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81.
Kuwayama S  Imai H  Hirano T  Terakita A  Shichida Y 《Biochemistry》2002,41(51):15245-15252
To identify the amino acid residue(s) responsible for the difference in the molecular properties between rod and cone pigments, we have prepared chicken green mutants where each of the residues (Val77, Gly144, and Pro189) completely conserved in the cone pigments was replaced with the residue in the rod pigment rhodopsin. Among the mutants, the P189I mutant showed an expression level in cultured HEK293 cells and a thermal stability higher than did the wild-type chicken green. The mutation caused a reduced decay rate of the meta II intermediate, while the mutation of the wild-type chicken rhodopsin at position 189 (I189P) resulted in an increased decay rate. The additional mutation at position 122, the previously reported site where the amino acid residue is one of the determinants of the meta II decay rate, converted the meta II decay rate into that observed in the wild-type chicken rhodopsin. These results suggest that the difference in the meta II decay rate between the chicken green and rhodopsin is due to the difference in the amino acid residues at positions 189 and 122. The completely conserved nature of proline at position 189 could provide a clue to the molecular evolution of the pigments.  相似文献   
82.
Retinochrome is a photoisomerase of the invertebrate visual system, which converts all-trans-retinal to the 11-cis configuration and supplies it to visual rhodopsin. In this paper, we studied light-induced structural changes in squid retinochrome by means of low-temperature UV-visible and Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy. In PC liposomes, lumi-retinochrome was stable in the wide temperature range between 77 and 230 K. High thermal stability of the primary intermediate in retinochrome is in contrast to the case in rhodopsins. FTIR spectroscopy suggested that the chromophore of lumi-retinochrome is in a relaxed planar 11-cis form, being consistent with its high thermal stability. The chromophore binding pocket of retinochrome appears to accommodate both all-trans and 11-cis forms without a large distortion, and limited protein structural changes between all-trans and 11-cis chromophores may be suitable for the function of retinochrome as a photoisomerase. The analysis of N-D and O-D stretching vibrations in D(2)O revealed that the hydrogen bond of the Schiff base is weaker in retinochrome than in bovine rhodopsin and bacteriorhodopsin, while retinochrome has a water molecule under strongly hydrogen-bonded conditions (O-D stretch at 2334 cm(-)(1)). The hydrogen bond of the water is further strengthened in lumi-retinochrome. The formation of meta-retinochrome accompanies deprotonation of the Schiff base, together with the peptide backbone alterations of alpha-helices, and possible formation of beta-sheets. It was found that the Schiff base proton is not transferred to its counterion, Glu181, but directly released to the aqueous phase in PC liposomes (pH 7.5). This suggests that the Schiff base environment is exposed to solvent in meta-retinochrome, which may be advantageous for the hydrolysis reaction of the Schiff base in the transport of 11-cis-retinal to its shuttle protein.  相似文献   
83.
Vertebrate retinas have two types of photoreceptor cells, rods and cones, which contain visual pigments with different molecular properties. These pigments diverged from a common ancestor, and their difference in molecular properties originates from the difference in their amino acid residues. We previously reported that the difference in decay times of G protein-activating meta-II intermediates between the chicken rhodopsin and green-sensitive cone (chicken green) pigments is about 50 times. This difference only originates from the differences of two residues at positions 122 and 189 (Kuwayama, S., Imai, H., Hirano, T., Terakita, A., and Shichida, Y. (2002) Biochemistry 41, 15245-15252). Here we show that the meta-III intermediates exhibit about 700 times difference in decay times between the two pigments, and the faster decay in chicken green can be converted to the slower decay in rhodopsin by replacing the residues in chicken green with the corresponding rhodopsin residues. However, the inverse directional conversion did not occur when the two residues in rhodopsin were replaced by those of chicken green. Analysis using chimerical mutants derived from these pigments has demonstrated that amino acid residues responsible for the slow rhodopsin meta-III decay are situated at several positions throughout the C-terminal half of rhodopsin. Considering that rhodopsins evolved from cone pigments, it has been suggested that the molecular properties of rhodopsin have been optimized by mutations at several positions, and the chicken green mutants at two positions could be rhodopsin-like pigments transiently produced in the course of molecular evolution.  相似文献   
84.
