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1.
The trp mutant of Drosophila melanogaster was re-examined and compared with the wildtype using monochromatic blue and orange light to manipulate the bi-stable visual pigment states in the peripheral retinula cells R1-6 of white-eyed flies. Recovery of sensitivity by application of orange light either during or after blue-adaptation is different in w;trp flies from that in bw;cn flies and does not proceed as predicted from the trp genotype. Blue-adaptation by isolating the activity of the central retinula cells confirms that the trp lesion affects these receptors also.  相似文献   

2.
The trp is a conditional phototransduction mutant of Drosophila. Direct electrical measurements and shot noise analysis suggest that a prolonged intense light causes in the mutant a reduction in the quantum efficiency for quantum bump production that does not arise from bleaching of the visual pigment. This effect depends on the duration of the light and only weakly on its intensity. In the normal fly, an intense blue light that shifts the visual pigment from rhodopsin to metarhodopsin, induces an excitatory process manifested by a prolonged depolarizing after potential (PDA). In the mutant, the PDA has a small amplitude and bump noise is superimposed on the response. It can thus be shown that the excitatory process underlying the PDA is also present in those trp mutants where the PDA voltage response is small or absent. It is suggested that the absence of the PDA voltage response in the mutant is probably due to a defect in an intermediate process, which links the excitatory process to the membrane conductance change.Presented at the EMBO-Workshop on Transduction Mechanism of Photoreceptors, Jülich, Germany, October 4–8, 1976  相似文献   

3.
Two DNA fragments which contain the Escherichia coli tryptophan promoter-operator region but lack the attenuator have been used in the construction of a series of pAT153 based plasmids suitable for the regulated expression of foreign genes in E. coli. The first, a 139-bp HhaI fragment includes 59 bp of the trp leader sequence, ending within the “attenuator peptide” coding sequence, eleven codons from the N-terminus. A fusion-type expression plasmid incorporating this fragment has been constructed. The second, a 99-bp HaeIII-TaqI fragment contains no coding sequence but includes the “attenuator peptide” SD site situated 4 bp upstream of the TaqI site. This fragment has been incorporated in expression vectors which result in the direct expression of cloned gene sequences. To further maximise expression, plasmids with directly repeating trp promoter HaeIII-TaqI units have been constructed.  相似文献   

4.
We studied rdgB, a retinal degeneration mutant, and trp, a phototransduction mutant, separately and in combination in Drosophila. First we showed that trp did not block degeneration in white-eyed rdgB mutants. Thus, rdgB was useful in determining the defects which trp caused in the compound eye receptors R7 and R8; this is because rdgB selectively eliminates R1-6 photoreceptors which would, if present, dominate the compound eye responses. R7 and R8 both express the trptransient receptor potential phenotype in trp mutants. The trp mutation does not change receptor spectral sensitivities, nor does it alter the dark stability of R1-6's and R7's metarhodopsins as judged by dark adaptation studies. The dark adaptation is not significantly affected by trp. However, trp slows the dark adaptation of R8 considerably and seems to make the blue-induced inactivation of R1-6 less stable.  相似文献   

5.
A rapid electrical potential, which we have named the M-potential, can be obtained from the Drosophila eye using a high energy flash stimulus. The potential can be elicited from the normal fly, but it is especially prominent in the mutant norp AP12 (a phototransduction mutant), particularly if the eye color pigments are genetically removed from the eye. Several lines of evidence suggest that the M-potential arises from photoexcitation of long-lived metarhodopsin. Photoexcitation of rhodopsin does not produce a comparable potential. The spectral sensitivity of the M-potential peaks at about 575 nm. The M-potential pigment (metarhodopsin) can be shown to photoconvert back and forth with a "silent pigment(s)" absorbing maximally at about 485 nm. The silent pigment presumably is rhodopsin. These results support the recent spectrophotometric findings that dipteran metarhodopsin absorbs at much longer wavelengths than rhodopsin. The M-potential probably is related to the photoproduct component of the early receptor potential (ERP). Two major differences between the M-potential and the classical ERP are: (a) Drosophila rhodopsin does not produce a rapid photoresponse, and (b) an anesthetized or freshly sacrificed animal does not yield the M-potential. As in the case of the ERP, the M-potential appears to be a response associated with a particular state of the fly visual pigment. Therefore, it should be useful in in vivo investigations of the fly visual pigment, about which little is known.  相似文献   

