Reviewer #3 (Public review):
Summary:
The paper by Saito et al. studies the properties of anthozoan-specific opsins (ASO-II) from organisms found in reef-building coral. Their goal was to test if ASO-II opsins can absorb visible light, and if so, what are they key factors involved.
The most exciting aspect of this work is their discovery that ASO-II opsins do not have a counterion residue (Asp or Glu) located at any of the previously known sites found in other animal opsins.
This is very surprising. Opsins are only able to absorb visible (long wavelength light) if the retinal Schiff base is protonated, and the latter requires (as the name implies) a "counter ion". However, the authors clearly show that some ASO-II opsins do absorb visible light.
To address this conundrum, they tested if the counterion could be provided by exogenous chloride ions (Cl-). Their results find compelling evidence supporting this idea, and their studies of ASO-II mutant E292A suggests E292 also plays a role in G protein activation and is a counterion for a protonated Schiff base in the light-activated form.
Strengths:
Overall, the methods are well described and carefully executed, and the results very compelling.
Their analysis of seven ASO-II opsin sequences undoubtedly shows they all lack a Glu or Asp residue at "normal" (previously established) counter-ion sites in mammalian opsins (typically found at positions 94, 113 or 181). The experimental studies clearly demonstrate the necessity of Cl- for visible light absorbance, as do their studies of the effect of altering the pH.
Importantly, the authors also carried out careful QM/MM computational analysis (and corresponding calculation of the expected absorbance effects), thus providing compelling support for the Cl- acting directly as a counterion to the protonated retinal Schiff base, and thus limiting the possibility that the Cl- is simply altering the absorbance of ASO-II opsins through some indirect effect on the protein.
Altogether, the authors clearly achieved their aims, and the results support their conclusions. The manuscript is carefully written, and refreshingly, the results and conclusions not overstated.
This study is impactful for several reasons. There is increasing interest in optogenetic tools, especially those that leverage G protein coupled receptor systems. Thus, the authors demonstration that ASO-II opsins could be useful for such studies is of interest.
Moreover, the finding that visible light absorbance by an opsin does not absolutely require a negatively charged amino acid be placed at one of the expected sites (94, 113 or 181) typically found in animal opsins is very intriguing and will help future protein engineering efforts. The argument that the Cl- counterion system they discover here might have been a preliminary step in the evolution of amino acid based counterions used in animal opsins is also interesting.
Finally, given the ongoing degradation of coral reefs worldwide, the focus on these curious opsins is very timely, as is the authors proposal that the lower Schiff base pKa they discovered here for ASO-II opsins may cause them to change their spectral sensitivity and G protein activation due to changes in their environmental pH.