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J Bacteriol, April 1998, p. 2033-2042, Vol. 180, No. 8
0021-9193/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Suppressor Mutation Analysis of the Sensory
Rhodopsin I-Transducer Complex: Insights into the
Color-Sensing Mechanism
Kwang-Hwan
Jung and
John L.
Spudich*
Department of Microbiology and Molecular
Genetics, University of Texas
Houston Medical School, Houston,
Texas 77030
Received 5 November 1997/Accepted 10 February 1998
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ABSTRACT |
The molecular complex containing the phototaxis receptor sensory
rhodopsin I (SRI) and transducer protein HtrI (halobacterial transducer
for SRI) mediates color-sensitive phototaxis responses in the archaeon
Halobacterium salinarum. One-photon excitation of the
complex by orange light elicits attractant responses, while two-photon
excitation (orange followed by near-UV light) elicits repellent
responses in swimming cells. Several mutations in SRI and HtrI cause an
unusual mutant phenotype, called orange-light-inverted signaling, in
which the cell produces a repellent response to normally attractant
light. We applied a selection procedure for intragenic and extragenic
suppressors of orange-light-inverted mutants and identified 15 distinct
second-site mutations that restore the attractant response. Two of the
3 suppressor mutations in SRI are positioned at the cytoplasmic ends of
helices F and G, and 12 suppressor mutations in HtrI cluster at the
cytoplasmic end of the second HtrI transmembrane helix (TM2). Nearly
all suppressors invert the normally repellent response to two-photon
stimulation to an attractant response when they are expressed with
their suppressible mutant alleles or in an otherwise wild-type strain.
The results lead to a model for control of flagellar reversal by the
SRI-HtrI complex. The model invokes an equilibrium between the A
(reversal-inhibiting) and R (reversal-stimulating) conformers of the
signaling complex. Attractant light and repellent light shift the
equilibrium toward the A and R conformers, respectively, and mutations
are proposed to cause intrinsic shifts in the equilibrium in the dark
form of the complex. Differences in the strength of the two-photon signal inversion and in the allele specificity of suppression are
correlated, and this correlation can be explained in terms of different
values of the equilibrium constant (Keq) for
the conformational transition in different mutants and
mutant-suppressor pairs.
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INTRODUCTION |
The phototaxis receptor sensory
rhodopsin I (SRI) is unusual among photoreceptors because of the color
sensitivity of its signaling (32). Absorption of an orange
photon triggers an attractant response (suppression of reversals in the
direction of swimming) by the cell, whereas absorption of an orange
photon followed by absorption of a near-UV photon triggers a repellent
response (induction of reversals). Both the attractant and repellent
signals are transmitted through the transducer protein HtrI, which is
tightly bound to SRI (9, 15, 23, 27, 37).
Cyclic photochemical reactions produced by one-photon and two-photon
excitation of SRI have been characterized by kinetic flash spectroscopy
(1). Orange light converts the dark form of SRI
(SR587 [subscript is
max]) into a sequence
of photointermediates, one of which is a long-lived (several seconds)
near-UV-light-absorbing species, S373, identified as the
attractant signaling state. S373 is photoreactive, and its
excitation by a near-UV photon returns it more rapidly to
SR587 via a pathway containing the long-lived species
Sb510 (half-life, ~80 ms; the superscript
represents photoconversion "back" to SR587). Behavioral
studies have shown that the one-photon reaction (orange light)
generates attractant signals and that the S373
photoreaction to near-UV light generates repellent signals (32). White-light (i.e., orange light delivered together
with near-UV light) stimulation of the dark-adapted SRI state
SR587 produces a mixture of one-photon and two-photon cycle
intermediates. The latter evidently dominate, since white light causes
a repellent response.
Recently, a two-conformation equilibrium model has been proposed as a
unified mechanism for ion pumping and sensory signaling by archaeal
rhodopsins (31). In the model, two receptor conformers, assumed to be similar to the well-established closed and open cytoplasmic-channel conformers of the proton pump bacteriorhodopsin (BR), are responsible for both attractant and repellent signals from
SRI: SR587 is proposed to exist in an equilibrium mixture of the two conformers, designated A (attractant) and R (repellent). The
net effect of the one-photon cycle is to shift the equilibrium to the A
conformer, which suppresses reversals, whereas the two-photon cycle
shifts the equilibrium to the R conformer, which induces reversals. The
repellent effect of white light is explained as an overall shift toward
the R conformer in the mixture of photoproducts. One argument in favor
of a metastable conformational equilibrium of SR587 is the
existence of the "orange-light-inverted" phenotype resulting from
some mutations affecting the SRI-HtrI complex. These mutants, D201N in
SRI (22), several substitutions for H166 in SRI
(38), and E56Q in HtrI (13), behave as if they are shifted extremely far into the A conformer in the dark, exhibiting a repellent response to both one-photon and two-photon activation.