To investigate the local structure that causes the differences in molecular properties between rod and cone visual pigments, we have measured the difference infrared spectra between chicken green and its photoproduct at 77 K and compared them with those from bovine and chicken rhodopsins. In contrast to the similarity of the vibrational bands of the chromophore, those of the protein part were notably different between chicken green and the rhodopsins. Like the rhodopsins, chicken green has an aspartic acid at position 83 (D83) but exhibited no signals due to the protonated carboxyl of D83 in the C=O stretching region, suggesting that the molecular contact between D83 and G120 through water molecule evidenced in bovine rhodopsin is absent in chicken green. A pair of positive and negative bands due to the peptide backbone (amide I) was prominent in chicken green, while the rhodopsins exhibited only small bands in this region. Furthermore, chicken green exhibited characteristic paired bands around 1480 cm(-1), which were identified as the imide bands of P189 using site-directed mutagenesis. P189, situated in the putative second extracellular loop, is conserved in all the known cone visual pigments but not in rhodopsins. Thus, some region of the second extracellular loop including P189 is situated near the chromophore and changes its environment upon formation of the batho-intermediate. The results noted above indicate that differences in the protein parts between chicken green and the rhodopsins alter the changes seen in the protein upon photoisomerization of the chromophore. Some of these changes appear to be the pathway from the chromophore to cytoplasmic surface of the pigment and thus could affect the activation process of transducin.  相似文献   
85.
Hirano T  Imai H  Kandori H  Shichida Y 《Biochemistry》2001,40(5):1385-1392
To investigate the chloride effect on the spectral properties of iodopsin, we have prepared an anion-free iodopsin (iodopsin.free) by extensive dialysis of an iodopsin sample against a buffer containing no chloride, and visible and infrared difference spectra between iodopsin.free and its photoproduct at 77 K were recorded. The absorption maximum of iodopsin.free in L-alpha-phosphatidylcholine liposomes was 528 nm, which was almost identical with that of the nitrate-bound form of iodopsin (526 nm, iodopsin.NO(3)), but 43 nm blue-shifted from that of the chloride-bound form of iodopsin (iodopsin.Cl). The iod/batho visible difference spectrum obtained from iodopsin.free was similar in shape to that from iodopsin.NO(3), but not to that from iodopsin.Cl. FTIR spectroscopy revealed that the chromophore vibrational bands and the peptide bonds of the original state in iodopsin.free were identical with those in iodopsin.NO(3) and were also similar to those in iodopsin.Cl except for the ethylenic vibrations of the chromophore. In contrast, those of the batho state in iodopsin.free were similar to those in iodopsin.NO(3) but considerably different from those in iodopsin.Cl. These results suggested that the binding of chloride but not nitrate induces a conformational change in the protein and that the chloride binding site is situated in a position where it directly interacts with the chromophore when the chromophore is photoisomerized. FTIR spectroscopy also revealed that one of the four water bands observed in the batho/iod spectrum of iodospin.Cl is absent in the spectra of iodopsin.free and iodopsin.NO(3). Thus, in contrast to nitrate, a lyotropic anion, chloride would bind to the binding site with water molecule(s) which could form a hydrogen-bonding network with amino acid residue(s) near the chromophore, thereby resulting in the red shift of the absorption maximum of iodopsin.  相似文献   
86.
Archaeal rhodopsins possess a retinal molecule as their chromophores, and their light energy and light signal conversions are triggered by all-trans to 13-cis isomerization of the retinal chromophore. Relaxation through structural changes of the protein then leads to functional processes, proton pump in bacteriorhodopsin and transducer activation in sensory rhodopsins. In the present paper, low-temperature Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy is applied to phoborhodopsin from Natronobacterium pharaonis (ppR), a photoreceptor for the negative phototaxis of the bacteria, and infrared spectral changes before and after photoisomerization are compared with those of bacteriorhodopsin (BR) at 77 K. Spectral comparison of the C--C stretching vibrations of the retinal chromophore shows that chromophore conformation of the polyene chain is similar between ppR and BR. This fact implies that the unique chromophore-protein interaction in ppR, such as the blue-shifted absorption spectrum with vibrational fine structure, originates from both ends, the beta-ionone ring and the Schiff base regions. In fact, less planer ring structure and stronger hydrogen bond of the Schiff base were suggested for ppR. Similar frequency changes upon photoisomerization are observed for the C==N stretch of the retinal Schiff base and the stretch of the neighboring threonine side chain (Thr79 in ppR and Thr89 in BR), suggesting that photoisomerization in ppR is driven by the motion of the Schiff base like BR. Nevertheless, the structure of the K state after photoisomerization is different between ppR and BR. In BR, chromophore distortion is localized in the Schiff base region, as shown in its hydrogen out-of-plane vibrations. In contrast, more extended structural changes take place in ppR in view of chromophore distortion and protein structural changes. Such structure of the K intermediate of ppR is probably correlated with its high thermal stability. In fact, almost identical infrared spectra are obtained between 77 and 170 K in ppR. Unique chromophore-protein interaction and photoisomerization processes in ppR are discussed on the basis of the present infrared spectral comparison with BR.  相似文献   
87.
