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1.
cGMP-Specific phosphodiesterase (PDE6) is the key enzyme of the phototransduction system of vertebrate retinal rod outer segments (ROS). The properties of PDE in extracts prepared by solubilization of bovine ROS in a high concentration (0.5% w/v) of detergent n-nonyl-β-D-glucoside (NG) and following centrifugation (ROS-NG) have been studied. Basal PDE activity of the preparations was low, but it greatly (>50-fold) increased (up to ∼20 μmol cGMP hydrolyzed/min per mg rhodopsin (R)) in the presence of trypsin. In bleached GTPγS-containing preparations the specific PDE activity was dependent on ROS-NG concentration and was half-maximal at about 0.8 μM of ROS G protein transducin (Gt). In dark-adapted GTPγS-containing ROS-NG preparations bleaching of 0.2% of the rhodopsin resulted in half-maximal PDE activation. The same result was obtained when PDE in dark-adapted ROS-NG preparations was activated by addition of a highly purified bleached rhodopsin solubilized by 0.5% solution of NG. The results demonstrate that the presence of NG has no significant influence either on the properties of the main ROS phototrans-duction system elements (R, Gt and PDE) or on the interaction between photoactivated R and Gt and suggest that the detergent NG can be used for crystallization of the rhodopsin-transducin complex.  相似文献   

2.
Mislocalization of the photopigment rhodopsin may be involved in the pathology of certain inherited retinal degenerative diseases. Here, we have elucidated rhodopsin's targeting signal which is responsible for its polarized distribution to the rod outer segment (ROS). Various green fluorescent protein (GFP)/rhodopsin COOH-terminal fusion proteins were expressed specifically in the major red rod photoreceptors of transgenic Xenopus laevis under the control of the Xenopus opsin promoter. The fusion proteins were targeted to membranes via lipid modifications (palmitoylation and myristoylation) as opposed to membrane spanning domains. Membrane association was found to be necessary but not sufficient for efficient ROS localization. A GFP fusion protein containing only the cytoplasmic COOH-terminal 44 amino acids of Xenopus rhodopsin localized exclusively to ROS membranes. Chimeras between rhodopsin and alpha adrenergic receptor COOH-terminal sequences further refined rhodopsin's ROS localization signal to its distal eight amino acids. Mutations/deletions of this region resulted in partial delocalization of the fusion proteins to rod inner segment (RIS) membranes. The targeting and transport of endogenous wild-type rhodopsin was unaffected by the presence of mislocalized GFP fusion proteins.  相似文献   

3.
T Shinozawa  M W Bitensky 《Biochemistry》1981,20(25):7068-7074
We describe a reconstitution of light-activated vertebrate photoreceptor GTPase and a purification of the GTP-binding protein (G protein), which is a component of the GTPase and modulates the light-activated phosphodiesterase (PDE) enzyme system. Rod outer segments (ROS) of bull frogs were treated with ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA), and the GTPase and PDE fractions were solubilized (EDTA supernatant). When the EDTA supernatant and EDTA-treated membrane fraction (EDTA-washed membranes) were recombined, light-dependent GTPase activity appeared. In the reconstituted system, the Km for GTP as substrate was 0.5 microM; the optimum pH was 7.5-8.0. The isoelectric point of GTPase in EDTA supernatant was 4.8. G protein was purified 400-fold from ROS, and the molecular weight of G protein was determined to be 40 000 by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The amount of G protein in ROS was calculated as at least 1 molecule per 400 rhodopsin molecules. By recombining (in the presence or absence of GTP) purified G protein, PDE, H fraction (an additional component of GTPase), and illuminated or unilluminated EDTA-washed membranes (as a source of rhodopsin), we showed that illuminated rhodopsin, G protein, PDE, and GTP are the minimum requirements for light-dependent PDE activity. We discuss the significance of these findings in the regulation of the light-activated GTPase and PDE activities, especially with regard to the mechanism of activation.  相似文献   

