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1.
Frog rod outer segments freshly detached from dark-adapted retinas contain approximately 1-2 molecules of guanosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate (cyclic GMP) for every 100 molecules of visual pigment present. This cyclic GMP decays to 5'-GMP, and the conversion is accelerated upon illumination of the outer segments. Bleaching one rhodopsin molecule can lead to the hydrolysis of 1,000-2,000 molecules of cyclic GMP within 100-300 ms. The decline in cyclic GMP concentration becomes larger as illumination increases, and varies with the logarithm of light intensity at levels which bleach between 5 X 10(2) and 5 X 10(5) rhodopsin molecules per outer segment-second. Light suppression of plasma membrane permeability, assayed in vitro as light suppression of outer segment swelling in a modified Ringer's solution, occurs over this same range of light intensity. The correlation between cyclic GMP and permeability or swelling is maintained in the presence of two pharmacological perturbations: papaverine, a phosphodiesterase inhibitor, increases both cyclic GMP levels and the dark permeability of the plasma membrane; and beta,gamma-methylene ATP increases the effectiveness of light in suppressing both permeability and cyclic GMP levels.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
Frog rod outer segments contain approximately 0.25 mol of GTP and 0.25 mol of ATP per mol of rhodopsin 3 min after their isolation from the retina. UTP and CTP are present at 10-fold and 100-fold lower levels, respectively. Concentrations of GTP and ATP decline in parallel over the next 4 min to reach relatively stable levels of 0.1 mol per mol of rhodopsin. Illumination reduces the concentration of endogenous GTP but not ATP. This light-induced decrease in GTP can be as large as 70% and has a half-time of 7 s. GTP is reduced to steady intermediate levels during extended illumination of intermediate intensity, but partially returns to its dark-adapted level after brief illumination. The magnitude of the decrease increases as a linear function of the logarithm of continuous light intensity at levels which bleach between 5 X 10(2) and 5 X 10(6) rhodopsin molecules/outer segment per second. This exceeds the range of intensities over which illumination causes decreases in the cyclic GMP content and permeability of isolated outer segments (Woodruff and Bownds. 1979. J. Gen. Physiol. 73:629-653). Thus, over 4 log units of light intensity, a sensitivity control mechanism functions to make extended illumination less effective in stimulating a GTP decrease. GTP levels in dark-adapted outer segments are sensitive to changes in calcium concentration in the suspending medium. If the external calcium concentration is reduced to 10(-8) M, GTP concentration is lowered to the same level caused by saturating illumination, and the GTP remaining is no longer light-sensitive. Lowering calcium concentration to intermediate levels between 10(-6) and 10(-8) M reduces GTP to stable intermediate levels, and the GTP remaining can be reduced by light. Restoration of millimolar calcium drives synthesis of GTP, but not of ATP, and GTP lability towards illumination is again observed. These calcium-induced changes in GTP are diminished by the addition of the divalent cation ionophore A23187. Lowering or raising magnesium levels does not influence the GTP concentration. These data raise the possibility that light activates either a calcium transport mechanism driven by the hydrolysis of GTP, or some other calcium-sensitive GTPase activity of unknown function. Known light-dependent reactions involving cyclic nucleotide transformations and rhodopsin phosphorylation appear to account for only a small fraction of the light-induced GTP decrease.  相似文献   

4.
Frog rod outer segments isolated in suspension can maintain much of their in vivo activity. This observation provides us with a simpler system than the intact retina for correlating biochemical and physiological changes. The relevant physiological process, a decrease of sodium permeability by illumination, is assayed as light suppression of outer segment swelling in a modified Ringer's solution. We report here that this decrease is observed over approximately 4 log units of input light intensity and varies with the logarithm of intensity at light levels which bleach between 5.102 and 5.104 rhodopsin molecules/outer segment-second. In this illumination range responsiveness to light decreases as intensity increases. This sensitivity control system may be linked to light-activated rhodopsin phosphorylation, for inhibitors of this reaction increase light sensitivity. The presence of a second system, which controls the maximum amplitude of in vitro response to light, is revealed in experiments with cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase inhibitors. Papaverine addition raises intracellular cyclic GMP (guanosine monophosphate) levels and increases the magnitude of the dark permeability, but does not have a large influence on the amount of illumination required for suppression of this permeability. The data suggest that sensitivity and amplitude, as they are expressed in this in vitro system, are regulated by pharmacologically distinct pathways which use two different light-sensitive enzyme systems.  相似文献   

