Rhodopsin is the light-activated receptor located in the disc membranes of rod photoreceptor cells in the retina and initiates vision via the phototransduction signaling cascade. There are divergent views on rhodopsin's quaternary organization within native disc membranes. The classical view posits that rhodopsin molecules function as freely diffusing monomers. However, recent evidence suggests that rhodopsin oligomerizes and forms higher order structures within the membrane. An accurate description of signaling events in phototransduction and of associated disease mechanisms is reliant on a comprehensive understanding of how rhodopsin is organized within native disc membranes. The aim of the current study was to determine and quantify the physiological arrangement of several vertebrate rhodopsins within their native disc membranes using atomic force microscopy (AFM). AFM is a microscopic method that allows for the imaging of membrane proteins in their native environment under physiological conditions. Disc membranes, with 90% of the total protein content comprised of rhodopsin, were isolated from human, mouse, and frog ocular tissue. AFM images of single-bilayer disc membranes revealed that these vertebrate disc membranes have similar topographies. Topographic features in these images indicate that rhodopsin is organized into microdomains and that the formation of these microdomains is not an effect of a low temperature environment. The microdomains formed by rhodopsin from each species were quantified and comparatively analyzed. By characterizing these microdomains, a baseline has been established for the organization of rhodopsin in human, mouse, and frog disc membranes. These characterizations of microdomain rhodopsin organization may serve as a guide in future investigations which will need to address the importance and role of such an organization on phototransduction and diseased states.
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