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1.
Tsutsui K  Imai H  Shichida Y 《Biochemistry》2007,46(21):6437-6445
A visual pigment consists of an opsin protein and a chromophore, 11-cis-retinal, which binds to a specific lysine residue of opsin via a Schiff base linkage. The Schiff base chromophore is protonated in pigments that absorb visible light, whereas it is unprotonated in ultraviolet-absorbing visual pigments (UV pigments). To investigate whether an unprotonated Schiff base can undergo photoisomerization as efficiently as a protonated Schiff base in the opsin environment, we measured the quantum yields of the bovine rhodopsin E113Q mutant, in which the Schiff base is unprotonated at alkaline pH, and the mouse UV pigment (mouse UV). Photosensitivities of UV pigments were measured by irradiation of the pigments followed by chromophore extraction and HPLC analysis. Extinction coefficients were estimated by comparing the maximum absorbances of the original pigments and their acid-denatured states. The quantum yield of the bovine rhodopsin E113Q mutant at pH 8.2, where the Schiff base is unprotonated, was significantly lower than that of wild-type rhodopsin, whereas the mutant gave a quantum yield almost identical to that of the wild type at pH 5.5, where the Schiff base is protonated. These results suggest that Schiff base protonation plays a role in increasing quantum yield. The quantum yield of mouse UV, which has an unprotonated Schiff base chromophore, was significantly higher than that of the unprotonated form of the rhodopsin E113Q mutant, although it was still lower than the visible-absorbing pigments. These results suggest that the mouse UV pigment has a specific mechanism for the efficient photoisomerization of its unprotonated Schiff base chromophore.  相似文献   

2.
Das J  Crouch RK  Ma JX  Oprian DD  Kono M 《Biochemistry》2004,43(18):5532-5538
In rhodopsin, the 9-methyl group of retinal has previously been identified as being critical in linking the ligand isomerization with the subsequent protein conformational changes that result in the activation of its G protein, transducin. Here, we report studies on the role of this methyl group in the salamander rod and cone pigments. Pigments were generated by combining proteins expressed in COS cells with 11-cis 9-demethyl retinal, where the 9-methyl group on the polyene chain has been deleted. The absorption spectra of all pigments were blue-shifted. The red cone and blue cone/green rod pigments were unstable to hydroxylamine; whereas, the rhodopsin and UV cone pigments were stable. The lack of the 9-methyl group of the chromophore did not affect the ability of the red cone and blue cone/green rod pigments to activate transducin. On the other hand, with the rhodopsin and UV cone pigments, activation was diminished. Interestingly, the red cone pigment containing the retinal analogue remained active longer than the native pigment. Thus, the 9-methyl group of retinal is not important in the activation pathway of the red cone and blue cone/green rod pigments. However, for the red cone pigment, the 9-methyl group of retinal appears to be critical in the deactivation pathway.  相似文献   

3.
Rhodopsin is the visual pigment of rod cells and a prototypical G protein-coupled receptor. It is activated by cis-->trans photoisomerization of the covalently bound chromophore 11-cis-retinal, which acts in the cis configuration as an inverse agonist. Light-induced formation of the full agonist all-trans-retinal in situ triggers conformational changes in the protein moiety. Partial agonists of rhodopsin include a retinal analog lacking the methyl group at C-9, termed 9-demethyl-retinal (9-dm-retinal). Rhodopsin reconstituted with this retinal (9-dm-rhodopsin) activates G protein poorly. Here we investigated the molecular nature of the partial agonism in 9-dm-rhodopsin using site-directed spin labeling. Earlier site-directed spin labeling studies of rhodopsin identified a rigid-body tilt of the cytoplasmic segment of [corrected] transmembrane helix 6 (TM6) by approximately 6A as a central event in rhodopsin activation. Data presented here provide additional evidence for this mechanism. Only a small fraction of photoexcited 9-dm pigments reaches the TM6-tilted conformation. This fraction can be increased by increasing proton concentration or [corrected] by anticipation of the activating protonation step by the mutation E134Q in 9-dm-rhodopsin. These results on protein conformation are in complete accord with previous findings regarding the biological activity of the 9-dm pigments. When the proton concentration is further increased, a new state arises in 9-dm pigments that is linked to direct proton uptake at the retinal Schiff base. This state apparently has a conformation distinguishable from the active state.  相似文献   

