2 resultados para Photoactivation
em BORIS: Bern Open Repository and Information System - Berna - Suiça
Resumo:
Connexin45 (Cx45) hemichannels (HCs) open in the absence of Ca(2+) and close in its presence. To elucidate the underlying mechanisms, we examined the role of extra- and intracellular Ca(2+) on the electrical properties of HCs. Experiments were performed on HeLa cells expressing Cx45 using electrical (voltage clamp) and optical (Ca(2+) imaging) methods. HCs exhibit a time- and voltage-dependent current (I(hc)), activating with depolarization and inactivating with hyperpolarization. Elevation of [Ca(2+)](o) from 20 nM to 2 μM reversibly decreases I(hc), decelerates its rate of activation, and accelerates its deactivation. Our data suggest that [Ca(2+)](o) modifies the channel properties by adhering to anionic sites in the channel lumen and/or its outer vestibule. In this way, it blocks the channel pore and reversibly lowers I(hc) and modifies its kinetics. Rapid lowering of [Ca(2+)](o) from 2 mM to 20 nM, achieved early during a depolarizing pulse, led to an outward I(hc) that developed with virtually no delay and grew exponentially in time paralleled by unaffected [Ca(2+)](i). A step increase of [Ca(2+)](i) evoked by photorelease of Ca(2+) early during a depolarizing pulse led to a transient decrease of I(hc) superimposed on a growing outward I(hc); a step decrease of [Ca(2+)](i) elicited by photoactivation of a Ca(2+) scavenger provoked a transient increase in I(hc). Hence, it is tempting to assume that Ca(2+) exerts a direct effect on Cx45 hemichannels.
Resumo:
G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are seven transmembrane domain proteins that transduce extracellular signals across the plasma membrane and couple to the heterotrimeric family of G proteins. Like most intrinsic membrane proteins, GPCRs are capable of oligomerization, the function of which has only been established for a few different receptor systems. One challenge in understanding the function of oligomers relates to the inability to separate monomeric and oligomeric receptor complexes in membrane environments. Here we report the reconstitution of bovine rhodopsin, a GPCR expressed in the retina, into an apolipoprotein A-I phospholipid particle, derived from high density lipoprotein (HDL). We demonstrate that rhodopsin, when incorporated into these 10 nm reconstituted HDL (rHDL) particles, is monomeric and functional. Rhodopsin.rHDL maintains the appropriate spectral properties with respect to photoactivation and formation of the active form, metarhodopsin II. Additionally, the kinetics of metarhodopsin II decay is similar between rhodopsin in native membranes and rhodopsin in rHDL particles. Photoactivation of monomeric rhodopsin.rHDL also results in the rapid activation of transducin, at a rate that is comparable with that found in native rod outer segments and 20-fold faster than rhodopsin in detergent micelles. These data suggest that monomeric rhodopsin is the minimal functional unit in G protein activation and that oligomerization is not absolutely required for this process.