Molecular and functional identification of a novel photopigment in ciliary photoreceptors.

J Gen Physiol

Instituto de Genética, Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Bogotá, Colombia

Published: March 2018

AI Article Synopsis

  • The two main types of animal photoreceptors, ciliary and microvillar, differ in how they process light signals, using G proteins and cycling nucleotides or lipid signaling pathways.
  • A third class of photoreceptors found in some marine invertebrates suggests a unique lineage, indicating different mechanisms of light sensation that remain poorly understood.
  • Research on an uncommon opsin in one invertebrate led to the confirmation of its role in light transduction through specific experiments that demonstrated its involvement in early receptor currents and photocurrent responses.

Article Abstract

The two basic animal photoreceptor types, ciliary and microvillar, use different light-transduction schemes: their photopigments couple to G versus G proteins, respectively, to either mobilize cyclic nucleotides or trigger a lipid signaling cascade. A third class of photoreceptors has been described in the dual retina of some marine invertebrates; these present a ciliary morphology but operate via radically divergent mechanisms, prompting the suggestion that they comprise a novel lineage of light sensors. In one of these organisms, an uncommon putative opsin was uncovered that was proposed to signal through G Orthologues subsequently emerged in diverse phyla, including mollusks, echinoderms, and chordates, but the cells in which they express have not been identified, and no studies corroborated their function as visual pigments or their suggested signaling mode. Conversely, in only one invertebrate species, , have the ciliary photoreceptors been physiologically characterized, but their photopigment has not been identified molecularly. We used the transcriptome of retina to guide the cloning by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and rapid amplification of cDNA ends (RACE) extensions of a new member of this group of putative opsins. In situ hybridization shows selective transcription in the distal retina, and specific antibodies identify a single band of the expected molecular mass in Western blots and distinctly label ciliary photoreceptors in retina sections. RNA interference knockdown resulted in a reduction in the early receptor current-the first manifestation of light transduction-and prevented the prolonged aftercurrent, which requires a large buildup of activated rhodopsin. We also obtained a full-length clone of the α-subunit of a G from retina complementary DNA and localized it by in situ hybridization to the distal photoreceptors. Small interfering RNA targeting this G caused a specific depression of the photocurrent. These results establish this novel putative opsin as a bona fide visual pigment that couples to G to convey the light signal.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5839723PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1085/jgp.201711938DOI Listing

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