4.
The visual pigment rhodopsin is characterized by an 11-cis retinal chromophore bound to Lys-296 via a protonated Schiff base. Following light absorption the C(11)=C(12) double bond isomerizes to trans configuration and triggers protein conformational alterations. These alterations lead to the formation of an active intermediate (Meta II), which binds and activates the visual G protein, transducin. We have examined by UV-visible and Fourier transform IR spectroscopy the photochemistry of a rhodopsin analogue with an 11-cis-locked chromophore, where cis to trans isomerization around the C(11)=C(12) double bond is prevented by a 6-member ring structure (Rh(6.10)). Despite this lock, the pigment was found capable of forming an active photoproduct with a characteristic protein conformation similar to that of native Meta II. This intermediate is further characterized by a protonated Schiff base and protonated Glu-113, as well as by its ability to bind a transducin-derived peptide previously shown to interact efficiently with native Meta II. The yield of this active photointermediate is pH-dependent and decreases with increasing pH. This study shows that with the C(11)=C(12) double bond being locked, isomerization around the C(9)=C(10) or the C(13)=C(14) double bonds may well lead to an activation of the receptor. Additionally, prolonged illumination at pH 7.5 produces a new photoproduct absorbing at 385 nm, which, however, does not exhibit the characteristic active protein conformation.  相似文献   

5.
A comparative study on the chromophore (retinal) binding sites of the opsin (R-photopsin) from chicken red-sensitive cone visual pigment (iodopsin) and that scotopsin) from bovine rod pigment (rhodopsin) was made by the aid of geometric isomers of retinal (all-trans, 13-cis, 11-cis, 9-cis, and 7-cis) and retinal analogues including fluorinated (14-F, 12-F, 10-F, and 8-F) and methylated (12-methyl) 11-cis-retinals. The stereoselectivity of R-photopsin for the retinal isomers and analogues was almost identical with that of scotopsin, indicating that the shapes of the chromophore binding sites of both opsins are similar, although the former appears to be somewhat more restricted than the latter. The rates of pigment formation from R-photopsin were considerably greater than those from scotopsin. In addition, all the iodopsin isomers and analogues were more susceptible to hydroxylamine than were the rhodopsin ones. These observations suggest that the retinal binding site of iodopsin is located near the protein surface. On the basis of the spectral properties of fluorinated analogues, a polar group in the chromophore binding site of iodopsin as well as rhodopsin was estimated to be located near the hydrogen atom at the C10 position of the retinylidene chromophore. A large difference in wavelength between the absorption maxima of iodopsin and rhodopsin was significantly reduced in the 9-cis and 7-cis pigments. On the assumption that the retinylidene chromophore is anchored rigidly at the alpha-carbon of the lysine residue and loosely at the cyclohexenyl ring, each of the two isomers would have the Schiff-base nitrogen at a position altered from that of the 11-cis pigments.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
Kono M  Crouch RK  Oprian DD 《Biochemistry》2005,44(2):799-804
A triple mutant (F86L/T93P/S118T; bovine rhodopsin numbering) of the tiger salamander UV cone pigment appears to be trapped in an open conformation that is metarhodopsin-II-like. The pigment is able to activate transducin in the dark, and the ligand-free apoprotein is also able to activate transducin constitutively. The pigment permits protons and chloride ions from solution access to the active site as it displays a pH- and NaCl-dependent absorption spectrum not observed with the wild-type pigment. However, the wild-type properties of light-dependent activity and a pH-independent absorption spectrum are recovered upon reconstitution of the triple mutant with 11-cis-9-demethyl retinal. These results suggest that binding the native chromophore cannot deactivate the protein because of steric interactions between the protein, possibly residue 118, and the 9-methyl group of the chromophore. Furthermore, the absorption spectrum of the 9-demethyl retinal regenerated pigment exhibits a band broader and with lower extinction at the absorption maximum than either the human blue or salamander UV wild-type pigments generated with the same retinal analogue. The broad spectrum appears to be comprised of two or more species and can be well-fit by a sum of scaled spectra of the two wild-type pigments. Binding the chromophore appears to trap the pigment in two or more conformations. The triple mutant reported here represents the first example of a dark-active cone pigment and constitutively active cone opsin.  相似文献   

