Apo-Opsin and Its Dark Constitutive Activity across Retinal Cone Subtypes.

Curr Biol

Solomon H. Snyder Department of Neuroscience, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA; Department of Ophthalmology, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA. Electronic address:

Published: December 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • Retinal rod and cone photoreceptors are responsible for vision in low and bright light, converting absorbed light into neural signals through similar mechanisms.
  • Unlike rod pigments, cone pigments can break down into apo-opsin and retinal in darkness, causing constant electrical noise even without light exposure.
  • A study on goldfish cones reveals varying levels of dark apo-opsin: approximately 30% in red (L), 3% in green (M), and nearly none in blue (S) cones, suggesting that this noise may influence vision in low-light situations.

Article Abstract

Retinal rod and cone photoreceptors mediate vision in dim and bright light, respectively, by transducing absorbed photons into neural electrical signals. Their phototransduction mechanisms are essentially identical. However, one difference is that, whereas a rod visual pigment remains stable in darkness, a cone pigment has some tendency to dissociate spontaneously into apo-opsin and retinal (the chromophore) without isomerization. This cone-pigment property is long known but has mostly been overlooked. Importantly, because apo-opsin has weak constitutive activity, it triggers transduction to produce electrical noise even in darkness. Currently, the precise dark apo-opsin contents across cone subtypes are mostly unknown, as are their dark activities. We report here a study of goldfish red (L), green (M), and blue (S) cones, finding with microspectrophotometry widely different apo-opsin percentages in darkness, being ∼30% in L cones, ∼3% in M cones, and negligible in S cones. L and M cones also had higher dark apo-opsin noise than holo-pigment thermal isomerization activity. As such, given the most likely low signal amplification at the pigment-to-transducin/phosphodiesterase phototransduction step, especially in L cones, apo-opsin noise may not be easily distinguishable from light responses and thus may affect cone vision near threshold.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8561704PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2020.09.062DOI Listing

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