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1 Department of Physiological Science, University of California, Los Angeles, USA2 Department of Ophthalmology, Program in Genetics, and Tufts Center for Vision Research, Tufts University School of Medicine, Boston, USA3 Department of Ophthalmology, Jules Stein Eye Institute, University of California, Los Angeles, USA
| Abstract |
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(Received 5 March 2004;
accepted after revision 8 April 2004;
first published online 8 April 2004)
Corresponding author G. L. Fain: Department of Physiological Science, Room 3836, Life Sciences Building, University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1606, USA. Email: gfain{at}ucla.edu
| Introduction |
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The ERP has been recorded from single cells in reptiles and amphibians with intracellular recording (Murakami & Pak, 1970; Hodgkin & O'Bryan, 1977). The change in current that produces the ERP, called the early receptor current or ERC, has also been recorded from lower vertebrates with voltage-clamp recording (Hestrin & Korenbrot, 1990; Makino et al. 1991; Makino & Dodd, 1996). Although the ERC of human rhodopsin has been studied in an expression system (Shukla & Sullivan, 1999; Brueggemann & Sullivan, 2001), no attempt has been made to record the ERC from an intact photoreceptor of a mammal. Since mouse has become the most useful vertebrate for studying physiological effects of mutations in rhodopsin and other transduction proteins, we have attempted to measure the ERC of mouse rods, hoping that recordings of a mammalian ERC might provide a further tool for the analysis of models of retinal degeneration and perhaps also provide a method for relating changes in pigment in a mouse model to changes in the ERP waveform or amplitude recorded from patients in a clinical setting.
We discovered that the ERC of a mouse rod is easily measured and large enough to permit a determination of the photosensitivity of mammalian rhodopsin in vivo. When we recorded the ERC from transducin knockout (Gnat1/) animals, we made the surprising observation that the ERC was followed by a current of the same sign as the normal light response, blocked by L-cis diltiazem and inhibited by incorporation of the Ca2+ buffer BAPTA. These observations appear to provide evidence for a light response in a mammalian photoreceptor independent of the normal transduction cascade and generated by light-activated release of Ca2+, similar to the one previously described for zebrafish cones (Brockerhoff et al. 2003).
| Methods |
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Suction pipettes pulled on a Flaming-Brown puller (Sutter Instruments, Novato, CA, USA) and polished on a home-made microforge were filled with Locke solution without glucose or ascorbate. Light stimuli were delivered either with a conventional dual-beam optical bench or from an argon ion laser (American Laser Corporation, Salt Lake City, UT, USA). The intensity of the light was measured with a calibrated photodiode (Graseby Optronics, Orlando, FL, USA). The stimulus from the laser consisted of a 10 µm spot placed in the middle of the outer segment, equidistant from the basal and distal tips. Laser intensities at 488 nm were converted to photons at the wavelength of maximum absorption (
max) of mouse rhodopsin (507 nm) by multiplying by 0.915 (see Rohrer et al. 1999) and are given in the text in units of equivalent photons. Stimulus duration was controlled with electronically driven shutters (Uniblitz, Vincent Associates, Rochester, NY, USA) and calibrated with the same photodiode used for the light bench. Suction-pipette currents were amplified with a patch-clamp amplifier (Warner Instruments Co, Hamden CT, USA), low-pass filtered with an 8 pole Bessel filter (Frequency Devices, Haverhill, MA, USA), acquired with pCLAMP (Axon Instruments, Union City, CA, USA) and a PC computer, and analysed with Quattro Pro (Corel Corporation, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada) and Origin (OriginLab Corporation, Northampton, MA, USA). The frequency of low-pass filtering and the sampling rate were varied in different experiments and are given in the figure legends. Most traces shown in the figures are the averages of many individual responses, and the number of rods and stimulus presentations are also given in the figure legends.
Light micrographs in Fig. 1 were taken with differential interference contrast on a Zeiss IM-35 microscope with a neofluar 63/1.25 NA oil-immersion objective.
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| Results |
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Previous extracellular recordings of ERP from rodent retina at 3537°C also show only an R2 component, though a negative R1 component has been shown to appear at lower temperature (Cone, 1965; Pak, 1965; see also Brueggemann & Sullivan, 2001). To see if this could also be the explanation for our inability to detect an R1 component, we recorded the ERC from 65 rods at room temperature (approximately 22°C). The averaged ERC from these photoreceptors is shown in Fig. 2D. The R2 component of the ERC is smaller in peak amplitude and decays much more slowly; however, the total charge moved during R2 obtained from integrals of the waveforms was similar (14.2 fC for Fig. 2C and 12.0 fC for Fig. 2D). The R2 component at room temperature was preceded by a brief negative transient, nearly as large in peak amplitude as R2. This may represent an R1 component (see Discussion).