5.
In the presence of 10(-9) M calcium, rod outer segments freshly detached from dark-adapted frog retinas contain between 0.01 and 0.02 moles of guanosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate (cyclic GMP) per mole of rhodopsin. The dark level of cyclic GMP is reduced approximately 50% by illumination that bleaches 5 x 10(5) rhodopsin molecules/outer segments. The dark levels of cyclic GMP also can be suppressed to approximately 0.007 mol/mol of rhodopsin by increasing the concentration of calcium from 10(-9) M to 2 x 10(-9) M, and they remain at this level as calcium concentration is raised to 10(-3) M. The final level to which illumination reduces cyclic GMP in unaffected by the calcium concentration between 10(-9) and 10(-3) M. The maximal light-induced decrease in cyclic GMP occurs within 1 s from the onset of illumination at all calcium concentrations. The magnitude and time-course of the light-induced decrease in cyclic GMP measured in these experiments are comparable to values obtained previously (Woodruff et al. 1977. J. Gen. Physiol. 69:677-679; Woodruff and Bownds. 1979. J. Gen. Physiol. 73:629-653). The data are consistent with a role for cyclic GMP in visual transduction irrespective of the calcium concentration.  相似文献   

6.
The light-activated cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase (PDE) of frog photoreceptor membranes has been assayed in isolated outer segments suspended in a low-calcium Ringer's solution. Activation occurs over a range of light intensity that also causes a decrease in the permeability, cyclic GMP levels, and GTP levels of isolated outer segments. At intermediate intensities, PDE activity assumes constant intermediate values determined by the rate of rhodopsin bleaching. Washing causes an increase in maximal enzyme activity. Increasing light intensity from darkness to a level bleaching 5 x 10(3) rhodopsin molecules per outer segment per second shifts the apparent Michaelis constant (Km) from 100 to 900 microM. Maximum enzyme velocity increases at least 10-fold. The component that normally regulates this light- induced increase in the Km of PDE is removed by the customary sucrose flotation procedures. The presence of 10(-3) M Ca++ increases the light sensitivity of PDE, and maximal activation is caused by illumination bleaching only 5 x 10(2) rhodopsin molecules per outer segment per second. Calcium acts by increasing enzyme velocity while having little influence on Km. The effect of calcium appears to require a labile component, sensitive to aging of the outer segment preparation. The decrease in the light sensitivity of PDE that can be observed upon lowering the calcium concentration may be related to the desensitization of the permeability change mechanism that occurs during light adaptation of rod photoreceptors.  相似文献   

7.
Considerable disagreement has resulted from experiments designed to test whether light-induced falls in cGMP in outer segment (OS) of photoreceptors precede their light-induced electrical responses. Different studies have reported initial declines at 50 ms, at s, or not at all for physiological stimuli. Such studies have employed whole retinas, isolated rod OS, or isolated rod OS with attached inner segments and involved a variety of techniques. We developed an apparatus that illuminates intact pieces of dark-adapted frog retinas at 22 degrees C for known brief durations and then rapidly (47 ms) presses their OS surface against a copper mirror cooled by liquid helium. Freezing occurs in less than 2 ms. Cyclic GMP was then assayed in cryostat sections of the OS layer. Six illumination intensities that bleached from 90 to 9 X 10(8) rhodopsin molecules per s were delivered for durations of 0.1-2 s. Compared to dark-adapted values, progressive losses of cGMP were seen with all illumination intensities. Because a significant loss in cGMP was seen after a 100 ms exposure to our dimmest stimulus, it appears that a loss of cGMP could play a role in rod visual transduction.  相似文献   