4.
Transducin is the retinal rod outer segment (ROS)-specific G protein coupling the photoexcited rhodopsin to cyclic GMP-phosphodiesterase. The alpha subunit of transducin is known to be ADP-ribosylated by bacterial toxins. We investigated the possibility that transducin is modified in vitro by an endogenous ADP-ribosyltransferase activity. By using either ROS, cytosolic extract of ROS or purified transducin in the presence of [alpha-32P]nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+), the alpha and beta subunits of transducin were found to be radiolabeled. The labeling was decreased by snake venom phosphodiesterase I (PDE I). The modification was shown to be mono ADP-ribosylation by analyses on thin layer chromatography of the PDE I-hydrolyzed products which revealed only 5'AMP residues. In addition we report that sodium nitroprusside activates the ADP-ribosylation of transducin.  相似文献   

5.
Bovine rod outer segment (ROS) cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase (PDE) could be activated about 6-fold by light, an effect that could be simulated by isolated bleached rhodopsin. About 90% of PDE activity in ROS could be extracted with 10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.5, but light is ineffective in activating the soluble enzyme. However, bleached rhodopsin could activate it in the presence of a very low concentration of ATP, strongly suggesting the mediation of rhodopsin in the light activation of the enzyme in ROS. Direct evidence is presented to suggest that the phosphorylation of opsin (bleached rhodopsin) is unrelated to the activation of PDE by bleached rhodopsin and ATP. The reconstitution of the light activation of PDE in a soluble system presented here opens up a new direction to future investigations on the mechanism of light regulation of cyclic GMP levels in retina and its implication in the photoreceptor function.  相似文献   

6.
Activity of soluble cGMP phosphodiesterase (PDE) and of two membrane enzymes, 5'-nucleotidase and Na,K-ATPase, was studied in the developing retina of rats with inherited retinal degeneration. It was found that by day 10 of life, the content of 5'-nucleotidase in the afflicted rats was significantly reduced as compared with controls. This difference was unchanged throughout the subsequent animals' life. Na,K-ATPase activity in the afflicted and normal animals was the same. Within the first 45 days of life, PDE calculated with respect to the rhodopsin content was not different as regards both the afflicted and normal rats. When calculated with respect to protein, the changes in PDE corresponded with the reported data. The data obtained allowed a suggestion to be made that changes in 5'-nucleotidase in inherited retinal degeneration are disease-specific. They are accounted for by changes in the enzymes of nonphotoreceptor retinal membranes. The changes in PDE may be regarded as secondary, correlating with variation in the number of the photoreceptor membranes.  相似文献   

7.
Rhodopsin, the major transmembrane protein in both the plasma membrane and the disk membranes of photoreceptor rod outer segments (ROS) forms the apo-protein opsin upon the absorption of light. In vivo the regeneration of rhodopsin is necessary for subsequent receptor activation and for adaptation, in vitro this regeneration can be followed after the addition of 11-cis retinal. In this study we investigated the ability of bleached rhodopsin to regenerate in the compositionally different membrane environments found in photoreceptor rod cells. When 11-cis retinal was added to bleached ROS plasma membrane preparations, rhodopsin did not regenerate within the same time course or to the same extent as bleached rhodopsin in disk membranes. Over 80% of the rhodopsin in newly formed disks regenerated within 90 minutes while only 40% regenerated in older disks. Since disk membrane cholesterol content increases as disks are displaced from the base to the apical tip of the outer segment, we looked at the affect of membrane cholesterol content on the regeneration process. Enrichment or depletion of disk membrane cholesterol did not alter the % rhodopsin that regenerated. Bulk membrane properties measured with a sterol analog, cholestatrienol and a fatty acid analog, cis parinaric acid, showed a more ordered, less fluid, lipid environment within plasma membrane relative to the disks. Collectively these results show that the same membrane receptor, rhodopsin, functions differently as monitored by regeneration in the different lipid environments within photoreceptor rod cells. These differences may be due to the bulk properties of the various membranes.  相似文献   

