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Publication : Channel modulation and the mechanism of light adaptation in mouse rods.

First Author  Chen J Year  2010
Journal  J Neurosci Volume  30
Issue  48 Pages  16232-40
PubMed ID  21123569 Mgi Jnum  J:166744
Mgi Id  MGI:4849563 Doi  10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2868-10.2010
Citation  Chen J, et al. (2010) Channel modulation and the mechanism of light adaptation in mouse rods. J Neurosci 30(48):16232-40
abstractText  Vertebrate photoreceptors are thought to adapt to light by a change in Ca(2+), which is postulated to mediate modulation of (1) excited rhodopsin (Rh*) by Ca(2+)-dependent binding of recoverin, (2) guanylyl cyclase activity via Ca(2+)-dependent GCAP proteins, and (3) cyclic nucleotide-gated channels by binding of Ca(2+)-calmodulin. Previous experiments genetically deleted recoverin and the GCAPs and showed that significant regulation of sensitivity survives removal of (1) and (2). We genetically deleted the channel Ca(2+)-calmodulin binding site in the mouse Mus musculus and found that removal of (3) alters response waveform, but removal of (3) or of (2) and (3) together still leaves much of adaptation intact. These experiments demonstrate that an important additional mechanism is required, which other experiments indicate may be regulation of phosphodiesterase 6 (PDE6). We therefore constructed a kinetic model in which light produces a Ca(2+)-mediated decrease in PDE6 decay rate, with the novel feature that both spontaneously activated and light-activated PDE6 are modulated. This model, together with Ca(2+)-dependent acceleration of guanylyl cyclase, can successfully account for changes in sensitivity and response waveform in background light.
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