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Lecture #5 Vertebrate visual pigments 2/7/13
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HW #3 There are two things on the assignment page: Assign#3.pdf which has the homework problems HumanGreenRedCones.xlsx which is a spreadsheet you can use for one of the problems I think I turned on online submissions but you don’t have to use that
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Today’s topics Visual pigments and opsin genes Opsin gene classes and diversity in vertebrates Primates: di- and trichromacy
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What absorbs light in a visual pigment? 1 2 3 O 11-cis
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Where does it come from?
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Your body turns -carotene into vitamin A All trans-retinOL
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Where does it come from? Vitamin A is converted to 11-cis retinal (visual cycle)
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Absorption spectrum of 11-cis retinal J Biol Chem 1956 George Wald Nobel Prize 1967
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Absorption spectrum of 11-cis retinal 378 nm
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11-cis retinal absorption
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11-cis retinal vs human visual pigments - opsin shift 11-cis S M L
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What is a visual pigment? Opsin protein surrounding and bound to 11-cis retinal Transmembrane protein Contained in the membrane G protein coupled receptor Turns on a G protein
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Membrane holds the visual pigment Rods have discs Cones have continuous membrane
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Opsin protein is threaded through the membrane 80% of protein in outer segment is rhodopsin
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Rhodopsin crystal structure
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Visual pigment =opsin + retinal 11-cis retinal membrane In rod, visual pigment is called rhodopsin
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Retinal is in binding pocket of opsin protein Chang et al. 1995
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11-cis bond isomerizes to form all trans Chang et al. 1995
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Light causes isomerization 11-cis retinal + photon = all trans retinal 1 2 3 Light
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Absorbing light
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Excited state - stays as metaII Meta II actually is what can activate the G protein
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Excited state - stays as metaII Eventually the excited state decays All trans retinal dissociates, leaving opsin Opsin recombines with new 11cis retinal
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Electronic energy levels of visual pigment molecule Ground state Excited state
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Electronic energy levels of visual pigment molecule Ground state Excited state light E = hc/λ Visual pigment absorbs light at wavelengths which can excite electrons to upper excited state
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Opsin interacts with retinal to make ground and excited states closer together Ground state Excited state light E = hc/λ Energy needed to excite electrons goes down Absorption is at longer wavelength
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Opsin interacts with retinal to make ground and excited states farther apart Ground state Excited state light E = hc/λ Energy needed to excite electrons goes up Absorption is at shorter wavelength
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Opsin is bound to and surrounds 11-cis retinal Chang et al. 1995
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How do we get one rod and three cone visual pigments? Cones: max = 420, 535, 565 nm Rod: max = 505 nm
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Put a different opsin protein in each cone type Webvision Blue cone - blue opsin Green cone - green opsin Red cone - red opsin Rod - rhodopsin
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Blue opsin versus green opsin
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Human rhodopsin sequence
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Human Rh sequence
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Nathans et al 1986
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Humans have 3 cone opsin genes Blue opsin - 5 exons Green and red - 6 exons
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Sequences for human green and red opsin genes are VERY similar HumanGreen MAQQWSLQRLAGRHPQDSYEDSTQSSIFTYTNSNSTRGPFEGPNYHIAPRWVYHLTSVWM 60 HumanRed MAQQWSLQRLAGRHPQDSYEDSTQSSIFTYTNSNSTRGPFEGPNYHIAPRWVYHLTSVWM 60 ************************************************************ HumanGreen IFVVIASVFTNGLVLAATMKFKKLRHPLNWILVNLAVADLAETVIASTISVVNQVYGYFV 120 HumanRed IFVVTASVFTNGLVLAATMKFKKLRHPLNWILVNLAVADLAETVIASTISIVNQVSGYFV 120 **** *********************************************:**** **** HumanGreen LGHPMCVLEGYTVSLCGITGLWSLAIISWERWMVVCKPFGNVRFDAKLAIVGIAFSWIWA 180 HumanRed LGHPMCVLEGYTVSLCGITGLWSLAIISWERWLVVCKPFGNVRFDAKLAIVGIAFSWIWS 180 ********************************:**************************: HumanGreen AVWTAPPIFGWSRYWPHGLKTSCGPDVFSGSSYPGVQSYMIVLMVTCCITPLSIIVLCYL 240 HumanRed AVWTAPPIFGWSRYWPHGLKTSCGPDVFSGSSYPGVQSYMIVLMVTCCIIPLAIIMLCYL 240 ************************************************* **:**:**** HumanGreen QVWLAIRAVAKQQKESESTQKAEKEVTRMVVVMVLAFCFCWGPYAFFACFAAANPGYPFH 300 HumanRed QVWLAIRAVAKQQKESESTQKAEKEVTRMVVVMIFAYCVCWGPYTFFACFAAANPGYAFH 300 *********************************::*:*.*****:************.** HumanGreen PLMAALPAFFAKSATIYNPVIYVFMNRQFRNCILQLFGKKVDDGSELSSASKTEVSSVSS 360 HumanRed PLMAALPAYFAKSATIYNPVIYVFMNRQFRNCILQLFGKKVDDGSELSSASKTEVSSVSS 360 ********:*************************************************** HumanGreen VSPA 364 HumanRed VSPA 364 **** Differ by 15 AA
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Why opsins are so cool You can grow cells that express ANY opsin protein you want You can add 11-cis retinal and purify the protein + 11-cis retinal
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Why opsins are so cool You can grow cells that express ANY opsin protein you want You can add 11-cis retinal and purify the protein You can measure the absorption spectrum for that visual pigment + 11-cis retinal
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You can mutate one amino acid and see how absorption peak shifts F261 + 11-cis retinal F261 Y261 + 11-cis retinal Y261
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Changing site 261 from F to Y shifts absorption peak by +10 nm
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Human red and green opsins 535 nm 565 nm A S A A164S=+2 nm Y F T F261Y=+10 nm A269T=+14 nm These 3 AA explain most of the shift between red and green opsin genes
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Location of human opsin genes Rhodopsin Chr 3 Blue opsin Chr 7 Exon Red and green opsin - X chromosome
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Normal DNA recombination Switches genes from one chromosome to the other Leads to new gene combinations
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Mismatched recombination If chromosomes misalign, recombination leads to gain in genes on one chromosome and loss of genes on the other. Tandem arrays of genes
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Opsin gene tandem arrays on X chromosome Humans differ in how many copies they have of green gene. Only first 2 genes are expressed so it doesn’t matter if there are more green genes. They are just along for ride.