Since conformational equilibria are generally sensitive to
single-residue substitutions (8, 26, 36), one would expect to be able to isolate second-site suppressor mutations that restore attractant responses to orange light in the inverted mutants by restoring the dark equilibrium of the wild-type SRI-HtrI complex. Moreover, some suppressors should restore the one-photon attractant response by shifting the dark equilibrium strongly in favor of the R
conformer. In such mutants an unusual phenotype is predicted, namely,
that the two-photon repellent response would become inverted because
further increase in the R conformer could not occur, due to the extreme
initial bias toward the R conformer and because some A conformer is
produced in white light by the excitation of SR587.
Therefore, white light would elicit an attractant response rather than
the wild-type repellent response.
To test these predictions, and to identify residues important in the
SRI-HtrI interaction, we developed a selection procedure for one-photon
attractant responses restored by suppressors of mutations causing the
orange-light-inverted response. The behavioral phenotypes of mutants
carrying such second-site suppressors confirm the predictions of the
model and provide information regarding the conformationally sensitive
regions of SRI and HtrI.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Plasmids and recipient strain.
The plasmid pKJ306 is a
shuttle vector that carries ampicillin and mevinolin resistance for
selection in Escherichia coli and Halobacterium
salinarum, respectively. The plasmid pKJ306 is a derivative of
pKJ301 (28) in which XhoI and BglII
restriction sites were introduced flanking the sopI gene.
Pho81Wr
(BR
halorhodopsin
SRI
SRII
HtrI
HtrII
) is carotenoid deficient and restriction negative
(25); it was used as the H. salinarum recipient
in plasmid transformations. Wild-type or mutant SRI and HtrI were
expressed from their native promoter in Pho81Wr
with
plasmid pKJ306 (Fig. 1) and its mutated
derivatives.

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FIG. 1.
Random PCR mutagenesis scheme. Plasmids and steps in the
preparation of randomly mutated libraries of sopI, which
encodes the SRI apoprotein, and the portion of htrI encoding
the 230-residue region of HtrI that is N terminal to the methylation
and signaling domains (see Materials and Methods).
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PCR mutagenesis.
The plasmids pKJ304 and pSP70XB, carrying
the SpeI/SacI (HtrI) and
XhoI/BglII (SRI) fragments in pBluescript KS
(Stratagene, La Jolla, Calif.) and pSP70 (Promega, Madison, Wis.) were
used as templates for random PCR mutagenesis (Fig. 1) with
Taq polymerase (Promega). The htrI and
sopI fragments were mutagenized and amplified under
conditions of reduced fidelity by adding MnCl2 in the
reaction mixture and increasing the polymerase extension time (3,
18). The reaction mixture contained 0.05 mM MnCl2,
1.5 mM MgCl2, 0.2 mM deoxynucleoside triphosphates, 50 mM
KCl, 10 mM Tris (pH 9.0), and 0.1% Triton X-100, and the PCR was
performed for 31 cycles at 95°C for 1 min, 50°C for 2 min, and
72°C for 3 min. The mutation frequency of the fragments used in this
study was measured by sequencing and found to be 1 mutation per 300 bp.
The frequency of transition and transversion mutations was about equal
in the presence of Mn2+. The mutated sopI or
htrI fragment was replaced into the htrI-sopI operon encoding the SRI D201N or HtrI E56Q mutation, and the mutant library was introduced into E. coli DH5
for amplification
prior to transformation of H. salinarum. In general, two or
three mutated sites were observed in the mutagenized gene in isolated
suppressor mutants. Therefore, site-directed mutagenesis was carried
out with the two-step megaprimer PCR method with Pfu
polymerase (4, 13) in order to identify the site responsible
for the suppression phenotype.
Isolation of suppressors.
Halobacterial cells were
transformed by the polyethylene glycol (PEG) method (5),
except that PEG was first purified by using AG501-X8 resin (20/50 mesh;
Bio-Rad, Hercules, Calif.). The cells with mutagenized plasmids were
grown to early-stationary phase and diluted 1:10 with complex growth
medium (CM; pH 6.0) (30), and 1.6-µl aliquots were loaded
into flat capillaries (0.1 by 2 by 50 mm; Dynamics, Inc., Rockaway,
N.J.) as described elsewhere (34). The capillary was
positioned on a microscope slide so that an orange light (600 ± 20 nm; 1.4 × 105 ergs · cm
2
s
1, measured at the region of greatest intensity) applied
near the distal end of the capillary produced a gradient along the
capillary length (Fig. 2). Both ends of
the capillary were sealed with paraffin. The light was delivered in 50- to 100-ms pulses every 10 s at 40°C. After 16 h, one-third
of the distal end of the capillary was cut off and dropped into a
culture tube containing 2 ml of CM with mevinolin (1 µg/ml). The
cells were grown at 37°C for 4 to 5 days. The selection was repeated
two or three times to enrich the suppressor population.

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FIG. 2.
