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1.
A procedure is described to purify and stabilize cattle rod outer segments with an intact plasma membrane. Three criteria are applied to assess the integrity of the latter. Upon photolysis in these rod outer segments: (1) exogenous ATP cannot phosphorylate rhodopsin located in the disk membrane. (2) Endogenous cofactors (NADPH, NADPH-regenerating system) are still available in the rod cytosol and consequently retinol is the final photoproduct of photolysis of rhodopsin. (3) The rod cytosol can maintain a pH different from that of the medium, since the later stages of rhodopsin photolysis are independent of the medium pH. The stability and homogeneity of the preparation appear to be much better than those of freshly isolated frog rod outer segments, which have been used most frequently so far for experiments on the physiology of rod outer segments. In addition, these cattle rod outer segments remain intact during various manipulations and therefore considerably extend the experimental possibilities when intact rod outer segments are required.  相似文献   

2.
By applying flash-spectrophotometry with the calcium-indicating dye arsenazo III rapid light-triggered calcium release in various cattle rod outer segment preparations was studied. It is shown that light-induced calcium signals can be unambiguously discriminated from underlying absorption changes due to photolysis of rhodopsin and apparent absorption changes resulting from lightscattering transients. The following results have been obtained: 1. Calcium-induced arsenazo III responses can be quantitatively and kinetically resolved within the time domain of the visual transduction process. 2. Photoexcitation of rhodopsin results in calcium release from intradiscal binding sites. 3. Calcium released does not appear in the cytoplasmic space unless the disc membrane is made permeable to calcium ions by an ionophore. 4. The shortest observed half-rise time of calcium release (300 ms) is possibly limited by the ionophore. 5. The stoichiometric ratio of calcium released/rhodopsin bleached is 0.5 at a free calcium concentration of 2 microM. The amount of calcium released is proportional to the precentage of rhodopsin bleaching (from 1--10%). 6. Upon disruption of the disc stack by lysis of intact rod outer segments the light-induced calcium release is greatly altered. The results are discussed in relation to previous reports on a light-induced calcium release from retinal discs and in terms of the proposed role of calcium as an intracellular transmitter in vertebrate photoreceptors.  相似文献   

3.
4.
P L Witt  M D Bownds 《Biochemistry》1987,26(6):1769-1776
Several functions have been identified for the plasma membrane of the rod outer segment, including control of light-dependent changes in sodium conductance and a sodium-calcium exchange mechanism. However, little is known about its constituent proteins. Intact rod outer segments substantially free of contaminants were prepared in the dark and purified on a density gradient of Percoll. Surface proteins were then labeled by lactoperoxidase-catalyzed radioiodination, and intact rod outer segments were reisolated. Membrane proteins were identified by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and autoradiography. The surface proteins labeled included rhodopsin, the major membrane protein, and 12 other proteins. Several control experiments indicated that the labeled proteins are integral membrane proteins and that label is limited to the plasma membrane. To compare the protein composition of plasma membrane with that of the internal disk membrane, purified rod outer segments were lysed by hypotonic disruption or freeze-thawing, and plasma plus disk membranes were radioiodinated. In these membrane preparations, rhodopsin was the major iodinated constituent, with 12 other proteins also labeled. Autoradiographic evidence indicated some differences in protein composition between disk and plasma membranes. A quantitative comparison of the two samples showed that labeling of two proteins, 24 kilodaltons (kDa) and 13 kDa, was enriched in the plasma membrane, while labeling of a 220-kDa protein was enriched in the disk membrane. These plasma membrane proteins may be associated with important functions such as the light-sensitive conductance and the sodium-calcium exchanger.  相似文献   

