Literature DB >> 15641808

A dark and constitutively active mutant of the tiger salamander UV pigment.

Masahiro Kono1, Rosalie K Crouch, Daniel D Oprian.   

Abstract

A triple mutant (F86L/T93P/S118T; bovine rhodopsin numbering) of the tiger salamander UV cone pigment appears to be trapped in an open conformation that is metarhodopsin-II-like. The pigment is able to activate transducin in the dark, and the ligand-free apoprotein is also able to activate transducin constitutively. The pigment permits protons and chloride ions from solution access to the active site as it displays a pH- and NaCl-dependent absorption spectrum not observed with the wild-type pigment. However, the wild-type properties of light-dependent activity and a pH-independent absorption spectrum are recovered upon reconstitution of the triple mutant with 11-cis-9-demethyl retinal. These results suggest that binding the native chromophore cannot deactivate the protein because of steric interactions between the protein, possibly residue 118, and the 9-methyl group of the chromophore. Furthermore, the absorption spectrum of the 9-demethyl retinal regenerated pigment exhibits a band broader and with lower extinction at the absorption maximum than either the human blue or salamander UV wild-type pigments generated with the same retinal analogue. The broad spectrum appears to be comprised of two or more species and can be well-fit by a sum of scaled spectra of the two wild-type pigments. Binding the chromophore appears to trap the pigment in two or more conformations. The triple mutant reported here represents the first example of a dark-active cone pigment and constitutively active cone opsin.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15641808     DOI: 10.1021/bi047898f

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biochemistry        ISSN: 0006-2960            Impact factor:   3.162


  6 in total

1.  Constitutive activity of a UV cone opsin.

Authors:  Masahiro Kono
Journal:  FEBS Lett       Date:  2005-12-12       Impact factor: 4.124

2.  Assays for inverse agonists in the visual system.

Authors:  Masahiro Kono
Journal:  Methods Enzymol       Date:  2010       Impact factor: 1.600

3.  Probing human red cone opsin activity with retinal analogues.

Authors:  Masahiro Kono; Rosalie K Crouch
Journal:  J Nat Prod       Date:  2011-02-11       Impact factor: 4.050

4.  In vitro assays of rod and cone opsin activity: retinoid analogs as agonists and inverse agonists.

Authors:  Masahiro Kono; Rosalie K Crouch
Journal:  Methods Mol Biol       Date:  2010

5.  11-cis- and all-trans-retinols can activate rod opsin: rational design of the visual cycle.

Authors:  Masahiro Kono; Patrice W Goletz; Rosalie K Crouch
Journal:  Biochemistry       Date:  2008-06-19       Impact factor: 3.162

6.  Improved mutation tagging with gene identifiers applied to membrane protein stability prediction.

Authors:  Rainer Winnenburg; Conrad Plake; Michael Schroeder
Journal:  BMC Bioinformatics       Date:  2009-08-27       Impact factor: 3.169

  6 in total

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