Abstract

Vision is the dominant sensory modality in many organisms for foraging, predator avoidance, and social behaviors including mate selection. Vertebrate visual perception is initiated when light strikes rod and cone photoreceptors within the neural retina of the eye. Sensitivity to individual colors, i.e., peak spectral sensitivities (λmax) of visual pigments, are a function of the type of chromophore and the amino acid sequence of the associated opsin protein in the photoreceptors. Large differences in peak spectral sensitivities can result from minor differences in amino acid sequence of cone opsins. To determine how minor sequence differences could result in large spectral shifts we selected a spectrally-diverse group of 14 teleost Rh2 cone opsins for which sequences and λmax are experimentally known. Classical molecular dynamics simulations were carried out after embedding chromophore-associated homology structures within explicit bilayers and water. These simulations revealed structural features of visual pigments, particularly within the chromophore, that contributed to diverged spectral sensitivities. Statistical tests performed on all the observed structural parameters associated with the chromophore revealed that a two-term, first-order regression model was sufficient to accurately predict λmax over a range of 452–528 nm. The approach was accurate, efficient and simple in that site-by-site molecular modifications or complex quantum mechanics models were not required to predict λmax. These studies identify structural features associated with the chromophore that may explain diverged spectral sensitivities, and provide a platform for future, functionally predictive opsin modeling.

Highlights

  • Many living organisms rely upon vision as the dominant sensory modality for foraging, predator avoidance, and social behaviors including mate selection

  • The λmax is a function of the type of chromophore and the amino acid sequence of the associated opsin protein

  • Visual pigments consist of seven-transmembrane, G-protein-coupled receptor proteins (GPCR) called opsins, together with a chromophore covalently bound through a Schiff base attachment at a lysine residue

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Summary

Introduction

Many living organisms rely upon vision as the dominant sensory modality for foraging, predator avoidance, and social behaviors including mate selection. The spectral sensitivities of visual pigments are a function of the type of chromophore (11-cis retinal or 11-cis-3,4-didehydro retinal) and the amino acid sequence of the associated opsin protein [1,2,3,4]. Cone opsins are under strong natural selection [5,6,7,8], and minor changes in their amino acid sequences can result in large changes in spectral sensitivities of their corresponding pigments [4]. The human green cone opsin is 96% identical at the amino acid level to the human red cone opsin, but their corresponding pigments show peak spectral sensitivities that are 28 nm different [9]. Some SWS1 pigments are maximally sensitive to blue wavelengths (e.g. human blue cone opsin), and some LWS pigments are maximally sensitive to green (e.g. human green cone opsin) [11]

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