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Role of membrane integrity on G protein-coupled receptors: Rhodopsin stability and function
Authors:Jastrzebska Beata  Debinski Aleksander  Filipek Slawomir  Palczewski Krzysztof
Institution:a Department of Pharmacology, School of Medicine, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH 44106-4965, USA
b University of Warsaw, Faculty of Chemistry, 02-093 Warsaw, Poland
Abstract:Rhodopsin is a prototypical G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) - a member of the superfamily that shares a similar structural architecture consisting of seven-transmembrane helices and propagates various signals across biological membranes. Rhodopsin is embedded in the lipid bilayer of specialized disk membranes in the outer segments of retinal rod photoreceptor cells where it transmits a light-stimulated signal. Photoactivated rhodopsin then activates a visual signaling cascade through its cognate G protein, transducin or Gt, that results in a neuronal response in the brain. Interestingly, the lipid composition of ROS membranes not only differs from that of the photoreceptor plasma membrane but is critical for visual transduction. Specifically, lipids can modulate structural changes in rhodopsin that occur after photoactivation and influence binding of transducin. Thus, altering the lipid organization of ROS membranes can result in visual dysfunction and blindness.
Keywords:G protein-coupled receptor(s)  Rhodopsin  Transducin (Gt)  Photoreceptor  Rod outer segment  Membranes  Oligomerization  Signal transduction  Phospholipids  Cholesterol  Phospholipase A2
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