Abstract
BACKGROUND: The vertebrate opsins are proteins which utilise a retinaldehyde chromophore in their photosensory or photoisomerase roles in the visual/irradiance detection cycle. The majority of the opsins, such as rod and cone opsins, have a very highly conserved gene structure suggesting a common lineage. Exceptions to this are RGR-opsin and melanopsin, whose genes have very different intron insertion positions. The gene structure of another opsin, peropsin (retinal pigment epithelium-derived rhodopsin homologue, RRH) is unknown. RESULTS: By in silico analysis of the GenBank database we have determined that the human RRH comprises 7 exons spanning approximately 16.5 kb and is localised to chromosome 4q25 in the following gene sequence: cen-EGF-RRH-IF-qter - a position that excludes this gene as a candidate for the RP29 autosomal recessive retinitis pigmentosa locus. A comparison of opsin gene structures reveals that RRH and RGR share two common intron (introns 1 and 4) insertion positions which may reflect a shared ancestral gene. CONCLUSION: The opsins comprise a diverse group of genes which appear to have arisen from three different lineages. These lineages comprise the "classical opsin superfamily" which includes the rod and cone opsins, pinopsin, VA-opsin, parapinopsin and encephalopsin; the RRH and RGR group; and the melanopsin line. A common lineage for RRH and RGR, together with their sites of expression in the RPE, indicates that peropsin may act as a retinal isomerase.
Original language | English |
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Journal | BMC Genomics |
Volume | 4( 1) |
Publication status | Published - 24 Jan 2003 |
Keywords
- genetics: Amino Acid Sequence
- Animals
- genetics: Base Sequence
- genetics: Carps
- genetics: Chickens
- methods: Chromosome Mapping
- genetics: Chromosomes, Human, Pair 4
- methods: Computational Biology
- Databases, Genetic
- Evolution, Molecular
- chemistry: Eye Proteins
- Humans
- Molecular Sequence Data
- genetics: Opsin
- metabolism: Pigment Epithelium of Eye
- chemistry: Receptors, Cell Surface
- Receptors, G-Protein-Coupled
- Rhodopsin