This old version of Proteopedia is provided for student assignments while the new version is undergoing repairs. Content and edits done in this old version of Proteopedia after March 1, 2026 will eventually be lost when it is retired in about June of 2026.


Apply for new accounts at the new Proteopedia. Your logins will work in both the old and new versions.


Rhodopsin Structure and Function

From Proteopedia

(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
Current revision (14:35, 31 May 2021) (edit) (undo)
 
Line 40: Line 40:
<scene name='77/778331/Rhodopsin_and_ligand/1'>Rhodopsin and Ligand</scene> This is rhodopsin with 11-cis retinal bound. After 11-cis retinal becomes activated and becomes all-trans, rhodopsin undergoes the conformational change to become metarhodopsin I and then metarhodopsin II which is the fully active form of rhodopsin. Metarhodopsin II then associates with the G protein transducin and the signal cascade can continue.
<scene name='77/778331/Rhodopsin_and_ligand/1'>Rhodopsin and Ligand</scene> This is rhodopsin with 11-cis retinal bound. After 11-cis retinal becomes activated and becomes all-trans, rhodopsin undergoes the conformational change to become metarhodopsin I and then metarhodopsin II which is the fully active form of rhodopsin. Metarhodopsin II then associates with the G protein transducin and the signal cascade can continue.
 +
 +
See also:
 +
*[[Receptor]]
 +
*[[Transmembrane (cell surface) receptors]]
 +
*[[G protein-coupled receptors]]

Current revision

Bovine rhodopsin complex with retinal (PDB code 1jfp)

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate
Personal tools