8.
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   

9.
Frog rod outer segments swell slowly after being shaken from an excised retina into a modified Ringer's solution. The swelling has the following characteristics: (a) It is suppressed by illumination which bleaches only 500 rhodopsin molecules per outer segment per second. This is approximately the level required to saturate the in vivo receptor potential. (b) Light suppression is seen in NaCl but not in KCl solutions. (c) Dark swelling is labile and is enhanced by calf serum, low calcium concentrations, dithiothreitol, and cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase inhibitors. (d) Lowering the pH to 5.5 or removing magnesium reversibly reduces dark swelling to the same extent as illumination. (e) The amount of light required for maximal suppression of dark-swelling increases approximately 10-fold if the calcium concentrations is lowered by EGTA addition. (f) The effect of illumination is irreversibly abolished by antimycin and other inhibitors of mitochondrial electron transport. (g) A process analogous to dark adaptation in vivo can be observed: If 10-50% of the rhodopsin present is bleached and the outer segments are then kept dark, rapid dark swelling returns after a period of 15-45 min. This swelling is again sensitive to light. We tentatively ascribe the light suppression of swelling to the same decrease in sodium permeability which is observed on illuminating living receptor cells. The experiments suggest that outer segments retain their competence to perform both transduction and dark adaptation after their separation from the retina.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
B R Aton 《Biochemistry》1986,25(3):677-680
Bovine rod outer segments were given a series of flashes, each bleaching from 0.1% to 0.4% of the rhodopsin present. 9-cis-Retinal was then added, regenerating the bleaching pigment to isorhodopsin. The phosphorylated pigment species having either four and five or six and eight phosphates were isolated by chromatofocusing. The amounts of rhodopsin and isorhodopsin present in the phosphorylated species were determined spectrally. The species with four and five phosphates per rhodopsin were approximately 50% rhodopsin-50% isorhodopsin. The more highly phosphorylated species were almost entirely isorhodopsin. Presumably, the phosphorylated rhodopsin was phosphorylated without having been bleached. At a 4% bleach level, approximately 0.5 rhodopsin was phosphorylated with four to five phosphates for each rhodopsin that was bleached and phosphorylated.  相似文献   

12.
G Swarup  D L Garbers 《Biochemistry》1983,22(5):1102-1106
Porcine rod outer segment (ROS) proteins were phosphorylated in the presence of [gamma-32P]ATP and Mg2+, separated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and detected by autoradiography. The phosphorylation of rhodopsin, the major protein-staining band (Mr approximately 34 000-38 000), was markedly and specifically increased by exposure of rod outer segments to light; various guanine nucleotides (10 microM) including GMP, GDP, and GTP also specifically increased rhodopsin phosphorylation (up to 5-fold). Adenine nucleotides (cyclic AMP, AMP, and ADP at 10 microM) and 8-bromo-GMP (10 microM) or cyclic 8-bromo-GMP (10 microM) had no detectable stimulatory effect on rhodopsin phosphorylation. GTP increased the phosphorylation of rhodopsin at concentrations as low as 100 nM, and guanosine 5'-(beta, gamma-imidotriphosphate), a relatively stable analogue of GTP, was nearly as effective as GTP. Maximal stimulation of rhodopsin phosphorylation by GTP was observed at 2 microM. GMP and GDP were less potent than GTP. Both cyclic GMP and GMP were converted to GTP during the time period of the protein phosphorylation reaction, suggestive of a GTP-specific effect. Transphosphorylation of guanine nucleotides by [32P]ATP and subsequent utilization of [32P]GTP as a more effective substrate were ruled out as an explanation for the guanine nucleotide stimulation. With increasing concentrations of ROS proteins, the phosphorylation of rhodopsin was nonlinear, whereas in the presence of GTP (2 microM) linear increases in rhodopsin phosphorylation as a function of added ROS protein were observed. These results suggest that GTP stimulates the phosphorylation of rhodopsin by ATP and that a GTP-sensitive inhibitor (or regulator) of rhodopsin phosphorylation may be present in ROS.  相似文献   

13.
Protein complement of rod outer segments of frog retina   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
H E Hamm  M D Bownds 《Biochemistry》1986,25(16):4512-4523
Rod outer segments (ROS) from frog retina have been purified by Percoll density gradient centrifugation, a procedure that preserves their form and intactness. One- and two-dimensional electrophoretic analysis reveals a smaller number of proteins than is observed in many cell organelles and permits quantitation of the 20 most abundant polypeptides. Rhodopsin accounts for 70% of the total protein (3 X 10(9) copies/outer segment), and approximately 70 other polypeptides are present at more than 6 X 10(4) copies/outer segment. Another 17% of the total protein is accounted for by the G-protein (3 X 10(8) copies/outer segment) that links rhodopsin bleaching and the activation of cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase (PDE). The phosphodiesterase accounts for 1.5% of the protein (1.5 X 10(7) copies/outer segment), and a 48,000-dalton component that binds to the membrane in the light accounts for a further 2.6%. The function of approximately 90% of the total protein in the outer segment is known, and two-thirds of the non-rhodopsin protein is accounted for by enzyme activities associated with cyclic GMP metabolism. The relative molar abundance of rhodopsin, G-protein, and PDE is 100:10:1. Apart from these major membrane-associated proteins, most of the other proteins are cytosolic. Thirteen other polypeptides are found at an abundance of one or more copies per 1000 rhodopsins, nine soluble and four membrane-bound, and their abundance relative to rhodopsin has been quantitated. ROS have been separated into subcellular fractions which resolve three classes of soluble, extrinsic membrane, and integral membrane proteins. A listing of the proteins that are phosphorylated and their subcellular localization is given. Approximately 25 phosphopeptides are detected, and most are in the soluble fraction. Fewer phosphorylated proteins are associated with the purified outer segments than with crude ROS. Distinct patterns of phosphorylation are associated with intact rods incubated with [32P]Pi and broken rods incubated with [gamma-32P]ATP.  相似文献   

