Mechanisms of spectral tuning in the mouse green cone pigment
Open Access
- 5 August 1997
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 94 (16) , 8860-8865
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.94.16.8860
Abstract
Diversification of cone pigment spectral sensitivities during evolution is a prerequisite for the development of color vision. Previous studies have identified two naturally occurring mechanisms that produce variation among vertebrate pigments by red-shifting visual pigment absorbance: addition of hydroxyl groups to the putative chromophore binding pocket and binding of chloride to a putative extracellular loop. In this paper we describe the use of two blue-shifting mechanisms during the evolution of rodent long-wave cone pigments. The mouse green pigment belongs to the long-wave subfamily of cone pigments, but its absorption maximum is 508 nm, similar to that of the rhodopsin subfamily of visual pigments, but blue-shifted 44 nm relative to the human red pigment, its closest homologue. We show that acquisition of a hydroxyl group near the retinylidene Schiff base and loss of the chloride binding site mentioned above fully account for the observed blue shift. These data indicate that the chloride binding site is not a universal attribute of long-wave cone pigments as generally supposed, and that, depending upon location, hydroxyl groups can alter the environment of the chromophore to produce either red or blue shifts.Keywords
This publication has 38 references indexed in Scilit:
- Identification of Functional Domains of Adenylyl Cyclase Using in Vivo ChimerasPublished by Elsevier ,1995
- Molecular determinants of human red/green color discriminationNeuron, 1994
- A single protocol to detect transcripts of various types and expression levels in neural tissue and cultured cells: in situ hybridization using digoxigenin-labelled cRNA probesHistochemistry and Cell Biology, 1993
- ROLE OF HYDROXYL‐BEARING AMINO ACIDS IN DIFFERENTIALLY TUNING THE ABSORPTION SPECTRA OF THE HUMAN RED AND GREEN CONE PIGMENTSPhotochemistry and Photobiology, 1993
- Absorption spectra of human cone pigmentsNature, 1992
- Determinants of visual pigment absorbance: identification of the retinylidene Schiff's base counterion in bovine rhodopsinBiochemistry, 1990
- Effects of chloride on chicken iodopsin and the chromophore transfer reactions from iodopsin to scotopsin and B-photopsinBiochemistry, 1990
- Effect of Carboxylic Acid Side Chains on the Absorption Maximum of Visual PigmentsScience, 1989
- Alteration of pKa of the bacteriorhodopsin protonated Schiff base. A study with model compoundsBiochemistry, 1986
- Isolation, sequence analysis, and intron-exon arrangement of the gene encoding bovine rhodopsinCell, 1983