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XB-ART-36639
Photochem Photobiol 2007 Jan 01;832:293-302. doi: 10.1562/2006-06-09-RA-916.
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Interaction of the halobacterial transducer to a halorhodopsin mutant engineered so as to bind the transducer: Cl- circulation within the extracellular channel.

Hasegawa C , Kikukawa T , Miyauchi S , Seki A , Sudo Y , Kubo M , Demura M , Kamo N .


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An alkali-halophilic archaeum, Natronomonas pharaonis, contains two rhodopsins that are halorhodopsin (phR), a light-driven inward Cl- pump and phoborhodopsin (ppR), the receptor of negative phototaxis functioning by forming a signaling complex with a transducer, pHtrII (Sudo Y. et al., J. Mol. Biol. 357 [2006] 1274). Previously, we reported that the phR double mutant, P240T/F250Y(phR), can bind with pHtrII. This mutant itself can transport Cl-, while the net transport was stopped upon formation of the complex. The flash-photolysis data were analyzed by a scheme in which phR --> 4 P1 --> P2 --> 4 P3 --> P4 --> phR. The P3 of the wild-type and the double mutant contained two components, X- and O-intermediates. After the complex formation, however, the P3 of the double mutant lacked the X-intermediate. These observations imply that the X-intermediate (probably the N-intermediate) is the state having Cl- in the cytoplasmic binding site and that the complex undergoes an extracellular Cl- circulation because of the inhibition of formation of the X-intermediate.

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Species referenced: Xenopus
Genes referenced: phr tbx2