follows the renewal of the retinal chromophore. It runs in parallel to the phototransduction pathway. Rhodopsin is an essential G-protein coupled receptor in
phototransduction.
Activation In rhodopsin, the aldehyde group of retinal is covalently linked to the amino group of a lysine residue on the protein in a protonated
Schiff base (-NH+=CH-). The photoisomerization dynamics has been subsequently investigated with time-resolved
IR spectroscopy and
UV/Vis spectroscopy. A first photoproduct called
photorhodopsin forms within 200
femtoseconds after irradiation, followed within
picoseconds by a second one called
bathorhodopsin with distorted all-trans bonds. This intermediate can be trapped and studied at
cryogenic temperatures, and was initially referred to as prelumirhodopsin. In subsequent intermediates
lumirhodopsin and
metarhodopsin I, the Schiff's base linkage to all-trans retinal remains protonated, and the protein retains its reddish color. The critical change that initiates the neuronal excitation involves the conversion of metarhodopsin I to
metarhodopsin II, which is associated with deprotonation of the Schiff's base and change in color from red to yellow.
Phototransduction cascade The product of light activation, Metarhodopsin II, initiates the
visual phototransduction second messenger pathway by stimulating the
G-protein transducin (Gt), resulting in the liberation of its α subunit. This
guanosine triphosphate (GTP)-bound subunit in turn
activates a
cGMP phosphodiesterase. The cGMP phosphodiesterase hydrolyzes (breaks down)
cGMP, lowering its local concentration so it can no longer activate cGMP-dependent
cation channels. This leads to the hyperpolarization of photoreceptor cells, changing the rate at which they release transmitters. Rhodopsin pigment must be regenerated for further phototransduction to occur. This means replacing all-trans-retinal with 11-cis-retinal and the decay of Meta II is crucial in this process. During the decay of Meta II, the Schiff base link that normally holds all-trans-retinal and the apoprotein opsin (aporhodopsin) is hydrolyzed and becomes Meta III. In the rod outer segment, Meta III decays into separate all-trans-retinal and opsin. A second product of Meta II decay is an all-trans-retinal opsin complex in which the all-trans-retinal has been translocated to second binding sites. Whether the Meta II decay runs into Meta III or the all-trans-retinal opsin complex seems to depend on the pH of the reaction. Higher pH tends to drive the decay reaction towards Meta III. == Diseases of the retina ==