6.
The prolonged depolarizing after potential (PDA) in the R1–6 receptors of the fly was used to isolate intermediate processes in phototransduction which are not manifested directly in the voltage response. It is first demonstrated that a pigment shift by light from metarhodopsin to rhodopsin in four species of the flies: Drosophila, Calliphora, Chrysomya and Musca induces an independent antagonistic process to the PDA, which is manifested in a strong inhibitory effect on PDA induction and is called the anti-PDA.By using mutants of Drosophila the existence of processes underlying the PDA were examined. The norpA H52and the trp mutant were used in which the voltage response of the photoreceptors could be reversibly abolished by elavated temperature and long intense light respectively. It is shown that the excitatory process underlying the PDA could be induced and depressed in conditions that block the voltage response of the photoreceptors, thus indicating the existance of intermediate processes which link the pigment activation by light to the PDA voltage response.Based on material presented at the European Neurosciences Meeting, Florence, September 1978  相似文献   

7.
From the retina of the land-locked population of the sea lamprey, Petromyzon marinus, a photolabile pigment was extracted which was identified spectrophotometrically as a member of the rhodopsin group of pigments. Using the absorption spectrum of a relatively pure solution and analysis by means of difference spectra, the peak of this pigment was placed at about 497 mµ. The method of selective bleaching by light of different wave lengths revealed no significant amounts of any other pigment in the extracts. A similar pigment was also detected in retinal extracts of the Pacific Coast lamprey, Entospenus tridentatus. These results are significant for two reasons: (a) the lamprey is shown to be an example of an animal which spawns in fresh water but which is characterized by the presence of rhodopsin, rather than porphyropsin, in the retina; (b) the primitive phylogenetic position of the lamprey suggests that rhodopsin was the visual pigment of the original vertebrates.  相似文献   

8.
The molecular mechanisms that regulate invertebrate visual pigment absorption are poorly understood. Studies of amphioxus Go-opsin have demonstrated that Glu-181 functions as the counterion in this pigment. This finding has led to the proposal that Glu-181 may function as the counterion in other invertebrate visual pigments as well. Here we describe a series of mutagenesis experiments to test this hypothesis and to also test whether other conserved acidic amino acids in Drosophila Rhodopsin 1 (Rh1) may serve as the counterion of this visual pigment. Of the 5 Glu and Asp residues replaced by Gln or Asn in our experiments, none of the mutant pigments shift the absorption of Rh1 by more than 6 nm. In combination with prior studies, these results suggest that the counterion in Drosophila Rh1 may not be located at Glu-181 as in amphioxus, or at Glu-113 as in bovine rhodopsin. Conversely, the extremely low steady state levels of the E194Q mutant pigment (bovine opsin site Glu-181), and the rhabdomere degeneration observed in flies expressing this mutant demonstrate that a negatively charged residueat this position is essential for normal rhodopsin function in vivo. This work also raises the possibility that another residue or physiologic anion may compensate for the missing counterion in the E194Q mutant.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Visual cues are necessary for optimal mating success in Drosophila melanogaster. The male's most important visually guided behaviour is tracking. It is shown here that tracking requires intact visual receptor cells R1–6 and the presence of screening pigments in the eye. Thus flies carrying the mutation ebony as well as wild type flies affected in receptor cell R1–6 are unable to use visual cues when they track females. A similar defect was obseved in white-eyed flies lacking screening pigments. Female receptivity depends on visual signals provided by the male flies. Most important cues are the light reflection from and the shape of the male's eyes. No influence of the light reflected from the thorax could be seen. Absence of eyes in the male, however, does not depress female receptivity as much as white eyes. Some evidence is provided that male courtship behaviour is evaluated visually by the female.  相似文献   

11.
12.
The visual pigment in the peripheral retinular cells of the hoverfly Syrphus balteatus was investigated by absorbance difference measurements. Different visual pigments were found in the dorsal versus the ventral part of the eye in the male, but not in the female. In the male in the dorsal part of the eye the visual pigment has an isosbestic point at 513 nm; in the ventral part this value is 490 nm. The latter value is found in the female in both parts of the eye.Prolonged pupillary responses were studied in the male Syrphus and appeared to be most marked in the ventral part of the eye. In both hoverfly and blowfly prolonged pupillary responses are induced by short wavelength light only; i.e., by light which excessively can convert rhodopsin into metarhodopsin. By contrast, in butterflies red light (and a long dark adaptation time) is necessary to evoke a prolonged pupillary response. It was demonstrated in both hoverfly and blowfly that long wavelength light, which reconverts metarhodopsin into rhodopsin, inhibits a prolonged pupillary response; or, accelerates pupil opening.Based on material presented at the European Neurosciences Meeting, Florence, September 1978  相似文献   

