Physiological Studies of the Interaction Between Opsin and Chromophore in Rod and Cone Visual Pigments
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The visual pigment in vertebrate photoreceptors is a G protein-coupled receptor that consists of a protein, opsin, covalently
attached to a chromophore, 11-cis-
retinal. Activation of the visual pigment by light triggers a transduction cascade that produces experimentally measurable
electrical responses in photoreceptors. The interactions between opsin and chromophore can be investigated with electrophysiologial
recordings in intact amphibian and mouse rod and cone photoreceptor cells. Here we describe methods for substituting the native
chromophore with various chromophore analogs to investigate how specific parts of the chromophore affect the signaling properties
of the visual pigment and the function of photoreceptors. We also describe methods for genetically substituting the native
rod opsin gene with cone opsins or with mutant rod opsins to investigate and compare their signaling properties. These methods
are useful not only for understanding the relation between the properties of visual pigments and the function of photoreceptors
but also for understanding the mechanisms by which mutations in rod opsin produce night blindness and other visual disorders.