Publications by authors named "Darya A Nikolaeva"

Vertebrate rods and cones operate over a wide range of ambient illumination, which is provided by light adaptation mechanisms regulating the sensitivity and speed of the phototransduction cascade. Three calcium-sensitive feedback loops are well established in both rods and cones: acceleration of the quenching of a light-activated visual pigment and cGMP synthesis by guanylate cyclase, and increased affinity of ion channels for cGMP. Accumulating evidence suggests that the molecular mechanisms of light adaptation are more complex.

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Purpose: Accumulating evidence suggests that dopamine, the major catecholamine in the vertebrate retina, may modulate cAMP-mediated signaling in photoreceptors to optimize vision in the light/dark cycle. The main putative mechanism of dopamine-induced adaptation changes in photoreceptors is activation of D-like receptors (DR), which leads to a decrease of the intracellular cAMP level and reduction of protein kinase A (PKA) activity. However, the mechanisms by which dopamine exerts its regulating effect on the phototransduction cascade remain largely unknown.

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The absolute sensitivity of vertebrate retinas is set by a background noise, called dark noise, which originates from several different cell types and is generated by different molecular mechanisms. The major share of dark noise is produced by photoreceptors and consists of two components, discrete and continuous. Discrete noise is generated by spontaneous thermal activations of visual pigment.

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