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Divergent G-protein selectivity across melanopsins from mice and humans

Richard J McDowell, Jessica Rodgers, Nina Milosavljevic, Robert J. Lucas

2022Journal of Cell Science12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Melanopsin is an opsin photopigment and light-activated G-protein-coupled receptor; it is expressed in photoreceptive retinal ganglion cells (mRGCs) and can be employed as an optogenetic tool. Mammalian melanopsins can signal via Gq/11 and Gi/o/t heterotrimeric G proteins, but aspects of the mRGC light response appear incompatible with either mode of signalling. We use live-cell reporter assays in HEK293T cells to show that melanopsins from mice and humans can also signal via Gs. We subsequently show that this mode of signalling is substantially divergent between species. The two established structural isoforms of mouse melanopsin (which differ in the length of their C-terminal tail) both signalled strongly through all three G-protein classes (Gq/11, Gi/o and Gs), whereas human melanopsin showed weaker signalling through Gs. Our data identify Gs as a new mode of signalling for mammalian melanopsins and reveal diversity in G-protein selectivity across mammalian melanopsins.

Topics & Concepts

MelanopsinBiologyHeterotrimeric G proteinOpsinG proteinPhotopigmentGq alpha subunitCell biologyHEK 293 cellsG protein-coupled receptorOptogeneticsSignal transductionIntrinsically photosensitive retinal ganglion cellsGene isoformReceptorRhodopsinRetinalNeuroscienceGeneticsBiochemistryGeneRetinal ganglion cellPhotoreceptor and optogenetics researchCircadian rhythm and melatoninRetinal Development and Disorders
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