Abstract

The light response of vertebrate visual cells is achieved by light-sensing proteins such as opsin-based pigments as well as signal transduction proteins, including visual arrestin. Previous studies have indicated that the pineal pigment parapinopsin has evolutionally and physiologically important characteristics. Parapinopsin is phylogenetically related to vertebrate visual pigments. However, unlike the photoproduct of the visual pigment rhodopsin, which is unstable, dissociating from its chromophore and bleaching, the parapinopsin photoproduct is stable and does not release its chromophore. Here, we investigated arrestin, which regulates parapinopsin signaling, in the lamprey pineal organ, where parapinopsin and rhodopsin are localized to distinct photoreceptor cells. We found that beta-arrestin, which binds to stimulated G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) other than opsin-based pigments, was localized to parapinopsin-containing cells. This result stands in contrast to the localization of visual arrestin in rhodopsin-containing cells. Beta-arrestin bound to cultured cell membranes containing parapinopsin light-dependently and translocated to the outer segments of pineal parapinopsin-containing cells, suggesting that beta-arrestin binds to parapinopsin to arrest parapinopsin signaling. Interestingly, beta-arrestin colocalized with parapinopsin in the granules of the parapinopsin-expressing cell bodies under light illumination. Because beta-arrestin, which is a mediator of clathrin-mediated GPCR internalization, also served as a mediator of parapinopsin internalization in cultured cells, these results suggest that the granules were generated light-dependently by beta-arrestin-mediated internalization of parapinopsins from the outer segments. Therefore, our findings imply that beta-arrestin-mediated internalization is responsible for eliminating the stable photoproduct and restoring cell conditions to the original dark state. Taken together with a previous finding that the bleaching pigment evolved from a non-bleaching pigment, vertebrate visual arrestin may have evolved from a “beta-like” arrestin by losing its clathrin-binding domain and its function as an internalization mediator. Such changes would have followed the evolution of vertebrate visual pigments, which generate unstable photoproducts that independently decay by chromophore dissociation.

Highlights

  • Rhodopsin and related photosensitive pigments consist of the protein moiety opsin and the chromophore retinal [1]

  • Visual arrestin was localized to the ventral region of the pineal organ (Figure 2C), which is consistent with previous reports [17]

  • Parapinopsin and b-arrestin colocalized in the dorsal photoreceptor cells of the pineal organ. This distribution pattern stands in contrast to the colocalization of visual arrestin and rhodopsin in the ventral photoreceptor cells (Figure 2D). These results imply that lamprey b-arrestin, instead of visual arrestin, interacts with light-stimulated parapinopsin to terminate the signaling from parapinopsin to G proteins

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Rhodopsin and related photosensitive pigments consist of the protein moiety opsin and the chromophore retinal [1]. Parapinopsin has an amino acid sequence similar to those of vertebrate visual pigments, but our spectroscopic analysis of parapinopsin expressed in cultured cells has revealed that parapinopsin has the molecular properties of non-bleaching pigments [8] like invertebrate visual pigments and melanopsins [1,4,5]. In various mammalian GPCR systems, b-arrestin generally has two major functions that are carried out via binding to stimulated GPCRs [12,13,14,15,16]: termination of GPCR signaling to G proteins like visual arrestin and involvement in the clathrin-mediated internalization process that removes receptors from the cell membrane to desensitize the cell With respect to the latter function, b-arrestin has a clathrinbinding domain, which visual arrestin lacks. We discuss the linkage between the molecular evolution of vertebrate arrestins and photopigments

Results
Discussion
Materials and Methods
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.