Melanopsin is the photoreceptor molecule of intrinsically photosensitive retinal ganglion cells, which serve as the input for various nonvisual behavior and physiological functions fundamental to organisms. The retina, therefore, possess a melanopsin-based nonvisual system in addition to the visual system based on the classical visual photoreceptor molecules. To elucidate the molecular properties of melanopsin, we have exogenously expressed mouse melanopsin in cultured cells. We were able to obtain large amounts of purified mouse melanopsin and conducted a comprehensive spectroscopic study of its photochemical properties. Melanopsin has an absorption maximum at 467 nm, and it converts to a meta intermediate having an absorption maximum at 476 nm. The melanopsin photoreaction is similar to that of squid rhodopsin, exhibiting bistability that results in a photosteady mixture of a resting state (melanopsin containing 11-cis-retinal) and an excited state (metamelanopsin containing all-trans-retinal) upon sustained irradiation. The absorption coefficient of melanopsin is 33000 ± 1000 M(-1) cm(-1), and its quantum yield of isomerization is 0.52; these values are also typical of invertebrate bistable pigments. Thus, the nonvisual system in the retina relies on a type of photoreceptor molecule different from that of the visual system. Additionally, we found a new state of melanopsin, containing 7-cis-retinal (extramelanopsin), which forms readily upon long-wavelength irradiation (yellow to red light) and photoconverts to metamelanopsin with short-wavelength (blue light) irradiation. Although it is unclear whether extramelanopsin would have any physiological role, it could potentially allow wavelength-dependent regulation of melanopsin functions.  相似文献   
88.
Sato K  Yamashita T  Imamoto Y  Shichida Y 《Biochemistry》2012,51(21):4300-4308
Visual pigments in rod and cone photoreceptor cells of vertebrate retinas are highly diversified photoreceptive proteins that consist of a protein moiety opsin and a light-absorbing chromophore 11-cis-retinal. There are four types of cone visual pigments and a single type of rod visual pigment. The reaction process of the rod visual pigment, rhodopsin, has been extensively investigated, whereas there have been few studies of cone visual pigments. Here we comprehensively investigated the reaction processes of cone visual pigments on a time scale of milliseconds to minutes, using flash photolysis equipment optimized for cone visual pigment photochemistry. We used chicken violet (L-group), chicken blue (M1-group), chicken green (M2-group), and monkey green (L-group) visual pigments as representatives of the respective groups of the phylogenetic tree of cone pigments. The S, M1, and M2 pigments showed the formation of a pH-dependent mixture of meta intermediates, similar to that formed from rhodopsin. Although monkey green (L-group) also formed a mixture of meta intermediates, pH dependency of meta intermediates was not observed. However, meta intermediates of monkey green became pH dependent when the chloride ion bound to the monkey green was replaced with a nitrate ion. These results strongly suggest that rhodopsin and S, M1, and M2 cone visual pigments share a molecular mechanism for activation, whereas the L-group pigment may have a special reaction mechanism involving the chloride-binding site.  相似文献   
89.
A mammalian type opsin 5 (neuropsin) is a recently identified ultraviolet (UV)-sensitive pigment of the retina and other photosensitive organs in birds. Two other opsin 5-related molecules have been found in the genomes of non-mammalian vertebrates. However, their functions have not been examined as yet. Here, we identify the molecular properties of a second avian opsin 5, cOpn5L2 (chicken opsin 5-like 2), and its localization in the post-hatch chicken. Spectrophotometric analysis and radionucleotide-binding assay have revealed that cOpn5L2 is a UV-sensitive bistable pigment that couples with the Gi subtype of guanine nucleotide-binding protein (G protein). As a bistable pigment, it also shows the direct binding ability to agonist all-trans-retinal to activate G protein. The absorption maxima of UV-light-absorbing and visible light-absorbing forms were 350 and 521 nm, respectively. Expression analysis showed relatively high expression of cOpn5L2 mRNA in the adrenal gland, which is not photoreceptive but an endocrine organ, while lower expression was found in the brain and retina. At the protein level, cOpn5L2 immunoreactive cells were present in the chromaffin cells of the adrenal gland. In the brain, cOpn5L2 immunoreactive cells were found in the paraventricular and supraoptic nuclei of the anterior hypothalamus, known for photoreceptive deep brain areas. In the retina, cOpn5L2 protein was localized to subsets of cells in the ganglion cell layer and the inner nuclear layer. These results suggest that the non-mammalian type opsin 5 (Opn5L2) functions as a second UV sensor in the photoreceptive organs, while it might function as chemosensor using its direct binding ability to agonist all-trans-retinal in non-photoreceptive organs such as the adrenal gland of birds.  相似文献   
90.
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