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1.
In the eyes of lower vertebrates, retinal photoreceptors and melanin pigment granules of the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) exhibit characteristic retinomotor movements in response to changes in ambient illumination and to signals from an endogenous circadian clock. We previously reported that 3,4-dihydroxyphenylethylamine (dopamine) mimicked the effect of light on these movements in photo-receptors and RPE cells of green sunfish, Lepomis cyanellus, by interacting with D2 dopaminergic receptors. Here, we report that dopamine also mimics the effect of light on cone and RPE retinomotor movements in bullfrogs, Rana catesbeiana, i.e., dopamine induces cone contraction and RPE pigment dispersion. Dopamine induced cone contraction in isolated dark-adapted bullfrog retinas incubated in constant darkness in the presence of the phosphodiesterase inhibitor 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine (IBMX). This effect of dopamine was inhibited by a D2 but not a D1 antagonist and mimicked by a D2 but not a D1 agonist. These results suggest that induction of cone contraction by dopamine is mediated by D2 dopaminergic receptors and that cone adenylate cyclase activity is inhibited. Thus, dopamine acts via the same type of receptor in both bullfrog and green sunfish retinas to induce cone contraction. In contrast, dopamine influences RPE retinomotor movement via different receptors in fish and bullfrog. Dopamine induced light-adaptive pigment dispersion in isolated dark-adapted bullfrog RPE-eyecups incubated in constant darkness in normal Ringer's solution. Because the retina was not present, these experiments demonstrate a direct effect of dopamine on bullfrog RPE. This effect of dopamine on bullfrog RPE was inhibited by a D1 but not a D2 antagonist and mimicked by a D1 but not a D2 agonist. Furthermore, agents that increase the concentration of intracellular cyclic AMP also induced pigment dispersion in dark-adapted bullfrog RPE-eyecups incubated in the dark. These results suggest that dopamine induces pigment dispersion in bullfrog RPE via D1 dopaminergic receptors. Thus, dopamine acts via different receptors on bullfrog (D1) versus green sunfish (D2) RPE to induce pigment dispersion. In addition, inhibitor studies indicate that pigment dispersion is actin dependent in teleost but not in bullfrog RPE. Dopamine-induced pigment dispersion was inhibited by cytochalasin D in isolated RPE sheets of green sunfish but not in RPE-eyecups of bullfrogs. Together, these observations indicate that dopamine mimics the effect of light on cone and RPE retinomotor movements in both fish and bullfrogs. However, in the RPE, different receptors mediate the effect of dopamine, and different cytoskeletal mechanisms are used to affect pigment transport.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
In the retinas of lower vertebrates, retinal photoreceptors and melanin pigment granules of the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) undergo characteristic movements in response to changes in light intensity and to signals from an endogenous circadian clock. To identify agents responsible for mediating light and/or circadian regulation of these retinomotor movements, we investigated the effects of hormones and neurotransmitters on cone, rod, and RPE movements in the green sunfish, Lepomis cyanellus. We report here that 3,4-dihydroxyphenylethylamine (dopamine) mimics the effect of light by inducing light-adaptive retinomotor movements in all three cell types. In isolated dark-cultured retinas, dopamine induced light-adaptive cone contraction with a half-maximal effect at 10(-8) M. This effect of dopamine was inhibited by antagonists with a potency order characteristic of D2 receptor mediation. The dopamine uptake blocker benztropine also induced light-adaptive cone contraction in isolated dark-cultured retinas, suggesting that there is continuous dopamine release in the dark but that concomitant uptake normally prevents activation of cone contraction. That dopamine plays a role in light regulation of cone movement is further suggested by the observation that light-induced cone contraction was partially inhibited by sulpiride, a selective D2 dopamine antagonist, or by Co2+, a blocker of synaptic transmission. Sulpiride also promoted dark-adaptive cone elongation in isolated light-adapted retinas, suggesting that continuous dopamine action is required in the light to maintain the light-adapted cone position. Dopamine can act directly on D2 receptors located on rod and cone inner/outer segments: dopamine induced light-adaptive retinomotor movements in isolated distal fragments of dark-adapted photoreceptors cultured in the dark. Together our results indicate that dopamine induces light-adaptive retinomotor movements in cones, rods, and RPE cells by activating D2 receptors. We suggest that, in vivo, dopamine plays a role in both light and circadian regulation of retinomotor movements.  相似文献   

