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Rhodopsin, light-sensor of vision

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PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.preteyeres.2022.101116

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Rhodopsin; Protein structure; G protein-coupled receptor; Receptor activation; Receptor shut-off; Rod photoreceptor; Phototransduction; Transducin; Rhodopsin kinase; Arrestin

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This article mainly introduces the light sensor of vertebrate scotopic vision, rhodopsin, which has remarkable physicochemical properties. The article describes the structural features, evolution, and activation mechanisms of rhodopsin, as well as light absorption, spectral sensitivity, photoreceptor electrical responses, and recovery of rhodopsin and the visual system from intense bleaching exposures. It then provides a detailed examination of rhodopsin's molecular structure and function.
The light sensor of vertebrate scotopic (low-light) vision, rhodopsin, is a G-protein-coupled receptor comprising a polypeptide chain with bound chromophore, 11-cis-retinal, that exhibits remarkable physicochemical properties. This photopigment is extremely stable in the dark, yet its chromophore isomerises upon photon absorption with 70% efficiency, enabling the activation of its G-protein, transducin, with high efficiency. Rhodopsin's photochemical and biochemical activities occur over very different time-scales: the energy of retinaldehyde's excited state is stored in <1 ps in retinal-protein interactions, but it takes milliseconds for the catalytically active state to form, and many tens of minutes for the resting state to be restored. In this review, we describe the properties of rhodopsin and its role in rod phototransduction. We first introduce rhodopsin's gross structural features, its evolution, and the basic mechanisms of its activation. We then discuss light absorption and spectral sensitivity, photoreceptor electrical responses that result from the activity of individual rhodopsin molecules, and recovery of rhodopsin and the visual system from intense bleaching exposures. We then provide a detailed examination of rhodopsin's molecular structure and function, first in its dark state, and then in the active Meta states that govern its interactions with transducin, rhodopsin kinase and arrestin. While it is clear that rhodopsin's molecular properties are exquisitely honed for phototransduction, from starlight to dawn/dusk intensity levels, our understanding of how its molecular interactions determine the properties of scotopic vision remains incomplete. We describe potential future directions of research, and outline several major problems that remain to be solved.

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