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Publication : Phototransduction in transgenic mice after targeted deletion of the rod transducin alpha -subunit.

First Author  Calvert PD Year  2000
Journal  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A Volume  97
Issue  25 Pages  13913-8
PubMed ID  11095744 Mgi Jnum  J:66420
Mgi Id  MGI:1928441 Doi  10.1073/pnas.250478897
Citation  Calvert PD, et al. (2000) Phototransduction in transgenic mice after targeted deletion of the rod transducin alpha -subunit. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 97(25):13913-8
abstractText  Retinal photoreceptors use the heterotrimeric G protein transducin to couple rhodopsin to a biochemical cascade that underlies the electrical photoresponse. Several isoforms of each transducin subunit are present in the retina. Although rods and cones seem to contain distinct transducin subunits, it is not known whether phototransduction in a given cell type depends strictly on a single form of each subunit. To approach this question, we have deleted the gene for the rod transducin alpha-subunit in mice. In hemizygous knockout mice, there was a small reduction in retinal transducin alpha-subunit content but retinal morphology and the physiology of single rods were largely normal. In homozygous knockout mice, a mild retinal degeneration occurred with age. Rod-driven components were absent from the electroretinogram, whereas cone-driven components were retained. Every photoreceptor examined by single-cell recording failed to respond to flashes, with one exception. The solitary responsive cell was insensitive, as expected for a cone, but had a rod-like spectral sensitivity and flash response kinetics that were slow, even for rods. These results indicate that most if not all rods use a single transducin type in phototransduction.
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