Structure and function in rhodopsin: expression of functional mammalian opsin in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

1996 
Abstract The yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae has been investigated for expression of mammalian opsin as an alternative to the currently used expression in COS-1 mammalian cells. The synthetic opsin gene was placed under the control of the inducible promoter GAL1 in the multicopy yeast/ Escherichia coli shuttle vector YEpRF1. Transformation of a GAL+ S. cerevisiae strain with the vector and growth of galactose-induced cultures to saturation showed the production of 2.0 +/- 0.5 mg of opsin from about 10(10) cells by ELISA. The addition of 11-cis-retinal to either cell spheroplasts or lysed cells showed that a fraction (2-4%) of the total expressed opsin reconstituted to rhodopsin. This fraction was purified to homogeneity and was shown to be fully functional and indistinguishable from bovine rhodopsin by the following criteria: (i) UV-visible absorption spectra, (ii) the formation of metarhodopsin II and its rate of decay, and (iii) initial rate of transducin activation as measured by the formation of a complex between transducin (alpha subunit) and guanosine 5'-[gamma-[35S]thio]triphosphate. The purified fraction was homogeneously glycosylated. However, glycosylation was distinct from that of bovine rhodopsin as judged by mobility on SDS/PAGE and endoglycosidase H sensitivity.
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