Selection scheme for suppressor mutants. Cells were
loaded between 0 and 8 mm from the end of the capillary. A repetitively
flashing orange-light gradient was delivered to the 8- to 50-mm region,
and cells were harvested from the 35- to 50-mm region of the capillary
after ~16 h. The rationale is that cells carrying SRI D201N or HtrI
E56Q will respond to the orange-light flash as a repellent stimulus and
reverse their swimming direction at the frequency of the flashing light
(0.1 Hz), which impedes their migration through the capillary. The
time-averaged spatial gradient of orange light favors the migration of
suppressed mutants that exhibit attractant phototaxis over that of
nonresponding mutants. For details, see Materials and Methods.
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Motion analysis.
The swimming behavior of cells was
monitored by a computerized cell-tracking system (Motion Analysis,
Santa Rosa, Calif.). Early-stationary-phase cultures were diluted 1:13
in fresh CM and incubated for 1 h at 37°C with agitation.
Responses to orange, near-UV, and white-light photostimuli were
monitored with infrared light (>700 nm). Stimuli were light at 600 nm
in the infrared background, light at 400 nm in a >580-nm background,
and light passed through a CS600 cyan-subtractive dichroic filter
("white-light" stimulus; 380 to 600 nm) (Corion, Franklin, Mass.)
in an infrared background (>700 nm), respectively. Stimuli were
delivered from a Nikon 100-W He/Xe short-arc lamp. All stimuli were
saturating for wild-type cells. Data were analyzed on a Sun SPARC-IPC
workstation (Sun Microsystems, Mountain View, Calif.).
Flash photolysis.
Flash-induced absorption changes were
measured by a cross-beam spectrophotometer equipped with a 532-nm,
40-mJ/6-ns pulse Nd-YAG laser (Surelite I; Continuum, Santa Clara,
Calif.). The pulse frequency was 0.08 Hz. Twenty transients were
averaged for each trace at 18°C. The half-life of S373
reprotonation was calculated with SIGMAPLOT (Jandel, San Rafael,
Calif.) by using a single exponential curve-fit.
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RESULTS |
Isolation of suppressor mutants.
Randomly mutagenized cells
carrying either the E56Q substitution in HtrI or the D201N substitution
in SRI, either of which produces an orange-light-inverted (repellent)
response, were subjected to the capillary selection procedure (Fig. 2).
Three hundred fifty single-colony isolates from the distal end of the
capillary were screened for their orange-light-induced swimming
behavior. Eighty-one (23%) of the cells contained suppressor mutations
and exhibited orange-light-induced attractant responses like that of
wild-type H. salinarum. One hundred nine (31%) were
orange-light-blind cells, which upon further examination were found not
to respond to any light stimuli used in this study. The blind mutants
may have lost the plasmid or may carry mutations that disrupt SRI-HtrI
expression or function, and they were not analyzed further. The
remaining 160 (46%) isolates exhibited the unsuppressed, inverted
phenotype of the parent D201N or E56Q strain.
The 81 mutants carrying suppressor mutations were analyzed by
sequencing of their randomly mutagenized segments of
htrI-sopI. Suppressor mutations were confirmed by making
site-specific substitutions of each of the two to three mutations found
per isolate and testing their phenotypes in the inverted-response
mutant strain in which they were isolated. Thirteen distinct suppressor
mutations were identified: 3 were in SRI, and 10 were in HtrI (Table
1). The three suppressors in SRI (A116T,
N161D, and R215W) and five of the suppressors in HtrI (I61V, Q67L,
V71F, N73Y, and R84N) were isolated with the HtrI E56Q mutant, and five
of the HtrI suppressors (N53I, I64V, R70H, V71I, and E96A) were
isolated with the SRI D201N mutant. Additionally, two residue
substitutions made in a previous study (13) at positions in
HtrI identified by the selection process, R84A and E96Q, were also
found to be suppressor mutations (Table 1), bringing the total number
of unique suppressor mutations to 15. In a separate study of the role
of a cluster of Arg residues in SRI function, a triple mutant, R215A
R216A R217A in SRI, had also been constructed. It was found to suppress HtrI E56Q, but photoactive SRI receptor was not expressed when the
triple mutation was combined with the SRI-inverting mutations in SRI.
Analysis of allele specificity.
A third residue at which
substitutions cause an orange-light-inverted response, His166 in SRI,
was identified (38) while this study was in progress.
Substitutions of Ala or Ser for His166 produce a behavioral phenotype
similar to that produced by the D201N substitution in SRI or the E56Q
substitution in HtrI (38). Accordingly, the 15 suppressor
mutations were tested for allele specificity by combining each of them
with SRI D201N, SRI H166A, SRI H166S, and HtrI E56Q. The suppressor
mutations fell into three classes based on this analysis. Class I
(allele specific) comprised two mutations: I61V (HtrI) was specific for
suppression of HtrI E56Q and did not suppress D201N, H166A, or H166S;
E96Q (HtrI) suppressed only D201N. Class II (partially allele specific)
comprised 11 mutations; each of these suppressed both D201N and E56Q,
but not H166A or H166S (Table 1). Class III (non-allele specific, or
"supersuppressors") comprised three mutations; R215W in SRI and
R84N or R84A in HtrI suppressed all four inverted-phenotype mutations.