3.
In the retinas of many species of lower vertebrates, retinal photoreceptors and pigment epithelium pigment granules undergo daily movements in response to both diurnal, and in the case of teleost cone photoreceptors, endogenous circadian signals. Typically, these cone movements take place at dawn and at dusk when teleosts are maintained on a cyclic light (LD) regime, and at expected dawn and expected dusk when animals are maintained in continuous darkness (DD). Because these movements are so strictly controlled, they provide an overt indicator of the stage of the underlying clock mechanism. In this study we report that both light-induced and circadian-driven cone myoid movements in the Midas cichlid (Cichlasoma citrinellum), occur normally in vitro. Many of the features of retinomotor movements found in vivo also occur in our culture conditions, including responses to light and circadian stimuli and dopamine. Circadian induced predawn contraction and maintenance of expected day position in response to circadian modulation, are also normal. Our studies suggest that circadian regulation of cone myoid movement in vitro is mediated locally by dopamine, acting via a D2 receptor. Cone myoid contraction can be induced at midnight and expected mid-day by dark culture with dopamine or the D2 receptor agonist LY171555. Further, circadian induced predawn contraction can be increased with either dopamine or LY171555, or may be reversed with the dopamine D2 antagonist, sulpiride. Sulpiride will also induce cone myoid elongation in retinal cultures at expected mid- day, but will not induce cone myoid elongation at dusk. In contrast, circadian cone myoid movements in vitro were unaffected by the D1 receptor agonist SCH23390, or the D1 receptor antagonist SKF38393. Our short-term culture experiments indicate that circadian regulation of immediate cone myoid movement does not require humoral control but is regulated locally within the retina. The inclusion of dopamine, or dopamine receptor agonists and antagonists in our cultures, has indicated that retinal circadian regulation may be mediated by endogenously produced dopamine, which acts via a D2 mechanism.  相似文献   

4.
In the accompanying paper we reported that 3,4-dihydroxyphenylethylamine (dopamine) induced light-adaptive retinomotor movements in teleost photoreceptors and that this effect was mediated by D2 dopamine receptors located on the photoreceptors themselves. In this study, we investigated the effects on cone retinomotor movement of three agents that have been reported by others to modulate retinal dopamine release: gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA), 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT, serotonin), and melatonin. We report here that the GABA antagonists bicuculline and picrotoxin induced light-adaptive cone contraction in dark-adapted green sunfish retinas cultured in constant darkness; thus they mimic the effect of light or exogenously applied dopamine. Since their effects were blocked by either the D2 dopamine antagonist sulpiride or by Co2+, it seems likely that these agents act by enhancing retinal dopamine release. The GABA agonist muscimol produced effects opposite to those of GABA antagonists. Muscimol inhibited light-induced cone contraction in previously dark-adapted retinas and induced dark-adaptive cone elongation in light-adapted retinas. These results suggest that in green sunfish retinas, as has been reported for other retinas, GABA inhibits dopamine release. 5-HT induced light-adaptive cone contraction in dark-adapted retinas; thus 5-HT also mimics the effect of light or exogenously applied dopamine. The effect of 5-HT was blocked by sulpiride, Co2+, or the 5-HT antagonist mianserin. These results suggest that 5-HT induces cone contraction by stimulating dopamine release. Melatonin neither inhibited dopamine-induced cone contraction in retinas cultured in the dark nor induced cone elongation in retinas cultured in the light. Our results suggest that both GABA and 5-HT (but not melatonin) affect cone retinomotor movements in green sunfish by modulating dopamine release: GABA by inhibiting and 5-HT by stimulating dopamine release. We report in the companion paper that dopamine induced contraction in isolated cone fragments. Together these observations strongly suggest that dopamine serves as the final extracellular messenger directly inducing light-adaptive cone retinomotor movement, and that GABA and 5-HT affect these movements by modulating dopamine release.  相似文献   

