Publications by authors named "Reza Bagherzadeh"

Article Synopsis
  • Microbial pump rhodopsins are light-driven proteins that manipulate ion movement across cell membranes, and studying their amino acid interactions can enhance our understanding of ion selectivity and transport direction.
  • A new numbering system for these proteins allows for easier comparison, revealing that while hydrogen-bond networks in different rhodopsins are less conserved than expected, their hydrophobic interactions remain largely stable.
  • Experiments and simulations suggest that the unique hydrogen-bond networks are crucial for the functionality of these proteins, indicating that changes in these networks can significantly impact their ion pumping abilities.
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TAT rhodopsin, a microbial rhodopsin found in the marine SAR11 bacterium HIMB114, uniquely possesses a Thr-Ala-Thr (TAT) motif in the third transmembrane helix. Because of a low pK value of the retinal Schiff base (RSB), TAT rhodopsin exhibits both a visible light-absorbing state with the protonated RSB and a UV-absorbing state with the deprotonated RSB at a neutral pH. The UV-absorbing state, in contrast to the visible light-absorbing one, converts to a long-lived photointermediate upon light absorption, implying that TAT rhodopsin functions as a pH-dependent light sensor.

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Channelrhodopsins (ChRs) are light-gated ion channels and central optogenetic tools that can control neuronal activity with high temporal resolution at the single-cell level. Although their application in optogenetics has rapidly progressed, it is unsolved how their channels open and close. ChRs transport ions through a series of interlocking elementary processes that occur over a broad time scale of subpicoseconds to seconds.

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DTG/DTS rhodopsin, which was named based on a three-residue motif (DTG or DTS) that is important for its function, is a light-driven proton-pumping microbial rhodopsin using a retinal chromophore. In contrast to other light-driven ion-pumping rhodopsins, DTG/DTS rhodopsin does not have a cytoplasmic proton donor residue, such as Asp, Glu, or Lys. Because of the lack of cytoplasmic proton donor residue, proton directly binds to the retinal chromophore from the cytoplasmic solvent.

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Background: Even subtle changes in environmental factors can exert behavioral effects on creatures, which may alter interspecific interactions and eventually affect the ecosystem. However, how changes in environmental factors impact complex behaviors regulated by neural processes is largely unknown. The freshwater planarian , a free-living flatworm, displays distinct behavioral traits mediated by sensitive perception of environmental cues.

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Background: Planarians are non-parasitic Platyhelminthes (flatworms) famous for their regeneration ability and for having a well-organized brain. is a typical planarian species that is widely distributed in the East Asia. Extensive cellular and molecular experimental methods have been developed to identify the functions of thousands of genes in this species, making this planarian a good experimental model for regeneration biology and neurobiology.

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