Abstract

For membrane transporters, substrate uptake and release reactions are major events during their transport cycles. Despite the functional importance of these events, it is difficult to identify their relevant structural intermediates because of the requirements of the experimental methods, which are to detect the timing of the formation and decay of intermediates and to detect the timing of substrate uptake and release. We report successfully achieving this for the light-driven Na+ pump rhodopsin (NaR). Here, a Na+-selective membrane, which consists of polyvinyl chloride and a Na+ ionophore, was employed to detect Na+ uptake and release. When one side of the membrane was covered by the lipid-reconstituted NaR, continuous illumination induced an increase in membrane potential, which reflected Na+ uptake by the photolyzed NaR. Via use of nanosecond laser pulses, two kinds of data were obtained during a single transport cycle: one was the flash-induced absorbance change in NaR to detect the formation and decay of structural intermediates, and the other was the flash-induced change in membrane potential, which reflects the transient Na+ uptake and release reactions. Their comparison clearly indicated that Na+ is captured and released during the formation and decay of the O intermediate, the red-shifted intermediate that appears in the latter half of the transport cycle.

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