Locations of suppressor mutations.
Two of the three
suppressors in SRI are positioned near the cytoplasmic surface of the
molecule, according to structural models of SRI based on the BR
structure (11, 12, 19): SRI N161D, a class II mutation, is
at the cytoplasmic end of helix F, and the supersuppressor SRI R215W
(class III) is located at the cytoplasmic end of helix G (Fig.
3). The corresponding regions in BR
undergo significant movement during its light-induced conformational
change. The third mutation, SRI A116T (class II), is located at the
periplasmic end of helix D (Fig. 3).

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FIG. 3.
Positions of the residues in SRI and HtrI altered by
suppressor mutations. Circled letters at the top represent specific
helices. Asterisks indicate suppressor sites. Open circles indicate
positions at which substitutions were observed to alter
S373 lifetime in a previous study (13). 5 and
6 refer to homologous regions in eubacterial receptor/transducers
(17). The relative arrangement of the transmembrane helices
of SRI and HtrI was chosen arbitrarily.
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All suppressor mutations in HtrI are located between residues 53 and 96 (Fig. 3). The location of this suppressor cluster adds to a body of
observations suggesting that this region at the cytoplasmic end of the
second HtrI transmembrane helix (TM2) is critical for SRI interaction.
One of the allele-specific (class I) mutations in HtrI, I61V, is only 5 residues C-terminal to the mutation that it suppresses, HtrI E56Q. This
region is predicted to be
-helical, which would place these two
mutations a little over one turn apart. The proximity and specificity
of this pair of substitutions suggest that I61V may suppress by
correction of a local structural change caused by E56Q. The other
allele-specific mutation, HtrI E96Q, probably has a less direct effect.
Another substitution at this position (E96A) is only partially allele
specific (class II), a difference interpretable as a matter of degree
rather than mechanism.
Swimming behavior of cells carrying suppressor mutations.
Cells carrying the suppressor mutations in an otherwise wild-type
strain and in an orange-light-inverted mutant strain were analyzed for
their responses to phototaxis stimuli. The reversal-frequency transients of the cell population are shown for the wild-type strain,
the HtrI E56Q inverted mutant, and the SRI R215W suppressor in inverted
mutants and in an otherwise wild-type strain (Fig. 4). A step-down in orange-light intensity
was used to assess one-photon signaling, and a "white" pulse (380 to 600 nm) was used to assess two-photon signaling. A step-down in
white-light intensity was also used to assess two-photon signaling.

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FIG. 4.
Phototaxis responses. Cells contained, from left to
right, wild-type SRI and HtrI (WT); wild-type SRI plus HtrI mutant
E56Q, SRI mutant R215W plus HtrI mutant E56Q, the double SRI mutant
R215W D201N plus wild-type HtrI, and SRI mutant R215W plus wild-type
HtrI. Two seconds after initiation of data acquisition, the cells were
exposed to 4-s removal of orange light (600 nm; top row), a 100-ms
pulse of white light (spanning the range 380 to 600 nm; middle row), or
a 4-s removal of white light (bottom row). Traces represent population
reversal-frequency transients collected by computerized motion analysis
at pH 6.0 and 40°C.
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(i) A 4-s step-down of orange (600-nm) light in an infrared
background.
The infrared (>700-nm) background light used for
imaging the cells is beyond the absorption range of SRI and is
accordingly nonactinic for phototaxis. The wild-type strain exhibited a
peak in reversals induced by the disappearance of the orange light. The
reversals are attributable to the decay of the intermediates of the
one-photon cycle, the most prominent of which is S373 (Fig. 4). The re-formation of S373 when the light returned after
4 s suppressed reversals (evident in the higher-resolution data of reference 13). However, this effect was negligible
within the signal/noise ratio of the low-spontaneous-reversal strains
used here. The orange-light-inverted mutants exhibited the opposite behavior; slight suppression of reversals after the light was turned
off, followed by an evident induction of reversals after the light
returned (for example, HtrI E56Q in Fig. 4). The basis of the selection
pressure used in this study, and the definition of the suppressor
phenotype, is exemplified by the wild-type-like response to this
stimulus shown by SRI mutant R215W with HtrI mutant E56Q and by SRI
mutant R215W D201N with wild-type HtrI (Fig. 4).
(ii) A 100-ms pulse of white light (spanning 380 to 600 nm) in an
infrared background.
This stimulus elicited the two-photon
reaction of SRI and thus a reversal response from the wild-type strain.
