A photic visual cycle of rhodopsin regeneration is dependent on Rgr

During visual excitation, rhodopsin undergoes photoactivation and bleaches to opsin and all-trans-retinal. To regenerate rhodopsin and maintain normal visual sensitivity, the all-trans isomer must be metabolized and reisomerized to produce the chromophore 11-cis-retinal in biochemical steps that con...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature genetics 2001-07, Vol.28 (3), p.256-260
Hauptverfasser: Fong, Henry K.W, Chen, Pu, Hao, Wenshan, Rife, Lawrence, Wang, Xiao Peng, Shen, Daiwei, Chen, Jeannie, Ogden, Thomas, Van Boemel, Gretchen B, Wu, Lanyin, Yang, Mao
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:During visual excitation, rhodopsin undergoes photoactivation and bleaches to opsin and all-trans-retinal. To regenerate rhodopsin and maintain normal visual sensitivity, the all-trans isomer must be metabolized and reisomerized to produce the chromophore 11-cis-retinal in biochemical steps that constitute the visual cycle and involve the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE; refs. 3-8). A key step in the visual cycle is isomerization of an all-trans retinoid to 11-cis-retinol in the RPE (refs. 9-11). It could be that the retinochrome-like opsins, peropsin, or the retinal G protein-coupled receptor (RGR) opsin12-16 are isomerases in the RPE. In contrast to visual pigments, RGR is bound predominantly to endogenous all-trans-retinal, and irradiation of RGR in vitro results in stereospecific conversion of the bound all-trans isomer to 11-cis-retinal. Here we show that RGR is involved in the formation of 11-cis-retinal in mice and functions in a light-dependent pathway of the rod visual cycle. Mutations in the human gene encoding RGR are associated with retinitis pigmentosa.
ISSN:1061-4036
1546-1718
DOI:10.1038/90089