Abstract

Recycling of signaling proteins is a common phenomenon in diverse signaling pathways. In photoreceptors of Drosophila, light absorption by rhodopsin triggers a phospholipase Cβ-mediated opening of the ion channels transient receptor potential (TRP) and TRP-like (TRPL) and generates the visual response. The signaling proteins are located in a plasma membrane compartment called rhabdomere. The major rhodopsin (Rh1) and TRP are predominantly localized in the rhabdomere in light and darkness. In contrast, TRPL translocates between the rhabdomeral plasma membrane in the dark and a storage compartment in the cell body in the light, from where it can be recycled to the plasma membrane upon subsequent dark adaptation. Here, we identified the gene mutated in trpl translocation defective 14 (ttd14), which is required for both TRPL internalization from the rhabdomere in the light and recycling of TRPL back to the rhabdomere in the dark. TTD14 is highly conserved in invertebrates and binds GTP in vitro. The ttd14 mutation alters a conserved proline residue (P75L) in the GTP-binding domain and abolishes binding to GTP. This indicates that GTP binding is essential for TTD14 function. TTD14 is a cytosolic protein and binds to PtdIns(3)P, a lipid enriched in early endosome membranes, and to phosphatidic acid. In contrast to TRPL, rhabdomeral localization of the membrane proteins Rh1 and TRP is not affected in the ttd14 P75L mutant. The ttd14 P75L mutation results in Rh1-independent photoreceptor degeneration and larval lethality suggesting that other processes are also affected by the ttd14 P75L mutation. In conclusion, TTD14 is a novel regulator of TRPL trafficking, involved in internalization and subsequent sorting of TRPL into the recycling pathway that enables this ion channel to return to the plasma membrane.

Highlights

  • Photoreceptor membrane proteins undergo a carefully regulated turnover that helps to adjust the sensitivity of the receptors and to renew old and possibly worn out proteins

  • In the genetic screen, trafficking of the TRPL-eGFP reporter protein was visualized in mosaic eyes by the fluorescence of the deep pseudopupil and the ttd14 mutant was identified by its defective TRPL-eGFP internalization to the cell body after 16 hours orange light illumination

  • To identify the gene affected in the ttd14 mutant, we made use of the lethal phenotype of ttd14, assuming that lethality in larvae and impaired TRPL trafficking in mosaic eye clones is caused by the same mutation

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Summary

Introduction

Photoreceptor membrane proteins undergo a carefully regulated turnover that helps to adjust the sensitivity of the receptors and to renew old and possibly worn out proteins. Major integral membrane proteins of the Drosophila photoreceptive membrane comprise the G protein-coupled receptor rhodopsin and two ion channels, transient receptor potential (TRP) and TRP-like (TRPL). The signaling cascade operating in fly photoreceptors is a G protein-coupled, phospholipase Cβ-mediated signaling pathway that is initiated by the absorption of a photon by rhodopsin and results in the opening of TRP and TRPL channels and subsequent influx of sodium and calcium ions. TRP and TRPL are the founding members of the large family of transient receptor potential channels that comprises 28 members in mammals [4,5,6,7]. TRP channels function in sensory systems as well as in calcium regulation in non-neuronal cells, for example in kidney or heart cells

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