Dual-substrate specificity short chain retinol dehydrogenases from the vertebrate retina.
Publication year
2002Source
Journal of Biological Chemistry, 277, 47, (2002), pp. 45537-46ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor

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Organization
Ophthalmology
Journal title
Journal of Biological Chemistry
Volume
vol. 277
Issue
iss. 47
Page start
p. 45537
Page end
p. 46
Subject
Hereditary and acquired vitreo-retinal disorders: experimental and clinical research and treatment.; Mechanism of the visual process and cellular aging; Erfelijke en verworven vitreo-retinale aandoeningen: experimenteel en klinisch onderzoek en behandeling.; Het visuele mechanisme en cellulaire verouderingAbstract
Retinoids are chromophores involved in vision, transcriptional regulation, and cellular differentiation. Members of the short chain alcohol dehydrogenase/reductase superfamily catalyze the transformation of retinol to retinal. Here, we describe the identification and properties of three enzymes from a novel subfamily of four retinol dehydrogenases (RDH11-14) that display dual-substrate specificity, uniquely metabolizing all-trans- and cis-retinols with C(15) pro-R specificity. RDH11-14 could be involved in the first step of all-trans- and 9-cis-retinoic acid production in many tissues. RDH11-14 fill the gap in our understanding of 11-cis-retinal and all-trans-retinal transformations in photoreceptor (RDH12) and retinal pigment epithelial cells (RDH11). The dual-substrate specificity of RDH11 explains the minor phenotype associated with mutations in 11-cis-retinol dehydrogenase (RDH5) causing fundus albipunctatus in humans and engineered mice lacking RDH5. Furthermore, photoreceptor RDH12 could be involved in the production of 11-cis-retinal from 11-cis-retinol during regeneration of the cone visual pigments. These newly identified enzymes add new elements to important retinoid metabolic pathways that have not been explained by previous genetic and biochemical studies.
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- Academic publications [229037]
- Electronic publications [111444]
- Faculty of Medical Sciences [87745]
- Open Access publications [80291]
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