14.
Cyclic GMP has been implicated in controlling the light-regulated conductance of rod photoreceptors of the vertebrate retina. However, there is little direct evidence correlating changes in cGMP concentration with the light-regulated permeability mechanism in living cells. A preparation of intact frog rod outer segments suspended in a Ringer's medium containing low Ca2+ has been used to demonstrate that initial changes in total cellular cGMP concentration parallel changes in the light-regulated membrane current over a wide range of light intensities. At light intensities bleaching from 160 to 5.6 X 10(6) rhodopsin molecules/rod/s, decreases in the response latency for the cGMP kinetics parallel decreases in the latent period of the electrical response. Further, changes in the rate of the cGMP decrease parallel the rate of membrane current suppression as the light intensity is varied. Up to 10(5) cGMP molecules are hydrolyzed per photolyzed rhodopsin, consistent with in vitro studies showing that each bleached rhodopsin can activate over 100 phosphodiesterase molecules. Addition of the Ca2+ ionophore, A23187, does not affect the initial kinetics of the cGMP decrease or of the electrical response, excluding a direct role for Ca2+ in the initial events of phototransduction. These results are consistent with cGMP being the intracellular messenger that links rhodopsin isomerization with changes in membrane permeability upon illumination. It is unlikely, however, that light-induced changes in total cGMP concentration are the sole regulators of membrane current. This is suggested by several observations: at bright light intensities, the subsecond light-induced cGMP decrease is essentially complete prior to complete suppression of membrane current; maximal light-induced decreases in cGMP concentration occur at all light intensities tested, whereas the extent of membrane current suppression varies over the same range of light intensities; changing the external Ca2+ concentration from 1 mM to 10 nM in the dark causes an increase in membrane current that is significantly more rapid than corresponding changes in cGMP concentration. Thus, light-induced changes in total cellular cGMP concentration correlate with some, but not all, aspects of the visual excitation process in vertebrate photoreceptors.  相似文献   

15.
J J Keirns  N Miki  M W Bitensky  M Keirns 《Biochemistry》1975,14(12):2760-2766
Frog (Rana pipiens) rod outer segment disc membranes contain guanosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate phosphodiesterase (EC 3.1.4.1.c) which, in the presence of ATP, is stimulated 5- to 20-fold by illumination. The effectiveness of monochromatic light of different wavelengths in activating phosphodiesterase was examined. The action spectrum has a maximum of 500 nm, and the entire spectrum from 350 to 800 nm closely matches the absorption spectrum of rhodopsin, which is apparently the pigment which mediates the effects of light on phosphodiesterase activity. trans-Retinal alone does not mimic light. Half-maximal activation of the phosphodiesterase occurs with a light exposure which bleaches 1/2000 of the rhodopsins. Half-maximal activation can also be achieved by mixing 1 part of illuminated disc membranes in which the rhodopsin is bleached with 99 parts of unilluminated membranes. Regeneration of bleached rhodopsin by addition of 11-cis-retinal is illuminated disc membranes reverses the ability of these membranes to activate phosphodiesterase in unilluminated membranes. If the rhodopsin regenerated by 11-cis-retinal is illuminated again, it regains the ability to activate phosphodiesterase. These studies show that the levels of cyclic nucleotides in vetebrate rod outer segments are regulated by minute amounts of light and clearly indicate that rhodopsin is the photopigment whose state of illumination is closely linked to the enzymatic activity of disc membrane phosphodiesterase.  相似文献   

