Abstract

The primary photodynamics of channelrhodopsin-1 from Chlamydomonas augustae (CaChR1) was investigated by VIS-pump supercontinuum probe experiments from femtoseconds to 100 picoseconds. In contrast to reported experiments on channelrhodopsin-2 from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii (CrChR2), we found a clear dependence of the photoreaction dynamics on varying the excitation wavelength. Upon excitation at 500 and at 550 nm we detected different bleaching bands, and spectrally distinct photoproduct absorptions in the first picoseconds. We assign the former to the ground-state heterogeneity of a mixture of 13-cis and all-trans retinal maximally absorbing around 480 and 540 nm, respectively. At 550 nm, all-trans retinal of the ground state is almost exclusively excited. Here, we found a fast all-trans to 13-cis isomerization process to a hot and spectrally broad P1 photoproduct with a time constant of (100 ± 50) fs, followed by photoproduct relaxation with time constants of (500 ± 100) fs and (5 ± 1) ps. The remaining fraction relaxes back to the parent ground state with time constants of (500 ± 100) fs and (5 ± 1) ps. Upon excitation at 500 nm a mixture of both chromophore conformations is excited, resulting in overlapping reaction dynamics with additional time constants of <300 fs, (1.8 ± 0.3) ps and (90 ± 25) ps. A new photoproduct Q is formed absorbing at around 600 nm. Strong coherent oscillatory signals were found pertaining up to several picoseconds. We determined low frequency modes around 200 cm−1, similar to those reported for bacteriorhodopsin.

Highlights

  • Microbial rhodopsins comprise a large family of light-driven ion pumps and sensors

  • Raman studies showed that the retinal chromophore in ground-state CaChR1 adopts a mixture of 13-cis and all-trans conformations with a fraction of ∼30 and ∼70%, respectively (Muders et al, 2014)

  • Different absorptions are expected for CaChR1 harboring 13-cis and all-trans retinal (Muders et al, 2014)

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Summary

Introduction

Microbial rhodopsins comprise a large family of light-driven ion pumps and sensors. In 2002, a new functionality of microbial rhodopsins was introduced by the discovery of a light-gated ion channel (named channelrhodopsin) in the eyespot of the green algae Chlamydomonas reinhardtii (Nagel et al, 2002). A year later, a second channelrhodopsin (CrChR2) was characterized, Nagel et al (2003) which paved the way for the new field of optogenetics where action potentials are elicited in neurons by remote illumination (Fenno et al, 2011). Electron microscopy provided the first structural information on CrChR2 and resolved the arrangement of the seven transmembrane helices (Muller et al, 2011). X-ray crystallography provided a high-resolution three-dimensional structural model of C1C2, a chimera of channelrhodopsin derived from CrChR1 (helices A–E) and

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