The E56Q mutant also exhibited a repellent response, as reported
previously (13), demonstrating that the mutation that
inverts the effect of S373 formation from attractant to
repellent does not change the repellent effect of S373
photoreaction products. A significant finding from this study is that
cells carrying any one of several suppressor mutations in the
inverted-mutant strain or in the wild-type strain do not exhibit the
two-photon repellent response (shown for SRI R215W in Fig. 4). The
opposite response, a slight suppression of reversals, is evident in
cells carrying the R215W suppressor in the SRI D201N mutant or
wild-type strains. Therefore, R215W and many of the other suppressor
mutations exhibit a new phenotype: inverted (attractant) responses to
two-photon activation of SRI. This result is predicted by the
metastable conformational-equilibrium model.
(iii) A 4-s step-down of white light in an infrared
background.
The attractant effect of a pulse of white light in the
R215W mutant was confirmed, and was more evident, when a long exposure to white light was interrupted, a procedure that produced reversal peaks in R215W mutants (Fig. 4). The response was strongest when R215W
was present in an otherwise wild-type strain. This response was
attenuated slightly by the SRI D201N mutation and more by the HtrI E56Q
mutation. Wild-type and E56Q strains exhibited a slight suppression of
reversals in response to this stimulus.
The behavioral analysis outlined above was conducted for all the
suppressors present in SRI D201N, HtrI E56Q, and wild-type strains. The
results are presented in Fig. 6 and
7 in terms of the phototaxis index,
calculated as described previously (13) from
reversal-frequency transients. A positive-response index results from
an attractant response, and a negative index results from a repellent
response. The values shown were reproducible to within ±0.1 index
unit.
(iv) A 100-ms pulse of near-UV (400-nm) light in a constant
orange-light background.
In previous work on SRI, the
S373-mediated repellent response was typically assessed not
by white light, as used above, but by a pulse of near-UV (400-nm) light
in a constant orange-light background. The background light generates a
steady-state presence of S373, which is excited by the
400-nm light to produce back photoreaction products (predominantly
Sb510). This stimulus has two signal
components, each of which induces reversals in a wild-type strain: the
transient disappearance of S373 and the transient formation
of Sb510. Therefore, the white-light stimulus
is a more-specific test for two-photon signaling. However, because the
UV pulse-orange-background protocol has been used so extensively, we
included it in our analysis. The wild-type strain exhibited a strong
reversal response (Fig. 5). The E56Q
mutant exhibited a weaker reversal response, as was observed previously
(13), presumably because the disappearance of
S373 has a reversal-suppressing (inverted) effect in this
mutant, which subtracts from reversal induction by S373
photoproducts. Consistent with this interpretation, the
R215W-suppressed mutants had stronger responses than E56Q, but weaker
responses than an otherwise wild-type strain containing R215W (Fig. 5).
The near-UV stimulus in an orange background produced a repellent
response in every mutant or double mutant assessed in this study. Since this stimulus elicits both removal of S373 and formation of
Sb510, it is evident that if either of the two
signals has a repellent effect, it dominates the response, and the net
index is negative. Therefore, it is essential to use a white-light
stimulus to detect the inversion of the two-photon stimulus to a
positive index (attractant response).

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FIG. 5.
Phototaxis responses to near-UV light. Wild-type and
mutant strains are as described for Fig. 4. Cells were exposed to a
100-ms pulse of near-UV light (400 nm) in a constant orange-light
background.
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(v) SRI suppressor mutations.
Strains carrying each of the
three suppressor mutations in SRI in each of three genetic backgrounds
(SRI D201N, HtrI E56Q, and wild-type) showed a suppressor phenotype
after stimulation by orange light (Fig. 6, top panel). Cells carrying
the H166A or H166S substitutions in SRI produced repellent responses to orange light that were not suppressed by N161D or A116T but were suppressed by R215W (data not shown).

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FIG. 6.
Phototaxis response indices from strains with suppressor
mutations in SRI. Positive values indicate attractant responses, and
negative values indicate repellent responses. D201N, SRI mutant D201N;
E56Q, HtrI mutant E56Q; WT, wild type. For each of the three SRI
suppressor mutations, the first bar shows the suppressor combined with
the D201N mutation, the second bar shows the suppressor combined with
the E56Q mutation, and the third bar shows the suppressor mutation
alone in otherwise wild-type SRI. Photostimuli were delivered as
described in Materials and Methods.
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Stimulation with white light revealed the inverted (attractant)
response caused by R215W in each strain background (Fig. 6, bottom
panel; also shown in Fig. 4). N161D and A116T did not cause inverted
responses when combined with HtrI E56Q but did when combined with SRI
D201N. These data allow a ranking to be made of the three suppressor
mutants based on their ability to invert the two-photon response in
different strains; from highest to lowest, the order of efficiency is
R215W, N161D, A116T. Similarly, the two-photon data rank E56Q above
D201N in its ability to resist two-photon response inversion by the SRI
suppressors. An important observation is that R215W, the mutation that
produced the most dominant two-photon response inversion, is also the
most effective suppressor; i.e., R215W is a supersuppressor (class
III), whereas the other two suppressors are in class II and failed to
restore normal responses to H166A or H166S mutants. The correlation of
rank order from two-photon inversion effects with that of suppression
efficiency provides support for a metastable-equilibrium model, and it
can be interpreted in terms of the relative values of the
conformational-equilibrium constant (Keq) of the
mutants (see Discussion).
