Morrison DF, Ting TD, Vallury V, Ho YK, Crouch RK, Corson DW, Mangini NJ, Pepperberg DR. Reduced light-dependent phosphorylation of an analog visual pigment containing 9-demethylretinal as its chromophore.
J Biol Chem 1995;
270:6718-21. [PMID:
7896815 DOI:
10.1074/jbc.270.12.6718]
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Abstract
9-Demethyl rhodopsin (9dR), an analog of vertebrate rhodopsin, consists of opsin and a covalently attached chromophore of 11-cis 9-demethylretinal. Electrophysiological evidence that photoactivated 9dR (9dR*) undergoes abnormally slow deactivation in salamander rods (Corson, D. W., Cornwall, M. C., and Pepperberg, D. R. (1994) Visual Neurosci. 11, 91-98) raises the possibility that opsin phosphorylation, a reaction involved in visual pigment deactivation, operates abnormally on 9dR*. This possibility was tested by measuring the light-dependent phosphorylation of 9dR in preparations obtained from bovine rod outer segments. Outer segment membranes containing 9dR or regenerated rhodopsin were flash-illuminated in the presence of [gamma-32P]ATP and rhodopsin kinase, further incubated in darkness, and then analyzed for opsin-bound [32P]Pi. [32P]Pi incorporation by 9dR* increased with both incubation period and bleaching extent but, under all conditions tested, was less than that measured in rhodopsin controls. Results obtained with 30-s incubation periods indicated that the maximal initial rate of incorporation by 9dR* is about 25% of that by photoactivated rhodopsin. The results imply that the low incorporation of Pi by 9dR* results from a reduced rate of phosphorylation by rhodopsin kinase and are consistent with the prolonged lifetime of 9dR* determined electrophysiologically.
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