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| ABSTRACT |
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Key Words: photoreceptor retinal rod light adaptation calcium rhodopsin
Abbreviations: Rh*, photoisomerized rhodopsin
| introduction |
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Photoreceptor Ca2+i is governed by the balance between Ca2+ influx through the outer segment conductance (Yau and Nakatani, 1984a
; Hodgkin et al., 1985
) and Ca2+ efflux via an Na+:Ca2+,K+ exchanger (Yau and Nakatani, 1984b
; Hodgkin et al., 1987
; Cervetto et al., 1989
). When the outer segment conductance is suppressed during the response to a bright flash, this balance is upset and Ca2+i falls (Yau and Nakatani, 1985
; McNaughton et al., 1986
; Ratto et al., 1987
; Gray-Keller and Detwiler, 1994
; McCarthy et al., 1994
) with a dominant time constant in salamander rods of 0.5–1 s (Yau and Nakatani, 1985
; Hodgkin et al., 1987
). If the flash is sufficiently bright to hold the response in saturation for several seconds, Ca2+i is likely to fall sufficiently low that its actions late in transduction will be essentially complete by the time that recovery commences. However, this dynamic fall in Ca2+i may also have a more modest effect on stages early in the transduction cascade during the period for which they remain accessible after the flash (Matthews, 1996
).
The light-induced fall in Ca2+i can be opposed by superfusing the outer segment with a 0 Ca2+/0 Na+ solution designed to minimize simultaneously Ca2+ influx and efflux (Matthews et al., 1988
; Nakatani and Yau, 1988
; Fain et al., 1989
). The removal of external Ca2+ minimizes Ca2+ influx through the outer segment conductance, while the removal of external Na+ prevents Ca2+ efflux through the Na+:Ca2+,K+ exchanger. I have investigated the actions of Ca2+ on early stages in transduction by briefly exposing the outer segment to this solution just after a bright flash, thereby delaying the onset of the usual dynamic fall in Ca2+i.
| methods |
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Solutions and Solution Changes
Ringer solution contained 111 mM NaCl, 2.5 mM KCl, 1.0 mM CaCl2, 1.6 mM MgCl2, and 3.0 mM HEPES, adjusted to pH 7.7 with NaOH, and 10 µM EDTA to chelate impurity heavy metals. The Ringer solution continuously perfusing the recording chamber also included 10 mM glucose. 0 Ca2+/0 Na+ solution was modified from Ringer solution by the equimolar substitution of choline chloride for NaCl, the omission of CaCl2 and MgCl2, the removal of EDTA, and the inclusion of 2 mM EGTA (Matthews, 1996
). The normally inward dark current is inverted in this choline-substituted solution due to the efflux of K+ (Hodgkin et al., 1985
; Matthews, 1995
; Lyubarsky et al., 1996
; Matthews, 1996
). The removal of Mg2+ served to prevent the substantial Mg2+ influx which would otherwise have occurred under these conditions (Hodgkin et al., 1985
) and which has been shown to retard response recovery (Matthews, 1995
). Rapid external solution changes were effected by translating the boundary between two flowing streams of solution across the exposed outer segment (Hodgkin et al., 1985
) using a piezo-electric actuator (Matthews, 1994
). Recordings were corrected by subtraction of the junction current measured when the same solution changes were carried out during intense steady illumination at the end of the experiment, scaled for coincidence of saturating level before and after the solution change. The junction current, shown in Figs. 1 and 2 as the solution monitor, normally rose to 90% of its final value within 50 ms, suggesting a similar time course for the solution change. Times of solution changes in Figs. 2 and 3 are given as the half-rise times of the junction current.
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| results |
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If, instead, the exposure to 0 Ca2+/0 Na+ solution took place immediately before the flash (Fig. 1 C, Pre) or was delayed until 1 s after the flash (Fig. 1 D, Late) then it had little effect on response recovery. These manipulations only prolonged the time for 25% recovery of the dark current by 0.02 ± 0.03 s (10 cells) and 0.05 ± 0.04 s (8 cells), respectively, neither of which differs significantly from zero. These observations indicate that the response was only prolonged when Ca2+i was prevented from falling during a brief period immediately after the flash and not as the result of exposure to 0 Ca2+/0 Na+ solution per se.
The period during which the dynamic fall in Ca2+i could exert this effect was explored in Fig. 2 by varying the time at which the outer segment was returned to Ringer solution after the flash. In each case the outer segment was stepped to 0 Ca2+/0 Na+ solution 1 s before the flash, and returned to Ringer solution at the time (
t) after the flash indicated beside each trace. As the time spent in 0 Ca2+/0 Na+ solution after the flash decreased, the duration of the response progressively declined towards that in Ringer solution.