(vi) HtrI suppressor mutations.
The class II, partially
allele-specific suppressor HtrI N53I inverted the two-photon response
of the D201N or E56Q mutant, and it decreased responses to all stimuli
in an otherwise wild-type strain (Fig. 7). Four of the remaining class
II HtrI suppressors (I64V, R70H, V71F, and E96A) and the class III
suppressor R84N each inverted the two-photon response in all strains
tested. The class II suppressors Q67L, V71I, and N73Y inverted the
two-photon response of a wild-type or D201N mutant strain but not that
of an E56Q mutant. These apparent differences in the strength of the
suppressor mutations are explained in the conformational-equilibrium model as different values of the Keq for the
transition between the two signaling conformations (i.e., E56Q is
shifted more toward one conformational extreme than D201N, and V71F is
shifted more than V71I toward the other conformer). The class I I61V
suppressor only affects E56Q, and it also only inverts the two-photon
response of E56Q. The N53I suppressor is unusual in that this mutant
protein supported little or no response to any stimuli when it was
expressed in a wild-type strain, but allowed good responses when
expressed in inverted-mutant strains.

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FIG. 7.
Phototaxis response indices from strains with suppressor
mutations in HtrI. Notation is as explained for Fig. 6.
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Effects of suppressor mutations on S373 decay in the
SRI photocycle.
In a previous study, seven mutations between
positions 70 and 108 of HtrI were shown to alter the half-life of the
S373 intermediate (13). This effect was
interpreted to mean that this region of HtrI is important in coupling
HtrI to SRI. Of the 10 suppressor mutations in HtrI, most perturbed the
S373 half-life, most notably I64V, which accelerated
S373 decay, and V71I, which retarded it (Fig.
8). These two suppressors thus extend the
list of residues in this cytoplasmic region at the end of TM2 that are
involved in determining the stability of photocycle intermediates of
SRI.

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FIG. 8.
Half-lives (t1/2) of
S373 in membranes from cells containing suppressor
mutations in an otherwise wild-type strain. The half-life of the decay
of S373 to SR587 was measured with excitation
at 590 nm, at pH 6.8 and 18°C. Twenty flash photolysis transients
were averaged for each determination. Error bars are ±1 standard error
of the mean for three determinations, and horizontal lines span 2 standard deviations of the mean for membranes from wild-type cells.
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Cells carrying the SRI A116T mutation combined with D201N exhibited a
delayed orange-light step-down reversal response (data not shown). This
delay is probably attributable to the very short half-life of 5.4 s (at 18°C) of this double-mutant protein. The half-life of
S373 decay in the D201N protein alone and in the A116T
protein alone is 2.7 s in each case, and therefore the retardation effects appear to be additive.
We detected no difference in the S373 decay rate of the
HtrI N53I mutant protein expressed in an otherwise wild-type strain, which mediates little or no photoresponse, in contrast to the behavior
of the N53I protein expressed in inverted-mutant strains, which showed
photoresponses and slow S373 decay.
 |
DISCUSSION |
The results presented above identify 15 distinct mutations
responsible for suppression of defects in one-photon signaling by the
SRI-HtrI complex. Three results argue that the majority of these
mutations modify the conformation of the SRI-HtrI interface. (i) Most
of the mutations (3 in SRI and 10 in HtrI) are not allele specific,
suggesting that they alter overall protein conformation. (ii) All of
the non-allele-specific mutations are capable of both intragenic and
extragenic complementation, demonstrating that they can correct the
effects of mutation in the companion protein, and the algebraic
additivity of phenotypes in double mutants argues that the mutations
affect the same functional domain. (iii) The complex phenotypes of
cells carrying the SRI suppressor mutations, which exhibit alterations
of both one-photon and two-photon signaling, are the same for SRI and
HtrI suppressors, suggesting that the general conformational changes
generated by these mutations are the same.
A model for the color-sensitive signaling by the SRI-HtrI complex that
can explain color-sensitive signaling, the orange-light-inverted phenotype, and the phenotypes of its suppressors is based on a metastable equilibrium of two conformations of the SRI-HtrI interface (designated A and R in Fig. 9). The basic
assumption of this model is that the wild-type SRI-HtrI complex is
poised in an equilibrium mixture of the two conformers in the dark.
