ABSTRACT: Previously, we showed that mutating RPE65 residue Phe-103 preferentially produces 13-cis-retinol instead of 11-cis-retinol, supporting a carbocation/radical cation mechanism of retinol isomerization. We asked whether this modulation of specificity can occur with residues other than Phe-103 and what role it plays in substrate binding and isomerization. We modeled the substrate-binding cleft of RPE65 to identify residues lining its surface. Many are phenylalanines and tyrosines, including three Phe residues (Phe-61, Phe-312, and Phe-526) forming an arch-like arrangement astride the cleft and Tyr-338. Also, Phe-418 sits at the neck of the cleft, lending a bend to the volume enclosed by the cleft. All mutations of Phe-61, Phe-312, and Phe-418 result in severely impaired or inactive enzyme. However, mutation of Phe-526 and Tyr-338, like Phe-103, decreases 11-cis-retinol formation, whereas increasing the 13-cis isomer. Significantly, 2 of these 3 residues, Phe-103 and Tyr-338, are located on putatively mobile interstrand loops. We propose that residual densities located in the binding cleft of the RPE65 structure represents a post-cleavage snapshot consistent not only with a fatty acid product, as originally modeled, but also an 11-cis-retinol product. Substrate docking simulations permit 11-cis- or 13-cis-retinyl ester binding in this relatively closed cleft, with the latter favored in F103L, F526A, and Y338A mutant structures, but prohibit binding of all-trans-retinyl ester, suggesting that isomerization occurs early in the temporal sequence, with O-alkyl ester cleavage occurring later. These findings provide insight into the mechanism of isomerization central to the visual cycle.