7.
The guanine nucleotide-binding protein (G-protein)-coupled receptor superfamily (GPCR) is comprised of a large group of membrane proteins involved in a wide range of physiological signaling processes. The functional switch from a quiescent to an active conformation is at the heart of GPCR action. The GPCR rhodopsin has been studied extensively because of its key role in scotopic vision. The ground state chromophore, 11-cis-retinal, holds the transmembrane region of the protein in the inactive conformation. Light induces cis-trans isomerization and rhodopsin activation. Here we show that rhodopsin regenerated with a ring-constrained 11-cis-retinal analog undergoes photoisomerization; however, it remains marginally active because isomerization occurs without the chromophore-induced conformational change of the opsin moiety. Modeling the locked chromophore analogs in the active site of rhodopsin suggests that the beta-ionone ring rotates but is largely confined within the binding site of the natural 11-cis-retinal chromophore. This constraint is a result of the geometry of the stable 11-cis-locked configuration of the chromophore analogs. These results suggest that the native chromophore cis-trans isomerization is merely a mechanism for repositioning of the beta-ionone ring which ultimately leads to helix movements and determines receptor activation.  相似文献   

8.
G Renk  R K Crouch 《Biochemistry》1989,28(2):907-912
Several analogue pigments have been prepared containing retinals altered at the cyclohexyl ring or proximal to the aldehyde group in order to examine the role of the chromophore in the formation of the metarhodopsin I and II states of visual pigments. Deletion of the 13-methyl group on the isoprenoid chain did not affect metarhodopsin formation. However, analogue pigments containing chromophores with modified rings did not show the typical absorption changes associated with the metarhodopsin transitions of native or regenerated rhodopsins. In particular, 4-hydroxyretinal pigments did not show clear transitions between the metarhodopsin I and metarhodopsin II states. Pigment formed with an acyclic retinal showed no evidence by absorption spectroscopy of metarhodopsin formation. A retinal altered by substitution of a five-membered ring containing a nitroxide required a more acidic pH than the native pigment for formation of the metarhodopsin II state. ESR data suggest that the ring remains buried within the protein through the metarhodopsin II state. However, the Schiff base linkage is susceptible to hydrolysis of hydroxylamine in the metarhodopsin II state. These data indicate that (1), in the transition from rhodopsin to metarhodopsin II, major protein conformational changes are occurring near the lysine-retinal linkage whereas the ring portion of the chromophore remains deeply buried within the protein and (2) pigment absorptions characteristic of the metarhodopsin I and II states may be due to specific protein-chromophore interactions near the region of the chromophore ring.  相似文献   

9.
An analogue of all-trans retinal in which all-trans/13-cis isomerization is blocked by a carbon bridge from C12 to C14 was incorporated into the apoproteins of sensory rhodopsin I (SR-I) and sensory rhodopsin II (SR-II, also called phoborhodopsin) in retinal-deficient Halobacterium halobium membranes. The "all-trans-locked" retinal analogue forms SR-I and SR-II analogue pigments with similar absorption spectra as the native pigments. Blocking isomerization prevents the formation of the long-lived intermediate of the SR-I photocycle (S373) and those of the SR-II photocycle (S-II360 and S-II530). A computerized cell tracking and motion analysis system capable of detecting 2% of native pigment activity was used for assessing motility behavior. Introduction of the locked analogue into SR-I or SR-II apoprotein in vivo did not restore phototactic responses through any of the three known photosensory systems (SR-I attractant, SR-I repellent, or SR-II repellent). We conclude that unlike the phototaxis receptor of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, which has been reported to mediate physiological responses without specific double-bond isomerization of its retinal chromophore (Foster et al., 1989), all-trans/13-cis isomerization is essential for SR-I and SR-II phototaxis signaling.  相似文献   