5.
Treatment of bovine rod outer segments with phospholipase C leads to largely lipid-depleted membranous structures. Under these conditions rhodopsin remains spectrally intact, but its thermal stability and regeneration capacity are decreased, whereas upon illumination the metarhodopsin I to II transition is blocked. These observations can be explained on the basis of the previously demonstrated lateral aggregation of rhodopsin molecules which, on the one hand leads to a (partial) shielding of these molecules and, on the other hand, might impose constraints on the flexibility of the molecule to undergo light-induced conformational changes.Upon reconstitution of these lipid-depleted preparations with amphipathic lipids by means of a detergent dialysis procedure, the aggregates are apparently rearranged to lipid bilayer structures with complete recovery of the original rhodopsin properties. Under our conditions the nature of the polar head groups and the fatty acids is not critical in this respect. Simple addition of amphipathic lipids, without the use of detergent, restores the rhodopsin properties only in the case of rod outer segment lipids and of didecanoylphosphatidylcholine, and even then only occasionally.These results are discussed in the light of the strong analogy in properties between phospholipase C-treated rod outer segment membranes and lipid- and detergent-free rhodopsin obtained by affinity chromatography. It is concluded that rhodopsin must be in a freely dispersed state in order to function properly. Apparently, a non-specific lipid bilayer fulfills this condition for the regeneration capacity, whereas normal photolytic behaviour requires, in addition, a minimal membrane fluidity according to the observations of other investigators. Presumably, the uniquely high phospholipid unsaturation of rod outer segment membranes is important for another, as yet unassessed, function of rhodopsin or the photoreceptor membrane.  相似文献   

6.
Frog (Rana catesbeiana) rod outer segment membrane contains cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase (EC 3.1.4.1). Irradiation of dark-adapted rod outer segment membrane increased the enzyme activity by 5–20-fold in the presence of GTP. The phosphodiesterase in rod outer segment membrane is also activated by mixing a photo-product of 11-cis (regenerated), 9-cis or 7-cis rhodopsin which is stable at 0°C. However, neither opsin in the membrane nor all-trans retinal activates the enzyme. The phosphodiesterase in rod outer segment membrane is also activated by irradiation at ?4°C. Thus, we conclude that the phosphodiesterase is activated by a common photolysis intermediate of these rhodopsin isomers, perhaps before metarhodopsin II decays.  相似文献   

7.
Ultrastructural localization of rhodopsin in the vertebrate retina   总被引:11,自引:9,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
Early work by Dewey and collaborators has shown the distribution of rhodopsin in the frog retina. We have repeated these experiments on cow and mouse eyes using antibodies specific to rhodopsin alone. Bovine rhodopsin in emulphogene was purified on an hydroxyapatite column. The purity of this reagent was established by spectrophotometric criteria, by sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) gel electrophoresis, and by isoelectric focusing. This rhodopsin was used as an immunoadsorbent to isolate specific antibodies from the antisera of rabbits immunized with bovine rod outer segments solubilized in 2% digitonin. The antibody so prepared was shown by immunoelectrophoresis to be in the IgG class and did not cross-react with lipid extracts of bovine rod outer segments. Papain-digested univalent antibodies (Fab) coupled with peroxidase were used to label rhodopsin in formaldehyde-fixed bovine and murine retinas. In addition to the disk membranes, the plasma membrane of the outer segment, the connecting cilium, and part of the rod inner segment membrane were labeled. We observed staining on both sides of the rod outer segment plasma membrane and the disk membrane. Discrepancies were observed between results of immunolabeling experiments and observations of membrane particles seen in freeze-cleaved specimens. Our experiments indicate that the distribution of membrane particles in freeze cleaving experiments reflects the distribution of membrane proteins. Immunolabeling, on the other hand, can introduce several different types of artifact, unless controlled with extreme care.  相似文献   

