Microbial rhodopsins, a diverse group of photoactive proteins found in Archaea, Bacteria, and Eukarya, function in photosensing and photoenergy harvesting and may have been present in the resource-limited early global environment. Four different physiological functions have been identified and characterized for nearly 5,000 retinal-binding photoreceptors, these being ion transporters that transport proton or chloride and sensory rhodopsins that mediate light-attractant and/or -repellent responses. The greatest number of rhodopsins previously observed in a single archaeon had been four. Here, we report a newly discovered sixrhodopsin system in a single archaeon, Haloarcula marismortui, which shows a more diverse absorbance spectral distribution than any previously known rhodopsin system, and, for the first time, two light-driven proton transporters that respond to the same wavelength. All six rhodopsins, the greatest number ever identified in a single archaeon, were first shown to be expressed in H. marismortui, and these were then overexpressed in Escherichia coli. The proteins were purified for absorption spectra and photocycle determination, followed by measurement of ion transportation and phototaxis. The results clearly indicate the existence of a proton transporter system with two isochromatic rhodopsins and a new type of sensory rhodopsin-like transducer in H. marismortui.Microbial rhodopsins comprise a large family of seven-transmembrane helical proteins that either mediate light-driven ion transport to harvest solar energy or serve as receptors to mediate phototaxis (13) and possibly photoadaptation (32). In archaea, four rhodopsins responding to different wavelengths of light with distinct functions in Halobacterium salinarum have been identified and characterized (20,32 The two ion-transporting rhodopsins perform light-driven outward proton transport to create a proton-electrochemical potential or inward chloride transport to maintain the osmotic and pH homeostasis of the cell. The photoactivated sensory rhodopsins, on the other hand, undergo light-triggered conformational changes to relay signals to their cognate transducers and consequently activate signaling cascades in a manner similar to that of the two-component system involved in eubacterial chemotaxis (1, 22) to control flagellum rotation and thus swimming direction. Our current understanding of microbial rhodopsins as both ion transporters and photosensory receptors has been based primarily on these four known rhodopsins.A recently completed genome project for Haloarcula marismortui (3) proposed the existence of six opsin-related genes, the greatest number ever found in a single archaeon. This proposal immediately raised three questions. (i) Are these six rhodopsins biologically expressed and functionally active? (ii) What is the maximum-absorbance-wavelength ( max ) distribution pattern of these six rhodopsins? (iii) Do the two extra rhodopsins, compared to the four in H. salinarum, perform new functions or have new features beyond those of t...