10.
Synthesis of the retinal analog, 10,20-methanoretinal (R6), where the 11Z conformation is locked in a six-membered ring, yielded four stereoisomers (7E,9E,13E, 7E,9E,13Z, 7E,9Z,13E and 7E,9Z,13Z). These four isomers were separated by straight-phase isocratic HPLC and identified by 1H-NMR and NOE analysis. All isomers smoothly recombined with bovine opsin at a relatively high rate (5-10% of that of the natural chromophore 11Z-retinal). The corresponding 13E and 13Z isomers yielded identical analog pigments, probably due to rapid thermal isomerization around the C13 = C14 double bond. The (7E,9E)-isomers produced a pigment with maximal absorbance at 510 nm, while the pigment produced from the (7E,9Z)-isomers had maximal absorbance at 494 nm. Based upon kinetic considerations, the chromophore structure in the 510-nm-absorbing pigment should be (7E,9E,13E), i.e. equivalent to 11Z-retinal and rhodopsin, while the chromophore structure in the 494-nm-absorbing pigment should be (7E,9Z,13Z), i.e. equivalent to (9Z,11Z,13Z)-rhodopsin, an isorhodopsin analog. In analogy to the 11-cis-locked rhodopsin analogs Rh5 and Rh7, the 510-nm-absorbing pigment, (7E,9E,13E)-10,20-methanorhodopsin, was dubbed Rh6 and the 494-nm-absorbing pigment. (7E,9Z,13Z)-10,20-methanorhodopsin, was dubbed Iso6. The opsin shift of Rh6 (2660 cm-1) is practically identical to that of rhodopsin itself (2650 cm-1). Rh6 and Iso6 are nearly as stable as rhodopsin towards hydroxylamine and solubilization in detergent solution and could be easily purified and reconstituted into proteoliposomes by established procedures. Due to the 11-cis-lock, Rh6 is much less photolabile (bleaching rate less than 1%) than rhodopsin, but it is not completely photostable, probably since photoisomerization around the C7 = C8, C9 = C10 and C13 = C14 bonds is allowed. Illumination of either Rh6 or Iso6 does not generate the common photointermediates but instead produces a complex pattern of photochemical transitions, which during continuous illumination leads to the same final steady state, absorbing at 498 nm. This process is accompanied by a slow but steady loss of pigment, probably due to hydrolytic release of chromophore, which is markedly accelerated in the presence of hydroxylamine. In a physiological assay (light-dependent activation of rod cGMP phosphodiesterase) Rh6 is only marginally active and this probably reflects conformational changes accompanying the above-mentioned photochemical transitions. This supports the concept that normal rhodopsin-based phototransduction requires 11Z to all-E isomerization.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
The key physiological functions of the rhodopsin molecule are reviewed. Molecular mechanisms of visual pigments spectral tuning, photoisomerization of the 11-cis-retinal chromophore that triggers the phototransduction process, formation of physiologically active state of rhodopsin as a G-protein-coupled receptor, rhodopsin visual cycle, and consequences of its impairment are evaluated. Visual pigment rhodopsin performs several functions, providing spectral sensitivity of photoreceptor cells, phototransduction processes and light and dark adaptation. Genetically determined defects of visual pigment molecule and proteins involved into mechanisms of phototransduction and adaptation or into mechanism of visual cycle are directly linked to pathogenesis of different forms of degenerative retina diseases. Understanding the molecular mechanisms of these physiological processes uncovers the way to direct investigation of pathogenesis of these severe eye diseases.  相似文献   

12.
Sterical constraints of the 9-methyl-binding pocket of the rhodopsin chromophore are probed using retinal analogues carrying substituents of increasing size at the 9 position (H, F, Cl, Br, CH(3), and I). The corresponding 11-Z retinals were employed to investigate formation of photosensitive pigment, and the primary photoproduct was identified by Fourier transform infrared difference spectroscopy. In addition, any effects of cumulative strain were studied by introduction of the 9-Z configuration and/or the alpha-retinal ring structure.Our results show that the 9-F analogue still can escape from the 9-methyl-binding pocket and that its photochemistry behaves very similar to the 9-demethyl analogue. The 9-Cl and 9-Br analogues behave very similar to the native 9-methyl pigments, but the 9-I retinal does not fit very well and shows poor pigment formation. This puts an upper limit on the radial dimension of the 9-methyl pocket at 0.45-0.50 nm. Introduction of the alpha-retinal ring constraint in the 11-Z series results in cumulative strain, because the 9-I and 9-Br derivatives cannot bind to generate a photopigment. The 9-Z configuration can partially compensate for the additional alpha-retinal strain. The corresponding 9-Br analogue does form a photopigment, and the other derivatives give increased photopigment yields compared to the corresponding 11-Z derivatives. In fact, 9-Z-alpha-retinal would be an interesting candidate for retinal supplementation studies. Our data provide direct support for the concept that the 9-methyl group is an important determinant in ligand anchoring and activation of the protein and in general agree with a three-point interaction model involving the ring, 9-methyl group, and aldehyde function.  相似文献   