8.
A Sitaramayya 《Biochemistry》1986,25(19):5460-5468
Rhodopsin kinase was extracted into a buffer containing 200 mM KCl and no MgCl2. The activity of the enzyme was stabilized with the use of a mixture of protease inhibitors, aprotinin, benzamidine, leupeptin, and pepstatin. The extract consisted of three major proteins of molecular weight (Mr) 65,000, 56,000, and 37,000, of which the Mr 65,000 protein was identified with the kinase activity since preparations containing the other proteins had no kinase activity and the Mr 65,000 protein was phosphorylated when the extract was incubated with ATP. A reconstituted cGMP phosphodiesterase (PDE) system consisting of peripheral protein-depleted rod disk membranes (RDM), GTP binding protein (G-protein), and PDE was used to test the effectiveness of the rhodopsin kinase preparation in mediating the ATP-dependent quench of light activation of PDE. In the absence of kinase, light-activated PDE activity lasted several minutes. In its presence, ATP and to a lesser extent GTP quenched the activation about as rapidly as in rod disk membranes. The influence of kinase was unaffected by increasing G-protein or PDE content of the reconstituted system but was slowed down by brighter flashes, showing that quench was caused by the inactivation of bleached rhodopsin and not of PDE or G-protein.  相似文献   

9.
A monoclonal antibody that blocks the light-activated cyclic GMP (cGMP) pathway in frog photoreceptor outer segments (ROS) has been obtained. The antibody (4A) inhibits guanine nucleotide binding to G-protein, the intermediate that links rhodopsin excitation to cGMP phosphodiesterase (PDE), inhibiting light-induced PDE activity as a consequence. Antibody inhibition of the light-activated cGMP pathway is complete at a stoichiometry of approximately one antibody per G-protein in the mixture, which indicates high specificity of the inhibition. Inhibition is more pronounced than that caused by PDE inhibitors such as isobutylmethylxanthine (IBMX) or Ro 20-1724. Antibody 4A has the further effect of inhibiting the phosphorylation of two low molecular weight proteins, components I and II, whose phosphorylation normally can be stimulated by raising cGMP levels. The inhibition is not overridden by adding cGMP, which suggests that the G-protein influences these phosphorylations by a pathway distinct from its action on cGMP concentration. Antibody 4A may prove useful as a probe of the relevance of the cGMP pathway to visual transduction in living photoreceptors. Six other monoclonal antibodies to G-protein, as well as six monoclonal antibodies to rhodopsin and one to PDE, do not block light-activated guanine nucleotide binding, PDE activity, or ROS protein phosphorylations.  相似文献   

10.
Cyclic GMP hydrolysis by the phosphodiesterase (PDE) of retinal rod outer segments (ROS) is a key amplification step in phototransduction. Definitive estimates of the turnover number, kcat, and of the Km are crucial to quantifying the amplification contributed by the PDE. Published estimates for these kinetic parameters vary widely; moreover, light-dependent changes in the Km of PDE have been reported. The experiments and analyses reported here account for most observed variations in apparent Km, and they lead to definitive estimates of the intrinsic kinetic parameters in amphibian rods. We first obtained a new and highly accurate estimate of the ratio of holo-PDE to rhodopsin in the amphibian ROS, 1:270. We then estimated the apparent kinetic parameters of light-activated PDE of suspensions of disrupted frog ROS whose structural integrity was systematically varied. In the most severely disrupted ROS preparation, we found Km = 95 microM and kcat = 4,400 cGMP.s-1. In suspensions of disc-stack fragments of greater integrity, the apparent Km increased to approximately 600 microM, though kcat remained unchanged. In contrast, the Km for cAMP was not shifted in the disc stack preparations. A theoretical analysis shows that the elevated apparent Km of suspensions of disc stacks can be explained as a consequence of diffusion with hydrolysis in the disc stack, which causes active PDEs nearer the center of the stack to be exposed to a lower concentration of cyclic GMP than PDEs at the disc stack rim. The analysis predicts our observation that the apparent Km for cGMP is elevated with no accompanying decrease in kcat. The analysis also predicts the lack of a Km shift for cAMP and the previously reported light dependence of the apparent Km for cGMP. We conclude that the intrinsic kinetic parameters of the PDE do not vary with light or structural integrity, and are those of the most severely disrupted disc stacks.  相似文献   

