Interaction between photoexcited rhodopsin and peripheral enzymes in frog retinal rods
- 1 November 1983
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in European Journal of Biochemistry
- Vol. 136 (3) , 489-499
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1432-1033.1983.tb07767.x
Abstract
The major peripheral and soluble proteins in frog rod outer segment preparations, and their interactions with photoexcited rhodopsin, have been compared to those in cattle rod outer segments and found to be similar in both systems. In particular the GTP‐binding protein (G) has the same subunit composition, the same abundance relative to rhodopsin (1/10) and it undergoes the same light and nucleotide‐dependent interactions with rhodopsin in both preparations.Previous work on cattle rod outer segments has shown that photoexcited rhodopsin (R*), in a state identified with metarhodopsin II, associates with the G protein as a first step to the light‐activated GDP/GTP exchange on G. The complex R*‐G is stable in absence of GTP, but is rapidly dissociated by GTP owing to the GDP/GTP exchange reaction. Low bleaching extents (< 10% R*) in absence of GTP therefore create predominantly R*‐G complexes, whereas bleaching in presence of GTP creates free R*. We report here that, under conditions of complexed R*, two reactions of R* in frog rod outer segments are highly perturbed as compared to free R*: (a) the spectral decay of metarhodopsin II (MII) into later photoproducts, and (b) the phosphorylation of R* by an ATP‐dependent protein kinase.a) The spectral measurements have been performed using linear dichroism on oriented frog rod outer segments; this technique allows discrimination between MII and later photoproducts absorbing at the same wavelength. Association of R* with G leads to a strong reduction of the amount of MIII formed and to an acceleration of the decay of MIII. Furthermore, MII is significantly stabilized, in agreement with the hypothesis that MII is the intermediate which binds to G.b) The phosphorylation of R* is strongly inhibited under conditions of R*‐G complex formation as compared to free R*.Interferences between reactions at the three sites involved in R* are discussed: the retinal binding site in the hydrophobic core is sensitive to the presence of GTP‐binding protein at its binding site on the cytoplasmic surface of R*: the kinase and the GTP‐binding protein compete for access to their respective binding sites, both located on the surface of R*.We also observed a slow and nucleotide‐dependent light‐induced binding of a protein of molecular weight 50 000, which we consider as the equivalent of the 48 000 Mr light‐dependent protein previously identified in cattle rod outer segments.This publication has 46 references indexed in Scilit:
- Complex formation between metarhodopsin II and GTP‐binding protein in bovine protoreceptor membranes leads to a shift of the photoproduct equilibriumFEBS Letters, 1982
- Light-induced axial and radial shrinkage effects and changes of the refractive index in isolated bovine rod outer segments and disc vesiclesEuropean Biophysics Journal, 1981
- The partial primary structure of bovine rhodopsin and its topography in the retinal rod cell disc membraneNeurochemistry International, 1980
- Light-induced, reversible binding of proteins to bovine photoreceptor membranes. Influence of nucleotidesNeurochemistry International, 1980
- The hydrophobic heart of rhodopsin revealed by an infrared 1H2H exchange studyFEBS Letters, 1977
- Control of light-activated phosphorylation in frog photoreceptor membranesBiochemistry, 1977
- Neutron diffraction studies of retinal rod outer segment membranesNature, 1976
- Light-dependent phosphorylation of rhodopsin in living frogsNature, 1974
- Light dependent phosphorylation of rhodopsin by ATPFEBS Letters, 1972
- Cleavage of Structural Proteins during the Assembly of the Head of Bacteriophage T4Nature, 1970