8.
The major peripheral and soluble proteins in frog rod outer segment preparations, and their interactions with photoexcited rhodopsin, have been compared to those in cattle rod outer segments and found to be similar in both systems. In particular the GTP-binding protein (G) has the same subunit composition, the same abundance relative to rhodopsin (1/10) and it undergoes the same light and nucleotide-dependent interactions with rhodopsin in both preparations. Previous work on cattle rod outer segments has shown that photoexcited rhodopsin (R*), in a state identified with metarhodopsin II, associates with the G protein as a first step to the light-activated GDP/GTP exchange on G. The complex R*-G is stable in absence of GTP, but is rapidly dissociated by GTP owing to the GDP/GTP exchange reaction. Low bleaching extents (less than 10% R*) in absence of GTP therefore create predominantly R*-G complexes, whereas bleaching in presence of GTP creates free R*. We report here that, under conditions of complexed R*, two reactions of R* in frog rod outer segments are highly perturbed as compared to free R*: (a) the spectral decay of metarhodopsin II (MII) into later photoproducts, and (b) the phosphorylation of R* by an ATP-dependent protein kinase. a) The spectral measurements have been performed using linear dichroism on oriented frog rod outer segments; this technique allows discrimination between MII and later photoproducts absorbing at the same wavelength. Association of R* with G leads to a strong reduction of the amount of MIII formed and to an acceleration of the decay of MIII. Furthermore, MII is significantly stabilized, in agreement with the hypothesis that MII is the intermediate which binds to G. b) The phosphorylation of R* is strongly inhibited under conditions of R*-G complex formation as compared to free R*. Interferences between reactions at the three sites involved in R* are discussed: the retinal binding site in the hydrophobic core is sensitive to the presence of GTP-binding protein at its binding site on the cytoplasmic surface of R*; the kinase and the GTP-binding protein compete for access to their respective binding sites, both located on the surface of R*. We also observed a slow and nucleotide-dependent light-induced binding of a protein of molecular weight 50 000, which we consider as the equivalent of the 48 000 Mr light-dependent protein previously identified in cattle rod outer segments.  相似文献   

9.
Rhodopsin-containing retinal rod disk membranes from cattle have been examined by differential scanning calorimetry. Under conditions of 67 mM phosphate pH 7.0, unbleached rod outer segment disk membranes gave a single major endotherm with a temperature of denaturation (Tm) of 71.9 +/- 0.4 degrees C and a thermal unfolding calorimetric enthalpy change (delta Hcal) of 700 +/- 17 kJ/mol rhodopsin. Bleached rod outer segment disk membranes (membranes that had lost their absorbance at 498 nm after exposure to orange light) gave a single major endotherm with a Tm of 55.9 +/- 0.3 degrees C and a delta Hcal of 520 +/- 17 kJ/mol opsin. Neither bleached nor unbleached rod outer segment disk membranes gave endotherms upon thermal rescans. When thermal stability is examined over the pH range of 4-9, the major endotherms of both bleached and unbleached rod outer segment disk membranes were found to show maximum stability at pH 6.1. The observed delta Hcal values for bleached and unbleached rod outer segment disk membranes exhibit membrane concentration dependences which plateau at protein concentrations beyond 1.5 mg/mL. For partially bleached samples of rod outer segment disk membranes, the calorimetric enthalpy change for opsin appears to be somewhat dependent on the degree of bleaching, indicating intramembrane nearest neighbor interactions which affect the unfolding of opsin. Delta Hcal and Tm are particularly useful for assessing stability and testing for completeness of regeneration of rhodopsin from opsin. Other factors such as sample preparation and the presence of low concentrations of ethanol also affect the delta Hcal values while the Tm values remain fairly constant. This shows that the delta Hcal is a sensitive parameter for monitoring environmental changes of rhodopsin and opsin.  相似文献   

10.
Two minor proteins of frog rod outer segments become phosphorylated when retinas are incubated in the dark with 32Pi. The proteins, designated component I (13,000 daltons) and component II (12,000 daltons), are dephosphorylated when retinas are illuminated. The dephosphorylation is reversible; the two proteins are rephosphorylated when illumination ceases. Each outer segment contains approximately 10(6( molecules of components I and II. These remain associated with both fragmented and intact outer segments but dissociate from the outer segment membranes under hypoosmotic conditions. The extent of the light-induced dephosphorylation increases with higher intensities of illumination and is maximal with continuous illumination which bleaches 5.0 x 10(5) rhodopsin molecules/outer segment per second. Light which bleaches 5.0 x 10(3) rhodopsin molecules/outer segment per second causes approximately half-maximal dephosphorylation. This same intermediate level of illumination causes half-suppression of the light-sensitive permeability mechanism in isolated outer segments (Brodie and Bownds. 1976. J. Gen Physiol. 68:1-11) and also induces a half-maximal decrease in their cyclic GMP content (Woodruff et al. 1977. J. Gen. Physiol. 69:667-679). The phosphorylation of components I and II is enhanced by the addition of cyclic GMP or cyclic AMP to either retinas or isolated rod outer segments maintained in the dark. Several pharmacological agents which influence cyclic GMP levels in outer segments, including calcium, cause similar effects on the phosphorylation of components I and II and outer segment permeability. Although the cyclic nucleotide-stimulated phosphorylation can be observed either in retinas or isolated rod outer segments, the light-induced dephosphorylation is observed only in intact retinas.  相似文献   