13.
The photosensitivities of the bovine rhodopsin and gecko pigment 521 analogues regenerated from C-10-substituted analogues of 11-cis- and 9-cis-retinals were determined by two different methods. A similar reactivity trend was noted for both pigment systems as revealed in the photosensitivity of the gecko pigments and relative quantum yields of the bovine analogues. The 10-fluoro-11-cis photopigments had a photosensitivity less than, but approaching, that of the native (11-cis) visual pigment while the 10-fluoro-9-cis photopigments had a much lower photosensitivity than the parent 9-cis regenerated pigment. The results are interpreted in terms of recently described models of rhodopsin architecture and of the primary molecular reaction of visual pigments to light. The unusually low photoreactivity of the 10-fluoro-9-cis pigment molecule is viewed as the result of a regiospecific hydrogen-bonding interaction of the electronegative fluorine atom to the opsin.  相似文献   

14.
Anabaena sensory rhodopsin (ASR) is a novel microbial rhodopsin recently discovered in the freshwater cyanobacterium Anabaena sp. PCC7120. This protein most likely functions as a photosensory receptor as do the related haloarchaeal sensory rhodopsins. However, unlike the archaeal pigments, which are tightly bound to their cognate membrane-embedded transducers, ASR interacts with a soluble cytoplasmic protein analogous to transducers of animal vertebrate rhodopsins. In this study, infrared spectroscopy was used to examine the molecular mechanism of photoactivation in ASR. Light adaptation of the pigment leads to a phototransformation of an all-trans/15-anti to 13-cis/15-syn retinylidene-containing species very similar in chromophore structural changes to those caused by dark adaptation in bacteriorhodopsin. Following 532 nm laser-pulsed excitation, the protein exhibits predominantly an all-trans retinylidene photocycle containing a deprotonated Schiff base species similar to those of other microbial rhodopsins such as bacteriorhodopsin, sensory rhodopsin II, and Neurospora rhodopsin. However, no changes are observed in the Schiff base counterion Asp-75, which remains unprotonated throughout the photocycle. This result along with other evidence indicates that the Schiff base proton release mechanism differs significantly from that of other known microbial rhodopsins, possibly because of the absence of a second carboxylate group at the ASR photoactive site. Several conformational changes are detected during the ASR photocycle including in the transmembrane helices E and G as indicated by hydrogen-bonding alterations of their native cysteine residues. In addition, similarly to animal vertebrate rhodopsin, perturbations of the polar head groups of lipid molecules are detected.  相似文献   

15.
Resonance Raman spectroscopy of octopus rhodopsin and its photoproducts   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
C Pande  A Pande  K T Yue  R Callender  T G Ebrey  M Tsuda 《Biochemistry》1987,26(16):4941-4947
We report here the resonance Raman spectra of octopus rhodopsin and its photoproducts, bathorhodopsin and acid metarhodopsin. These studies were undertaken in order to make comparisons with the well-studied bovine pigments, so as to understand the similarities and the differences in pigment structure and photochemical processes between vertebrates and invertebrates. The flow method was used to obtain the Raman spectrum of rhodopsin at 13 degrees C. The bathorhodopsin spectrum was obtained by computer subtraction of the spectra containing different photostationary mixtures of rhodopsin, isorhodopsin, hypsorhodopsin, and bathorhodopsin, obtained at 12 K using the pump-probe technique and from measurements at 80 K. Like their bovine counterparts, the Schiff base vibrational mode appears at approximately 1660 cm-1 in octopus rhodopsin and the photoproducts, bathorhodopsin and acid metarhodopsin, suggesting a protonated Schiff base linkage between the chromophore and the protein. Differences between the Raman spectra of octopus rhodopsin and bathorhodopsin indicate that the formation of bathorhodopsin is associated with chromophore isomerization. This inference is substantiated by the chromophore chemical extraction data which show that, like the bovine system, octopus rhodopsin is an 11-cis pigment, while the photoproducts contain an all-trans pigment, in agreement with previous work. The octopus rhodopsin and bathorhodopsin spectra show marked differences from their bovine counterparts in other respects, however. The differences are most dramatic in the structure-sensitive fingerprint and the HOOP regions. Thus, it appears that although the two species differ in the specific nature of the chromophore-protein interactions, the general process of visual transduction is the same.  相似文献   