13.
Drosophila photoreceptors respond to oscillating light of high frequency (~100 Hz), while increasing the oscillating light intensity raises the maximally detected frequency. Recently, we reported that dephosphorylation of the light-activated TRP ion channel at S936 is a fast, graded, light-, and Ca2+-dependent process. We further found that this process affects the detection limit of high frequency oscillating light. Accordingly, transgenic Drosophila, which do not undergo phosphorylation at the S936-TRP site (trpS936A), revealed a short time-interval before following the high stimulus frequency (oscillation-lock response) in both dark- and light-adapted flies. In contrast, the trpS936D transgenic flies, which mimic constant phosphorylation, showed a long-time interval to oscillation-lock response in both dark- and light-adapted flies. Here we extend these findings by showing that dark-adapted trpS936A flies reveal light-induced current (LIC) with short latency relative to trpWT or trpS936D flies, indicating that the channels are a limiting factor of response kinetics. The results indicate that properties of the light-activated channels together with the dynamic light-dependent process of TRP phosphorylation at the S936 site determine response kinetics.  相似文献   

14.
RHODOPSIN, the visual pigment of vertebrate rods, has been shown to consist of a chromophore (11-cis retinal) bound to a protein (opsin)1–2. It has been proposed that the linkage is a Schiff base between phosphatidyl ethanolaniine (PE) and retinal and that when exposed to light, the retinal migrates from PE to the ε-amino-group of a lysine residue in opsin3–7. Most of the support for this theory comes from the observation that N-retinylidenephosphatidylethanolamine (N-RPE) can be extracted in the dark from rod outer segments (ROS)3,4. Furthermore, N-retinylphosphatidylethanolamine (N-RH2PE) has been extracted from ROS preparations after treating the visual pigment with acid and NaBH4—conditions which are assumed fix retinal to its “native” binding site through a secondary amine linkage7. All these studies, however, were carried out on crude extracts of ROS in various detergents. These crude extracts contain large amounts of phospholipid and retinal which is not bound to opsin. Thus, the isolation of N-RPE from crude ROS extracts does not necessarily point to its involvement in the binding of retinal to opsin. In contradiction to these reports are findings that purified visual pigment contains no phospholipid9,10 and that the molar concentration of N-RPE in bovine ROS is less than that of rhodopsin11. We have taken advantage of the observation that visual pigment in the outer segment disks is continually being renewed12 to label the rhodopsin with 3H-retinal and to show in yet another way that N-RPE does not exist in purified visual pigment.  相似文献   

15.
Visual pigment extracts prepared from rhabdomeric membranes of vitamin A deficient blowflies contain a 5–10 times lower concentration of rhodopsin than extracts from flies which were raised on a vitamin A rich diet. Spectrophotometry showed that digitonin-solubilized rhodopsin from blowfly photoreceptors R1–6 has an absorbance maximum at about 490 nm, but no unusually enhanced β-band in the ultraviolet. The extracts did not contain detectable concentrations of other visual pigments nor was there any evidence for the presence of photostable vitamin A derivatives.Sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis demonstrated that the concentration of opsin in the rhabdomeric membrane is significantly reduced in vitamin A deficient flies compared to normal flies. The results indicate that the synthesis of opsin or its incorporation into the photoreceptor membrane is regulated by the chromophore concentration in the receptor cell. Furthermore, our findings open up the possibility that differences in the spectral absorption and excitability of photoreceptors from normal and vitamin A deficient flies result from the differing opsin content of the rhabdomeres.  相似文献   

