Nature Structural and Molecular Biology, volume 29, issue 5, pages 440-450
True-atomic-resolution insights into the structure and functional role of linear chains and low-barrier hydrogen bonds in proteins
Valentin Borshchevskiy
1, 2, 3
,
Kirill Kovalev
4
,
Ekaterina Round
5
,
Rouslan G. Efremov
6, 7
,
Roman Astashkin
3, 8
,
Gleb Bourenkov
4
,
Dmitry Bratanov
1, 2
,
Taras Balandin
1, 2
,
Igor Chizhov
9
,
Christian Baeken
1, 2
,
Ivan Gushchin
3
,
Alexander Kuzmin
3
,
Alexey Alekseev
3
,
Andrey Rogachev
3, 10
,
Dierk RAABE
1, 2, 11
,
MARTIN ENGELHARD
12
,
Ernst Bamberg
13
,
Georg Büldt
3
,
Valentin Gordeliy
1, 2, 3, 8
11
12
Department of Structural Biochemistry, Max Planck Institute for Physiology, Dortmund, Germany
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Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2022-04-28
scimago Q1
SJR: 7.151
CiteScore: 22.0
Impact factor: 12.5
ISSN: 15459993, 15459985
Molecular Biology
Structural Biology
Abstract
Hydrogen bonds are fundamental to the structure and function of biological macromolecules and have been explored in detail. The chains of hydrogen bonds (CHBs) and low-barrier hydrogen bonds (LBHBs) were proposed to play essential roles in enzyme catalysis and proton transport. However, high-resolution structural data from CHBs and LBHBs is limited. The challenge is that their ‘visualization’ requires ultrahigh-resolution structures of the ground and functionally important intermediate states to identify proton translocation events and perform their structural assignment. Our true-atomic-resolution structures of the light-driven proton pump bacteriorhodopsin, a model in studies of proton transport, show that CHBs and LBHBs not only serve as proton pathways, but also are indispensable for long-range communications, signaling and proton storage in proteins. The complete picture of CHBs and LBHBs discloses their multifunctional roles in providing protein functions and presents a consistent picture of proton transport and storage resolving long-standing debates and controversies. High-resolution (≤1.2 Å) structures of functional states of bacteriorhodopsin reveal the molecular mechanism for generating a membrane proton electrochemical gradient, a key event of cell bioenergetics driving ATP synthesis.
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