11.
The kinetics of recombination of 11-cis-retinal with bleached rod outer segments and sodium cholate solubilized rhodopsin have been investigated. At neutral pH, it was found that bleached rod outer segments in the presence of an excess of 11-cis-retinal follow pseudo-first-order kinetics. The results suggest the second-order formation of an intermediate addition compound followed by a first-order dehydration step to form a protonated aldimine linkage. In addition, at pH values above 7.5 or below 6.5 the kinetics of recombination are complex, indicating the formation of a molecular species inactive in recombination which is in equilibrium with the active form of opsin. Based upon the observed rate constants as a function of pH, a scheme is presented to describe the recombination reaction in bleached rod outer segments. The kinetics of recombination of sodium cholate solubilized opsin were also analyzed. In terms of formation of an intermediate addition compound and subsequent dehydration, the values for the individual rate constants for both bleached rod outer segments and cholate-solubilized opsin were found to compare very favorably. These results demonstrate that the sodium cholate (2 mg/ml) maintains opsin in a conformation very similar to that in the rod outer segment membrane and suggest that the cholate-opsin complex is an excellent model system for studies on opsin-membrane interactions.  相似文献   

12.
Localization of rhodopsin and its position in the membrane has been the subject of numerous studies. Most recently, immunocytochemical techniques have been employed to localize the opsin component of the molecule in in situ rod outer segments. Due to the problems inherent in localization procedures (penetration and mechanical interference) we have utilized isolated, osmotically intact rod outer segment discs in this study. Specific antibodies to chromatographically pure rhodopsin were prepared and enzymatically digested to their Fab components. The univalent Fab antibodies were conjugated to horseradish peroxidase and used to label the isolated rod outer segment discs. Discs treated with anti-opsin conjugate stained uniformly and heavily on their interdisc surfaces. Reaction product was also present on the intradisc surface in a thinner but still uniformly distributed layer. Controls treated with preimmune Fab - horseradish peroxidase conjugate showed no deposition of reaction product.  相似文献   

13.
Suspensions of isolated rod outer segments are shown to have a high calcium content of up to 11 moles calcium per mole rhodopsin. Osmotic lysis of the outer segments demonstrates the presence of two calcium fractions, a soluble one and a particulate one. The particulate fraction apparently coincides with the rod disks or with disk fragments. Illumination of intact rod outer segments in calcium-free ATP-containing Ringer solution has no measurable effect upon their total caclium content, but causes a significant shift of calcium from the particulate to the soluble fraction. This light effect is retained in lysed outer segments resuspended in calcium-free ATP-containing Ringer. These results support a function of calcium as a transmitter in light transduction in rod outer segments.  相似文献   

14.
Szundi I  Lewis JW  Kliger DS 《Biochemistry》2003,42(17):5091-5098
Absorbance difference spectra were recorded at 20 degrees C with a dense sequence of delay times from 1 to 128 micros after photolysis of lauryl maltoside suspensions of rhodopsin prepared from hypotonically washed bovine rod outer segments. Data were best fit by two-exponential components with a small, fast component (tau = 12 micros) occurring during the period that lumirhodopsin has been presumed to be stable. The shape of the spectral change corresponds to an approximately 2 nm red shift of the lumirhodopsin spectrum. Measurements with linearly polarized light verified that no absorbance changes associated with rotational diffusion were present in these preparations on this time scale, and experiments designed to enhance isorhodopsin production during photolysis showed no effect on the relative amplitude of the fast process. A similar process was previously observed in membrane suspensions of rhodopsin, but there the similarity of the change to rotational diffusion artifacts made conclusive identification of a second lumirhodopsin difficult. However, reexamination of polarized light measurements on rhodopsin in membrane supports the fact that the fast process seen here in detergent also takes place there. The new absorbance process occurs when time-resolved resonance Raman experiments have shown that the protonated Schiff base is moving from one hydrogen bond acceptor to another. The results are discussed in the context of possibly related processes on the same time scale that have been observed recently in artificial visual pigments with synthetic retinylidene chromophores and in a related rhodopsin mutant. The details of lumirhodopsin behavior are important because it is the last protonated Schiff base intermediate that occurs under physiological conditions.  相似文献   