16.
The properties of the major visual pigment of Drosophila melanogaster were evaluated. The visual pigment was isolated from other protein components using acrylamide gel electrophoresis and spectral identification. Sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) acrylamide gels of the isolated visual pigment gave a single protein subunit with a mol wt of 37,000 daltons. The rhodopsin480 molar extinction coefficient was 35,000 liter/mol-cm (+/- 2,700 SE). The metarhodopsin580 molar extinction coefficient was approximately 56,000 liter/mol-cm. Microspectrophotometry was used to compare the rhodopsin concentrations in wild-type flies and norpA vision transduction mutants. At 2 days of age (12 h dark-12 h light cycle, 19 degrees C) all of the norpA flies exhibited a similar rhodopsin concentration (75% of the wild-type strain). By 21 days of age some of the norpA alleles showed substantially reduced rhodopsin concentrations (16-43% of normal), whereas others showed no major age-dependent decreases (68-77%). Temperature and light-dark cycle affected the reduction. Alleles with no receptor potential exhibited the largest decreases in rhodopsin concentration. The data indicate that the norpA phototransduction mutant has a defect in the system responsible for maintaining the rhodopsin480 concentration. This defect in the rhodopsin maintenance system does not appear to be the cause of the reduced electroretinogram (ERG) amplitude observed in some of these mutants, but instead is a consequence of the decrease in ERG amplitude, or the flaw(s) responsible for the decrease in ERG amplitude.  相似文献   

17.
Changes in the morphology of the salivary glands of Drosophila lebanonensis have been followed at both the light and electronmicroscopic level during a period of 30 hr before puparium formation and during puparium formation itself. Three striking differences were observed in comparison to other Drosophila species studied: (1) the secretion product of Drosophila lebanonensis has a different stainability to PAS reagent and uranyl acetate and no internal structures or “caps” can be observed; (2) the release of this secretion product is not restricted to a time period shortly before puparium formation but is a continuous process starting about 24 hr before puparium formation; and (3) the histolysis of these glands starts immediately after puparium formation, whereas in other Drosophila species this event starts 5 hr later.Puparium formation of Drosophila lebanonensis is controlled by the circadian oscillation. Injection of ecdysterone before the “gate” period results in changes in the cuticle as observed during normal development, but is not followed by the histolysis of the glands. Injection of ecdysterone after the “gate” is not followed by changes in the cuticle but histolysis is induced.  相似文献   

18.
Summary Ultraviolet light excites a red fluorescence fromDrosophila R1–6 rhabdomeres which is superimposed on a blue background emission. Metarhodopsin (M570) pigment generates some or all of the vitamin A dependent red emission. However, the excitation spectrum for red emission peaks in the UV. This suggests that the pigment which sensitizes R1–6's visual pigment to UV light (sensitizing pigment) absorbs the UV light, sensitizing metarhodopsin's fluorescence by energy transfer. Blue emission is neither from sensitizing pigment nor from visual pigment as shown by vitamin A deprivation studies.Very intense UV or blue stimulation causes these changes: (1) conversion of visual pigment into a fluorescent product; (2) destruction of this fluorescent product; (3) a decrease in the blue background fluorescence (even in vitamin A deprived flies); and (4) a permanent destruction of visual pigment and retinal degeneration. The first effect requires intensities 3 log units brighter than needed to interconvert rhodopsin and metarhodopsin 1/2 way to photoequilibrium. UV light is about 5 times as effective as blue light for the conversion of visual pigment into fluorescent product.  相似文献   

19.
Oscillatory behaviour in the tryptophan operon of an Escherichia coli mutant strain lacking the enzyme-inhibition regulatory mechanism has been observed by Bliss et al. but not confirmed by others. This behaviour could be important from the standpoint of synthetic biology, whose goals include the engineering of intracellular genetic oscillators. This work is devoted to investigating, from a mathematical modelling point of view, the possibility that the trp operon of the E. coli inhibition-free strain expresses cyclically. For that we extend a previously introduced model for the regulatory pathway of the tryptophan operon in Escherichia coli to account for the observed multiplicity and cooperativity of repressor binding sites. Thereafter we investigate the model dynamics using deterministic numeric solutions, stochastic simulations, and analytic studies. Our results suggest that a quasi-periodic behaviour could be observed in the trp operon expression level of single bacteria.  相似文献   

20.
Seed coat carotenoids of Dioon, Encephelartos, Macrozamia and Zamia with ranges in Africa, the West Indies, Australia and Mexico are simple mixtures which conform to the theoretical primitive angiosperm “magnolian pattern”. Lycopene is the principal pigment of Zamia while Encephelartos, Dioon and Macrozamia coats contain a mixture of the unsubstituted, mono-and di-hydroxy-β-carotenes. The evolutionary significance of these results is discussed.  相似文献   

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