5.
Abstract: In the retinas of teleost fish, cone photoreceptors change shape in response to light and circadian signals. They elongate in the dark, contract in the light, and under conditions of constant darkness undergo appropriate movements at expected dusk and dawn. Dopamine induces cones to contract, thus mimicking the effect of light or expected dawn. To identify the receptor subtype responsible for mediating dopamine regulation of cone retinomotor movements, we have carried out pharmacological studies using isolated fragments of teleost cones consisting of cone inner segments-cone outer segments (CIS-COS). Isolated CIS-COS retain the ability to elongate in dark culture and contract when subsequently exposed to light or dopamine. We report that dark-induced elongation of CIS-COS was inhibited by dopamine and its agonists with an effectiveness ranking of dopamine = quinpirole > bromocriptine ⋙SKF-38393. After 60 min of elongation in dark culture, CIS-COS myoids contracted when subsequently cultured in the dark with dopamine or quinpirole. Quinpirole-induced inhibition of elongation and quinpirole-induced contraction were completely blocked by clozapine at 1 µ M or by sulpiride at 100 µ M . These effectiveness profiles for dopamine agonists and antagonists suggest that dopamine regulation of cone retinomotor movement is mediated by a D4-like receptor.  相似文献   

6.
7.
We have examined the effects of changes in extracellular ionic composition on cone and retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) retinomotor movements in cultured isolated teleost retinas. In vivo, the myoid portion of teleost cones contracts in the light and elongates in the dark; RPE pigment disperses in the light and aggregates in the dark. In vitro, cones of dark-adapted (DA) retinas cultured in constant darkness contracted spontaneously to their light-adapted (LA) positions if the culture medium contained greater than or equal to 10(-3)M Cao++. DA cones retained their long DA positions in a medium containing less than or equal to 10(-6)M Cao++. Low [Ca++]o (10(-5)-10(-7)M) also permitted darkness to induce cone elongation and RPE pigment aggregation. Light produced cone contraction even in the absence of Cao++, but the extent of contraction was reduced if [Ca++]o was less than 10(-3) M. Thus, full contraction appeared to require the presence of external Ca++. High [K+]o (greater than or equal to 27 mM) inhibited both light-induced and light-independent Ca++-induced cone contraction. However, low [Na+]o (3.5 mM) in the presence of less than or equal to 10(-6)M Cao++ did not mimic light onset by inducing cone contraction in the dark. High [K+]o also promoted dark-adaptive cone and RPE movements in LA retinas cultured in the light. All results obtained in high [K+]o were similar to those observed when DA or LA retinas were exposed to treatments that elevate cytoplasmic cyclic 3',5'-adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) content.  相似文献   

8.
The activity of serotonin N-acetyltransferase (NAT), a key regulatory enzyme in the melatonin biosynthetic pathway, was examined in low-density monolayer cultures of chick embryo retinal cells prepared with three levels of photoreceptor enrichment. In cultures prepared from embryonic day 8 retinas (E8), photoreceptors represented approximately 30% of the total cell population, whereas in those prepared from embryonic day 6 retinas (E6), approximately 70% of the cells were photoreceptors. In E8 retinas treated with kainic acid to destroy neurons (E8K), the relative content of photoreceptors was increased to approximately 50%. NAT activity was detectable in the cultures under all conditions studied, and was markedly increased by drugs that increase intracellular cyclic AMP levels and cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase activity: 8-bromocyclic AMP, forskolin, and 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine (IBMX). Consistent with the hypothesis that NAT is localized in photoreceptors, the effects of the stimulatory treatments were significantly greater in E6 and E8K cultures than in E8 cultures. The stimulation of NAT activity in E6 cultures was inhibited by actinomycin D and cycloheximide, suggesting the involvement of RNA and protein synthesis. Dopamine inhibited the induction of NAT activity by forskolin and IBMX, but not that elicited by 8-bromocyclic AMP. The dopamine-mediated suppression of activity was significantly inhibited by pertussis toxin and by spiperone and sulpiride, both D2-dopamine receptor antagonists, but not by SCH 23390, a D1-dopamine receptor blocker, or antagonists of alpha-adrenergic, beta-adrenergic, or serotonergic receptors. Because the inhibitory effect of dopamine on E6 and E8K cultures was at least as great as that on E8 cultures, the results suggest that dopamine acts on D2-like receptors on photoreceptors. The receptors appear to be coupled to adenylate cyclase through an inhibitory GTP-binding protein and to mediate inhibition of cyclic AMP synthesis and consequent induction of NAT activity.  相似文献   

