Regulation of sorting and post-Golgi trafficking of rhodopsin by its C-terminal sequence QVS(A)PA

  1. Dusanka Deretic*,,,
  2. Sonia Schmerl*,
  3. Paul A. Hargrave§,
  4. Anatol Arendt§, and
  5. J. Hugh McDowell§
  1. Departments of *Ophthalmology and Anatomy and Cell Biology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48105; and §Department of Ophthalmology, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32610
  1. Communicated by Thaddeus P. Dryja, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA (received for review March 17, 1998)

Abstract

Several mutations that cause severe forms of the human disease autosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa cluster in the C-terminal region of rhodopsin. Recent studies have implicated the C-terminal domain of rhodopsin in its trafficking on specialized post-Golgi membranes to the rod outer segment of the photoreceptor cell. Here we used synthetic peptides as competitive inhibitors of rhodopsin trafficking in the frog retinal cell-free system to delineate the potential regulatory sequence within the C terminus of rhodopsin and model the effects of severe retinitis pigmentosa alleles on rhodopsin sorting. The rhodopsin C-terminal sequence QVS(A)PA is highly conserved among different species. Peptides that correspond to the C terminus of bovine (amino acids 324–348) and frog (amino acids 330–354) rhodopsin inhibited post-Golgi trafficking by 50% and 60%, respectively, and arrested newly synthesized rhodopsin in the trans-Golgi network. Peptides corresponding to the cytoplasmic loops of rhodopsin and other control peptides had no effect. When three naturally occurring mutations: Q344ter (lacking the last five amino acids QVAPA), V345M, and P347S were introduced into the frog C-terminal peptide, the inhibitory activity of the peptides was no longer detectable. These observations suggest that the amino acids QVS(A)PA comprise a signal that is recognized by specific factors in the trans-Golgi network. A lack of recognition of this sequence, because of mutations in the last five amino acids causing autosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa, most likely results in abnormal post-Golgi membrane formation and in an aberrant subcellular localization of rhodopsin.

Footnotes

  • To whom reprint requests should be addressed at: Kellogg Eye Center, University of Michigan, 1000 Wall Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48105. e-mail: dereticd{at}umich.edu.

  • ABBREVIATIONS:
    ROS,
    rod outer segment(s);
    TGN,
    trans-Golgi network;
    PNS,
    postnuclear supernatant;
    ADRP,
    autosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa;
    ER,
    endoplasmic reticulum
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