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Publication : Mechanistic basis for the failure of cone transducin to translocate: why cones are never blinded by light.

First Author  Lobanova ES Year  2010
Journal  J Neurosci Volume  30
Issue  20 Pages  6815-24
PubMed ID  20484624 Mgi Jnum  J:160517
Mgi Id  MGI:4454572 Doi  10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0613-10.2010
Citation  Lobanova ES, et al. (2010) Mechanistic basis for the failure of cone transducin to translocate: why cones are never blinded by light. J Neurosci 30(20):6815-24
abstractText  The remarkable ability of our vision to function under ever-changing conditions of ambient illumination is mediated by multiple molecular mechanisms regulating the light sensitivity of rods and cones. One such mechanism involves massive translocation of signaling proteins, including the G-protein transducin, into and out of the light-sensitive photoreceptor outer segment compartment. Transducin translocation extends the operating range of rods, but in cones transducin never translocates, which is puzzling because cones typically function in much brighter light than rods. Using genetically manipulated mice in which the rates of transducin activation and inactivation were altered, we demonstrate that, like in rods, transducin translocation in cones can be triggered when transducin activation exceeds a critical level, essentially saturating the photoresponse. However, this level is never achieved in wild-type cones: their superior ability to tightly control the rates of transducin activation and inactivation, responsible for avoiding saturation by light, also accounts for the prevention of transducin translocation at any light intensity.
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