Regulatory arrestin cycle secures the fidelity and maintenance of the fly photoreceptor cell.
- 1 March 1993
- journal article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 90 (5) , 1907-1911
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.90.5.1907
Abstract
Excitation of fly photoreceptor cells is initiated by photoisomerization of rhodopsin to the active form of metarhodopsin. Fly metarhodopsin is thermostable, does not bleach, and does not regenerate spontaneously to rhodopsin. For this reason, the activity of metarhodopsin must be stopped by an effective termination reaction. On the other hand, there is also a need to restore the inactivated photopigment to an excitable state in order to keep a sufficient number of photopigment molecules available for excitation. The following findings reveal how these demands are met. The photopigment undergoes rapid phosphorylation upon photoconversion of rhodopsin to metarhodopsin and an efficient Ca2+ dependent dephosphorylation upon regeneration of metarhodopsin to rhodopsin. Phosphorylation decreases the ability of metarhodopsin to activate the guanine nucleotide-binding protein. Binding of 49-kDa arrestin further quenches the activity of metarhodopsin and protects it from dephosphorylation. Light-dependent binding and release of 49-kDa arrestin from metarhodopsin- and rhodopsin-containing membranes, respectively, directs the dephosphorylation reaction toward rhodopsin. This ensures the return of phosphorylated metarhodopsin to the rhodopsin pool without initiating transduction in the dark. Assays of rhodopsin dephosphorylation in the Drosophila retinal degeneration C (rdgC) mutant, a mutant in a gene previously cloned and predicted to encode a serine/threonine protein phosphatase, reveal that phosphorylated rhodopsin is a major substrate for the rdgC phosphatase. We propose that mutations resulting in either a decrease or an improper regulation of rhodopsin phosphatase activity bring about degeneration of the fly photoreceptor cells.Keywords
This publication has 30 references indexed in Scilit:
- Variations in retinal degenerationsCurrent Biology, 1992
- The influence of arrestin (48K protein) and rhodopsin kinase on visual transductionNeuron, 1992
- Rhodopsin activation causes retinal degeneration in drosophila rdgC mutantNeuron, 1990
- β-Arrestin: a Protein that Regulates β-adrenergic Receptor FunctionScience, 1990
- Inactivation of photoexcited rhodopsin in retinal rods: the roles of rhodopsin kinase and 48-kDa protein (arrestin)Biochemistry, 1988
- myo-inositol polyphosphate may be a messenger for visual excitation in Limulus photoreceptorsNature, 1984
- Photoreceptor excitation and adaptation by inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphateNature, 1984
- Characteristics of Drosophila rhodopsin in wild-type and norpA vision transduction mutants.The Journal of general physiology, 1978
- Cleavage of Structural Proteins during the Assembly of the Head of Bacteriophage T4Nature, 1970
- The Ventral Photoreceptor Cells of Limulus The Journal of general physiology, 1969