15.
The visual photoreception takes place in the retina, where specialized rod and cone photoreceptor cells are located. The rod outer segments contain a stack of 500-2,000 sealed membrane disks. Rhodopsin is the visual pigment located in rod outer segment disks, it is a member of the G-protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) superfamily, an important group of membrane proteins responsible for the majority of physiological responses to stimuli such as light, hormones, peptides, etc. Alongside rhodopsin, peripherin/Rom proteins located in the disk rims are thought to be responsible for disk morphology. Here we describe the supramolecular structure of rod outer segment disk membranes and the spatial organization of rhodopsin and peripherin/Rom molecules. Using atomic force microscopy operated in physiological buffer solution, we found that rhodopsin is loosely packed in the central region of the disks, in average about 26?000 molecules covering approximately one third of the disk surface. Peripherin/Rom proteins form dense assemblies in the rim region. A protein-free lipid bilayer girdle separates the rhodopsin and peripherin/Rom domains. The described supramolecular assembly of rhodospin, peripherin/Rom and lipids in native rod outer segment disks is consistent with the functional requirements of photoreception.  相似文献   

16.
Isolated bovine rod outer segment protein is phosphorylated with GTP-gamma-32P and ATP-gamma 32P and to a much lesser extent by CTP-gamma-32P and UTP-gamma-32P. Phosphorylation with both GTP (GTP-kinase activity) and ATP (ATP-kinase activity) is markedly stimulated by light; phosphorylation with GTP is lower in dark-adapted and higher in light-adapted rod outer segments than is phosphorylation with ATP. Km values of 20 and 200 muM and Vmax values of 2.1 and 5.9 nmol/(mg min(-1)) were calculated using ATP and GTP, respectively, in light-adapted outer segments. When outer segments are incubated with GTP-gamma-32P under the usual conditions employed in these experiments, no formation of ATP-gamma-32P was detected by the techniques of high-pressure liquid chromatography and thin-layer chromatography. In intact, light-bleached outer segments, GTP appears to specifically phosphorylate rhodopsin. Histone and phosvitin are not phosphorylated to any appreciable extent by GTP. Histone appears to block rhodopsin phosphorylation by GTP while histone and, to some extent, phosvitin, both act as substrates for ATP-kinase activity. Cyclic AMP and other adenine derivates have a marked inhibitory effect on GTP-kinase activity. Phosphate also inhibits GTP-kinase activity but stimulates ATP-kinase activity. Such differences in phosphorylation with GTP and ATP indicate that these activities are either due to separate enzyme systems or, if only one enzyme is involved, the activities are under separate physiological control in the photoreceptor unit.  相似文献   

17.
Arrestin (also named 48-kDa protein or S-antigen) binds to photoexcited and phosphorylated rhodopsin and thereby prevents activation of cGMP phosphodiesterase (EC 3.1.4.35) by transducin in retinal rods. We report here that retinal arrestin consists of several subspecies (isoelectric points between pH 5.5-6.2), which can be separated by FPLC anion-exchange chromatography and by FPLC chromatofocusing resulting in highly enriched individual subspecies. The entire heterogeneity pattern of arrestin is present in rod outer segments, independently of whether arrestin orginated from the outer or mostly from the inner segment of rod cells. The different subspecies show a similar binding behavior to photoexcited rhodopsin phosphorylated to various degrees and they quench the cGMP phosphodiesterase activity equally well. In the presence of rod outer segment membranes, arrestin is phosphorylated light-dependently by protein kinase C (0.2 mol phosphate/mol arrestin). This implies that the heterogeneity of arrestin is not primarily due to phosphorylation. Arrestin from different individuals exists as four isoelectric focusing patterns which occur with remarkably different frequencies in calf and cattle. The complexity of the IEF pattern does not increase with aging. Distinct subspecies of arrestin may reflect differences in their primary structure, or may result from differentially regulated post-translational modifications in individuals.  相似文献   

