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Extensive heterogeneity in somatic mutation and selection in the human bladder 期刊论文
Science, 2020
作者:  Andrew R. J. Lawson;  Federico Abascal;  Tim H. H. Coorens;  Yvette Hooks;  Laura O’Neill;  Calli Latimer;  Keiran Raine;  Mathijs A. Sanders;  Anne Y. Warren;  Krishnaa T. A. Mahbubani;  Bethany Bareham;  Timothy M. Butler;  Luke M. R. Harvey;  Alex Cagan;  Andrew Menzies;  Luiza Moore;  Alexandra J. Colquhoun;  William Turner;  Benjamin Thomas;  Vincent Gnanapragasam;  Nicholas Williams;  Doris M. Rassl;  Harald Vöhringer;  Sonia Zumalave;  Jyoti Nangalia;  José M. C. Tubío;  Moritz Gerstung;  Kourosh Saeb-Parsy;  Michael R. Stratton;  Peter J. Campbell;  Thomas J. Mitchell;  Iñigo Martincorena
收藏  |  浏览/下载:19/0  |  提交时间:2020/10/12
Femtosecond-to-millisecond structural changes in a light-driven sodium pump 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020, 583 (7815) : 314-+
作者:  Moore, Luiza;  Leongamornlert, Daniel;  Coorens, Tim H. H.;  Sanders, Mathijs A.;  Ellis, Peter;  Dentro, Stefan C.;  Dawson, Kevin J.;  Butler, Tim;  Rahbari, Raheleh;  Mitchell, Thomas J.;  Maura, Francesco;  Nangalia, Jyoti;  Tarpey, Patrick S.;  Brunner, Simon F.;  Lee-Six, Henry;  Hooks, Yvette;  Moody, Sarah;  Mahbubani, Krishnaa T.;  Jimenez-Linan, Mercedes;  Brosens, Jan J.;  Iacobuzio-Donahue, Christine A.;  Martincorena, Inigo;  Saeb-Parsy, Kourosh;  Campbell, Peter J.;  Stratton, Michael R.
收藏  |  浏览/下载:17/0  |  提交时间:2020/07/03

Light-driven sodium pumps actively transport small cations across cellular membranes(1). These pumps are used by microorganisms to convert light into membrane potential and have become useful optogenetic tools with applications in neuroscience. Although the resting state structures of the prototypical sodium pump Krokinobacter eikastus rhodopsin 2 (KR2) have been solved(2,3), it is unclear how structural alterations overtime allow sodium to be translocated against a concentration gradient. Here, using the Swiss X-ray Free Electron Laser(4), we have collected serial crystallographic data at ten pump-probe delays from femtoseconds to milliseconds. High-resolution structural snapshots throughout the KR2 photocycle show how retinal isomerization is completed on the femtosecond timescale and changes the local structure of the binding pocket in the early nanoseconds. Subsequent rearrangements and deprotonation of the retinal Schiff base open an electrostatic gate in microseconds. Structural and spectroscopic data, in combination with quantum chemical calculations, indicate that a sodium ion bind stransiently close to the retinal within one millisecond. In the last structural intermediate, at 20 milliseconds after activation, we identified a potential second sodium-binding site close to the extracellular exit. These results provide direct molecular insight into the dynamics of active cation transport across biological membranes.