Photosensitivity of mouse rhodopsin in vivo
If the current in response to the bright laser flash is a displacement current produced by molecular movement of rhodopsin, the movement of charge should be strictly proportional to the amount of pigment bleached (Cone, 1964; Hodgkin & O'Bryan, 1977), and the amplitude of the charge moved by a series of successive bleaches of the same intensity should decline exponentially by Beer's Law (see Hestrin & Korenbrot, 1990; Makino et al. 1991). An experiment of this kind is given in Fig. 3. An initial stimulus was given from the light bench to close the cGMP-gated channels as in Fig. 2B, and this was then followed by a series of three flashes of intensity 9.6 x 107 equivalent photons µm2, each estimated to bleach 42% of the remaining rhodopsin. All recordings were made at 37°C. The R2 responses to the flashes are shown at higher temporal resolution in Fig. 3B; each trace is the average of 64 rods.
The R2 responses from each of the rods for the experiment of Fig. 3 were individually integrated from the beginning of the flash over a period of 8 ms to calculate the charge movement. The mean and S.E.M. values of these measurements have been plotted against cumulative intensity in Fig. 3C. Note that, since each of the flashes was of the same intensity, plotting cumulative intensity is equivalent to plotting flash number. The means could be fitted with single exponential decay, consistent with the simple proportionality of the charge movement to the number of rhodopsin molecules bleached.
The decay of the amplitude of charge movement to a series of flashes of the same intensity can be used to estimate the in vivo photosensitivity of mouse rhodopsin (Makino et al. 1991; Makino & Dodd, 1996). The amplitude of the charge moved during the ERC as a function of the cumulative light intensity should decrease according to:
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| (1) |
ERC of rods from transducin knockout mice
In rods from Gnat1/ mice that lack the G protein transducin, there are no responses to physiological light levels since the visual cascade cannot be activated (Calvert et al. 2000). It should therefore be possible to record the ERC without prior illumination, since the only current expected from the photoreceptor is the displacement current produced by the conformational change in rhodopsin. Recordings of the ERC in transducin knockout mice are shown in Fig. 4. The records in A and B are the same response averaged from 40 rods to the same laser flash used in Fig. 2, calculated to bleach 93% of the rhodopsin. In A the recordings have been low-pass filtered at 1500 Hz, and in B, at 35 Hz (note difference in scale for the ordinate). The ERC in Fig. 4A is similar in amplitude to that recorded from normal mice but has a somewhat accelerated wave form (inset). The reason for the difference is not known but may be the result of the less negative membrane potential in the transducin knockout animals, for which the cGMP-gated channels would be expected at least initially to remain open even in light. The acceleration of kinetics may also at least in part arise from a difference in the time constant of the rods, which would be expected to be shorter in the transducin knockout animals.
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If, as in zebrafish cones, this slow current is produced by closing of the cGMP-gated channels in response to a light-activated increase in outer segment Ca2+ concentration, we should be able to block it both with the cGMP-gated channel blocker L-cis diltiazem (see Kaupp & Seifert, 2002) and by prior incorporation of the Ca2+ buffer BAPTA. Experiments of this kind are given in Fig. 5. Panel A gives the average of the responses of 65 Gnat1/ rods in control solution and without BAPTA incorporation. The rods used for this average were different from those for Fig. 4A and B and were from the same retinas used for the recordings of parts B and C of Fig. 5. The records in panels B and C show the average of the responses to the laser flash of 26 rods perfused with 100 µML-cis diltiazem, and of 38 rods after prior incorporation of 50 µM BAPTA-AM. Both treatments inhibited the slow current, suggesting that this component of the response is generated by a process that is independent of the normal transduction cascade, and which produces a change in outer segment Ca2+ concentration that reduces the current through the cGMP-gated channels.
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| Discussion |
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We have shown that the amplitude of total charge movement during the ERC declined exponentially with successive flashes (see Fig. 3C), consistent with the direct proportionality of the ERC to the quantity of pigment bleached. We have used the amplitude of the charge movement for a series of successive flashes to estimate the value of the photosensitivity of mammalian rod rhodopsin. Our estimate of 5.7 x 109µm2 per molecule is somewhat smaller than the value of about 108µm2 per molecule previously obtained for A1-based rhodopsin in solution (see Dartnall, 1968). Although part of this difference is probably due to orientation of visual pigment in the plasma membrane of the rod (see Makino et al. 1991), the greater part may be the result of light scatter by the suction recording pipette. Since the outer segment has been drawn into the pipette, light must pass through the glass before it reaches the rhodopsin molecules, and some of the incident illumination will be lost by scattering. An overestimate of It in eqn (1) would produce an underestimate of P. The value of P we have measured is nevertheless quite useful, since after correction for the difference in orientation of rhodopsin in the plasma and disk membranes, it can be used to calculate with some accuracy the fraction of pigment bleached in the outer segment during a suction-electrode experiment.
