Transducin activation in electropermeabilized frog rod outer segments is highly amplified, and a portion equivalent to phosphodiesterase remains membrane-bound
An electropermeabilized preparation of frog retinal rod outer segments (ROS) has been developed to examine the light sensitivity and amplification of visual transduction reactions in a minimally disturbed environment. Electropermeabilized ROS are indistinguishable from whole and osmotically intact R...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of biological chemistry 1990-09, Vol.265 (25), p.15323-15332 |
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Zusammenfassung: | An electropermeabilized preparation of frog retinal rod outer segments (ROS) has been developed to examine the light sensitivity
and amplification of visual transduction reactions in a minimally disturbed environment. Electropermeabilized ROS are indistinguishable
from whole and osmotically intact ROS in the light microscope and retain 3-fold more protein than mechanically disrupted ROS.
They differ from mechanically fragmented ROS in several respects. Illumination results in more amplified activation of the
GTP-binding protein transducin (Gt) than previously observed: bleaching as little as approximately 1 rhodopsin molecule (Rho*)
in every 10 disks within a single ROS activates 37,000 molecules of Gt per Rho*, equivalent to 70% of the light-activatable
Gt present on a single disk face. This amplification is maintained over approximately 1 decade of light intensity but drops
sharply as disk faces begin to absorb a second photon. Lower amplification is observed in fragmented ROS and derives from
the fact that physical disruption of ROS causes Gt to bind GTP and elute from the membrane, thus decreasing the amount remaining
and available for light activation. Illumination of electropermeabilized ROS in the presence of GTP or of the nonhydrolyzable
substrate guanosine 5'-(gamma-thio)triphosphate (GTP gamma S) causes redistribution of Gt: an amount (approximately 20 mmol/mol
Rho) equivalent to the amount of inhibitory gamma subunit of phosphodiesterase (PDE) remains internal and bound to nucleotide,
and the remaining activated Gt diffuses out in a manner graded with light intensity. This suggests that PDE activation by
Gt alpha may not require dissociation of Gt alpha bound to the gamma subunit of PDE in a form than can elute from ROS. Two
further differences between electropermeabilized and mechanically disrupted ROS are noted: the addition of ATP to electropermeabilized
ROS does not affect the light sensitivity or kinetics of the GTP binding reaction, and a specificity for light-induced GTP
versus GDP binding is observed. |
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ISSN: | 0021-9258 1083-351X |
DOI: | 10.1016/s0021-9258(18)77259-1 |