Abstract

Visual pigment in photoreceptors is activated by light. Activated visual pigment (R*) is believed to be inactivated by phosphorylation of R* with subsequent binding of arrestin. There are two types of photoreceptors, rods and cones, in the vertebrate retina, and they express different subtypes of arrestin, rod and cone type. To understand the difference in the function between rod- and cone-type arrestin, we first identified the subtype of arrestins expressed in rods and cones in carp retina. We found that two rod-type arrestins, rArr1 and rArr2, are co-expressed in a rod and that a cone-type arrestin, cArr1, is expressed in blue- and UV-sensitive cones; the other cone-type arrestin, cArr2, is expressed in red- and green-sensitive cones. We quantified each arrestin subtype and estimated its concentration in the outer segment of a rod or a cone in the dark; they were ∼0.25 mm (rArr1 plus rArr2) in a rod and 0.6-0.8 mm (cArr1 or cArr2) in a cone. The effect of each arrestin was examined. In contrast to previous studies, both rod and cone arrestins suppressed the activation of transducin in the absence of visual pigment phosphorylation, and all of the arrestins examined (rArr1, rArr2, and cArr2) bound transiently to most probably nonphosphorylated R*. One rod arrestin, rArr2, bound firmly to phosphorylated pigment, and the other two, rArr1 and cArr2, once bound to phosphorylated R* but dissociated from it during incubation. Our results suggested a novel mechanism of arrestin effect on the suppression of the R* activity in both rods and cones.

Highlights

  • Photoreceptor arrestin is thought to act on light-activated (R*) and phosphorylated visual pigment to completely suppress the R* activity

  • We found that the expression level of arrestin is higher in carp cones than in rods (Tables 1 and 2) and that carp arrestins suppress Tr activation without visual pigment phosphorylation both in rods and cones (Figs. 3 and 4) in contrast to the previous suggestion that arrestin binds to the pigment after phosphorylation

  • Higher Expression Level of Arrestin in Cones Than in Rods— In this study in carp retina, we showed that rods express two rod-type arrestins, rArr1 and rArr2, and cones express conetype arrestins, cArr1 in blue- and UV-sensitive cones and cArr2 in red- and green-sensitive cones (Fig. 1)

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Summary

Background

Photoreceptor arrestin is thought to act on light-activated (R*) and phosphorylated visual pigment to completely suppress the R* activity. There are two types of photoreceptors, rods and cones, in the vertebrate retina, and they express different subtypes of arrestin, rod and cone type. In contrast to previous studies, both rod and cone arrestins suppressed the activation of transducin in the absence of visual pigment phosphorylation, and all of the arrestins examined (rArr, rArr, and cArr2) bound transiently to most probably nonphosphorylated R*. We found that all subtypes of arrestin examined inhibit Tr activation by R* regardless of visual pigment phosphorylation both in rods and cones. This finding is consistent with a result obtained electrophysiologically in GRK and arrestin double-knock-out mice [14].

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
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