Abstract
The aim of the present paper is to evaluate the modulation of phosphatidate phosphohydrolase (PAPase) and diacylglyceride lipase (DGL) activities in bovine rod outer segment (ROS) under dark and light conditions and to evaluate the role of transducin (T) in this phenomenon. In dark-adapted ROS membranes exposed to light, PAPase activity is inhibited by 20% with respect to the activity found under dark conditions. To determine whether the retinal G protein, T, participates in the regulation of PAPase activity in these membranes, the effects of GTPγS and GDPβS on enzyme activity were examined. Under dark conditions in the presence of GTPγS, which stabilizes T in its active form (Tα + Tβγ), enzyme activity was inhibited and approached control values under light conditions. GDPβS, on the other hand, which stabilizes the inactive state of T (Tαβγ), stimulated PAPase activity by 36% with respect to control light conditions. ADP-ribosylation by cholera and pertussis toxin was also studied. In ADP-rybosilated ROS membranes with pertussis toxin under dark conditions, PAPase activity was 36% higher than the activity found under control light conditions. ADP-ribosylation by CTx, on the other hand, inhibited PAPase activity by 22%, with respect to dark control conditions, mimicking light effect. The effects of GTPγS and GDPβS and conditions of ADP-ribosylation by PTx and CTx on DGL activity were similar to those of PAPase activities. Based on NEM sensitivity we have also demonstrated that the PAPase present in ROS is the PAP 2 isoform. Our findings therefore suggest that light inhibition of PAP 2 in ROS is a transducin-mediated mechanism.
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