9.
Both vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) and glucagon rapidly elevated cyclic AMP levels in embryonic chick retinal pigment epithelium (RPE), in culture as well as in freshly dissected tissue. In cultured cells, the half-maximal activities of VIP and glucagon were 5 X 10(-8) M and 3 X 10(-8) M, respectively. After 3 min of reaction, VIP elevated intracellular cyclic AMP by 100-fold; elevation with glucagon was up to 10-fold. Both neuropeptides stimulated adenylate cyclase activity in RPE membranes. Glucagon showed a half-maximal activity of 1 X 10(-8) M. VIP remained more effective than glucagon in stimulating adenylate cyclase activity, but the dose-response curve was shifted to a higher concentration range when compared to that of the VIP-elevated intracellular cyclic AMP.  相似文献   

10.
Circadian rhythms in the green sunfish retina   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4       下载免费PDF全文
We investigated the occurrence of circadian rhythms in retinomotor movements and retinal sensitivity in the green sunfish, Lepomis cyanellus. When green sunfish were kept in constant darkness, cone photoreceptors exhibited circadian retinomotor movements; rod photoreceptors and retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) pigment granules did not. Cones elongated during subjective night and contracted during subjective day. These results corroborate those of Burnside and Ackland (1984. Investigative Ophthalmology and Visual Science. 25:539-545). Electroretinograms (ERGs) recorded in constant darkness in response to dim flashes (lambda = 640 nm) exhibited a greater amplitude during subjective night than during subjective day. The nighttime increase in the ERG amplitude corresponded to a 3-10-fold increase in retinal sensitivity. The rhythmic changes in the ERG amplitude continued in constant darkness with a period of approximately 24 h, which indicates that the rhythm is generated by a circadian oscillator. The spectral sensitivity of the ERG recorded in constant darkness suggests that cones contribute to retinal responses during both day and night. Thus, the elongation of cone myoids during the night does not abolish the response of the cones. To examine the role of retinal efferents in generating retinal circadian rhythms, we cut the optic nerve. This procedure did not abolish the rhythms of retinomotor movement or of the ERG amplitude, but it did reduce the magnitude of the nighttime phases of both rhythms. Our results suggest that more than one endogenous oscillator regulates the retinal circadian rhythms in green sunfish. Circadian signals controlling the rhythms may be either generated within the eye or transferred to the eye via a humoral pathway.  相似文献   