16.
The light-activated guanosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate (cyclic GMP) phosphodiesterase (PDE) of frog photoreceptor membranes has been assayed by measuring the evolution of protons that accompanies cyclic GMP hydrolysis. The validity of this assay has been confirmed by comparison with an isotope assay used in previous studies (Robinson et al. 1980. J. Gen. Physiol. 76: 631-645). The PDE activity elicited by either flash or continuous dim illumination is reduced if ATP is added to outer segment suspensions. This desensitization is most pronounced at low calcium levels. In 10(-9) M Ca++, with 0.5 mM ATP and 0.5 mM GTP present, PDE activity remains almost constant as dim illumination and rhodopsin bleaching continue. At intermediate Ca++ levels (10-7-10-5M) the activity slowly increases during illumination. Finally, in 10(-4) and PDE activity is more a reflection of the total number of rhodopsin molecules bleached than of the rate of the rhodopsin bleaching. At intermediate or low calcium levels a short-lived inhibitory process is revealed by observing a nonlinear summation of responses of the enzyme to closely spaced flashes of light. Each flash makes PDE activity less responsive to successive flashes, and a steady state is obtained in which activation and inactivation are balanced. It is suggested that calcium and ATP regulation of PDE play a role in the normal light adaption processes of frog photoreceptor membranes.  相似文献   

17.
Abstract— Guanylate cyclase activity of dark-adapted bovine rod outer segments demonstrates a biphasic pattern upon exposure to light. By 10 s of illumination, activity is 20% lower than that observed in dark-adapted outer segments. Activity subsequently increases and then slowly declines to two-thirds of the original activity after 10 min of illumination. In the presence of GTP or ATP, hydrolysis of cyclic GMP is rapidly enhanced by exposure of outer segments to light; the magnitude of this effect is dependent on the amount of substrate present. The rapid effects of light on synthesis and degradation of cyclic GMP indicate that these reactions may be involved in the visual process. The concentration of guanosine 3':5'-cyclic monophosphate (cyclic GMP) is extraordinarily high in dark-adapted bovine rod outer segments and is at least 100-fold that of adenosine 3':5'-cyclic monophosphate (cyclic AMP). No significant decrease in the level of cyclic GMP or cyclic AMP was observed however upon exposure of dark-adapted outer segments to light.  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
The presence of three soluble nucleotide phosphotransferases in bovine rod outer segments was demonstrated: guanylate kinase (EC 2.7.4.8), nucleoside-diphosphate kinase (EC 2.7.4.6) and adenylate kinase (EC 2.7.4.3). The enzyme guanylate kinase, which catalyzes the reaction GMP + ATP in equilibrium GDP + ADP, was purified to homogeneity from isolated bovine rod outer segments as well as from bovine retinas. The enzyme preparations obtained from both sources are identical in their chromatographic properties, molecular mass (20-23 kDa for both native enzyme and dodecylsulfate-denatured polypeptide), Km values (13 microM for GMP and 430 microM for ATP), specific activities, and nucleotide specificities. The enzyme's turnover number was estimated to be 130 s-1. The minimum amount of enzyme found in rod outer segments is about 1 copy per 800 rhodopsin molecules. The role of the enzyme in the cyclic GMP cycle in rod outer segments is discussed.  相似文献   

20.
Exposure of an intact vertebrate eye to light bleaches the rhodopsin in the photoreceptor outer segments in spatially nonuniform patterns. Some axial bleaching patterns produced in toad rods were determined using microspectrophotometric techniques. More rhodopsin was bleached at the base of the outer segment than at the distal tip. The shape of the bleaching gradient varied with the extent of bleach and with the spectral content of the illuminant. Monochromatic light at the lambda max of the rhodopsin gave rise to the steepest bleaching gradients and induced the greatest changes in the form of the gradient with increasing extent of bleach. These results were consistent with a mathematical model for pigment bleaching in an unstirred sample. The model did not fit bleaching patterns resulting from special lighting conditions that promoted the photoregeneration of rhodopsin from the intermediates of bleaching. Prolonged light adaptation of toads could also produce axial rhodopsin gradients that were not fit by the bleaching model. Under certain conditions the axial gradient of rhodopsin in a rod outer segment reversed with time in the light: the rhodopsin content became highest at the base. This result could be explained by an interaction between the pattern of bleaching and the intracellular topography of regeneration.  相似文献   

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