Retinal

Retinal

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ImageFile = Retinal structure.png ImageSize =
IUPACName =
OtherNames =
Formula = C20H28O
PubChem = 1070
SMILES =
MolarMass= 284.436
Appearance =
CASNo = 116-31-4
Density=
MeltingPt= 63 °C
BoilingPt=
Solubility =
MainHazards =
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Autoignition =

Retinal, technically called retinene1 or retinaldehyde, is a light-sensitive retinene molecule found in the photoreceptor cells of the retina. Retinal is the fundamental chromophore involved in the transduction of light into visual signals, i.e. nerve impulses, in the visual system of the central nervous system.

Overview

The molecule that takes part in the initial step in the vision process, rhodopsin, has two components called 11-cis retinal and opsin. Retinal is a light-sensitive derivative of vitamin A, and opsin is a protein molecule. Rhodopsin is found in the rod cells of the eye. 11-cis retinal is a powerful absorber of light because it is a polyene; its 6 alternating single and double bonds make up a long conjugated electron network. When no light is present, the 11-cis retinal molecule is found in a "bent (cis) configuration" ("fig A"), and as such it is attached to the opsin molecule in a stable arrangement:

When light strikes the retina, a retinal molecule may absorb a photon, promoting it into an excited electronic state. The nature of the excited state is not well understood, but it is known that within 200 femtoseconds it returns to the ground electronic state.cite journal | title = Quantumchemische berekeningen aan retinal-modelstoffen | first = W.C.A. | last = van Dorst | coauthors = Buck, H.M., Dormans, G.J.M. | publisher = Eindhoven University of Technology, Faculty of Chemical Technology, Organic Chemistry dept | date = 28 Januari 1987 | language = Dutch | pages = 35 pages] One third of these events cause no net change, while the remaining two thirds induce a rotation in the pi bond found between the eleventh and twelfth carbon atoms. In other words, the 11-cis retinal is transformed into the all-trans retinal ("fig B") in a straightened configuration. [cite book|author=Chang, Raymond |title=Chemistry, 6th Ed.|location=New York | publisher=McGraw Hill|year=1998|id=ISBN 0-07-115221-0]

The all-trans retinal configuration, subsequently, does not fit into the binding site of the opsin molecule; as a result, upon isomerization, the trans isomer separates from the protein, which triggers a G protein signaling pathway' including transducin, that results in the generation of an electrical impulse, which is transmitted through the optic nerve to the brain for processing.

It takes a minimum of five photons to trigger a nerve impulse. [cite book|author=Feynman, Richard |title=QED - The Strange Theory of Light and Matter|location=Princeton, New Jersey | publisher=Princeton University Press|year=1985|id=ISBN 0-691-02417-0] In the absence of light, enzymes mediate the isomerization of all-trans back to the 11-cis configuration, and rhodopsin is regenerated by a new formation of a Schiff base linkage, which actuates the binding of the cis isomer to opsin. This is the basic mechanism of the vision cycle.

All-trans-retinal is also an essential component of type I, or microbial, opsins such as bacteriorhodopsin, channelrhodopsin, and halorhodopsin. In these molecules, light causes the all-trans-retinal to become 13-cis retinal, [J Photochem Photobiol B. 2002 Apr;66(3):188-94.] which then cycles back to all-trans-retinal in the dark state.



History

This photon induced retinal-bending mechanism was discovered in 1958 by the American biochemist George Wald and his co-workers. For his work, Wald won a share of the 1967 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine with Haldan Keffer Hartline and Ragnar Granit. [ [http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/medicine/laureates/1967/ 1967 Nobel Prize in Medicine] ]

ee also

*Sensory system
*Vision
*The Visual Cycle

References

External links

* [http://www.accessexcellence.org/AE/AEC/CC/vision_background.html First Steps of Vision] - National Health Museum
* [http://www.chemistry.wustl.edu/~edudev/LabTutorials/Vision/Vision.html Vision and Light-Induced Molecular Changes]
* [http://palaeo-electronica.org/2000_1/retinal/vision.htm Retinal Anatomy and Visual Capacities]
* [http://www.ch.ic.ac.uk/vchemlib/mim/bristol/retinal/retinal_text.htm Retinal]


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Look at other dictionaries:

  • Rétinal — Tout trans rétinal Général Nom IUPAC (2E,4E,6E,8E) 3,7 dimethyl 9 (2,6,6 trimethylcyclohexen 1 yl)nona 2,4,6,8 tetraenal …   Wikipédia en Français

  • retinal — carotenoide componente de los pigmentos visuales. De los 16 isoméros posibles el 11 cis retinal es el cromóforo de la mayor parte de las opsinas naturales estructura química [véase http://www.iqb.es/diccio/r/re.htm#retinal] Diccionario ilustrado… …   Diccionario médico

  • rétinal — [ retinal ] n. m. • 1972; de rétine ♦ Biol. Aldéhyde de la vitamine A entrant, avec l opsine, dans la composition du pourpre rétinien. (Plur. inus. rétinals.) ● rétinal ou rétinène nom masculin Aldéhyde diterpénique C20H28O, apparenté au rétinol …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Retinal — Ret i*nal, a. (Anat.) Of or pertaining to the retina. [1913 Webster] {Retinal purple} (Physiol. Chem.), the visual purple. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Retinal — Ret i*nal, n. (Chem.) A retinoid compound ({C20H28O}), closely related to vitamin A, which is a component of the visual pigments in the eye. It is also called {retinaldehyde} and {vitamin A aldehyde}. [PJC] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Retinal — ⇒ Axerophthol …   Deutsch wörterbuch der biologie

  • retinal — (adj.) 1838; see RETINA (Cf. retina) + AL (Cf. al) (1) …   Etymology dictionary

  • retinal — [ret′ n əl] adj. of or related to a retina n. Biochem. 1. a yellowish carotenoid, C20H28O, liberated when rhodopsin or iodopsin is transformed by the action of light 2. a similar carotenoid, C20H26O, formed by the action of light on porphyropsin …   English World dictionary

  • Retinal — Strukturformel …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • retinal — 1. Relating to the retina. 2. Retinaldehyde; most commonly referring to the all trans form. r. dehydrogenase an oxidoreductase catalyzing the interconversion of retinaldehyde and NAD+ to retinoic acid and NADH …   Medical dictionary

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