Systematic profiling of temperature- and retinal-sensitive rhodopsin variants by deep mutational scanning

J Biol Chem. 2021 Dec;297(6):101359. doi: 10.1016/j.jbc.2021.101359. Epub 2021 Oct 29.

Abstract

Membrane protein variants with diminished conformational stability often exhibit enhanced cellular expression at reduced growth temperatures. The expression of "temperature-sensitive" variants is also typically sensitive to corrector molecules that bind and stabilize the native conformation. There are many examples of temperature-sensitive rhodopsin variants, the misfolding of which is associated with the molecular basis of retinitis pigmentosa. In this work, we employ deep mutational scanning to compare the effects of reduced growth temperature and 9-cis-retinal, an investigational corrector, on the plasma membrane expression of 700 rhodopsin variants in HEK293T cells. We find that the change in expression at reduced growth temperatures correlates with the response to 9-cis-retinal among variants bearing mutations within a hydrophobic transmembrane domain (TM2). The most sensitive variants appear to disrupt a native helical kink within this transmembrane domain. By comparison, mutants that alter the structure of a polar transmembrane domain (TM7) exhibit weaker responses to temperature and retinal that are poorly correlated. Statistical analyses suggest that this observed insensitivity cannot be attributed to a single variable, but likely arises from the composite effects of mutations on the energetics of membrane integration, the stability of the native conformation, and the integrity of the retinal-binding pocket. Finally, we show that the characteristics of purified temperature- and retinal-sensitive variants suggest that the proteostatic effects of retinal may be manifested during translation and cotranslational folding. Together, our findings highlight several biophysical constraints that appear to influence the sensitivity of genetic variants to temperature and small-molecule correctors.

Keywords: GPCR; corrector; membrane protein folding; proteostasis; rhodopsin.

Publication types

  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural

MeSH terms

  • HEK293 Cells
  • Humans
  • Mutation*
  • Retinaldehyde / metabolism*
  • Rhodopsin / genetics
  • Rhodopsin / metabolism*
  • Temperature

Substances

  • Rhodopsin
  • Retinaldehyde