This equilibrium is shifted toward the A conformer by formation of
S373 and toward the R conformer by formation of
Sb510. An increase in concentration of the A
form produces an attractant signal, and an increase in the R form
produces a repellent signal. In terms of this model, the
orange-light-inverted responses caused by the D201N, E56Q, and His166
substitutions occur because these mutations destabilize the R state of
HtrI associated with the dark species (SR587 of SRI),
shifting the equilibrium far toward the A conformer. The one-photon
products are assumed to contain some R form, and therefore repellent
responses occur following orange-light stimulation. (An increased
presence of the R conformer in the second half of the one-photon cycle
is expected if the A and R conformers correspond to the open and closed
cytoplasmic-channel conformers, respectively, of BR. In BR, the channel
closes during the latter half of the photocycle, and in the dark state
it is maintained closed by electrostatic and other constraints
[16]. The inverting mutations are proposed to
disrupt constraints that stabilize the R state in the dark, producing
an extreme shift to A. The restoration of the R conformer in the
photocycle would still occur, however, and would therefore produce a
transient increase in R in the latter half of the photocycle.)
Suppressor mutations in the SRI-HtrI complex restore the one-photon
attractant response to orange-light-inverted mutants by shifting the
conformational equilibrium back toward the R form. Suppressor mutations
that overcompensate by shifting the equilibrium to generate the R form predominantly would invert white-light repellent responses to attractant responses because of the increase in A form in the white-light photoproducts (which include some S373). The
model explains the concomitant inversion of the two-photon response upon restoration of the one-photon response by suppressor mutations, because these two responses result from opposing shifts in the same
equilibrium.

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|
FIG. 9.
Proposed conformational equilibria of a wild-type
signaling complex, the signaling complex of an orange-light-inverted
mutant, (such as SRI D201N or HtrI E56Q), and the signaling complex of
supersuppressor strains, such as SRI R215W or HtrI R84N. A and R
represent the two conformations of the SRI-HtrI interface in different
spectral species of SRI. Light-induced transformations that increase
the concentration of the A or R conformation suppress or induce
reversals, producing attractant or repellent responses, respectively.
The A form predominates in the one-photon (orange-light-induced)
products, and the R form predominates in the two-photon
(white-light-induced) products. In the wild-type SRI-HtrI complex, the
one-photon reaction increases the amount of the A form, and therefore
causes an attractant response, whereas the two-photon reaction
increases the amount of the R form, causing a repellent response. The
basis of the orange-light-inverted phenotype is proposed to be a
mutation-induced shift of the equilibrium in the SR587
species toward the A form. Repellent responses are therefore elicited
by either one-photon or two-photon activation, because of the greater
amounts of the R form in the equilibrium mixtures. Suppressors restore
the one-photon-induced attractant response by shifting the equilibrium
back toward the R form in SR587. Supersuppressors shift
excessively into the R form, thus restoring the one-photon attractant
response but concomitantly inverting the two-photon repellent response
to an attractant response.
|
|
In terms of the model, the linear ranking of inverting and suppressing
mutations (Fig. 10) represents
different values of the Keq of the
interconversion of A and R. The equilibrium is most strongly shifted to
the R form in the class III suppressors SRI R215W and HtrI R84N and to
the A form in the substitutions at SRI His166. Other mutations are
ranked according to two criteria: their ability to suppress
orange-light-inverted responses (i.e., whether they are in class II or
class III), and their ability to invert the two-photon response in
various backgrounds. These two properties are highly correlated. Class
III supersuppressors are more effective at inverting the two-photon
response than class II suppressors, which are partially allele
specific. An important property of the conformational-equilibrium model
is that it predicts this correlation, because the one-photon and
two-photon responses are attributed to opposite shifts of the same
equilibrium by a mechanism in which Keq is
sensitive to the effects of mutations.

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|
FIG. 10.
Relative bias of the dark equilibrium toward the R form
(toward the left) or toward the A form (toward the right) of the
wild-type (WT) signaling complex, the signaling complex of
orange-light-inverted mutants, and the signaling complex of suppressed
mutants. The range of values of Keq in which A
and R are both present in sufficient amounts in the dark equilibrium
mixture to yield wild-type behavior is placed at the center.
Mutation-induced shifts of Keq for the dark
equilibrium toward the R or A form lead to the indicated phenotypes,
according to the model in Fig. 9 and as observed in this study. The
relative ranking of Keq for different mutations
is assigned on the basis of the abilities of mutations on the left to
suppress the effects of those on the right and on the extent of
inversion of the two-photon response produced by the mutation in
wild-type or mutant strains.
|
|
The properties of the wild-type strain, the orange-light-inverted
mutants, and strains containing class II and class III suppressors, all
fit well into the framework of the model. The class I I61V suppressor
in HtrI, which suppresses only E56Q, represents a special case. The
proximity of residue 61 to Glu56 suggests that in this case the
suppression is due to a direct effect on the local structure of HtrI.
I61V inverts the white-light response of cells carrying E56Q, but it
does not invert the response of cells carrying D201N or that of the
wild-type strain, even though these are signaling complexes less
shifted toward the A form than the E56Q complex. This result can be
understood if I61V by itself does not shift the equilibrium much, but
the structure of the E56Q I61V double-mutant protein produces a strong
shift.
