitate all-trans-retinal uptake and Schiff base formation. Here we present the 3.0 and 2.85 crystal structures, respectively, of MetaII alone or in complex with an 11-amino-acid C-terminal fragment derived from Gα (GαCT2). GαCT2 binds in a large crevice at the cytoplasmic side, akin to the binding of a similar Gα-derived peptide to Ops* (ref. 7). In the MetaII structures, the electron density from the retinal ligand seamlessly continues into the Lys296 side chain, reflecting proper formation of the Schiff base linkage. The retinal is in a relaxed conformation and almost undistorted compared with pure crystalline all-trans-retinal. By comparison with early photoproducts we propose how retinal translocation and rotation induce the gross conformational changes characteristic for MetaII. The structures can now serve as models for the large GPCR family.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)651-655
Number of pages5
JournalNature
Volume471
Issue number7340
DOIs
StatePublished - 2011.03.31

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