The laser spot in our measurements was placed so that it was unlikely to have stimulated either basal disks or the tip of the outer segment (see Methods). The membrane surface contributing to the ERC was therefore likely to have been only the surface membrane, which for a 10 µm diameter spot and a rod 1.2 µm in diameter can be calculated to have an area of about 38 µm2. On the assumption that the density of rhodopsin molecules in the surface membrane is the same as in the disk, and that the disk density is 2.7 x 104 molecules µm2 (see Fein & Szuts, 1982), we estimate from the total charge movement of about 50 fC that the bleaching of a single mouse rhodopsin molecule causes the movement of 0.3 of an electronic charge perpendicular to the surface of the plasma membrane. If the density of pigment molecules in the surface membrane is half that in the disk (Molday & Molday, 1987), this would rise to 0.6 of a charge per molecule. These estimates are uncertain, since the fraction of current collected by the suction pipette may have been greater or less than our estimate of 0.5, but they appear to be somewhat larger than the values for charge movement per molecule estimated from ERP and ERC measurements in other species (0.080.2, see Hodgkin & O'Bryan, 1977; Hochstrate et al. 1982; Hestrin & Korenbrot, 1990; Makino et al. 1991), perhaps indicating a difference between mammalian rhodopsin and the pigment of lower vertebrates.
In rods of Gnat1/ mice, the ERC was followed by a slow component of outward current of the same sign as the photocurrent. This response must arise from the closing of cGMP-gated channels, since it can be blocked by L-cis diltiazem (Fig. 5B). Although the mean value of this current was only about 0.5 pA, in some rods it was of the order of 57 pA, nearly as large as the maximum value of the normal light response. Although such large responses were recorded from only a small minority of the photoreceptors, we think it unlikely that they were produced by the normal transduction cascade from a few anomalous rods having an intact response (see Calvert et al. 2000), or from cones, which in a Gnat1/ mouse would have had functional tranducin. The response in Fig. 4C rises much more slowly and decays much more rapidly than would be expected for channel closing produced by the normal transduction cascade in either rods or cones for such bright flash intensities.
Since the slow current response can also be blocked by incorporation of the Ca2+ buffer BAPTA (Fig. 5), it is probably produced by light-activated Ca2+ release. Previous experiments have shown that light-activated release requires bright light (Matthews & Fain, 2001, 2003). Furthermore, in nof mutant zebrafish cones that lack transducin bright light can produce an electrical response (Brockerhoff et al. 2003) similar to the one we have recorded from transducin knockout mouse rods. In nof zebrafish cones this response also rises and decays much more slowly than the normal light response, and it is also blocked by diltiazem and by incorporation of the Ca2+ buffer BAPTA. Although it is not presently possible to record light-activated Ca2+ release from mouse rods directly, the similarity of the properties of the response in mouse rods to that in zebrafish cones argues strongly that both are produced by a similar phenomenon.
Since the recording of the ERC from mouse rods is relatively straight forward, it may be possible to use this method in a variety of experiments on isolated wild-type and mutant photoreceptors. The ERC could, for example, be used to estimate rhodopsin concentration during vitamin A deprivation, or in mutant animals such as Rpe65/ mice (Woodruff et al. 2003), which have a reduced rhodopsin content. It might also provide a useful measure of rhodopsin expression in animals for which the normal light response could not be measured, for example in animals for which the cGMP-gated channels or guanylyl cyclase were mutated.
If the slow current we record in transducin knockout rods is indeed produced by light-activated Ca2+ release, the recording of this current in mutant animals might facilitate an investigation of the molecular mechanism of Ca2+ release. It is at present unknown whence the Ca2+ originates or how it produces an electrical response. Measurements from mice lacking transducin but also lacking other proteins, such as Ca2+ binding proteins or components of IP3-gated Ca2+ release, might make it possible to explore the origin of this interesting phenomenon in greater detail. Although light-induced Ca2+ release is unlikely to produce a significant change in the outer segment Ca2+ concentration at physiological light levels (Matthews & Fain, 2003), it may reflect light-dependent changes in Ca2+ buffering or other phenomena of importance to the function or homeostasis of the photoreceptor.
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