Retinal accumulation of the phosducin/T beta gamma and transducin complexes in developing normal mice and in mice and dogs with inherited retinal degeneration |
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Authors: | R H Lee B S Lieberman R N Lolley |
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Affiliation: | Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, University of California, Los Angeles. |
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Abstract: | Rod photoreceptors of mammalian retinas contain a 33-kDa phosphoprotein, phosducin, which complexes with the beta, gamma-subunits of transducin (T beta gamma). The level of phosducin phosphorylation is modulated by light, suggesting that the phosducin/T beta gamma complex has a pivotal role in light-regulated events that occur in photoreceptors. We have investigated, in developing mouse retinas, the age at which the complex is first detected and the subsequent accumulation of the phosducin/T beta gamma complex during postnatal life. Western blot analysis detected immunoreactivity both for phosducin and T beta in retinal homogenates of 3-day-old mice. Thereafter, the level of immunoreactivity for both proteins increased steadily, to reach adult levels in the next 2 postnatal weeks. Gel filtration analysis of extracts from immature mouse retina showed that phosducin and T beta co-eluted, like the phosducin/T beta gamma complex of adult retina, as a 77-kDa complex, indicating that the phosducin/T beta gamma complex is formed when photoreceptors first synthesize the components of the complex. While the levels of the phosducin/T beta gamma complex increased steadily during the first 2 postnatal weeks, the subunits of transducin complex, T alpha together with additional amounts of T beta gamma, only started to appear around the 7-9th postnatal day, and the level of transducin complex increased sharply at 11-14 days to reach adult levels that are similar to those of phosducin/T beta gamma complex.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS) |
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