Arrestins participate in the termination of phototransduction
in both vertebrates and invertebrates. However, the visual
arrestins of invertebrates and vertebrates differ significantly
from one another in that the invertebrate visual arrestins
become phosphorylated rapidly in response to light while
those in the photoreceptors of vertebrates do not. In an
effort to understand the functional relevance of arrestin
phosphorylation, we examined this process in the photoreceptors
of the horseshoe crab Limulus polyphemus. We report
that Limulus visual arrestin can be phosphorylated
at three sites near its C-terminus and show that arrestin
molecules phosphorylated on one, two, and three sites are
normally present in both light- and dark-adapted photoreceptors.
Light adaptation increases the amount of arrestin phosphorylated
at three sites.