13-Desmethyl Rhodopsin and 13-Desmethyl Isorhodopsin: Visual Pigment Analogues
Abstract
The preparation and properties of three geometric isomers of 13-desmethyl retinal (13-dmr) are described. They are analogous to the all-trans, 11-cis, and 9-cis isomers of retinal since two of the cis isomers combine with cattle opsin to form pigments which are spectrally indistinguishable from rhodopsin and isorhodopsin and the all-trans isomer is unreactive. The pigment which resembles rhodopsin, 13-desmethyl (13-dm) rhodopsin, is formed at about one ninth the rate at which 11-cis retinal reacts with opsin at 20°C. The reaction with 13-dmr does not go to completion; and 0.05 M hydroxylamine, to which rhodopsin is stable, decomposes 13-dm rhodopsin. Irradiation of 13-dm rhodopsin results in a cis → trans isomerization of the chromophore; but the photosensitivity of 13-dm rhodopsin is only 40 per cent that of rhodopsin. 13-dm isorhodopsin, the 13-desmethyl analogue of isorhodopsin, is formed at approximately the same specific rate as 13-dm rhodopsin. The reaction goes to completion and the pigment is not decomposed by 0.03 M hydroxylamine. 13-dm isorhodopsin can also be photolyzed to the all-trans chromophore plus opsin.
- Publication:
-
Proceedings of the National Academy of Science
- Pub Date:
- June 1970
- DOI:
- 10.1073/pnas.66.2.531
- Bibcode:
- 1970PNAS...66..531N