Mammals express four arrestin subtypes and each arrestin subtype is known by multiple aliases. The systematic arrestin name (1–4) plus the most widely used aliases for each arrestin subtype are listed in bold below: •
Arrestin-1 was originally identified as the
S-antigen (SAG) causing uveitis (autoimmune eye disease), then independently described as a 48 kDa protein that binds light-activated phosphorylated rhodopsin before it became clear that both are one and the same. It was later renamed visual arrestin, but when another cone-specific visual subtype was cloned the term
rod arrestin was coined. This also turned out to be a misnomer: arrestin-1 expresses at comparable very high levels in both rod and cone
photoreceptor cells. •
Arrestin-2 was the first non-visual arrestin cloned. It was first named
β-arrestin simply because of the two
GPCRs available in purified form at the time,
rhodopsin and
β2-adrenergic receptor, it showed preference for the latter. •
Arrestin-3. The second non-visual arrestin cloned was first termed
β-arrestin-2 (retroactively changing the name of β-arrestin into β-arrestin-1), even though by that time it was clear that non-visual arrestins interact with hundreds of different GPCRs, not just with β2-adrenergic receptor. Systematic names, arrestin-2 and arrestin-3, respectively, were proposed soon after that. •
Arrestin-4 was cloned by two groups and termed
cone arrestin, after photoreceptor type that expresses it, and X-arrestin, after the chromosome where its gene resides. In the
HUGO database its gene is called
arrestin-3. Other
arrestin-like proteins include mammalian ARRDC1–5 and thioredoxin-interacting protein (TXNIP), in addition to
VPS26A and
VPS26B, which fold like the true arrestins but share only roughly 10% amino acid identity and 20% homology overall. Fish and other vertebrates appear to have only three arrestins: no equivalent of arrestin-2, which is the most abundant non-visual subtype in mammals, was cloned so far. The
proto-chordate Ciona intestinalis (sea squirt) has only one arrestin, which serves as visual in its mobile larva with highly developed eyes, and becomes generic non-visual in the blind sessile adult. Conserved positions of multiple introns in its gene and those of our arrestin subtypes suggest that they all evolved from this ancestral arrestin. Lower invertebrates, such as roundworm
Caenorhabditis elegans, also have only one arrestin. Insects have arr1 and arr2, originally termed
visual arrestins because they are expressed in photoreceptors, and one non-visual subtype (kurtz in
Drosophila). Later arr1 and arr2 were found to play an important role in olfactory neurons and renamed
sensory. Fungi have distant arrestin relatives involved in pH sensing. == Tissue distribution ==