18.
The kinetics of the metarhodopsin (meta) I → metarhodopsin II reaction have been studied by flash photolysis in two different types of preparations of bovine rhodopsin: (i) digitonin-solubilized rod outer segment (ROS) membranes with a molar ratio of phospholipid to rhodopsin of approximately 90, and (ii) digitonin-solubilized phospholipid-free rhodopsin with a molar ratio of phospholipid to rhodopsin of less than 0.2. At 20 °C the kinetics in both preparations are multiexponential, but four terms are required to fit the data with the solubilized membranes, whereas only two are required with the phospholipid-free preparation. Thus, phospholipid removal simplifies the kinetics of the meta I → meta II reaction, but the resulting preparation still does not show first-order kinetics. The ratio of the time constants of these two components with detergent-solubilized phospholipid-free rhodopsin was nearly equal to the values found with ROS particles, rhodopsin-phospholipid recombinants and intact rabbit eyes. This suggests a common origin for these two components in all these preparations and appears to exclude heterogeneity in bound phospholipid as the basis of these two-component kinetics.  相似文献   

19.
This study examines whether changes in cGMP concentration initiated by illumination of frog rod photoreceptors occur rapidly enough to implicate cGMP as an intermediate between rhodopsin activation in the disc membrane and permeability changes in the plasma membrane. Previous studies using whole retinas or isolated outer segments have provided conflicting evidence on the role of cGMP in the initial events of phototransduction. The rod photoreceptor preparation employed in this work consists of purified suspensions of outer segments still attached to the mitochondria-rich ellipsoid portion of the inner segment. These photoreceptors are known to retain normal electrophysiological responses to illumination and have cGMP levels comparable to those measured in the intact retina. When examined under several different conditions, changes in cGMP concentrations were found to occur as rapidly or more rapidly than the suppression of the membrane dark current. Subsecond changes in cGMP concentration were analyzed with a rapid quench apparatus and confirmed by comparison with a rapid freezing technique. In a 1 mM Ca2+ Ringer's solution, cGMP levels decrease to 65% of their final extent within 200 ms after bright illumination; changes in membrane dark current follow a similar time course. When the light intensity is decreased to 8000 rhodopsins bleached per rod per s, the light-induced cGMP decrease is completed within 50 ms, with 7 X 10(5) cGMP molecules hydrolyzed per rhodopsin bleached. During this time the dark current has not yet begun to change. Thus, under physiological conditions it is clear that changes in cGMP concentration precede permeability changes at the plasma membrane. The correlation of rapid changes in cGMP levels with changes in membrane current leave open the possibility that changes in cGMP concentration may be an obligatory step in the reaction sequence linking rhodopsin activation by light and the resultant decrease in sodium permeability of the plasma membrane.  相似文献   

20.
Light detection by vertebrate rod photoreceptor outer segments results in the destruction of the visual pigment, rhodopsin, as its retinyl moiety is photoisomerized from 11-cis to all-trans. The regeneration of rhodopsin is necessary for vision and begins with the release of the all-trans retinal and its reduction to all-trans retinol. Retinol is then transported out of the rod outer segment for further processing. We used fluorescence imaging to monitor retinol fluorescence and quantify the kinetics of its formation and clearance after rhodopsin bleaching in the outer segments of living isolated frog (Rana pipiens) rod photoreceptors. We independently measured the release of all-trans retinal from bleached rhodopsin in frog rod outer segment membranes and the rate of all-trans retinol removal by the lipophilic carriers interphotoreceptor retinoid binding protein (IRBP) and serum albumin. We find that the kinetics of all-trans retinol formation in frog rod outer segments after rhodopsin bleaching are to a good first approximation determined by the kinetics of all-trans retinal release from the bleached pigment. For the physiological concentrations of carriers, the rate of retinol removal from the outer segment is determined by IRBP concentration, whereas the effect of serum albumin is negligible. The results indicate the presence of a specific interaction between IRBP and the rod outer segment, probably mediated by a receptor. The effect of different concentrations of IRBP on the rate of retinol removal shows no cooperativity and has an EC50 of 40 micromol/L.  相似文献   

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