The Ca(2+)-binding protein recoverin is thought to regulate rhodopsin kinase and to modulate the lifetime of the photoexcited state of rhodopsin (Rh*), the visual pigment of vertebrate rods. Recoverin has been postulated to inhibit the kinase in darkness, when Ca(2+) is high, and to be released from the disk membrane in light when Ca(2+) is low, accelerating rhodopsin phosphorylation and shortening the lifetime of Rh*. This proposal has remained controversial, in part because the normally rapid turnoff of Rh* has made Rh* modulation difficult to study in an intact rod. To circumvent this problem, we have made mice that underexpress rhodopsin kinase so that Rh* turnoff is rate limiting for the decay of the rod light response. We show that background light speeds the decay of Rh* turnoff, and that this no longer occurs in mice that have had recoverin knocked out. This is the first demonstration in an intact rod that light accelerates Rh* inactivation and that the Ca(2+)-binding protein recoverin may be required for the light-dependent modulation of Rh* lifetime.
Background light produces a recoverin-dependent modulation of activated-rhodopsin lifetime in mouse rods.
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作者:Chen Ching-Kang, Woodruff Michael L, Chen Frank S, Chen Desheng, Fain Gordon L
期刊: | Journal of Neuroscience | 影响因子: | 4.000 |
时间: | 2010 | 起止号: | 2010 Jan 27; 30(4):1213-20 |
doi: | 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4353-09.2010 |
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