Quantitative aspects of cGMP phosphodiesterase activation in carp rods and cones

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Abstract

Cones are less light-sensitive than rods. We showed previously in carp that more light (> 100-fold) is required in cones than in rods to activate 50% of cGMP phosphodiesterase (PDE). The lower effectiveness of PDE activation in carp cones is due partly to the fact that the activation rate of transducin (Tr) by light-activated visual pigment (R*) is 5-fold lower in carp cones than in rods. In this study, we tried to explain the remaining difference. First, we examined the efficiency of activation of PDE by activated Tr (Tr *). By activating PDE with known concentrations of the active (guanosine 5'-0-(γ-thio)triphosphate (GTPγS)-bound) form of Tr *, we found that Tr* activated PDE at a similar efficiency in rods and cones. Next, we examined the contribution of R* and Tr* lifetimes. In a comparison of PDE activation in the presence (with GTP) and absence (with GTPyS) of Tr * inactivation, PDE activation required more light (and was therefore less effective) when Tr* was inactivated in both rod and cone membranes. This is probably because inactivation of Tr * shortened its lifetime, thereby reducing the number of activated PDE molecules. The effect of Tr* inactivation was larger in cones, probably because the lifetime of Tr* is shorter in cones than in rods. The shorter lifetimes of Tr* and R* in cones seem to explain the remaining difference in the effectiveness of PDE activation between rods and cones. © 2014 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.

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Koshitani, Y., Tachibanaki, S., & Kawamura, S. (2014). Quantitative aspects of cGMP phosphodiesterase activation in carp rods and cones. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 289(5), 2651–2657. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M113.495325

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