11.
In the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) of lower vertebrates, melanin pigment granules migrate in and out of the cells' long apical projections in response to changes in light condition. When the RPE is in its normal association with the retina, light onset induces pigment granules to disperse into the apical projections; dark onset induces pigment granules to aggregate into the cell bodies. However, when the RPE is separated from the retina, pigment granule movement in the isolated RPE is insensitive to light onset. It thus seems likely that a signal from the retina communicates light onset to the RPE to initiate pigment dispersion. We have examined the nature of this retina-to-RPE signal in green sunfish, Lepomis cyanellus. In isolated retinas with adherent RPE, light-induced pigment dispersion in the RPE is blocked by treatments known to block Ca2+-dependent transmitter release in the retina. In addition, the medium obtained from incubating previously dark-adapted retinas in the light induces light-adaptive pigment dispersion when added to isolated RPE. In contrast, the medium obtained from incubating dark-adapted retinas in constant darkness does not affect pigment distribution when added to isolated RPE. These results are consistent with the idea that RPE pigment dispersion is triggered by a substance that diffuses from the retina at light onset. The capacity of the conditioned medium from light-incubated retinas to induce pigment dispersion in isolated RPE is inhibited by a D2 dopamine antagonist, but not by D1 or alpha-adrenergic antagonists. Light-induced pigment dispersion in whole RPE-retinas is also blocked by a D2 dopamine antagonist.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
In several parts of the nervous system, adenosine has been shown to function as an extracellular neuromodulator binding to surface receptors on target cells. This study examines the possible role of adenosine in mediating light and circadian regulation of retinomotor movements in teleost cone photoreceptors. Teleost cones elongate in the dark and contract in the light. In continuous darkness, the cones continue to elongate and contract at subjective dusk and dawn in response to circadian signals. We report here that exogenous adenosine triggers elongation (the dark/night movement) in isolated cone inner segment-cone outer segment preparations (CIS-COS) in vitro. Agonist/antagonist potency profiles indicate that adenosine's effect on cone movement is mediated by an A2-like adenosine receptor, which like other A2 receptors enhances adenylate cyclase activity. Although closest to that expected for A2 receptors, the antagonist potency profile for CIS-COS does not correspond exactly to any known A2 receptor subtype, suggesting that the cone receptor may be a novel A2 subtype. Our findings are consistent with previous reports that retinal adenosine levels are higher in the dark, and further suggest that adenosine could act as a neuromodulatory "dark signal" influencing photoreceptor metabolism and function in the fish retina.  相似文献   

13.
Abstract: The Xenopus retinal photoreceptor layer contains a circadian oscillator that regulates melatonin synthesis in vitro. The phase of this oscillator can be reset by light or dopamine. The phase-response curves for light and dopamine are similar, with transitions from phase delays to phase advances in the mid-subjective night. Light and dopamine each can inhibit adenylate cyclase in retinal photoreceptors, suggesting cyclic AMP as a candidate second messenger for entrainment of the circadian oscillator. We report here that treatments that increase intracellular cyclic AMP reset the phase of the photoreceptor circadian oscillator, and that the phase-response curves for these treatments are 180° out of phase with the phase-response curves for light and dopamine. Activation of adenylate cyclase by forskolin during the late subjective day or early subjective night caused phase advances. The same treatment during the late subjective night or early subjective day caused phase delays. Similar phase shifts were induced by 3-isobutyl-1-methyl-xanthine (a phosphodiesterase inhibitor) or 8-(4-chlorophenylthio)cyclic AMP. All of these treatments also acutely increased melatonin release. Forskolin and 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine increased the accumulation of intracellular cyclic AMP, but not cyclic GMP, in photoreceptor layers. The results indicate that cyclic AMP-dependent pathways regulate the photoreceptor circadian oscillator and suggest that a decrease in cyclic AMP may be involved in circadian entrainment by light and/or dopamine.  相似文献   

