Abstract

Absorption of light in rhodopsin leads through 11-cis- and all-trans-retinal isomerization, proton transfers, and structural changes to the active G-protein binding meta-II state. When meta-II is photolysed by blue light absorption, the activating pathway is apparently reverted, and rhodopsin is photoregenerated. However, the product formed, a P subspecies with A(max) = 500 nm (P(500)), is different from the ground state based on the following observations: (i) the ground state fingerprint of 11-cis-retinal does not appear in the infrared spectra, although the proton transfers and structural changes are reverted; (ii) extraction of the retinal from P(500) does not yield the expected stoichiometric amount of 11-cis-retinal but predominantly yields all-trans-retinal; (iii) the infrared spectrum of P(500) is similar to the classical meta-III intermediate, which arises from meta-II by thermal decay; and (iv) both P(500) and meta-III can be photoconverted to meta-II with the same changes in the infrared spectrum and without a significant change in the isomerization state of the extracted chromophore. The data indicate the presence of a "second switch" between active and inactive conformations that operates by photolysis but without isomerization around the C(11)-C(12) double bond. This emphasizes the exclusivity of the ground state, which is only accessible by the metabolic regeneration with 11-cis-retinal.

Highlights

  • Absorption of light in rhodopsin leads through 11-cisand all-trans-retinal isomerization, proton transfers, and structural changes to the active G-protein binding meta-II state

  • The product formed, a P subspecies with Amax ‫ ؍‬500 nm (P500), is different from the ground state based on the following observations: (i) the ground state fingerprint of 11-cis-retinal does not appear in the infrared spectra, the proton transfers and structural changes are reverted; (ii) extraction of the retinal from P500 does not yield the expected stoichiometric amount of 11-cisretinal but predominantly yields all-trans-retinal; (iii) the infrared spectrum of P500 is similar to the classical meta-III intermediate, which arises from meta-II by thermal decay; and (iv) both P500 and meta-III can be photoconverted to meta-II with the same changes in the infrared spectrum and without a significant change in the isomerization state of the extracted chromophore

  • When the normal activating pathway is reverted by photolysing M-II with blue light (␭ Ͻ420 nm), one measures a shift of the absorption maximum indicating reprotonation of the retinal-Schiff base and proton release, a photoproduct with ␭max ϭ 500 nm is formed that was so far identified with the 11-cis- or 9-cisretinal bound ground state [12,13,14,15,16]

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Summary

Signaling States of Rhodopsin

ABSORPTION OF LIGHT IN ACTIVE METARHODOPSIN II GENERATES AN ALL-TRANS-RETINAL BOUND INACTIVE STATE*. Absorption of light in rhodopsin leads through 11-cisand all-trans-retinal isomerization, proton transfers, and structural changes to the active G-protein binding meta-II state. The data indicate the presence of a “second switch” between active and inactive conformations that operates by photolysis but without isomerization around the C11-C12 double bond This emphasizes the exclusivity of the ground state, which is only accessible by the metabolic regeneration with 11-cis-retinal. When the normal activating pathway is reverted by photolysing M-II with blue light (␭ Ͻ420 nm), one measures a shift of the absorption maximum indicating reprotonation of the retinal-Schiff base and proton release, a photoproduct with ␭max ϭ 500 nm is formed that was so far identified with the 11-cis- or 9-cisretinal bound ground state [12,13,14,15,16]. Because photoexcitation of the signaling state fails to restore the ground state in vertebrate rhodopsin, the regeneration through the complex cellular metabolism (for review see Ref. 17) may be the only way to restore 11-cis-retinal bound rhodopsin

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
Photolysis of Metarhodopsin II
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
Full Text
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