brp and blh Are Required for Synthesis of the Retinal Cofactor of Bacteriorhodopsin in Halobacterium salinarum*
- Ronald F. Peck‡,
- Carlos Echavarri-Erasun§,
- Eric A. Johnson§,¶,
- Wailap Victor Ng‖,
- Sean P. Kennedy**,
- Leroy Hood‖,
- Shiladitya DasSarma** and
- Mark P. Krebs‡‡
- From the ‡Department of Biomolecular Chemistry, University of Wisconsin Medical School, Madison, Wisconsin 53706, §Department of Food Microbiology and Toxicology and ¶Department of Bacteriology, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin 53706, **Department of Microbiology, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Massachusetts 01003, and ‖Institute for Systems Biology, Seattle, Washington 98105
Abstract
Bacteriorhodopsin, the light-driven proton pump of Halobacterium salinarum, consists of the membrane apoprotein bacterioopsin and a covalently bound retinal cofactor. The mechanism by which retinal is synthesized and bound to bacterioopsinin vivo is unknown. As a step toward identifying cellular factors involved in this process, we constructed an in-frame deletion of brp, a gene implicated in bacteriorhodopsin biogenesis. In the Δbrp strain, bacteriorhodopsin levels are decreased ∼4.0-fold compared with wild type, whereas bacterioopsin levels are normal. The probable precursor of retinal, β-carotene, is increased ∼3.8-fold, whereas retinal is decreased by ∼3.7-fold. These results suggest that brp is involved in retinal synthesis. Additional cellular factors may substitute forbrp function in the Δbrp strain because retinal production is not abolished. The in-frame deletion ofblh, a brp paralog identified by analysis of the Halobacterium sp. NRC-1 genome, reduced bacteriorhodopsin accumulation on solid medium but not in liquid. However, deletion of both brp and blh abolished bacteriorhodopsin and retinal production in liquid medium, again without affecting bacterioopsin accumulation. The level of β-carotene increased ∼5.3-fold. The simplest interpretation of these results is that brp and blh encode similar proteins that catalyze or regulate the conversion of β-carotene to retinal.
- BR
- bacteriorhodopsin
- BO
- bacterioopsin
- PCR
- polymerase chain reaction
- bp
- base pair(s)
- kbp
- kilobase pair(s)
- HPLC
- high pressure liquid chromatography
- Received October 18, 2000.
- Revision received November 22, 2000.
- The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.











