Abstract

Digitonin solutions of labelled rhodopsin, containing (3)H in the retinyl moiety, were prepared by two related methods. Labelled rhodopsin was also prepared for the first time in cetyltrimethylammonium bromide and purified by column chromatography. It was shown that only certain rhodopsin preparations on denaturation in the dark and the reduction with sodium borohydride gave up to 60% of the radioactivity in a fraction characterized as N-retinylphosphatidylethanolamine. Such preparations also gave a lipid-linked retinyl moiety at the metarhodopsin-I stage, but, as expected, a protein-linked retinyl moiety at the metarhodopsin-II stage. Other preparations however, gave exclusively protein-bound radioactivity at the native-rhodopsin, metarhodopsin-I and metarhodopsin-II stages. It is therefore conceivable that the formation of N-retinylphosphatidylethanolamine is due to a non-enzymic reaction resulting from the transfer of the retinyl moiety from its native site to an amino group of a favourably oriented phospholipid molecule. The only firmly established aspect of the rhodopsin active site remains the demonstration in our previous work that at the metarhodopsin-II stage the retinyl moiety is linked to an in-amino group of lysine. On the basis of chemical reactivity it is argued that the light-induced conversion of rhodopsin into metarhodopsin II involves a profound conformational change resulting in the dislocation of the retinylideneiminium chromophore from a non-polar environment in rhodopsin to a polar environment in metarhodopsin II.

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