11.
The formation of metarhodopsin II in various bovine rhodopsin preparations (rod outer segment (ROS) suspensions and rhodopsin-detergent solutions) was measured by means of flash spectrophotometry. The half-lifetime and formation of metarhodopsin II in ROS did not depend on the calcium concentration in the range of less than 10(-9) M (using EGTA ro EDTA) to 15 x 10(-3) M calcium at pH values of 5.0, 7.1, and 9.0 (Table 1). The regeneration of rhodopsin from opsin by adding 11-cis retinal to ROS-suspensions and rhodopsin digitonin solutions was measured spectrophotometrically. It was not substantially different in either saline, one containing less than 10(-7) M calcium (by adding EGTA), the other containing 10(-3) M calcium (Table 2).  相似文献   

12.
J L Miller  D A Fox  B J Litman 《Biochemistry》1986,25(18):4983-4988
In the vertebrate rod outer segment (ROS), the light-dependent activation of a GTP-binding protein (G-protein) and phosphodiesterase (PDE) is quenched by a process that requires ATP [Liebman, P.A., & Pugh, E.N. (1979) Vision Res. 19, 375-380]. The ATP-dependent quenching mechanism apparently requires the phosphorylation of photoactivated rhodopsin (Rho*); however, a 48-kilodalton protein (48K protein) has also been proposed to participate in the inactivation process. Purified species of phosphorylated rhodopsin containing 0, 2, or greater than or equal to 4 (high) phosphates per rhodopsin (PO4/Rho) were reconstituted into phosphatidylcholine (PC) vesicles and reassociated with a hypotonic extract from isotonically washed disk membranes that were depleted of 48K protein; PDE activation, in response to bleaching from 0.01% to 15% of the rhodopsin present, was measured. PDE activity was reduced by at least 30% at high fractional rhodopsin bleaches and by greater than 80% at low fractional rhodopsin bleaches in high PO4/Rho samples when compared to the activity measured in O PO4/Rho controls. A phosphorylation level of 2 PO4/Rho produced PDE activities that were intermediate between O PO4/Rho and high PO4/Rho samples at low bleaches, but were identical with the O PO4/Rho samples at high rhodopsin bleaches. Rhodopsin phosphorylation is thus capable of producing a graded inhibition of light-stimulated PDE activation over a limited range of (near physiological) bleach levels. This effect become less pronounced as the bleach levels approach those that saturate PDE activation. These results are consistent with increasing levels of phosphorylation, producing a reduction of the binding affinity of G-protein for Rho*.  相似文献   

13.
In vitro identification of rhodopsin in the green alga Chlamydomonas   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
M Beckmann  P Hegemann 《Biochemistry》1991,30(15):3692-3697
The unicellular alga Chlamydomonas can detect both intensity and direction of the ambient light and adjust its swimming speed and direction accordingly. On the basis of physiological experiments, the functional photoreceptor for this visual process has recently shown to be a rhodopsin. We here report the in vitro identification of endogenous retinal and a rhodopsin in Chlamydomonas cell extracts and purified membrane preparations. The rhodopsin absorption spectrum has fine structure with the maximum at 495 nm and matches the action spectra for the behavioral light responses. The rhodopsin can be bleached and subsequently reconstituted with exogenous retinal. Labeling with [3H]retinal occurs in the final preparation only with a single protein with a molecular weight of 32,000. We conclude that this protein is the visual photoreceptor in Chlamydomonas.  相似文献   