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Misaligned recombination If recombination happens within gene, get chimera Intermediate phenotype which results in color blindness Opsin genes on X chromosome
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Human red and green opsins 535 nm 565 nm A S A A164S=+2 nm Y F T F261Y=+10 nm A269T=+14 nm 554 nm Chimera has intermediate peak wavelength A YT
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Protanope - no red cones 1% males 0.01% females max = 420, 535nm
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Deuteranope - no green cones 1% males 0.01% females max = 420, 565 nm
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Protanomoly - red pigment shifted towards green max = 420, 535, 550 nm 1% male 0.01% female
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Deuteranomoly - green pigment shifted towards red max = 420, 554, 565 nm 5% male 0.04% female
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Mutations in human opsin genes Protanope Deuteranope Protanomalous Deuteranomalous
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Color “blindness” DeficiencyMalesFemales Protanopia1%0.01% Deuteranopia1%0.01% Protanomoly1%0.01% Deuteranomoly5%0.4% Total (red-green)8%0.5% Tritanopia0.008%
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Phylogenetics Compare sequences and determine the relatedness of things -Calculate % similarity of DNA or AA sequences Draw relatedness as a tree Human Mouse Bird Human Mouse Bird
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Vertebrates Placental mammalsAmphibians MarsupialsBirds ReptilesCartilagenous fish Bony fishJawless fish
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Vertebrate relationships and divergence times Kumar and Hedges 1998 Mammals, 100 MY Fish, 450 MY
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Trees can also tell you about genes What organisms have the gene? Where did the gene come from? What happens to the gene once it’s there? Duplicate - tandem - mRNA can be inserted Lost
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Line lengths are proportional to how different sequences are Human Chimp Dog Humans and chimps had a common ancestor 5-6 MYa so genes will be very similar Dogs and other mammals are about 100 MY apart so genes will be 20x more different from human as compared to human-chimp
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Default expectation - if gene arose early in vertebrates, all species will have a copy and gene will be related in same way as organisms Dog Gene A Opossum Gene A Chicken Gene A Frog Gene A Zebrafish Gene A
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Examine whether a gene exists in all organisms Dog Gene A Opossum Gene A Chicken Gene A Frog Gene A Zebrafish No A Gained
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Examine whether a gene exists in all organisms Mouse Platypus Chicken Frog Pufferfish lost
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What is happening? Gene duplication Human Gene A Chicken Gene A Frog Gene A Zebrafish Gene A1 Dog Gene A Zebrafish Gene A2
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Human Chicken Frog Zebrafish Dog Human Chicken Frog Zebrafish Dog Lamprey Gene duplication GeneA2 GeneA1 Gene A
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Human Frog Dog Chicken Frog Zebrafish Lamprey GeneA2 GeneA1 Gene A
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Human Chicken Frog Zebrafish Dog Human Chicken Frog Zebrafish Dog Gene duplication and then losses Lamprey Gene A2 Gene A1
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Opsin genes Opsin genes can duplicate Tandem duplication Chromosomal duplication Whole genome duplication Opsin genes can be lost Can reinsert from mRNA No introns
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Opsin genes from: Lamprey (jawless vertebrate) Zebrafish Anole (reptile) Chicken (bird) Mouse Human
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LWS RH2 SWS2 SWS1 RH1 What does this tree tell us?
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Conclusions from opsin tree #1 5 opsin classes arose very early in vertebrates SWS1 - very short wavelength sensitive SWS2 - short wavelength sensitive RH2 - like rhopopsin but in cones LWS - long wavelength sensitive RH1 - rhodopsin rods cones
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Range of cone visual pigment λ max SWS1 SWS2 RH2 LWS
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Conclusion #2 Rod opsins evolved from cone opsins LWS SWS1 SWS2 RH2 RH1
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LWS RH2 SWS2 SWS1 RH1 Mammalian genes
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Conclusion #3 Mammals lost two of the opsin classes Mammals have LWS, SWS1 and RH1 Only 2 cone opsins (dichromat) Dogs, cats, mice, rats, horses, goats, pigs … Mammals went through “nocturnal period” during reign of dinosaurs
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“Rugrats”
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“Spike’s view”
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Spike’s view?
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LWS RH2 SWS2 SWS1 RH1 Human genes
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Conclusion #4 Primates had a duplication of the LWS gene Went from dichromatic to trichromatic
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Human green and red opsins are part of LWS class = M/LWS max = 535, 565 nm
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M/LWS opsin duplication on X chromosome Rhodopsin Chr 3 Blue opsin Chr 7 Red and green opsin - X chromosome
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New world vs Old world primates X X
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Why trichromacy? Why two ‘ LWS ’ cone types? Dichromacy with a single LWS and an SWS1 cone type gives no red-green discrimination. Jim Bowmaker
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Trichromacy with two ‘ LWS ’ cone types and an SWS1 cone gives red-green discrimination. Ripe fruit and young, more reddish leaves can be detected against the dappled green foliage. Jim Bowmaker
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