14.
In the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) of lower vertebrates, melanin pigment granules aggregate and disperse in response to changes in light conditions. Pigment granules aggregate into the RPE cell body in the dark and disperse into the long apical projections in the light. Pigment granule movement retains its light sensitivity in vitro only if RPE is explanted together with neural retina. In the absence of retina, RPE pigment granules no longer move in response to light onset or offset. Using a preparation of mechanically isolated fragments of RPE from green sunfish, Lepomis cyanellus, we investigated the effects of catecholamines on pigment migration. We report here that 3,4-dihydoxyphenylethylamine (dopamine) and clonidine each mimic the effect of light in vivo by inducing pigment granule dispersion. Dopamine had a half-maximal effect at approximately 2 nM; clonidine, at 1 microM. Dopamine-induced dispersion was inhibited by the D2 dopaminergic antagonist sulpiride but not by D1 or alpha-adrenergic antagonists. Furthermore, a D2 dopaminergic agonist (LY 171555) but not a D1 dopaminergic agonist (SKF 38393) mimicked the effect of dopamine. Clonidine-induced dispersion was inhibited by the alpha 2-adrenergic antagonist yohimbine but not by sulpiride. These results suggest that teleost RPE cells possess distinct D2 dopaminergic and alpha 2-adrenergic receptors, and that stimulation of either receptor type is sufficient to induce pigment granule dispersion. In addition, forskolin, an activator of adenylate cyclase, induced pigment granule movement in the opposite direction, i.e., dark-adaptive pigment aggregation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
The circadian oscillator in Xenopus retinal photoreceptor layers can be reset in similar ways by light and agonists of D2-like dopamine receptors. Treatments that increase cyclic AMP levels act on this oscillator in an opposite fashion, mimicking darkness in the induction of phase shifts. Light and dopamine have each been reported to inhibit adenylate cyclase in photoreceptors. Together, these data suggest that the transduction pathways for entrainment by dopamine and/or light include suppression of cyclic AMP or a cyclic AMP-sensitive step. In these studies, we examined this hypothesis by measuring the effects of treatment with a cyclic AMP analogue on the phase shifts induced in photoreceptor melatonin rhythms by light or a D2 receptor agonist (quinpirole). When photoreceptor layers were treated simultaneously with 8-(4-chlorophenylthio)cyclic AMP (8-CPT-cAMP) and quinpirole at any of three different phases of the circadian cycle, the resulting phase shifts of the melatonin rhythm were always the same as those caused by 8-CPT-cAMP alone. This indicates that there is a cyclic AMP-sensitive step in the dopamine entrainment pathway. In contrast, light pulses did reset the oscillator in the presence of elevated cyclic AMP. This suggests a separate cyclic AMP-insensitive transduction pathway for entrainment by light. Quinpirole reduced basal levels of cyclic AMP in photoreceptors, but light did not. These data suggest that cyclic AMP plays a role in the entrainment pathway activated by dopamine but not in the entrainment pathway activated by light.  相似文献   

16.
In teleosts, the basal part of the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) is relatively smooth, i. e., it is free of basal membrane infoldings. In the featherback, Notopterus notopterus, whereas this is the situation in light adaptation, during dark-adaptation, especially when kept for prolonged periods (6-9 hour), numerous infoldings appear at the basal region, as found uniquely by transmission electron microscopy. In this teleost, during retinomotor movements, the rods move vitreally during dark-adaptation, while the cones do not elongate, and remain stationary in both light- and dark-adaptation. The significance of the appearance of basal infoldings in dark-adapted RPE is explained in terms of the pattern of retinomotor responses and the features of RPE and photoreceptors in this species. It is suggested that (1) the thick, impervious tapetal layer present in the RPE, (2) the unusual position of the photoreceptors in the visual cell layer of dark-adapted retina, and (3) the presumably high demand for glucose and O2 of the outer retina during dark-adaptation might contribute to cause this phenomenon in this species. The available evidence tend to associate this phenomenon with the involvement of the RPE in nutrient and O2 delivery to the photoreceptors via the basal infoldings of the RPE in dark-adapted state in this species. This has not been reported for any other teleosts to date.  相似文献   

17.
Adenylate cyclase activity and the effects of EGTA, 5'-guanylylimidodiphosphate (GPP(NH)P), and dopamine were measured in microdissected layers of rod-dominant (rabbit) and cone-dominant (ground squirrel) retinas, The distribution of basal enzyme activity was similar in both species, with the highest levels found in the inner plexiform and photoreceptor cell inner segment layers, EGTA inhibited adenylate cyclase in the inner retina of both species and stimulated activity in rabbit outer and inner segment layers, but had no effect in these layers from ground squirrel. Enzyme activity was stimulated in all regions by GPP(NH)P, except in the outer segments of the photoreceptors. Dopamine stimulated the enzyme in the outer and inner plexiform and inner nuclear layers in rabbit, but only in the inner plexiform layer in ground squirrel. These data demonstrate that the enzymatic characteristics of adenylate cyclase vary extensively from region to region in vertebrate retina and suggest that cyclic AMP may have multiple roles in this tissue. A model for the distribution of the different forms of adenylate cyclase in retina is proposed.  相似文献   

