Δευτέρα 12 Φεβρουαρίου 2018

Role of recoverin in rod photoreceptor light adaptation

Abstract

Recoverin is a small molecular-weight, calcium-binding protein in rod outer segments which binds to G-protein receptor kinase 1 (GRK1) and can alter the rate of rhodopsin phosphorylation. A change in phosphorylation should change the lifetime of light-activated rhodopsin and the gain of phototransduction, but deletion of recoverin has little effect on the sensitivity of rods either in the dark or in dim-to-moderate background light. We describe two additional functions perhaps of greater physiological significance. (1) When the ambient intensity increases, sensitivity and integration time decrease in wild-type (WT) rods with similar time constants of 150 – 200 ms. Recoverin is part of the mechanism controlling this process since, in Rv-/- rods lacking recoverin, sensitivity declines more rapidly and integration time is already shorter and not further altered. (2) During steady light exposure, WT rod circulating current slowly increases during a time course of tens of seconds, gradually extending the operating range of the rod. In Rv-/- rods this mechanism is also deleted, steady-state currents are already larger, and rods saturate at brighter intensities. We argue that neither (1) nor (2) can be caused by modulation of rhodopsin phosphorylation but may instead be produced by direct modulation of phophodiesterase-6, the phototransduction effector enzyme. We propose that recoverin in dark-adapted rods keeps the integration time long and the spontaneous PDE6 rate relatively high to improve sensitivity. In background light, the integration time is decreased to facilitate detection of change and motion, and the spontaneous PDE6 rate decreases to augment the rod working range.

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