These data are quantified in Fig. 3 by once again measuring the time for recovery of 25% of the dark current in each case. The longest exposures to 0 Ca2+/0 Na+ solution prolonged the response by nearly 1 s in comparison with the response in Ringer, but this delay in recovery progressively decreased as the time spent in 0 Ca2+/0 Na+ solution after the flash was reduced. These data could be well fitted by a single exponential of time constant 0.49 ± 0.03 s (8 cells). The simplest interpretation of this result is that it reflects the progressive removal of a Ca2+-sensitive stage early in the transduction cascade. When the dynamic fall in Ca2+i was delayed in this way an ever-smaller proportion of these sites would remain to respond to it. The small displacement of the fitted exponential curve from the origin probably arises largely from the delay between the flash and the complete suppression of the circulating current (Cobbs and Pugh, 1987
) which initiates the dynamic fall in Ca2+i. This delay will have been augmented by the finite flash duration, a 20-ms group delay from the Bessel low-pass filter, and the time taken for completion of the solution change.
| discussion |
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After the return to Ringer solution the response to the bright flash remained in saturation for a period sufficient to allow Ca2+i to fall substantially (Yau and Nakatani, 1985
; Hodgkin et al., 1987
), thereby presumably resulting in near maximal activation of guanylyl cyclase before the circulating current began to recover (Koch and Stryer, 1988
). Therefore the prolongation of the response when the outer segment was exposed to 0 Ca2+/0 Na+ solution immediately after the flash seems likely to reflect instead the abolition of actions of the dynamic fall in Ca2+i on an early stage in the transduction cascade which was only accessible to Ca2+ for a relatively brief period after the flash (Koutalos et al., 1995b
; Matthews, 1996
). These changes in response duration are much smaller than those induced by near saturating steady light (Fain et al., 1989
; Pepperberg et al., 1992
; Matthews, 1995
), which presumably reduces Ca2+i to a static level similar to that ultimately attained after a bright flash. This observation implies that the site for Ca2+ early in transduction is likely to become inaccessible at least as rapidly as the dynamic fall in Ca2+i induced by the flash, thereby limiting the effect on response duration. The time constant of 0.49 ± 0.03 s obtained in Fig. 3 from the dependence of the response prolongation on the duration of the exposure to 0 Ca2+/0 Na+ solution is most readily interpreted as reflecting the time course with which this early site for Ca2+ is removed after the flash. Indeed, this interpretation follows directly, irrespective of the precise time course of the stereotypical decline in Ca2+i once the outer segment is returned to Ringer solution, if it is assumed that the early site decays stochastically and that reduced Ca2+i accelerates its removal independent of time after the flash.
The strongest candidate for such a site of action for Ca2+ early in the transduction cascade is Rh* itself, whose inactivation via phosphorylation is known to be modulated by Ca2+i (Kawamura, 1993
; Chen et al., 1995
). Suppose that Rh* were phosphorylated more rapidly when Ca2+i was reduced, or that its ability to activate transducin were decreased. Under control conditions the dynamic fall in Ca2+i would act on Rh* to lower the activation of transducin resulting from the flash. If instead the dynamic fall in Ca2+i were delayed until long after the flash, by which time Rh* would have been completely phosphorylated, then this effect would be abolished, and the response to a bright flash prolonged. However, as the delay between the flash and the dynamic fall in Ca2+i was reduced, the overlap between the lifetime of unphosphorylated Rh* and the dynamic fall in Ca2+i would increase, thereby progressively shortening the flash response. Thus the time constant derived from these measurements may represent the effective lifetime of unphosphorylated Rh* in the dark-adapted rod.
Previous estimates of Rh* lifetime have been derived from the time constant of around 2 s which dominates the recovery of the flash response (Pepperberg et al., 1992
, 1994
). However, the insensitivity of this longer time constant to Ca2+i (Lyubarsky et al., 1996
; Matthews, 1996
) and light (Pepperberg et al., 1992
, 1994
; Murnick and Lamb, 1996
) is difficult to reconcile with biochemical evidence for the Ca2+ dependence of Rh* phosphorylation (Kawamura, 1993
; Chen et al., 1995
). If the more rapid time constant of about 0.5 s obtained here for the removal of the Ca2+-sensitive site early in transduction represents Rh* phosphorylation then this problem would be resolved, suggesting that the longer time constant governing response recovery might originate instead from subsequent events in Rh* inactivation or from the inactivation of later stages in the transduction cascade (Lyubarsky et al., 1996
; Matthews, 1996
; Murnick and Lamb, 1996
). This value is also in close agreement with the shorter of the two time constants required to model the kinetics of the flash response when the light-induced fall in Ca2+i is prevented (Lyubarsky et al., 1996
).
Such rapid phosphorylation of Rh* even in darkness would have several functional implications for the light response. First, to account for the magnitude of the change in sensitivity induced by bright light (Pepperberg et al., 1994
; Jones, 1995
; Matthews, 1996
) or greatly reduced Ca2+i (Lagnado and Baylor, 1994
; Koutalos et al., 1995b
), it seems possible that the time constant for Rh* phosphorylation might shorten further in the fully light-adapted rod by at least three- to fourfold from this already rapid value in darkness. Second, much Rh* phosphorylation appears to take place during the rising phase of even the dark-adapted dim flash response, before it has reached its peak. Such rapid phosphorylation of Rh* might thereby contribute to the ability of lowered Ca2+i to reduce the apparent gain of the flash response rising phase (Lagnado and Baylor, 1994
; Jones, 1995
).
Preliminary results from this study have been presented to the Physiological Society (Matthews, H.R. 1996. Dynamic actions of Ca2+i early' in transduction in the adaptation of rods isolated from the tiger salamander. J. Physiol. (Lond.). 494:15P).
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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Submitted: 22 September 1996
Accepted: 8 November 1996
| references |
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