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Retinal Attachment Instability Is Diversified among Mammalian Melanopsins.


ABSTRACT: Melanopsins play a key role in non-visual photoreception in mammals. Their close phylogenetic relationship to the photopigments in invertebrate visual cells suggests they have evolved to acquire molecular characteristics that are more suited for their non-visual functions. Here we set out to identify such characteristics by comparing the molecular properties of mammalian melanopsin to those of invertebrate melanopsin and visual pigment. Our data show that the Schiff base linking the chromophore retinal to the protein is more susceptive to spontaneous cleavage in mammalian melanopsins. We also find this stability is highly diversified between mammalian species, being particularly unstable for human melanopsin. Through mutagenesis analyses, we find that this diversified stability is mainly due to parallel amino acid substitutions in extracellular regions. We propose that the different stability of the retinal attachment in melanopsins may contribute to functional tuning of non-visual photoreception in mammals.

SUBMITTER: Tsukamoto H 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC4646394 | biostudies-literature | 2015 Nov

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Retinal Attachment Instability Is Diversified among Mammalian Melanopsins.

Tsukamoto Hisao H   Kubo Yoshihiro Y   Farrens David L DL   Koyanagi Mitsumasa M   Terakita Akihisa A   Furutani Yuji Y  

The Journal of biological chemistry 20150928 45


Melanopsins play a key role in non-visual photoreception in mammals. Their close phylogenetic relationship to the photopigments in invertebrate visual cells suggests they have evolved to acquire molecular characteristics that are more suited for their non-visual functions. Here we set out to identify such characteristics by comparing the molecular properties of mammalian melanopsin to those of invertebrate melanopsin and visual pigment. Our data show that the Schiff base linking the chromophore  ...[more]

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