Cyclophilin-related protein RanBP2 acts as chaperone for red/green opsin
doi: 10.1038/383637a0
pmid: 8857542
Cyclophilin-related protein RanBP2 acts as chaperone for red/green opsin
Cyclophilins are ubiquitous and abundant proteins that exhibit peptidyl prolyl cis-trans isomerization (PPlase) activity in vitro. Their functions in vivo, however, are not well understood. Two new retinal cyclophilin isoforms, types I and II, are highly expressed in cone photoreceptors of the vertebrate retina. Type-II cyclophilin is identical to RanBP2, a large protein that binds the GTPase Ran. Here we report that two contiguous domains in RanBP2, Ran-binding domain 4 (RBD4) and cyclophilin, act in concert as a chaperone for the opsin molecule of the red/green-sensitive visual pigment of a dichromatic vertebrate. In Drosophila, the cyclophilin NinaA is expressed in all photoreceptors and is required for the expression of only a subset of opsins. The molecular basis of these photoreceptor class-specific effects and the functions of NinaA and other cyclophilins in vivo remain unclear. Unlike NinaA, which forms a stable complex with opsin from retinular cells R1-6, we find that the cyclophilin domain of RanBP2 does not bind opsin directly; rather, it augments and stabilizes the interaction between red/green (R/G) opsin and the RBD4 domain. This involves a cyclophilin-mediated modification of R/G opsin, possibly involving proline isomerization. The RBD4-cyclophilin supradomain of RanBP2, therefore, is a form of vertebrate chaperone of defined substrate specificity, which may be involved in the processing and/or transport of long-wavelength opsin in cone photoreceptor cells.
- The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center United States
Binding Sites, Chaperonins, Recombinant Fusion Proteins, Rod Opsins, Nuclear Proteins, Peptidylprolyl Isomerase, Retina, DNA-Binding Proteins, Nuclear Pore Complex Proteins, COS Cells, Animals, Humans, Cattle, Drosophila, Carrier Proteins, Amino Acid Isomerases, Molecular Chaperones, Protein Binding
Binding Sites, Chaperonins, Recombinant Fusion Proteins, Rod Opsins, Nuclear Proteins, Peptidylprolyl Isomerase, Retina, DNA-Binding Proteins, Nuclear Pore Complex Proteins, COS Cells, Animals, Humans, Cattle, Drosophila, Carrier Proteins, Amino Acid Isomerases, Molecular Chaperones, Protein Binding
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