14.
The visual transduction cascade of the retinal rod outer segment responds to light by decreasing membrane current. This ion channel is controlled by cyclic GMP which is, in turn, controlled by its synthesis and degradation by guanylate cyclase and phosphodiesterase, respectively. When light bleaches rhodopsin there is an induced exchange of GTP for GDP bound to the alpha subunit of the retinal G-protein, transducin (T). The T alpha.GTP then removes the inhibitory constraint of a small inhibitory subunit (PDE gamma) on the retinal cGMP phosphodiesterase (PDE). This results in activation of the PDE and in hydrolysis of cGMP. Recently both low and high affinity binding sites have been identified for PDE gamma on the PDE alpha/beta catalytic subunits. The discovery of two PDE gamma subunits, each with different binding affinities, suggests that a tightly regulated shut-off mechanism may be present.  相似文献   

15.
R N Frank  S M Buzney 《Biochemistry》1975,14(23):5110-5117
Partial separation of protein kinase activity from rhodopsin in isolated bovine retinal photoreceptor outer segments was accomplished by mild ultrasonic treatment followed by ultracentrifugation. Residual kinase activity in the rhodopsin-rich sediment was destroyed by chemical denaturation which did not affect the spectral properties of the rhodopsin. The retinal outer segment kinase was found to be specific for rhodopsin, since in these preparations it alone of several bovine protein kinases was capable of phosphorylating rhodopsin in the light. The phosphorylation reaction apparently requires a specific conformation of the rhodopsin molecule since it is abolished by heat denaturation of rhodopsin, and it is greatly reduced or abolished by treatment of the visual pigment protein with potassium alum after the rhodopsin has been "bleached" by light. When kinase and rhodopsin or opsin fractions were prepared from dark-adapted and bleached outer segments and the resultant fractions were mixed in various combinations of bleached and unbleached preparations, the observed pattern of light-activated phosphorylation was consistent only with the interpretation that a conformational change in the rhodopsin molecule in the light exposes a site on the visual pigment protein to the kinase and ATP. These results rule out the possibility of a direct or indirect (rhodopsin-mediated) light activation of the kinase. Finally, phosphorylation of retinal outer segment protein in monochromatic lights of various wavelengths followed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis indicates that both rhodopsin and the higher molecular weight visual pigment protein reported by several laboratories have the same action spectrum for phosphorylation. This result is consistent with the suggestion that the higher molecular weight species is a rhodopsin dimer.  相似文献   

16.
A light-activated phosphodiesterase (PDE) from retinal rod outer segments (ROS) has been strongly implicated as a possible mediator in the propagation of the visual response. In view of the probable importance of this enzyme in the visual system, a comparison of the PDE proteins from ROS of different evolutionary species was made. Partial purification of the PDE, as measured by enzymic activity, followed by resolution of the protein components on sodium dodecyl sulphate/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis, indicated that the major Coomassie Blue-staining species in the ROS of all species studied is a doublet of 84000-88000 Da. After radioiodination, this doublet was converted in all but the frog proteins into a single band of 85000 Da. Two-dimensional tryptic peptide mapping of the radioiodinated peptides indicated that at least six major peptides of the putative PDE have been conserved in all of the species studies. If this protein is indeed associated with PDE activity, such conserved peptides may play an important role in the catalytic and/or regulatory functions of the enzyme.  相似文献   

17.
Summary -Tocopherol was identified in lipid extracts of bovine retinal outer segment (ROS) preparations. Positive identification was obtained by the thin layer chromatographic characteristics of the tocopherol form and its oxidation product -tocopherylquinone, and by the ultraviolet spectrum of the oxidized and KBH4-reduced form of the tocopherylquinone. In the ROS preparations used, -tocopherol chromanol was the predominant species, the quinone form accounting for 25% or less of the total. The concentration of -tocopherol in the ROS preparations was about 0.1 mole -tocopherol per mole rhodopsin, or about 1 nmole/mg, protein. Mitochondria from bovine retina contained about 0.4 nmole -tocopherol per mg protein.  相似文献   