16.
With the aim of preparing a light-stable rhodopsin-like pigment, an analog, II, of 11-cis retinal was synthesized in which isomerization of the C11-C12 cis-double bond is blocked by a cyclohexene ring built around the C10 to C13-methyl. The analog II formed a rhodopsin-like pigment (rhodopsin-II) with opsin expressed in COS-1 cells and with opsin from rod outer segments. The rate of rhodopsin-II formation from II and opsin was approximately 10 times slower than that of rhodopsin from 11-cis retinal and opsin. After solubilization in dodecyl maltoside and immunoaffinity purification, rhodopsin-II displayed an absorbance ratio (A280nm/A512nm) of 1.6, virtually identical with that of rhodopsin. Acid denaturation of rhodopsin-II formed a chromophore with lambda max, 452 nm, characteristic of protonated retinyl Schiff base. The ground state properties of rhodopsin-II were similar to those of rhodopsin in extinction coefficient (41,200 M-1 cm-1) and opsin-shift (2600 cm-1). Rhodopsin-II was stable to hydroxylamine in the dark, while light-dependent bleaching by hydroxylamine was slowed by approximately 2 orders of magnitude relative to rhodopsin. Illumination of rhodopsin-II for 10 s caused approximately 3 nm blue-shift and 3% loss of visible absorbance. Prolonged illumination caused a maximal blue-shift up to approximately 20 nm and approximately 40% loss of visible absorbance. An apparent photochemical steady state was reached after 12 min of illumination. Subsequent acid denaturation indicated that the retinyl Schiff base linkage was intact. A red-shift (approximately 12 nm) in lambda max and a 45% recovery of visible absorbance was observed after returning the 12-min illuminated pigment to darkness. Rhodopsin-II showed marginal light-dependent transducin activation and phosphorylation by rhodopsin kinase.  相似文献   

17.
In order to prepare a completely light-stable rhodopsin, we have synthesized an analog, II, of 11-cis retinal in which isomerization at the C11-C12 cis-double bond is blocked by formation of a cyclohexene ring from the C10 to C13-methyl. We used this analog to generate a rhodopsin-like pigment from opsin expressed in COS-1 cells and opsin from rod outer segments (Bhattacharya, S., Ridge, K.D., Knox, B.E., and Khorana, H. G. (1992) J. Biol. Chem. 267, 6763-6769). The pigment (lambda max, 512 nm) formed from opsin and analog II (rhodospin-II) showed ground state properties very similar to those of rhodopsin, but was not entirely stable to light. In the present work, 12 opsin mutants (Ala-117----Phe, Glu-122----Gln(Ala, Asp), Trp-126----Phe(Leu, Ala), Trp-265----Ala(Tyr, Phe), Tyr-268----Phe, and Ala-292----Asp), where the mutations were presumed to be in the retinal binding pocket, were reconstituted with analog II. While all mutants formed rhodopsin-like pigments with II, blue-shifted (12-30 nm) chromophores were obtained with Ala-117----Phe, Glu-122----Gln(Ala), Trp-126----Leu(Ala), and Trp-265----Ala(Tyr, Phe) opsins. The extent of chromophore formation was markedly reduced in the mutants Ala-117----Phe and Trp-126----Ala. Upon illumination, the reconstituted pigments showed varying degrees of light sensitivity; the mutants Trp-126----Phe(Leu) showed light sensitivity similar to wild-type. Continuous illumination of the mutants Glu-122----Asp, Trp-265----Ala, Tyr-268----Phe, and Ala-292----Asp resulted in hydrolysis of the retinyl Schiff base. Markedly reduced light sensitivity was observed with the mutant Trp-265----Tyr, while the mutant Trp-265----Phe was light-insensitive. Consistent with this result, the mutant Trp-265----Phe showed no detectable light-dependent activation of transducin or phosphorylation by rhodopsin kinase.  相似文献   

