Predicting peak spectral sensitivities of vertebrate cone visual pigments using atomistic molecular simulations
ORAL
Abstract
Vertebrate visual perception is initiated when light strikes rod and cone photoreceptors within the retina of the eye. Peak spectral sensitivities ($\lambda_{\mathrm{max}})$ of visual pigments, are a function of the type of chromophore and the amino acid sequence of the associated opsin protein in the photoreceptors. To determine how minor sequence differences could result in large spectral shifts, we selected a spectrally-diverse group of 14 teleost Rh2 cone opsins for which sequences and $\lambda _{\mathrm{max\thinspace }}$are experimentally known. Molecular dynamics simulations were carried out after embedding cone opsin homology structures within explicit bilayers and water. Simulations revealed structural features of the chromophore, that contributed to diverged spectral sensitivities. Statistical tests performed on all the observed structural parameters of the chromophore revealed that a two-term, first-order regression model was sufficient to accurately predict $\lambda_{\mathrm{max\thinspace }}$(R$^{\mathrm{2}}$=$0.94)$ over a range of 452-528 nm. This approach was efficient and simple in that site-by-site molecular modifications were not required to predict $\lambda_{\mathrm{max}}$.
*This research was supported by the Center for Modeling Complex Interactions sponsored by the NIGMS under award number NIH P20 GM104420, through a Modeling Access Grant to DLS that supported JSP, CJB, and FMY, and by NIH R01 EY012146 (DLS).
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