Abstract

Natural channelrhodopsins with strictly anion selectivity and high unitary conductance have been recently discovered in the cryptophyte alga Guillardia theta. These proteins, called anion channelrhodopsins (ACRs), are of interest for their novel function and also because they were shown to be highly efficient tools to inhibit neuronal action potentials with light. We show that a homologous protein from the cryptophyte alga Proteomonas sulcata (named here PsuACR1) exhibits similar strict anion selectivity as the previously identified G. theta ACRs. Like G. theta ACRs, PsuACR1 lacks a protonatable residue at the position of the proton acceptor Asp-85 in bacteriorhodopsin, which may be a key characteristic of ACR family members shared by haloarchaeal chloride pumps. Of importance for its potential use in optogenetics, despite its 10-fold lower channel activity than the GtACRs, PsuACR1 exhibits an ~eightfold more rapid channel closing half-time making it uniquely suitable for silencing the subclass of high-frequency firing neurons when high-time resolution is needed. The existence of a rhodopsin with properties similar to G. theta ACRs in a different cryptophyte genus indicates that such proteins may be widespread in the phylum of cryptophyte algae.

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