The effect of recoverin-like calcium-binding proteins on the photoresponse of retinal rods
- PMID: 8461139
- DOI: 10.1016/0896-6273(93)90339-s
The effect of recoverin-like calcium-binding proteins on the photoresponse of retinal rods
Abstract
The rod photoresponse is triggered by an enzyme cascade that stimulates cGMP hydrolysis. The resulting fall in cGMP leads to a decrease in Ca2+, which promotes photoresponse recovery by activating guanylate cyclase, causing cGMP resynthesis. In vitro biochemical studies suggest that Ca2+ activation of guanylate cyclase is medicated by recoverin, a 26 kd Ca(2+)-binding protein. To evaluate this, exogenous bovine recoverin and two other homologous Ca(2+)-binding proteins from chicken and Gecko retina were dialyzed into functionally intact Gecko rods using whole-cell recording. All three proteins prolonged the rising phase of the photoresponse without affecting the kinetics of response recovery. These results suggest that recoverin-like proteins affect termination of the transduction cascade, rather than mediate Ca(2+)-sensitive activation of guanylate cyclase.
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