Differential localization of protein kinase C isozymes in retinal neurons.
Open Access
- 15 March 1991
- journal article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of cell biology
- Vol. 112 (6) , 1241-1247
- https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.112.6.1241
Abstract
We report the immunohistochemical localization of protein kinase C isozymes (types I, II, and III) in the rabbit retina using the monospecific monoclonal antibodies MC-1a, MC-2a, and MC-3a. Using immunoblot analysis of partially purified protein kinase C preparations of rabbit retina, types II and III isozymes alone were detected. The activity of type III was the stronger. By light microscopic immunohistochemical analysis, retinal neurons were negative for type I and positive for type II and type III isozymes. Type II was more diffusely distributed through the retinal layers, but was distinctive in ganglion cells, bipolar cells, and outer segments. The immunoreactivity was stronger for type III isozyme, and it was observed in mop (rod) bipolar cells and amacrine cells. By using immunoelectron microscopy, the cytoplasm of the cell body, the axon, and dendrites of the mop bipolar cells were strongly immunoreactive for type III. The so-called rod bipolar cells were for the first time seen to form synapses with rod photoreceptor cells. These differential localizations of respective isozymes in retinal neurons suggest that each isozyme has a different site of function in each neuron.Keywords
This publication has 35 references indexed in Scilit:
- Type-specific expression of protein kinase C isozymes in CNS tumor cellsNeuroscience Letters, 1990
- A mutant protein kinase C that can transform fibroblastsNature, 1989
- Isolation and characterization of two new Drosophila protein kinase C genes, including one specifically expressed in photoreceptor cellsCell, 1989
- Immunocytochemical evidence for translocation of protein kinase C in human megakaryoblastic leukemic cells: synergistic effects of Ca2+ and activators of protein kinase C on the plasma membrane association.The Journal of cell biology, 1988
- The structure, expression, and properties of additional members of the protein kinase C family.Journal of Biological Chemistry, 1988
- [44] Transmembrane Ca2+ signaling and a new class of inhibitorsPublished by Elsevier ,1987
- Cloning and expression of multiple protein kinase C cDNAsCell, 1986
- Studies and Perspectives of Protein Kinase CScience, 1986
- Phorbol esters block a voltage-sensitive chloride current in hippocampal pyramidal cellsNature, 1986
- Protein kinase C activation induces conductance changes in Hermissenda photoreceptors like those seen in associative learningNature, 1986