Abstract

Glycine 121 in transmembrane (TM) helix 3 and phenylalanine 261 in TM helix 6 of bovine rhodopsin have been shown to be critical residues for creating an appropriate chromophore binding pocket for 11-cis-retinal [Han, M., Lin, S. W., Smith, S. O., and Sakmar, T. P. (1996) J. Biol. Chem. 271, 32330-32336; Han, M., Lin, S. W., Minkova, M., Smith, S. O., and Sakmar, T. P. (1996) J. Biol. Chem. 271, 32337-32342]. To further explore structure-function relationships in the vicinity of receptor helices 3 and 6, time-resolved absorption difference spectra of rhodopsin mutants G121A, G121V, and G121L/F261A were obtained at 20 degrees C. Data were collected from 30 ns to 690 ms after laser photolysis with 7 ns pulses (lambdamax = 477 nm) and analyzed using a global exponential fitting procedure after singular value decomposition (SVD). For each mutant, the decay of its bathorhodopsin photoproduct (batho) into an equilibrium with its blue-shifted intermediate (bsi) was too fast to resolve (<20 ns). The reaction scheme found for the mutants G121A and G121L/F261A was batho/bsi --> lumirhodopsin (lumi) --> metarhodopsin I (MI) --> metarhodopsin II (MII). For G121V, an additional early 380 nm absorber, with a back-reaction to lumi, had to be included in the above scheme. For the three Gly121 mutants, the main pathway to reach the active MII state is via lumi and MI. This is in contrast to rhodopsin where the main pathway in detergent samples is via lumi and an early 380 nm absorber, MI380. From the accelerated batho decay present in all three mutants, we conclude that Gly121 is likely to participate in the earliest chromophore-protein interactions. In addition, bsi decay is further accelerated in mutant G121L/F261A, suggesting that Phe261 is an essential determinant of the protein processes involved in bsi decay.

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