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Helix movement is coupled to displacement of the second extracellular loop in rhodopsin activation
Authors
AB Patel
AB Patel
+70 more
AJ Rader
Amiram Hirshfeld
B Holst
B Holst
C Altenbach
CE Elling
D Salom
D Sharma
DL Farrens
E Crocker
E Crocker
EA Zhukovsky
ECY Yan
ECY Yan
Elsa C Y Yan
F DeLange
F Jäger
FF Davidson
G Steinberg
GB Cohen
H Imai
H Matsumoto
J Herzfeld
J Hwa
J Li
J Lugtenburg
JA Goodwin
JA Javitch
JH Park
JM Janz
JM Janz
JM Klco
Joseph A Goncalves
K Fahmy
K Palczewski
KDG Pfleger
L Shi
M Conner
M Eilers
M Han
M Samson
M Scarselli
M Struthers
Markus Eilers
Martine Ziliox
ME Olah
Mordechai Sheves
Natalie Syrett
P Scheerer
Philip J Reeves
PJ Reeves
PJ Reeves
R Dulbecco
S Madabushi
Shivani Ahuja
SJ Han
SP Sheikh
SP Sheikh
SS Karnik
Steven O Smith
T Doi
T Okada
T Wurch
Thomas P Sakmar
TP Sakmar
TP Sakmar
UM Ganter
V Cherezov
Viktor Hornak
Y Furutani
Publication date
1 February 2009
Publisher
'Springer Science and Business Media LLC'
Doi
View
on
PubMed
Abstract
The second extracellular loop (EL2) of rhodopsin forms a cap over the binding site of its photoreactive 11-cis retinylidene chromophore. A crucial question has been whether EL2 forms a reversible gate that opens upon activation or acts as a rigid barrier. Distance measurements using solid-state 13C NMR spectroscopy between the retinal chromophore and the β4 strand of EL2 show that the loop is displaced from the retinal binding site upon activation, and there is a rearrangement in the hydrogen-bonding networks connecting EL2 with the extracellular ends of transmembrane helices H4, H5 and H6. NMR measurements further reveal that structural changes in EL2 are coupled to the motion of helix H5 and breaking of the ionic lock that regulates activation. These results provide a comprehensive view of how retinal isomerization triggers helix motion and activation in this prototypical G protein-coupled receptor. © 2009 Nature America, Inc. All rights reserved
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oai:repository.essex.ac.uk:930
Last time updated on 10/08/2012
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Last time updated on 01/04/2019