The Journal of General Physiology
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Published online
doi:10.1085/jgp.200910214
The Journal of General Physiology, Vol. 134, No. 3, 177-189
The Rockefeller University Press, 0022-1295 $30.00
© del Pilar Gomez et al.
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ARTICLE

Prolonged calcium influx after termination of light-induced calcium release in invertebrate photoreceptors

Maria del Pilar Gomez1,3 and Enrico Nasi1,2,3

1 Facultad de Ciencias and 2 Instituto de Genética, Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Bogotá, Colombia
3 Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, MA 02543

Correspondence to Maria del Pilar Gomez: mgomez{at}mbl.edu

In microvillar photoreceptors, light stimulates the phospholipase C cascade and triggers an elevation of cytosolic Ca2+ that is essential for the regulation of both visual excitation and sensory adaptation. In some organisms, influx through light-activated ion channels contributes to the Ca2+ increase. In contrast, in other species, such as Lima, Ca2+ is initially only released from an intracellular pool, as the light-sensitive conductance is negligibly permeable to calcium ions. As a consequence, coping with sustained stimulation poses a challenge, requiring an alternative pathway for further calcium mobilization. We observed that after bright or prolonged illumination, the receptor potential of Lima photoreceptors is followed by the gradual development of an after-depolarization that decays in 1–4 minutes. Under voltage clamp, a graded, slow inward current (Islow) can be reproducibly elicited by flashes that saturate the photocurrent, and can reach a peak amplitude in excess of 200 pA. Islow obtains after replacing extracellular Na+ with Li+, guanidinium, or N-methyl-D-glucamine, indicating that it does not reflect the activation of an electrogenic Na/Ca exchange mechanism. An increase in membrane conductance accompanies the slow current. Islow is impervious to anion replacements and can be measured with extracellular Ca2+ as the sole permeant species; Ba can substitute for Ca2+ but Mg2+ cannot. A persistent Ca2+ elevation parallels Islow, when no further internal release takes place. Thus, this slow current could contribute to sustained Ca2+ mobilization and the concomitant regulation of the phototransduction machinery. Although reminiscent of the classical store depletion–operated calcium influx described in other cells, Islow appears to diverge in some significant aspects, such as its large size and insensitivity to SKF96365 and lanthanum; therefore, it may reflect an alternative mechanism for prolonged increase of cytosolic calcium in photoreceptors.


Abbreviations: ASW, artificial sea water; Islow, slow inward current

© 2009 Gomez and Nasi
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