- Kang, Yanyong
- Zhou, X Edward
- Gao, Xiang
- He, Yuanzheng
- Liu, Wei
- Ishchenko, Andrii
- Barty, Anton
- White, Thomas A
- Yefanov, Oleksandr
- Han, Gye Won
- Xu, Qingping
- de Waal, Parker W
- Ke, Jiyuan
- Tan, MH Eileen
- Zhang, Chenghai
- Moeller, Arne
- West, Graham M
- Pascal, Bruce D
- Van Eps, Ned
- Caro, Lydia N
- Vishnivetskiy, Sergey A
- Lee, Regina J
- Suino-Powell, Kelly M
- Gu, Xin
- Pal, Kuntal
- Ma, Jinming
- Zhi, Xiaoyong
- Boutet, Sébastien
- Williams, Garth J
- Messerschmidt, Marc
- Gati, Cornelius
- Zatsepin, Nadia A
- Wang, Dingjie
- James, Daniel
- Basu, Shibom
- Roy-Chowdhury, Shatabdi
- Conrad, Chelsie E
- Coe, Jesse
- Liu, Haiguang
- Lisova, Stella
- Kupitz, Christopher
- Grotjohann, Ingo
- Fromme, Raimund
- Jiang, Yi
- Tan, Minjia
- Yang, Huaiyu
- Li, Jun
- Wang, Meitian
- Zheng, Zhong
- Li, Dianfan
- Howe, Nicole
- Zhao, Yingming
- Standfuss, Jörg
- Diederichs, Kay
- Dong, Yuhui
- Potter, Clinton S
- Carragher, Bridget
- Caffrey, Martin
- Jiang, Hualiang
- Chapman, Henry N
- Spence, John CH
- Fromme, Petra
- Weierstall, Uwe
- Ernst, Oliver P
- Katritch, Vsevolod
- Gurevich, Vsevolod V
- Griffin, Patrick R
- Hubbell, Wayne L
- Stevens, Raymond C
- Cherezov, Vadim
- Melcher, Karsten
- Xu, H Eric
- et al.
G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) signal primarily through G proteins or arrestins. Arrestin binding to GPCRs blocks G protein interaction and redirects signalling to numerous G-protein-independent pathways. Here we report the crystal structure of a constitutively active form of human rhodopsin bound to a pre-activated form of the mouse visual arrestin, determined by serial femtosecond X-ray laser crystallography. Together with extensive biochemical and mutagenesis data, the structure reveals an overall architecture of the rhodopsin-arrestin assembly in which rhodopsin uses distinct structural elements, including transmembrane helix 7 and helix 8, to recruit arrestin. Correspondingly, arrestin adopts the pre-activated conformation, with a ∼20° rotation between the amino and carboxy domains, which opens up a cleft in arrestin to accommodate a short helix formed by the second intracellular loop of rhodopsin. This structure provides a basis for understanding GPCR-mediated arrestin-biased signalling and demonstrates the power of X-ray lasers for advancing the frontiers of structural biology.