Other evidence supporting the model is that pH and temperature, which
would be expected to affect the Keq of a protein
conformational transition, have large effects on the behavioral
responses. Low pH corrects the E56Q orange-light inversion
(13), and over the range 25 to 45°C, lower temperatures
also convert the behavior of the E56Q mutant to that of the wild-type
strain (our unpublished data). Also supporting the existence of a
metastable equilibrium is the observation that small changes in the
side chains of the residues can have marked effects on the signaling
phenotype. The suppressor mutations I61V, I64V, and V71I in HtrI show
that, for example, addition or removal of only one methyl group of
residues in the cytoplasmic portion of TM2 can greatly alter the
function of the complex.
In terms of the metastable-equilibrium model proposed here, inverted
responses result from subtle structural changes in the signaling
complex that alter Keq. Inverted responses have
also been reported in eubacterial cells containing modified taxis
transducers (6, 14, 20, 21), and these may be explained by
the same conformational-bias mechanism.
The locations of the suppressor mutations suggest which regions
of SRI and HtrI are important for coupling of the two proteins. Two of
the three suppressors in SRI alter residues near the cytoplasmic surface of the protein, according to structural models of SRI based on
the BR structure (11, 12, 19); N161D and R215W are at the
cytoplasmic ends of helix F and helix G, respectively (Fig. 3). These
sites are significant in view of BR structure and function. Recent
studies indicate that SRI uses some of the same chemistry for signaling
to HtrI that is used by BR for proton pumping (29, 31). This
idea was strongly suggested by the observation that removal of HtrI
from SRI by genetic deletion converted SRI into a BR-like electrogenic
proton pump (2), whereas SRI complexed with HtrI does not
carry out electrogenic ion transport (7, 29). Therefore,
essential features of the BR mechanism must be conserved in SRI and
influenced by interaction with HtrI. A crucial component of the pumping
mechanism of BR is the light-triggered conformational change that opens
a cytoplasmic channel for proton uptake during the second half of the
pumping cycle (16). This conformational change has been
visualized by crystallographic methods (33), and it is
characterized by the movement first of helices G and B, followed by an
outward tilt of the cytoplasmic end of helix F. The residues
corresponding to SRI N161 (K172 in BR) and R215 (S226 in BR) are
located in this conformationally active region of BR. An attractive
hypothesis is that the contribution of the receptor to the
conformational change from the R to the A form of the complex in the
model is the same conformational change that opens the cytoplasmic
channel of BR.
The third suppressor mutation in SRI, A116T, is located at the
periplasmic end of helix D (Fig. 3). Expression of A116T in a wild-type
background retards the reprotonation of the retinylidene Schiff base
nearly threefold, as monitored by S373 decay in the SRI
photocycle. This effect is much larger than that of HtrI mutations (Fig. 3), and it suggests that this site is more directly coupled to
the photoactive site of SRI.
All suppressor mutations in HtrI are located between positions 53 and
96 (Fig. 3). This clustering must be significant, because our random
mutagenesis of HtrI spanned residues 1 to 230. The suppressor sites are
not restricted to a single face of the putative
-helix, but they are
concentrated in a short region of the helix (Fig. 3). The location of
this suppressor cluster adds to a body of observations that indicate
that this region at the cytoplasmic end of TM2 is critical for
interaction with SRI. Residues 1 to 147 in HtrI have been shown to
contain the sites of interaction with SRI responsible for controlling
the photocycle (25). Furthermore, in a previous study, seven
mutations between positions 70 and 108 were shown to perturb the
lifetime of the attractant signaling state S373, and the
E56Q mutant protein was shown to exhibit altered signaling
(13). Most of the HtrI suppressors also perturb the S373 lifetime, a finding that extends the number of sites
in this region that have this modulating effect. The suppressor
mutations cluster in HtrI within a region homologous to the linker
region of the eubacterial chemotaxis receptor Tar, which cannot be
removed without loss of chemotaxis (10, 35), and the linker
region of EnvZ, which has been implicated in signaling (24).
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank Elena Spudich, Xue-Nong Zhang, Michael Manson, and
Walther Stoeckenius for critical comments on the manuscript, and Claudia Ruiz for contributing to the construction of the pKJ306 plasmid.
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health grant
R01-GM27750 (to J.L.S.).
 |
ADDENDUM IN PROOF |
A specific mechanism for inverted taxis responses has recently
been suggested in which mutation or methylation repositions a critical
transducer residue nearer to an active site on CheA so that stimuli
that would normally shift the residue toward the site move it further
away (B. L. Taylor and M. S. Johnson, FEBS Lett., in press). This
mechanism is an example of a conformational-equilibrium bias as
described here if one assumes that the positions of the critical
residue are determined by conformations in equilibrium.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, University of Texas
Houston
Medical School, Houston, TX 77030. Phone: (713) 500-5458. Fax: (713)
500-5499. E-mail: spudich{at}utmmg.med.uth.tmc.edu.
 |
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0021-9193/98/$04.00+0
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