18.
Vogel R  Fan GB  Sheves M  Siebert F 《Biochemistry》2000,39(30):8895-8908
The formation of the active rhodopsin state metarhodopsin II (MII) is believed to be partially governed by specific steric constraints imposed onto the protein by the 9-methyl group of the retinal chromophore. We studied the properties of the synthetic pigment 9-demethyl rhodopsin (9dm-Rho), consisting of the rhodopsin apoprotein regenerated with synthetic retinal lacking the 9-methyl group, by UV-vis and Fourier transform infrared difference spectroscopy. Low activation rates of the visual G-protein transducin by the modified pigment reported in previous studies are shown to not be caused by the reduced activity of its MII state, but to be due to a dramatic equilibrium shift from MII to its immediate precursor, MI. The MII state of 9dm-Rho displays only a partial deprotonation of the retinal Schiff base, leading to the formation of two MII subspecies absorbing at 380 and 470 nm, both of which seem to be involved in transducin activation. The rate of MII formation is slowed by 2 orders of magnitude compared to rhodopsin. The dark state and the MI state of 9dm-Rho are distinctly different from their respective states in the native pigment, pointing to a more relaxed fit of the retinal chromophore in its binding pocket. The shifted equilibrium between MI and MII is therefore discussed in terms of an increased entropy of the 9dm-Rho MI state due to changed steric interactions.  相似文献   

19.
This article reviews the primary reaction processes in rhodopsin, a photoreceptive pigment for twilight vision. Rhodopsin has an 11-cis retinal as the chromophore, which binds covalently with a lysine residue through a protonated Schiff base linkage. Absorption of a photon by rhodopsin initiates the primary photochemical reaction in the chromophore. Picosecond time-resolved spectroscopy of 11-cis locked rhodopsin analogs revealed that the cis-trans isomerization of the chromophore is the primary reaction in rhodopsin. Then, generation of femtosecond laser pulses in the 1990s made it possible to follow the process of isomerization in real time. Formation of photorhodopsin within 200 fsec was observed by a transient absorption (pump–probe) experiment, which also revealed that the photoisomerization in rhodopsin is a vibrationally coherent process. Femtosecond fluorescence spectroscopy directly captured excited-state dynamics of rhodopsin, so that both coherent reaction process and unreacted excited state were observed. Faster photoreaction of the chromophore in rhodopsin than that in solution implies that the protein environment facilitates the efficient isomerization process. Such contributions of the protein residues have been monitored by infrared spectroscopy of rhodopsin, bathorhodopsin, and isorhodopsin (9-cis rhodopsin) at low temperatures. The crystal structure of bovine rhodopsin recently reported will lead to better understanding of the mechanism in future.  相似文献   

20.
Mooney VL  Szundi I  Lewis JW  Yan EC  Kliger DS 《Biochemistry》2012,51(12):2630-2637
Molecular structure and function studies of vertebrate ultraviolet (UV) cone visual pigments are needed to understand the molecular evolution of these photoreceptors, which uniquely contain unprotonated Schiff base linkages between the 11-cis-retinal chromophore and the opsin proteins. In this study, the Siberian hamster ultraviolet cone pigment (SHUV) was expressed and purified in an n-dodecyl-β-D-maltoside suspension for optical characterization. Time-resolved absorbance measurements, over a spectral range from 300 to 700 nm, were taken for the purified pigment at time delays from 30 ns to 4.64 s after photoexcitation using 7 ns pulses of 355 nm light. The resulting data were fit globally to a sum of exponential functions after noise reduction using singular-value decomposition. Four exponentials best fit the data with lifetimes of 1.4 μs, 210 μs, 47 ms, and 1 s. The first photointermediate species characterized here is an equilibrated mixture similar to the one formed after rhodopsin's Batho intermediate decays into equilibrium with its successor, BSI. The extremely large red shift of the SHUV Batho component relative to the pigment suggests that SHUV Batho has a protonated Schiff base and that the SHUV cone pigment itself has an unprotonated Schiff base. In contrast to SHUV Batho, the portion of the equilibrated mixture's spectrum corresponding to SHUV BSI is well fit by a model spectrum with an unprotonated Schiff base. The spectra of the next two photointermediate species revealed that they both have unprotonated Schiff bases and suggest they are analogous to rhodopsin's Lumi I and Lumi II species. After decay of SHUV Lumi II, the correspondence with rhodopsin photointermediates breaks down and the next photointermediate, presumably including the G protein-activating species, is a mixture of protonated and unprotonated Schiff base photointermediate species.  相似文献   

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