18.
Previous histological, electrophysiological, and biochemical reports have addressed the hypothesis that serotonin functions as a neurotransmitter in mammalian retinas. We have tested the effect on the levels of cyclic AMP of the application of exogenous serotonin, 5-methoxytryptamine, melatonin, and 5-methoxydimethyl-tryptamine to isolated, incubated rabbit retinas. All indoleamines tested significantly elevated intracellular levels of cyclic AMP in both light- and dark-adapted, incubated, intact retinas, provided a phosphodiesterase inhibitor was present. In homogenates of rabbit retina, all indoleamines tested also markedly increased adenylate cyclase activity over basal levels. Maximal activity was observed with 50 microM indoleamine; addition of GTP augmented this increase. The increase in enzyme activity persisted in the presence of known antagonists of dopamine and serotonin 5-HT2-receptors, but was blocked by the mixed 5-HT1, 5-HT2-antagonist lysergic acid diethylamide. The retinal locations of this response have also been identified using layer microdissection techniques on freeze-dried samples obtained from rabbit eyecups suprafused with indoleamine plus phosphodiesterase inhibitor. Cyclic AMP levels were measured in discrete retinal layers of both light- and dark-adapted suprafused eyecups, and increased levels were observed primarily in the inner and outer plexiform layers, which contain the synapses of the retinal neurons.  相似文献   

19.
The effects of dopamine and octopamine on adenylate cyclase activity were studied on the head homogenate of adult Culex pipiens mosquitoes in vitro. Both dopamine and octopamine were shown to increase the cyclic AMP content in the homogenate. The antagonist haloperidol blocked the production of cyclic AMP induced from dopamine but had no effect on the production of cyclic AMP induced by octopamine at the concentrations tested. The opiate agonist etorphine was ineffective at reducing cyclic AMP levels induced by either dopamine or octopamine at the concentrations tested.  相似文献   

20.
Although 3,4-dihydroxyphenylethylamine (dopamine, DA) and vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) have been reported to stimulate adenylate cyclase activity in the rabbit retina, possible interactions between VIP-sensitive and DA-sensitive adenylate cyclase systems have not been previously investigated. To elucidate the interactions between these two putative transmitter-stimulated cyclase systems, the effects of VIP, DA, and VIP + DA on the conversion of [alpha-32P]ATP to [32P]cyclic AMP in rabbit retinal homogenates were measured. VIP stimulated adenylate cyclase activity in a biphasic manner, suggesting that two classes of VIP receptors may be involved in the induction of cyclic AMP formation. DA was less potent than VIP, and stimulated cyclase activity with a monophasic dose-response curve. When assayed together, these stimulations were partially nonadditive, implying the existence of a common adenylate cyclase pool that may be stimulated by both putative neurotransmitters. The dopaminergic antagonist (+)-butaclamol completely blocked dopaminergic stimulation, but had no significant effect on VIP-induced stimulation, indicating that VIP interacts with specific VIP receptor sites, which are distinct from the dopaminergic receptor sites. Furthermore, the specific D-2 dopaminergic receptor agonist LY141865 demonstrated no inhibitory effect on adenylate cyclase activity, suggesting that the interaction between the VIP- and DA-sensitive adenylate cyclase systems does not result from a D-2 receptor-mediated cyclase inhibition in the rabbit retina. Finally, at maximally effective concentrations, DA and VIP were less potent than fluoride or forskolin in the stimulation of cyclic AMP formation, suggesting that adenylate cyclase pools that are not sensitive to DA and VIP may also be present in this retina.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

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