Visual cycle
The visual cycle is a process in the retina that replenishes the molecule retinal for its use in vision. Retinal is the chromophore of most visual opsins, meaning it captures the photons to begin the phototransduction cascade. When the photon is absorbed, the 11-cis retinal photoisomerizes into all-trans retinal as it is ejected from the opsin protein. Each molecule of retinal must travel from the photoreceptor cell to the RPE and back in order to be refreshed and combined with another opsin. This closed enzymatic pathway of 11-cis retinal is sometimes called Wald's visual cycle after George Wald, who received the Nobel Prize in 1967 for his work towards its discovery.
Retinal
Retinal is a chromophore that forms photosensitive retinylidene proteins when covalently bound to proteins called opsins. Retinal can be photoisomerized by itself, but requires to be bound to an opsin protein to both trigger the phototransduction cascade and tune the spectral sensitivity to longer wavelengths, which enable color vision.Retinal is a species of retinoid and the aldehyde form of vitamin A. Retinal is interconvertible with retinol, the transport and storage form of vitamin A. During the visual cycle, retinal moves between several different isomers and is also converted to retinol and retinyl ester. Retinoids can be derived from the oxidation of carotenoids like beta carotene or can be consumed directly. To reach the retina, it is bound to retinol binding protein and transthyretin, which prevents its filtration in the glomeruli.
As in transport via the RBP-transthyretin pathway, retinoids must always be bound to chaperone molecules, for several reasons. Retinoids are toxic, insoluble in aqueous solutions, and prone to oxidation, and as such they must be bound and protected when within the body. The body uses a variety of chaperones, particularly in the retina, to transport retinoids.
Overview
The visual cycle is consistent within mammals, and is summarized as follows:- all-trans-retinyl ester + H2O → 11-cis-retinol + fatty acid; RPE65 isomerohydrolases;
- 11-cis-retinol + NAD+ → 11-cis-retinal + NADH + H+; 11-cis-retinol dehydrogenases;
- 11-cis-retinal + aporhodopsin → rhodopsin + H2O; forms Schiff base linkage to lysine, -CH=N+H-;
- rhodopsin + hν → metarhodopsin II :
- :;
- metarhodopsin II + H2O → aporhodopsin + all-trans-retinal;
- all-trans-retinal + NADPH + H+ → all-trans-retinol + NADP+; all-trans-retinol dehydrogenases;
- all-trans-retinol + fatty acid → all-trans-retinyl ester + H2O; lecithin retinol acyltransferases.
Description
When a photon is absorbed, 11-cis-retinal is transformed to all-trans-retinal, and it moves to the exit site of rhodopsin. It will not leave the opsin protein until another fresh chromophore comes to replace it, except for in the ABCR pathway. Whilst still bound to the opsin, all-trans-retinal is transformed into all-trans-retinol by all-trans-retinol dehydrogenase. It then proceeds to the cell membrane of the rod, where it is chaperoned to the retinal pigment epithelium by interphotoreceptor retinoid-binding protein. It then enters the RPE cells, and is transferred to the cellular retinol binding protein chaperone.When inside the RPE cell, bound to CRBP, the all-trans-retinol is esterified by lecithin retinol acyltransferase to form a retinyl ester. The retinyl esters of the RPE are chaperoned by a protein known as RPE65. It is in this form that the RPE stores most of its retinoids, as the RPE stores 2-3 times more retinoids than the neural retina itself. When further chromophore is required, the retinyl esters are acted on by isomerohydrolase to produce 11-cis-retinol, which is transferred to the cellular retinaldehyde binding protein. 11-cis-Retinol is transformed into 11-cis retinal by 11-cis-retinol dehydrogenase, then it is shipped back to the photoreceptor cells via IRBP. There, it replaces the spent chromophore in opsin molecules, rendering the opsin photosensitive.