18.
A phosphodiesterase (PDE) has been characterized in the interphotoreceptor matrix (IPM) of light-adapted fresh bovine retinas. It is obtained through a gentle rinsing of the retinal surface under conditions where the light-activated rod outer segment (ROS) enzyme remains attached. The enzyme has an apparent native molecular weight of 350 000 by gel filtration and appears as a doublet at Mr 47 000 and 45 000 on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels. It has an apparent Km value for cGMP of 33 microM and an apparent Km value for cAMP of 2200 microM. It is activated 3-6-fold by protamine and over 40-fold by trypsin. Protamine has no effect on the Km for cGMP while trypsin decreases the Km for cGMP by a factor of 2. The enzyme occurs in at least two forms as evidenced by two distinct peaks of activity after gel electrophoresis under nondenaturing conditions. A heat-stable inhibitor is tightly bound to the enzyme. The inhibitor obtained from the IPM PDE inhibits 98% of the activity of the trypsin-activated ROS PDE: conversely, the inhibitor obtained by boiling the ROS PDE completely inhibits the trypsin-activated IPM enzyme. A high-affinity monoclonal antibody to the active site of the ROS PDE, ROS 1 [Hurwitz, R., Bunt-Milan, A.H., & Beavo, J. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 8612-8618], quantitatively absorbs the IPM PDE. These observations indicate a clear relationship between these two PDEs even though their location, sizes, and specific functions in the retina appear to be distinct.  相似文献   

19.
An electropermeabilized preparation of frog retinal rod outer segments (ROS) has been developed to examine the light sensitivity and amplification of visual transduction reactions in a minimally disturbed environment. Electropermeabilized ROS are indistinguishable from whole and osmotically intact ROS in the light microscope and retain 3-fold more protein than mechanically disrupted ROS. They differ from mechanically fragmented ROS in several respects. Illumination results in more amplified activation of the GTP-binding protein transducin (Gt) than previously observed: bleaching as little as approximately 1 rhodopsin molecule (Rho*) in every 10 disks within a single ROS activates 37,000 molecules of Gt per Rho*, equivalent to 70% of the light-activatable Gt present on a single disk face. This amplification is maintained over approximately 1 decade of light intensity but drops sharply as disk faces begin to absorb a second photon. Lower amplification is observed in fragmented ROS and derives from the fact that physical disruption of ROS causes Gt to bind GTP and elute from the membrane, thus decreasing the amount remaining and available for light activation. Illumination of electropermeabilized ROS in the presence of GTP or of the nonhydrolyzable substrate guanosine 5'-(gamma-thio)triphosphate (GTP gamma S) causes redistribution of Gt: an amount (approximately 20 mmol/mol Rho) equivalent to the amount of inhibitory gamma subunit of phosphodiesterase (PDE) remains internal and bound to nucleotide, and the remaining activated Gt diffuses out in a manner graded with light intensity. This suggests that PDE activation by Gt alpha may not require dissociation of Gt alpha bound to the gamma subunit of PDE in a form than can elute from ROS. Two further differences between electropermeabilized and mechanically disrupted ROS are noted: the addition of ATP to electropermeabilized ROS does not affect the light sensitivity or kinetics of the GTP binding reaction, and a specificity for light-induced GTP versus GDP binding is observed.  相似文献   

20.
It is shown that nearly 70% water--soluble protein of the frog retina outer segments (ROS) consist of three polypeptides with molecular weights 39 000, 36 000 and less than 15 000 daltons. These proteins are present in equal proportions and are, apparently, the subunits of a tightly bound protein complex. The subunit of 39 000 daltons is responsible for guanyl nucleotides binding. Parameters of the investigated GTP-binding complex are similar to transducyn which transmits excitation from bleached rhodopsin to PDE molecules in the bovine retina ROS. The thermodynamic state of GTP-binding protein in frog retina ROS depends on the functional state of the photoreceptor membrane, as shown by microcalorimetric method.  相似文献   

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